Frank Gaziano | |
---|---|
Associate Justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court | |
Assumed office August 18, 2016 | |
Appointed by | Charlie Baker |
Preceded by | Francis X. Spina |
Associate Justice of the Massachusetts Superior Court | |
In office 2004 –August 18,2016 | |
Appointed by | Mitt Romney |
Succeeded by | Diane C. Freniere |
Personal details | |
Born | Quincy,Massachusetts,U.S. | September 8,1963
Education | Lafayette College (BA) Suffolk University (JD) |
Frank M. Gaziano (born September 8,1963) is an associate justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court.
Born in Quincy,Massachusetts, [1] Gaziano received his Bachelor of Arts from Lafayette College in 1986 and his Juris Doctor from Suffolk University Law School in 1989. [2]
He began his legal career at the Boston law firm of Foley Hoag as a litigation associate. In 1991,he entered public service as an assistant district attorney with the Plymouth County District Attorney's Office in Brockton.
In 2001,he was appointed the First Assistant United States Attorney for the District of Massachusetts,where he was a member of the Organized Crime Strike Force. [1]
Gaziano was previously an associate justice for the Massachusetts Superior Court. He was nominated to the court by Governor Mitt Romney in 2004. [2] He served as the Regional Administrative Justice for Plymouth County and for Criminal Business in Suffolk County. He also chaired the Supreme Judicial Court's Standing Committee on Criminal Rules and was a member of the Supreme Judicial Court's Model Homicide Jury Instruction Committee. [1]
Gaziano was nominated to the Supreme Judicial Court by Governor Charlie Baker on June 14,2016,and confirmed by the Governor's Council on July 13,2016. [3] He succeeded Justice Francis X. Spina,who retired on August 12,2016.
In April 2020,Gaziano wrote for the unanimous court when it found that warrantless use of automatic number-plate recognition cameras to surveil a suspected heroin distributor's bridge crossings to Cape Cod was not an unconstitutional search because of the limited time and scope of the observations. [4] [5]
In February 2022,the Supreme Judicial Court ruled that a criminal defendant lacked a reasonable expectation of privacy in a Snapchat story he shared with an undercover Boston police officer,who friended the defendant using a pseudonym and then used the clip to charge him in an illegal gun case. Writing for the court,Gaziano said that requiring police officers to always identify themselves would render "virtually all undercover work" unconstitutional. [6] [7]
Suffolk University Law School is the private,non-sectarian law school of Suffolk University located in downtown Boston,across the street from the Boston Common and the Freedom Trail,two blocks from the Massachusetts State House,and a short walk to the financial district. Suffolk Law was founded in 1906 by Gleason Archer Sr. to provide a legal education for those who traditionally lacked the opportunity to study law because of socio-economic or racial discrimination.
Dwight Foster was an American lawyer and politician from Massachusetts. He served as Massachusetts Attorney General and was an associate justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court.
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Lesbian,gay,bisexual,and transgender (LGBT) persons in the U.S. state of Massachusetts enjoy the same rights as non-LGBT people. The U.S. state of Massachusetts is one of the most LGBT-friendly states in the country. In 2004,it became the first U.S. state to grant marriage licenses to same-sex couples after the decision in Goodridge v. Department of Public Health,and the sixth jurisdiction worldwide,after the Netherlands,Belgium,Ontario,British Columbia,and Quebec.
The Boston Municipal Court (BMC),officially the Boston Municipal Court Department of the Trial Court,is a department of the Trial Court of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts,United States. The court hears criminal,civil,mental health,restraining orders,and other types of cases. The court also has an appellate division which reviews questions of law that arise from civil matters filed in the eight divisions of the department.
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Judge Peter W. Agnes Jr. is a former justice of the Massachusetts Appeals Court as an Associate Justice,having been appointed by Governor Deval Patrick in 2011 and serving until reaching the mandatory retirement age of 70 in 2020. In addition to being an active member of the legal community in providing "…service on numerous Supreme Judicial Court and Bar Association committees,commissions[,]…task forces,[et al.]…," Justice Agnes has also been passionate about education,having taught at the Massachusetts School of Law for the past fifteen years,and continuing to do so currently. Agnes presently resides in Wayland,MA with his wife Eileen Agnes. They have four children and three grandchildren,boasting a passionate relationship with their extensive family outside of their legal careers.
David A. Lowy is an American attorney,academic and jurist serving as an associate justice of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts.
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