Saturday, February 10, 2024

Mass. Attys Shrug Off 'Brilliant' Top Court Pick's Ties To Gov.

Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey's selection Wednesday of a former romantic partner to fill a vacancy on the state's highest court didn't raise eyebrows among prominent Bay State attorneys, who touted Appeals Court Justice Gabrielle R. Wolohojian's "impeccable" resume on the bench and in BigLaw. Justice Wolohojian, 63, if confirmed, will replace Justice David Lowy, who left the Supreme Judicial Court to serve as general counsel of the University of Massachusetts. Justice Wolohojian, a graduate of Columbia Law School, has served on the Appeals Court, an intermediate appellate court, since 2008. Prior to that, she was a partner at WilmerHale, where she first met Healey. While the two were involved in a long-term relationship and lived together in Boston's Charlestown neighborhood, Healey did not address their past connection in her announcement. She called Justice Wolohojian the best candidate for the position. "There is no one more qualified or better prepared to serve on the Supreme Judicial Court than Justice Wolohojian," Healey said in a statement announcing the nomination. "She will bring over three decades of broad trial and appellate experience, including sixteen years on the Appeals Court." Healey's relationship with Justice Wolohojian ended prior to her election as governor in 2022, according to published interviews of the governor and her new partner, Joanna Lydgate, who is also an attorney. The nomination was vetted by the Supreme Judicial Court Nominating Commission, and will now go to the Governor's Council. A hearing is scheduled for Feb. 21. One member of the Governor's Council called Healey's decision "courageous." "I frankly think that it's kind of courageous of the governor to nominate her," Governor's Council member Terrence Kennedy told Law360 on Wednesday. "She knows she's going to catch heat." "She's absolutely brilliant," Kennedy said of Justice Wolohojian. Kennedy said he had encouraged her to apply for a vacancy on the court during the administration of then-Gov. Charlie Baker. "She's really, really smart and really qualified," Kennedy said. "When you look at it objectively, she has impeccable credentials," said Martin Healy, chief legal counsel for the Massachusetts Bar Association. "It's a solid pick." "I don't think it's going to be an impediment," Healy said of the prior relationship. Justice Wolohojian has strong support within the legal community, said Healy, and brings "tons of experience" both as a practicing attorney and a jurist. "She'll hit the ground running," he said. Justice Wolohojian joined what was then known as Hale & Dorr in 1991, following clerkships for U.S. District Judge Rya Zobel and U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit Judge Bailey Aldrich, according to a biography provided by the governor's office. She eventually became partner and chair of the firm's litigation department, focusing on complex commercial cases, including product liability and consumer class actions. Justice Wolohojian spent 16 months as an associate independent counsel on what came to be known as the Whitewater investigation into President Bill Clinton in 1994 before returning to the firm, which merged with Wilmer Cutler & Pickering in 2004. She was appointed to the Appeals Court by then-Gov. Deval Patrick in 2008. Besides a workload that has included authoring more than 900 decisions for the Appeals Court, Justice Wolohojian chairs the Supreme Judicial Court's Advisory Committees on the Rules of Appellate Procedure, and the Appeals Court's Committees on Judicial Mentoring and Training, Education, Policies and Practices, and En Banc Rehearings. Prior to Columbia Law School, where she received her law degree in 1989 and served as a Columbia Law Review editor, Justice Wolohojian earned a Ph.D. in English language and literature from the University of Oxford in 1987, and a Bachelor of Arts from Rutgers University in 1982. The selection earned praise from retired Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court Justice Geraldine S. Hines, who called Justice Wolohojian "uniquely qualified" for the role in the statement announcing the nomination. "This is a difficult job that demands intellectual vigor, respect for the rule of law, an unwavering commitment to equal justice under the law, and an impeccable work ethic," Justice Hines said. "From our time together on the Appeals Court and from my conversations with colleagues who have continued to serve on the court, I can say that Justice Wolohojian is richly blessed with these qualifications, as exemplified in her record of achievement as a lawyer and jurist." Outside her legal work, Justice Wolohojian is also a violinist who has performed with the Boston Civic Symphony for 35 years, and has served as president of the organization's board. She also serves as an overseer of a radio program called "From the Top," which features children performing classical music. The governor on Wednesday also nominated four new state district court justices, who if confirmed will sit in community courts in the greater Boston area. Among the nominees is longtime Supreme Judicial Court clerk Francis V. Kenneally, who has overseen the court's docket for the past decade. The other nominees include Lynnfield solo practitioner Leo Fama, Middlesex County Assistant District Attorney Courtney C. Linnehan, and Executive Office of Public Safety and Security attorney Marjorie P. Tynes, who is the agency's deputy executive director of the office of grants and research.

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