词条 | Elizabeth B. Lacy |
释义 |
|name = Elizabeth B. Lacy |image = |office = Justice of the Supreme Court of Virginia |appointer = Gerald Baliles |term_start = January 4, 1989 |term_end = August 16, 2007 |predecessor = Richard H. Poff |successor = S. Bernard Goodwyn |office1 = Member of the Virginia State Corporation Commission |term_start1 = April 1, 1985 |term_end1 = December 1988 |preceded1 = Junie L. Bradshaw |succeeded1 = Theodore V. Morrison, Jr. |birth_name= Elizabeth Bermingham |birth_date = {{birth date and age|1945|1|12}} |birth_place = Parris Island, South Carolina |death_date = |death_place = |religion = |signature = |alma_mater = Saint Mary's College (B.A.) University of Texas (J.D.) University of Virginia (LL.M.) |spouse = Dennis Patrick Lacy, Jr. }}Elizabeth Bermingham Lacy (born January 12, 1945) is a Virginia jurist. She was the first woman named to the Virginia State Corporation Commission and later was the first woman named to be a Justice of the Supreme Court of Virginia, where she served until her retirement in 2007.[1] Early and family lifeLacy graduated from St. Mary's College at Notre Dame in 1966 and taught elementary school in Texas for a year. She studied law at the University of Texas Law School and graduated in 1969. She also received an LL.M. from the University of Virginia School of Law in 1992. CareerLacy practiced law in Texas before moving to Virginia, serving for three years with the Texas Legislative Council, and then for three years with the Texas Attorney General's office, specializing in antitrust and consumer protection law. From 1976-1977, Lacy moved to Virginia and served as legislative aide to delegate Carrington Williams. She then began working for the Virginia Office of Attorney General, under Gerald L. Baliles. She rose to become the state Deputy Attorney General for Judicial Affairs (a division that prosecutes consumer protection violations, oversees the state's antitrust laws, state regulations and conflict of interest statutes). Governor Charles S. Robb appointed her to the State Corporation Commission, which had judicial as well as responsibilities. She was the first woman on the SCC. After Gerald L. Baliles was elected Governor of Virginia, he appointed Lacy to the Virginia Supreme Court as discussed below. Delegate Theodore V. Morrison Jr., a lawyer from Newport News, Virginia and part-time member of the General Assembly, was nominated and confirmed to succeed her on the SCC. On November 22, 1988, Gov. Baliles appointed Lacy to the Virginia Supreme Court, and the General Assembly confirmed her appointment in due course. She was again the first woman to hold the position, and she was subsequently elected to a full 12-year term. Although by seniority she was the longest serving active member of the Supreme Court when Chief Justice Harry L. Carrico retired, Lacy did not succeed him as Chief Justice. Although the Chief Justice was previously the senior active member of the Court, a change in the law before Chief Justice Carrico's retirement provided that in future the Chief Justice would be selected by an election of the Court members for a four-year term. Chief Justice Leroy Rountree Hassell, Sr., then second in seniority to Justice Lacy, was elected Chief Justice, and was the first African American to hold that position. Justice Lacy retired and took senior status effective August 16, 2007. The Library of Virginia honored her as one of the eight Virginia Women in History for 2008.[2] See also
References1. ^http://www.americanbar.org/content/dam/aba/directories/women_trailblazers/lacy_bio.authcheckdam.pdf 2. ^{{cite web|title=Virginia Women in History: Elizabeth Bermingham Lacy (1945– )|url=http://www.lva.virginia.gov/public/vawomen/2008/honorees.asp?bio=7|publisher=Library of Virginia|accessdate=4 March 2015}} External links
11 : 1945 births|American women judges|Living people|People from Parris Island, South Carolina|Saint Mary's College (Indiana) alumni|University of Texas School of Law alumni|University of Virginia School of Law alumni|Virginia lawyers|Virginia Supreme Court justices|20th-century American judges|21st-century American judges |
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