Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Margaret Walsh: [33] First openly LGBT female elected as a Judge of the Albany County Family Court, Third Department (2004) Mae D’Agostino: [ 121 ] First female from Albany to serve as a Judge of the Northern District Court of New York (2011)
Thomas Marcelle (born February 8, 1962) is an American attorney and judge from the state of New York. He serves as a Justice of the New York State Supreme Court, Third Judicial District, having been elected to his post in November 2022. Marcelle previously served as Albany County attorney and as a judge of the Cohoes, New York City Court.
The New York State Court of Appeals is the state's highest court. In civil cases, appeals are taken almost exclusively from decisions of the Appellate Divisions. In criminal cases, depending on the type of case and the part of the state in which it arose, appeals can be heard from decisions of the Appellate Division, the Appellate Term, and the County Court.
Judge Alison Raeside, Judge Peter Nathan and Judge Sally Williams were named on Friday as the three judges who were all involved in family court proceedings related to the care of the 10-year-old ...
Mae Avila D'Agostino (born December 18, 1954) is a United States district judge of the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York. She was formerly an attorney in Albany County, New York.
The Appellate Division primarily hears appeals from the state's superior courts (Supreme Court, Surrogate's Court, Family Court, Court of Claims, the county courts) in civil cases, the Supreme Court in criminal cases, and, in the Second, Third, and Fourth Judicial Departments, from the county courts in felony criminal cases. [5]
After law school, Stein first worked as a law clerk at Schenectady County Family Court. [1] [2] She was in private practice for almost 14 years, starting as an associate and later a partner, at the Albany, New York law firm of McNamee, Lochner, Titus & Willams. [1] [2] She re-entered government service as an Albany City court judge in early ...
James C. Matthews was born in New Haven, Connecticut on November 6, 1844. [1] His father was a barber, and the family moved to Albany when James Matthews was a boy. [2] His parents died in 1861, and Matthews was raised by Lydia Mott and Phebe Jones, two Albany anti-slavery activists who later worked in support of racial integration.