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The State Bar of California is an administrative division of the Supreme Court of California which licenses attorneys and regulates the practice of law in California. [2] It is responsible for managing the admission of lawyers to the practice of law, investigating complaints of professional misconduct, prescribing appropriate discipline, accepting attorney-member fees, and financially ...
Pursuant to California Government Code § 68070 and the Judicial Council California Rules of Court § 10.613, the Sacramento County Superior Court has adopted Local Rules for its government and the government of its officers.
Lorenzo Patino: [208] First Latino American male to serve as a municipal court judge in Sacramento County, California; Joginder Dhillon: [209] First Sikh male appointed as a Judge of the Superior Court of Sacramento (2018) Daniel J. Calabretta: [210] First openly LGBT male appointed as a Judge of the Superior Court of Sacramento (2019)
Virginia S. Mueller (1947): [226] First female Deputy District Attorney for Sacramento County, California (1959-1966) Frances Newell Carr (1948): First female to serve on the Superior Court of Sacramento, California (1975) Alice A. Lytle (1974): [227] First African American female judge in Sacramento County, California (1983)
He worked as a law clerk for Judge William B. Shubb at the U.S. District Court Eastern District of California from 2002 to 2003. Superior court judges serve six-year terms and are elected by ...
Two new judges for Sacramento County were among 16 appointees named this week by Gov. Gavin Newsom to superior courts around the state. Philip Ferrari, 52, of Sacramento, and Satnam Rattu, 42, of ...
Pursuant to California Rule of Court 2.506 and Government Code Section 68150(h), courts may impose fees for the costs of providing access to its electronic records. Several superior courts do so, including Alameda, Los Angeles, Riverside, Sacramento, and San Diego, and the fees have been criticized by Thomas Peele as exorbitant and ...
The paradox of state judicial officers working in county-operated organizations culminated in a 1996 case in which the Supreme Court of California upheld the constitutionality of a statute under which the superior court of Mendocino County was bound by the county board of supervisors' designation of unpaid furlough days for all county employees ...