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Frank Gordon Jr.

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Frank X. Gordon Jr.
Chief Justice of the Arizona Supreme Court
In office
January 1, 1987 – January 1, 1992
Preceded byWilliam A. Holohan
Succeeded byStanley G. Feldman
Justice of the Arizona Supreme Court
In office
September 16, 1975 – January 6, 1992
Appointed byRaul Castro
Preceded byLorna E. Lockwood
Succeeded byThomas A. Zlaket
Personal details
Born1929

Frank X. Gordon Jr. (born January 9, 1929) is a former Justice of the Supreme Court of Arizona[1] from September 16, 1975 to February 3, 1992. He served as Chief Justice[2] from January 1987 to December 1992.[3] Gordon was the first Supreme Court appointment under the new merit selection system, he was appointed by Governor Raul Castro.[4]

Gordon received a Bachelor of Arts from Stanford University in 1951, and an LL.B. from the University of Arizona School of Law in 1954.

He was an associate with the law firm of Gordon and Gordon in Kingman, Arizona from 1954 to 1962, and became a judge of the Superior Court of Mohave County in 1962. He served in that office until his appointment to the Arizona Supreme Court in 1975. In 1990, Gordon received an American Bar Association Pro Bono Publico Award for his efforts on behalf of the poor through his stewardship of the Volunteer Lawyers Program of Phoenix.[5]

Following Gordon's retirement from the court in 1992, United States District Judge Paul Gerhardt Rosenblatt appointed Gordon to mediate a dispute between various Native American tribes and the government of Arizona.[6] In February 1993, Gordon ruled in favor of a proposal put forth by the tribes to allow them to operate slot machine casinos in their territories.[7][6]

References

  1. ^ Arizona, State Bar of (1991). Arizona Attorney. State Bar of Arizona. p. 10. Retrieved February 5, 2017.
  2. ^ AP (November 12, 1987). "Jurors in Arizona Given Green Light". The New York Times. Retrieved February 5, 2017.
  3. ^ https://www.azcourts.gov/meetthejustices/Judicial-History
  4. ^ Rebecca White Berch, A History of the Arizona Courts, 3 Phoenix L. Rev. 11, 33 (2010)
  5. ^ ABA Journal, Vol. 76 (September 1990), p. 104.
  6. ^ a b Donald Craig Mitchell, Wampum: How Indian Tribes, the Mafia, and an Inattentive Congress Invented Indian Gaming and Created a $28 Billion Gambling Empire (2016).
  7. ^ Jeff Corntassel, Richard C. Witmer, Forced Federalism: Contemporary Challenges to Indigenous Nationhood (2008), p. 100.