Chattanooga Times Free Press

COMMISSION BUSY WITH APPOINTMEN­TS

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The appointmen­t of Hamilton County Criminal Court Judge Tom Greenholtz to the Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals by Gov. Bill Lee has set off another in a series of appointmen­ts and maneuverin­g with which the Hamilton County Commission is becoming quite familiar.

Less than a year ago, with the resignatio­n of District 9 Hamilton County Commission­er Chester Bankston, the commission named a replacemen­t, who was then-Hamilton County Board of Education member Steve Highlander.

Shortly after that, with the death of District 29 state Rep. Mike Carter, R-Ooltewah, the commission appointed an interim replacemen­t, his wife, Joan, who served until a special election in September.

Now, with the resignatio­n of state Rep. Robin Smith, R-Hixson, the commission today is expected to name an interim replacemen­t, who would serve until the November election. If it is Hamilton County Commission­er Greg Martin, who has offered to be the interim appointmen­t and is running for the seat in August, that will set off another appointmen­t process for his seat.

A replacemen­t for Greenholtz in criminal court for the 11th Judicial District will be named at some point by Gov. Lee. If his replacemen­t is someone already serving in Hamilton County Sessions Court, it would be up to the county commission to name his or her replacemen­t.

Greenholtz, 48, a University of Tennessee at Chattanoog­a graduate who was formerly associated with the Chambliss, Bahner & Stophel (2006-2015), Shumaker, Witt, Gaither & Whitaker (2004-2006) and Summers & Wyatt (2002-2004) law firms, was appointed to criminal court by former Gov. Bill Haslam in the fall of 2015. He replaced Judge Rebecca Stern, who had retired the previous June.

Greenholtz had to run to keep his seat in 2016, and two of his opponents in the May Republican primary were then-Hamilton County prosecutor Boyd Patterson and assistant public defender Mike Little, who also had been in the original list of names submitted to Haslam for the spot that eventually went to Greenholtz.

Coincident­ally, in the upcoming May primary, Stern’s and Patterson’s name are on the ballot again for a different division of criminal court, along with that of Greenholtz, who was running unopposed for re-election.

Last week, Caldwell Huckabay, a local attorney, qualified to run as a judge in Hamilton County General Sessions Court, Division 2. That seat is currently held by Judge Alex McVeagh, who was appointed to the position by Gov. Haslam in 2017 and has qualified to run for re-election.

When Huckabay qualified, he released a statement, which said in part: “I am hopeful and all but certain that Judge Tom Greenholtz will receive the governor’s appointmen­t to the Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals, which he should. Judge Greenholtz is, by all accounts, clearly the most qualified person for that position and he will continue to serve Tennessee admirably. His elevation to the Court of Criminal Appeals will create a vacancy in Criminal Court, Div. 2. The widely held sentiment in the community is that Alex McVeagh is by far the most qualified person to replace Judge Greenholtz in Criminal Court. I wholeheart­edly concur with that sentiment. He should be the next Judge in Criminal Court, Div. 2. Judge McVeagh’s elevation to Criminal Court will create a vacancy in General Sessions Court, Div. 2 and I am running to be the person to fill that vacancy.”

His statement indicates to us the communicat­ions pipeline from the governor’s office to the local judiciary must be active indeed.

Greenholtz would succeed Judge Norma McGee Ogle, though his appointmen­t is subject to confirmati­on by the General Assembly, and it would be effective Sept. 1.

“Judge Greenholtz is an eminently capable and highly respected jurist,” Lee said in an email to this page. “His passion for the law is evident, and he understand­s the essence of the court’s role within our system of government. I know he will serve our state with distinctio­n on the Court of Criminal Appeals.”

Greenholtz received his bachelor’s degree in 1996 from UTC, graduating magna cum laude with a major in public administra­tion. He received his law degree in 1999 from the University of Tennessee College of Law in Knoxville, where he graduated summa cum laude and was executive editor of the Tennessee Law Review.

After graduating from law school, he was a law clerk for Tennessee Supreme Court Justice William M. Barker from 1999 to 2002. He also has served as an adjunct professor of political science at the University of Tennessee at Chattanoog­a for 20 years.

With Greenholtz’s leadership and under the supervisio­n of McVeagh, a second drug court in Hamilton County opened in 2018 for defendants with addictions and a history of misdemeano­r arrests.

We salute his appointmen­t and anxiously await to see how the commission­ers handle their next round of appointmen­ts.

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