Catherine Kimball

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Catherine D. "Kitty" Kimball (b. 1945) is the chief justice of the Louisiana Supreme Court. This term expires in 2018.

With the retirement on December 31, 2008 of former chief justice Pascal Calogero, Kimball became the justice with the most seniority on the court. In January 1, 2009, she became the Chief Justice, a position that automatically goes to the justice with the longest tenure on the court. She is the court's first female chief justice. (About 40% of the state supreme courts have a female chief justice.) She is a Democrat.

Biography

Kimball had a stroke on January 10, 2010 and underwent post-stroke rehabilitation therapy at the Neuromedical Rehabilitation Hospital in Baton Rouge until her release on February 19, 2010. According to a statement from the Supreme Court, Kimball "continues to progress in her recovery, and will now undergo several weeks of continued post-stroke rehabilitation therapy on an out-patient basis".

Kimball is married to Clyde W. Kimball, former Louisiana State Representative and former Deputy Secretary for the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries. [1][2]

Legal background

  • 2008 - 1992 Associate Justice, Louisiana Supreme Court
  • 1992 - 1990 Chief Judge, 18th Judicial District Court, Division A
  • 1990 - 1982 Judge, 18th Judicial District Court, Division A
  • 1982 - 1975 Attorney
  • 1981 - 1973 General Counsel, Louisiana Commission on Law Enforcement and Administration of Criminal Justice
  • 1973 - 1971 Special Counsel, Louisiana Attorney General's Office
  • 1970 Law Clerk to Judge Nauman S. Scott, United States District Court, Western District of Louisiana[3]

Awards and associations

Awards

  • 2009 LSU Women’s Center Esprit de Femme Award
  • 2008 Judge of the Year Award, Louisiana CASA Association
  • 2007 Named one of the Top 100 in Baton Rouge by the Baton Rouge Business Report
  • 2006 Distinguished Jurist Award, Louisiana Bar Foundation
  • 2006 Received the Crimestoppers Special Award for Commitment to Community, Southeast Louisiana Criminal Justice Recovery Task Force
  • 2006 Inducted into the Louisiana Justice Hall of Fame
  • 2003 Received an Ambassador for Children Award from the Louisiana CASA Association
  • 2002 Louisiana CASA Association President’s Award
  • 1997 Honored as one of the Top 25 Women of Achievement by the Baton Rouge Business Report

Associations

  • Member, Louisiana State Bar Association
  • Member, American Judicature Society
  • Member, State-Federal Judicial Council
  • Member, Wex Malone American Inns of Court
  • Member, COSCA/NACM National Association for Court Management
  • Chair, Louisiana Supreme Court Case Management Information System Task Force
  • Chair, Louisiana Supreme Court Technology Committee
  • Chair, Southeast Louisiana Criminal Justice Recovery Task Force
  • Chair, Judicial Budgetary Control Board
  • Founder, Sunshine Foundation
  • Board Member, Juvenile Justice Implementation Commission
  • Member, Louisiana Law Enforcement Commission
  • Member, U.S. Department of Justice National Integration Resource Center Task Force
  • Chair of the Integrated Criminal Justice Information System Policy Board
  • Member, Leadership Louisiana, Class of 1999
  • Member, Louisiana Children’s Cabinet
  • Member, Judicial Council
  • Member, Ethics Committee, 2001
  • Member, Louisiana Protective Order Registry (LPOR)
  • Supreme Court Liaison to the Louisiana Legislature
  • Supreme Court Liaison to District Judges’ Association[3]

2008 election

On October 4, 2008 she won re-election to a new ten-year term on the court against challenger Jefferson Hughes.[4]

Graphic courtesy of The Advocate and WBRZ News 2 Louisiana

External links

References

The Louisiana Project on Judgepedia
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