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Robert C. Ervin (born 1960) is a North Carolina Superior Court judge who has presided over numerous high-profile cases. He is the grandson of U.S. Senator Sam J. Ervin, the son of U.S. Court of Appeals Judge Samuel James Ervin III and the brother of state Supreme Court Justice Sam J. Ervin IV.
Magistrate judges represent about 10% of the judicial branch workforce, according to the North Carolina Magistrates Association, and they are appointed by district court judges.
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A Charlotte murder suspect caught in legal purgatory — with most of his adult life spent in jail and psychiatric hospitals — has been found mentally stable enough to stand trial, a judge ruled ...
Chief Judge of the United States District Court for the Western District of North Carolina; In office 2006–2013: Preceded by: Graham Calder Mullen: Succeeded by: Frank DeArmon Whitney: Judge of the United States District Court for the Western District of North Carolina; In office June 2, 2005 – May 17, 2023: Appointed by: George W. Bush ...
Levinson is a native North Carolinian. He received a BBA in finance, cum laude, from the University of Georgia, where he was an honors program student. [4] While an undergraduate, he a completed the Institute on Comparative Political and Economic Systems through the Fund for American Studies in Washington, D.C. and Georgetown University, and completed an overseas studies program in ...
During Wynn’s lengthy judicial career, he nearly made history as the 4th Circuit’s first Black judge when former President Bill Clinton attempted in 1994 and 2000 to nominate him to the bench ...
Judges were salaried and served indefinitely "during good behavior". [1] Interim vacancies were to be filled by the governor with the advice of the Council of State. The first judges were Taylor, Leonard Henderson, and John Hall. Henderson and Hall made Taylor chief justice, and the court held its first meeting on January 1, 1819.