Lamont nominees for Superior Court bench include attorneys with local ties
Lamont nominees for Superior Court bench include attorneys with local ties
Gov. Ned Lamont has nominated several attorneys with local ties for seats on the state Superior Court bench. Lamont is seen here in a November file photo in Meriden. | Dave Zajac, Record-Journal
March 03, 2021 05:11PM By Jareliz Diaz, Record-Journal staff
Gov. Ned Lamont recently named 15 nominees to fill vacancies on the state Superior Court bench â three from the local area.Â
The nominees include Carletha Texidor of Southington, Gladys Idelis Nieves, a Meriden native, and Chris Pelosi of Berlin.Â
Texidor, 43, is an assistant attorney general focusing on employment rights. Sheâs served in the office since 2014 after stints in private practice in New York City and as counsel for the New York City Department of Education. Texidor is a graduate of Lewisham College and the University o
From Old Lyme, Gov. Ned Lamont nominated 64-year-old retired U.S. Navy captain Edward O Hanlan, a partner at Robinson & Cole, LLP, which has offices in
Lamont to nominate diverse first class of trial judges
He is to pick Robert Clark for Appellate, 15 others for Superior Court
mark Pazniokas :: ctmirror.org
Robert W. Clark, center, with the governor’s chief of staff, Paul Mounds, left, and Doug Dalena, during a debate in March about the governor’s emergency pandemic powers. Clark is to be nominated for the Appellate Court.
Gov. Ned Lamont is expected Wednesday to nominate his general counsel, Robert W. Clark, to the Appellate Court and name a racially diverse class of eight women and seven men as his first picks for the trial court.
15 CT Residents Nominated To Fill Vacancies On The Superior Court patch.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from patch.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Governor Lamont Nominates 15 Connecticut Residents To Fill Vacancies on the Superior Court Written by Office of the Governor.
Governor Ned Lamont today announced that he is nominating 15 jurists to fill vacancies as judges on the Connecticut Superior Court.
This is the first class of Superior Court nominations made by Governor Lamont, who took office in January 2019. The most recent class was approved in 2018 under the prior administration. State statutes authorize 185 judges on that court, and 50 of those positions are currently vacant.
“I am proud today to announce one of the most diverse classes of judicial nominations in our state’s history,”