Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
District Seats: Ascension Parish Courthouse (Donaldsonville, LA), Assumption Parish Courthouse (Napoleonville, LA), St. James Parish Courthouse (Convent, LA) Current Judges [ 42 ] [ 43 ] Title
Alvin Turner Jr.: [30] First African American male to serve as an Assistant District Attorney and a Judge of the 23rd Judicial District [Ascension, Assumption, and St. James Parishes, Louisiana] Jesse N. Stone: [13] [14] First African American lawyer in Shreveport, Louisiana [Bossier and Caddo Parishes, Louisiana]
Ascension Parish (French: Paroisse de l'Ascension; Spanish: Parroquia de la Ascensión) is a parish located in the U.S. state of Louisiana. As of the 2020 census, the population was 126,500. [1] Its parish seat is Donaldsonville. [2] The parish was created in 1807. [3] Ascension Parish is part of the Baton Rouge metropolitan statistical area.
Current judges [3]; Title Name District Subdistrict Election section Division Party Term start Chief Judge: Vanessa Guidry-Whipple: 1: D: Democratic: 1991 Circuit Judge
Each judicial district is assigned its own state's attorney. They are appointed by a state commission. ... 23rd: Ascension, Assumption, St. James: Ricky Babin (R ...
The Judiciary of Louisiana is defined under the Constitution and law of Louisiana and is composed of the Louisiana Supreme Court, the Louisiana Circuit Courts of Appeal, the District Courts, the Justice of the Peace Courts, the Mayor's Courts, the City Courts, and the Parish Courts. The Chief Justice of the Louisiana Supreme Court is the chief ...
Carl W. Bauer, Louisiana House of Representatives and Louisiana State Senate from St. Mary Parish [10] Bruce M. Bolin, Louisiana House of Representatives and 26th Judicial District Court judge [11] James E. Bolin, 1937, Louisiana House of Representatives, 26th Judicial District Court judge, and Louisiana Second District Court of Appeal judge [2]
Congress again abolished the Western District of Louisiana and reorganized Louisiana as a single judicial district on July 27, 1866, by 14 Stat. 300. [1] On March 3, 1881, by 21 Stat. 507 , Louisiana was for a third time divided into Eastern and the Western Districts, with one judgeship authorized for each. [ 1 ]