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The Kentucky Supreme Court is the state supreme court of the U.S. state of Kentucky. Prior to its creation by constitutional amendment in 1975, the Kentucky Court of Appeals was the only appellate court in Kentucky. The Kentucky Court of Appeals is now Kentucky's intermediate appellate court.
2024 Alabama Supreme Court election; 2024 Arizona elections; 2024 Georgia judicial elections; 2024 Kentucky Supreme Court election; 2024 Michigan elections; 2024 Minnesota elections; 2024 North Carolina judicial elections; 2024 Ohio elections; 2024 Tennessee elections; 2024 Texas elections; 2024 Washington elections; 2024 West Virginia elections
The 2024 Kentucky Supreme Court election was held in the 5th district of the Kentucky Supreme Court on November 5, 2024. The court consists of seven justices elected in nonpartisan elections to staggered eight-year terms. District 5, composed of eight counties in the Lexington area, [a] was the only district up for election in 2024. [1]
The Kentucky Supreme Court consists of seven justices elected in non-partisan elections to staggered eight-year terms. Districts 1, 2, 4, and 6 were up for election in 2014. Districts 1, 2, 4, and 6 were up for election in 2014.
Pamela R. Goodwine is an American judge serving as Justice-elect of the Kentucky Supreme Court, a position to which she was elected in November 2024.She previously held roles as a district and circuit judge in Fayette County and as a judge on the Kentucky Court of Appeals, becoming the first Black woman from Lexington to serve on both the appellate and Supreme Court levels in Kentucky.
Kentucky Supreme Court tells Attorney General Russell Coleman to ask for injunction to be modified or dropped. Kentucky hasn’t executed anyone since 2008. Under new ruling, it won’t resume ...
Justice District Began active service End of active service; Boyce G. Clayton: 1st: 1976: 1983 John S. Palmore: 2nd: 1976: 1983 Pleas Jones: 3rd: 1976: 1979 Marvin J. Sternberg
Commonwealth's Attorneys, who serve as the prosecutors for felonies in the state, are elected to six-year terms. [3] One attorney is elected for each of the 57 circuits of the Kentucky Circuit Courts. Following the 2018 elections, 32 attorneys were affiliated with the Democratic Party, 24 with the Republican party, and one independent. [5]