Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Newest Sac. judge represents change in California’s judiciary

- By Darrell Smith The Sacramento Bee

The face of California’s judiciary continues to change statewide.

More women on the appellate court and on the Los Angeles bench. A new Black judge in the busy Riverside courts. And now in California’s capital, federal defender Jerome Price Jr., will soon take his seat as the latest Africaname­rican judge on the Sacramento Superior Court bench.

Price — part of Gov. Gavin Newsom’s latest class of judicial appointees — has served as chief assistant federal defender for the Office of the Federal Defender in the Sacramento-based Eastern District of California since 2021 and has been an assistant defender in the office since 2012.

“Our loss is the Sacramento Superior Court community’s gain,” said Heather Williams, federal defender for the Eastern District.

Williams called Price an “an adept, compassion­ate and tenacious defense lawyer (who) tirelessly worked to improve our office’s work and increase our voice by telling our clients’ stories and of the challenges we face when defending the accused. His experience­s will translate well to his Sacramento judgeship.”

Price joins other Black jurists on the Sacramento bench including

Newsom appointees former Sacramento County public defender Allison Williams and former district attorney’s prosecutor Carlton G. Davis; and Sacramento Superior Court’s first

Black presiding judge Bunmi O. Awoniyi.

They follow in the path laid by past Black Sacramento Superior Court jurists including Alice Lytle, Gary Ransom, Stacy Boulware Eurie, now an associate justice of the California 3rd District Court of Appeal; and Troy L. Nunley, now a federal judge in Sacramento’s Eastern District.

They also continue a shift in the Sacramento courts that is being mirrored statewide.

“It’s also been a tremendous opportunit­y to the way our court looks,” Awoniyi said earlier this year. “We have more diversity. We have more women. We have people of color, of different sexual orientatio­n, and some would say that that is a good thing and that it reflects more of the face of California.”

The courts growing more diverse

Nearly 9% of California’s judges identify as Black or African-american, according to the Judicial Council of California’s latest figures, up from 4.6% in 2006, the first year data was collected.

Female judges and justices saw the greatest percentage increase during the span, rising from 27% in 2006, to about 40%. The percentage of Hispanic or Latino judges and justices climbed from 6.3% in 2006 to 12.5%; while

Asian justices and judges also increased from 4.4% to more than 9%.

All told, California’s judiciary has grown more diverse every year since that first survey.

Retirement­s are one driver, but also mentoring and recruiting programs to, as Sacramento’s Awoniyi said, “reflect more of the face of California.”

The council encourages local courts to encourage people in underrepre­sented groups to pursue law careers; while the statewide Judicial Mentor Program, a joint program between the Governor’s office and the state’s trial courts, works with bar associatio­ns, law firms and government attorneys among others to identify, develop and recruit applicants to the bench.

The push has also come from the Governor’s office. Gov. Newsom appointed roughly 300 new judges during his first four years in office.

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