The Catoosa County News

Chief Judge Kristina Cook Graham seeking reelection

- Staff reports

Kristina Cook Graham, chief judge of the Superior Court for the Lookout Mountain Judicial Circuit, on Jan. 28 announced her reelection campaign for the May 19 general primary and nonpartisa­n general election.

The Lookout Mountain Judicial Circuit includes Catoosa, Chattooga, Walker and Dade counties and serves approximat­ely 177,000 residents across the four-county area.

Judge Graham, a veteran of the Superior Court, has won seven consecutiv­e elections since her appointmen­t by former Governor Zell Miller in 1992. In 2016, she became chief judge upon the retirement of former Judge Jon B. Wood.

Graham said she has “worked tirelessly to modernize the local court system by introducin­g the circuit’s first ever Accountabi­lity Courts, including Drug Court, Mental Health Court, and Parental Accountabi­lity Court.

“The work we are doing is saving lives, reuniting families, and bringing healing to communitie­s,” Graham said.

Accountabi­lity Courts are alternativ­e sentencing programs available to qualifying individual­s that use evidence-based treatments and accountabi­lity measures to reduce recidivism, save taxpayer dollars, keep communitie­s safe, and restore citizens as healthy and productive members of the community, Graham said. If an individual qualifies, he or she can avoid incarcerat­ion by joining the rigorous 18-24 month program, she said.

Program participan­ts must follow strict curfew and sobriety rules, attend regular court appearance­s, submit to random drug screenings, and maintain full-time employment in order to avoid a long period of incarcerat­ion, she said. Felony Drug Court and Mental Health Court focus on individual­s with addictions and mental health illnesses while Parental Accountabi­lity Court helps chronic nonpayers of child support meet their obligation­s to their children, she said.

“Before my term as chief judge, the Lookout Mountain circuit was one of the few judicial circuits in Georgia without Accountabi­lity Courts,” Graham said. “Individual­s with addictions and the mentally ill often had few options other than incarcerat­ion. Now, we’ve made a path to restoratio­n for those who are willing to work hard and play by the rules.”

According to a study performed by the Carl Vinson Institute of Government, Felony Drug Court participan­ts who graduate from the program are 50 percent less likely to re-offend compared to those who terminated their participat­ion in the program, she said. Mental Health Courts also see similar success with program graduates seeing a 40 percent decrease in their chances of reoffendin­g, she said. And according to economic estimates, graduates produce $22,129 in economic benefits to their communitie­s and save taxpayers almost $5,000 in court and prison costs, she said.

“Accountabi­lity Courts are saving taxpayers thousands of dollars a year,” Graham said. “And while Accountabi­lity Courts aren’t for everyone, the evidence shows that incarcerat­ion isn’t always the answer, either.

In addition to institutin­g the circuit’s Accountabi­lity Courts, Graham administer­s the day-to-day business of the Superior Court, including the creation of the court calendar and applying for state grant funding while also hearing cases across all four counties. She frequently travels across the state working with other judicial profession­als to gain resources for the Lookout Mountain circuit. This year marks Graham’s 28th year as a Superior Court judge.

Graham is a graduate of Vanderbilt University and Tulane University School of Law. She lives in Cloudland, Ga., with her husband Gordon, who is a cardiologi­st at Chattanoog­a Heart Institute and her dog Maddie. She Graham has two sons, Sutton and Jeffrey Connelly, who are practicing attorneys. Her daughter, Elizabeth Connelly, is a photograph­er.

The general primary and nonpartisa­n general election will occur on Tuesday, May 19. The last day for a person to register and be eligible to vote will be April 20. Citizens can early vote Mondays through Fridays beginning April 27, with extended Saturday hours on May 9. Because Superior Court judges are nonpartisa­n elected officials, voters may request either a Republican, Democratic, or nonpartisa­n primary ballot in order to vote for a judge.

“I am deeply honored by the continued confidence and support from my fellow citizens,” Graham said. “With another term as your chief judge, I will strengthen these programs and guarantee that they are sustainabl­e in order to better serve our citizens.”

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Kristina Cook Graham

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