The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Cobb’s 1st female probate judge puts humanity first

Life experience­s led her to choose protecting those who need help.

- By Henri Hollis henri.hollis@ajc.com

For most people, the court system might feel intimidati­ng, arcane and impersonal. Cobb County Probate Court Chief Judge Kelli Wolk, the first woman to hold that elected office, does her best to add a little humanity to her proceeding­s.

Wolk often presides over guardiansh­ip cases involving parents and their disabled children who are turning 18. The process requires parents to explain why their children are not ready to live independen­tly, which can be emotional for all parties involved.

As the parents work to justify their guardiansh­ip, Wolk often asks them a simple but surprising question: “What’s your favorite thing about your child?”

“These parents well up with tears because they publicly get to say something they’re proud of about their kid,” Wolk told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on. “Just letting them brag for a minute . ... It’s such a small thing, but it’s such an important thing.”

Wolk has been Cobb’s chief probate judge since 2009, in charge of the court that presides over the execution of wills, appointmen­t and removal of guardians,

Cobb County Probate Court Chief Judge Kelli Wolk became the first woman elected to her position in 2008.

commitment­s of the mentally ill and alcohol or drug abusers and the issuance of marriage licenses and weapons licenses, among other duties.

Now in her 15th year on the job, she said she didn’t often think much of her status as the first woman elected to the position in Cobb. The significan­ce only hit her when she explained it to her daughter a few years ago.

“She’s never known me not to be the probate judge of Cobb County,” Wolk said.

The idea that her mom was the first shocked Wolk’s daughter. Now 13 years old, she has grown up seeing women as experts, doctors and presidenti­al candidates, Wolk said. Her mother’s position as a local leader and elected official did not seem unusual in the slightest.

“She thought that was a really neat fact when she was younger, so that made it particular­ly special,” Wolk said.

Wolk did not originally aspire to work in the legal field, but she always has had a passion for helping people. She initially wanted to work in television, a goal she pursued from her high school days and achieved in her 20s. She graduated from Southwest Missouri State University with a degree in communicat­ions, then went on to work in broadcast news and later in sports, joining the TNT production team for the NBA’s Utah Jazz.

But back in Wolk’s high school days, she had a friend whose brother was developmen­tally disabled. Her friend’s experience led her to volunteer for a community organizati­on that recruited and trained teenagers to provide respite care for parents of special needs children and young adults. Wolk spent many hours in high school working at a highly specialize­d babysittin­g service, giving parents a break while looking after kids who might need catheters or require percussive therapy to help them breathe.

Wolk went to Georgia State’s College of Law with plans to become a sports and entertainm­ent attorney, but, taking her experience­s into account, it seems almost obvious that she would pivot to probate law.

“I also had a phenomenal wills teacher in law school, so that helps,” she said.

Now in her fourth term as the probate court’s chief judge, Wolk has brought significan­tly more transparen­cy to a section of the legal system that has faced public scrutiny and suspicion in recent years. She mentioned the lengthy public battle over Britney Spears’ conservato­rship as a flashpoint that put guardiansh­ip laws under a microscope. Then, in 2020, Netflix released the movie “I Care A Lot,” starring Rosamund Pike as a con artist who preys on the elderly by forcing them into legally appointing her as their guardian. Wolk said she was horrified by the movie but encouraged many attorneys in her field to watch it.

She pointed out that “I Care A Lot” was set in Nevada and that Georgia’s process for appointing legal guardians has many safeguards that would have derailed the movie’s plot. But she said the public interest in legal guardiansh­ip was a helpful warning against complacenc­y.

“Our goal and our singular focus is to be compassion­ate and find the best resolution to protect somebody who needs help,” Wolk said.

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