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Texas: active: Gary R. Orozco [428] Fresno County Superior Court (2001– ) California: active: Patricia Orozco [429] Arizona Court of Appeals (2004–2016) Arizona: retired: Richard Orozco [9] Orange County Municipal Court California: retired: Yolanda Orozco [430] Los Angeles County Superior Court (2010– ) California: active: Darleen Ortega ...
Sheila Polk (1982): [58] First female to serve as the Yavapai County Attorney (2004) Nellie T. Bush and Emeline Ferguson: [9] First females elected as Justices of the Peace in Yuma County, Arizona (1914) Patricia A. Orozco (1989): [19] [20] First Latino American female appointed as the County Attorney for Yuma County, Arizona (1999)
The Chief Justice of Texas presides at the Texas Supreme Court, which is the top appellate court for civil matters in the Texas court system. The chief justice (and all the justices) are elected statewide in partisan elections. The term of the chief justice is six years. The position was created in the Texas Constitution of 1876.
The post surfaced after Meta, then known as Facebook, went public that same year. “An attorney advised us to post this. Good enough for me,” the post said, per Snopes.
A judge has expunged the misdemeanor convictions of a St. Louis couple who waved guns at racial injustice protesters outside their mansion in 2020. Attorneys Mark and Patricia McCloskey filed a ...
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Hattie Ruth Elam Briscoe: [1] [2] [3] First African American female to graduate from law school in Texas (1956) Hortense Sparks Ward: First female lawyer in Texas (1910) Harriet Mitchell Murphy: First African American female judge in Texas (1973) Eva Guzman: First Hispanic female Justice of the Supreme Court of Texas (2009)
The associate justices were the judges of the eight district courts of Texas. The district judges, whose first session was January 13, 1840, served with the chief justice as associate justices from January 13, 1840 to December 29, 1845, when Texas was admitted into the United States: