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Pages in category "Justices of the Indiana Supreme Court" The following 107 pages are in this category, out of 107 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Indiana is a state in the United States. The law Courts of Indiana include: State courts of Indiana The E. Ross Adair Federal Building, seat of the Fort Wayne division of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Indiana. Indiana Supreme Court [1] Indiana Court of Appeals (5 districts; previously Indiana Appellate Court) [2] Indiana ...
Judges in county court preside over misdemeanor criminal cases, traffic offenses and civil disputes involving $30,000 or less. County court judges are elected to six-year terms and paid $172,015 ...
Jesús Ricardo Treviño: [24] First Latino American male judge in Allen County, Indiana (2021) William Clarence Hueston, Sr.: [25] First African American male to serve as a judge in Gary, Indiana (1924) [Lake County, Indiana] James C. Kimbrough: [26] First African American male appointed as a Judge of the Lake County Superior Court, Indiana
County Seminary (Wilmington, OH) 24 Samuel Buskirk: January 3, 1871 January 1, 1877 2190 Indiana University 25 Andrew L. Osborn: December 16, 1872 January 4, 1875 749 26 Horace P. Biddle: January 4, 1875 January 3, 1881 2191 27 William Niblack: January 1, 1877 January 7, 1889 4389 Indiana University 28 George Howk: January 1, 1877 January 7 ...
The Indiana Department of Correction (IDOC) operates state prisons in Indiana. It has its headquarters in Indianapolis . [ 1 ] As of 2019, the Indiana Department of Correction housed 27,140 adult Inmates, 388 juvenile Inmates, employed 5,937 State Employed Staff, and 1,718 Contracted Staff.
Superior Court Judge David Petersen conducts a criminal docket hearing in a Franklin County Superior Courtroom at the Franklin County Courthouse in Pasco in 2023. (Bob Brawdy/bbrawdy@tricityherald ...
In November 2020, the paper reported on the ways that the office used Pasco County Schools district data, students grades, and students abuse history to predict "future criminal behavior". [7] A data-sharing agreement had been in place between the sheriff's office and the school district for twenty years, and there were 420 children on their list.