An investiture ceremony was held in Lansing last week for the newest member of the Michigan Supreme Court, Mary McCormack. She is pictured with Chief Justice Robert P. Young Jr., who administered the oath of office.
Photo by Rich Kotarba/Ultimate Images
New Justice Bridget Mary McCormack was praised for her legal scholarship and character at her investiture ceremony Wednesday at the Michigan Hall of Justice in Lansing.
Chief Justice Robert P. Young Jr., who administered the judicial oath to McCormack, called the ceremony “a grand moment for Justice McCormack. But it is also an opportunity for the rest of us who wear black robes to ponder, and reaffirm, our own commitment to the rule of law that makes our system of ordered liberty possible.”
McCormack, who was elected to the Supreme Court in November, was previously a law professor and associate dean at the University of Michigan Law School.
Speakers included Evan Caminker, dean of the University of Michigan Law School; Supreme Court Justices Michael F. Cavanagh and Mary Beth Kelly; William McCormack Jr., McCormack’s brother; and Steven Croley, her husband.
Wallace D. Riley, president of the Michigan Supreme Court Historical Society, also spoke, as did McCormack.
Caminker praised McCormack as “both brilliant and commonsensical” and “unceasingly fair-minded.” McCormack “has the strength of character necessary to follow the law, even if doing so is unpopular,” the dean said.
Cavanagh said the court “is indeed fortunate” to have McCormack as a member because of “her wisdom, her energy, her experience and her passion.”
In her remarks, McCormack vowed “to be a good listener, to the litigants who appear before us, but no less to you as well.”
“I believe in the power of law, and in the legal system that distinguishes our country from so many other places,” McCormack said. “Of course, anyone familiar with the legal system knows that perfect justice is not achieved in every case. But what is distinct about our system is that, where attorneys do their jobs, and judges do theirs, there justice might be achieved.”
McCormack’s sons, Harold Croley and Matthew McCormack, opened the ceremony with the Pledge of Allegiance.
Her daughter Anna Croley and her son John McCormack presented the new justice with her judicial robe.
Hon. Angela Kay Sherigan, an attorney and associate judge for the Little River Band of Ottawa Indians, presented McCormack with a banner from the Women Lawyers Association of Michigan.
McCormack, a graduate of the New York University Law School, spent the first five years of her legal career trying cases in New York City’s trial courts with the Legal Aid Society, and also argued in appellate courts with the Office of the Appellate Defender. In 1996, she became a faculty fellow at the Yale Law School.
In 1998, McCormack joined the University of Michigan Law School faculty, teaching criminal law and legal ethics courses; she was named Associate Dean for Clinical Affairs in 2002.
She expanded the law school’s practical education curriculum, including a domestic violence clinic, pediatric health advocacy clinic, mediation clinic, human trafficking clinic, and others.
In 2008, she founded the Michigan Innocence Clinic, in which students seek to exonerate the wrongfully convicted.
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