Deborah Cook
Deborah Cook waited
almost two years to learn the good news. In May 2003, the U.S. Senate
voted 66 to 25 to confirm her nomination to the 6th U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals. As the judge to that court, she rules on appeals from the
federal district courts in Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio and Tennessee. In
the federal court system, only the U.S. Supreme Court is higher that
the 12 appellate circuits. Cook's appointment is for life.
Cook is a strict
constructionist of the law and is considered a conservative. Thus, her
nomination caused much controversy in liberal Democratic circles. Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass, was particularly critical of Cook's record
on worker's rights. "She seems to think 'the law' should almost
always protect corporations and not injured workers." Cook objected
to that characterization, "It was just an incredible distortion."
When President George
W. Bush nominated Cook for the federal court in May 2001, she was serving
on the Ohio Supreme Court. She was first elected to that seat in 1994
and re-elected in November 2000.
Prior to her election
to the Ohio Supreme Court, Cook served as a judge of the Ninth District
Court of Appeals covering Summit, Wayne, Medina and Lorain counties
for the four years prior to taking the Ohio Supreme Court bench
A native of Pittsburgh,
Cook received her Bachelor of Arts (1974) and her Juris Doctor (1978)
degrees from The University of Akron. Following graduation from law
school until her election to the Court of Appeals, Cook was with Akron's
oldest law firm, Roderick, Myers & Linton and became the firm's
first female partner. She later married partner Robert Linton.
Cook was president
of Delta Gamma and president of her senior class at The University of
Akron and is a member of the Omicron Delta Kappa leadership and academic
honorary. Cook received the Delta Gamma National Shield Award for Leadership
and Volunteerism and the Akron Women's Network 1991 Woman of the Year
Award. The university presented her with an Honorary Doctor of Laws
degree in 1996 and in 1997 she received The University of Akron's Alumni
Award.
Cook chaired the Commission
on Public Legal Education and was a member of the Ohio Courts Futures Commission
and the Ohio Commission on Dispute Resolution and Conflict Management. She is
a past president of the Akron Bar Association Foundation, a fellow of the American
Bar Foundation, and a member of the Akron Bar Association disciplinary committee.
On the community side, Cook
has served on the Akron Art Museum Board of Trustees, Summit County United Way
Board of Trustees, Volunteer Center Board of Trustees, and Women's Network Board
of Directors. She was also a past chair of the Junior Leadership Akron Project,
Safe Landing Shelter volunteer, Mobile Meals volunteer; Akron School of Law Board
of Trustees, and The University of Akron Alumni Board.
Photo courtesy of the Beacon
Journal.
--Zachary
Jackson
