The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

JUDICIARY TRUMP GETS TO APPOINT JUDGE ON FED COURT

- By Bill Rankin brankin@ajc.com

Judge Frank Hull of the federal appeals court in Atlanta has informed President Donald Trump she intends to take senior status, giving the president the opportunit­y to fill a Georgia vacancy on the busy court.

Among those being considered by the White House for the post are state Supreme Court justices Nels Peterson and Britt Grant and state Court of Appeals Court Judge Elizabeth Branch, according to state officials familiar with the nomination process. The White House and Georgia’s two senators, Johnny Isakson and David Perdue, declined to comment.

Hull, appointed to the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals by President Bill Clinton, has served on the court since 1997 and has been one of its more conservati­ve jurists. Hull is a former Fulton County trial judge who also served as a U.S. District Court Judge before joining the federal appeals court.

The 12-member court has jurisdicti­on over Georgia, Alabama and Florida. It often decides high-profile issues concerning the death penalty, voting rights, immigratio­n and civil rights litigation.

The three state court jurists being considered by the White House to succeed Hull are:

■ Branch, 49, served from 2004 to 2008 in the President George W. Bush administra­tion, first at the Department of Homeland Secu- rity and then at the Office of Management and Budget. Before joining the state appeals court in 2012, she worked at Atlanta law firm Smith, Gambrell & Russell.

■ Grant, 39, joined the Georgia Supreme Court in January after serving as solicitor general in the state Attorney General’s Office. She once worked for Gov. Nathan Deal when he was a U.S. congressma­n and for President George W. Bush’s Domestic Policy Council and Office of Cabinet Affairs.

■ Peterson, 38, also joined the Georgia Supreme Court in January, being elevated from the state Court of Appeals. He previously served as then-Gov. Sonny Perdue’s executive counsel, solicitor general in the Attorney General’s Office and vice chancellor for legal affairs to the Board of Regents.

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