Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Franklin County voters will choose from four candidates on the ballot for two judgeships on Franklin County Domestic Relations and Juvenile court.
A complaint alleges that Franklin County Domestic Relations Judge Kim A. Browne forced a party into a parenting agreement without his attorney present
Ohio Rep. Richard Brown, the endorsed Democrat, is facing Stephanie Hanna, who's previously run for judge as a Republican, in the Democratic primary.
Yvette McGee Brown (born 1960) became the first African-American female justice on the Ohio Supreme Court when she took office on January 1, 2011. [1] She was the founding president of the Center for Child and Family Advocacy at Nationwide Children's Hospital, and was a judge of the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas for nine years.
The duties of the courts are outlined in Article IV, Section 4. Each of Ohio's 88 counties has a court of common pleas. The Ohio General Assembly (the state legislature) has the power to divide courts of common pleas into divisions, and has done so, establishing general, domestic relations, juvenile, and probate divisions:
Katherine (Kay) Lias: [49] First female elected as a Judge of the Franklin County Common Pleas Court, Division of Domestic Relations and Juvenile Branch, Franklin County, Ohio (1988) Yvette McGee Brown: [12] [50] First African American female elected to serve as a Judge of the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas
Hanna ran as a Republican twice: in 2016 for the Common Pleas Court General Division and again in 2020 for the Common Pleas Court Domestic Relations and Juvenile Division.
Before serving as Probate Court Judge, Brown served as a Judge and Magistrate on the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas, General Division where he presided over a large caseload consisting of criminal felony cases, substantial civil disputes, administrative appeals, and a wide variety of other matters, including serving as the probate judge ...