Michael Burrage Explained

Michael Burrage
Office:Choctaw Ambassador to the United States
Term Start:1974 – 1994, 2001 – present[1]
Office1:Chief Judge of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Oklahoma
Term Start1:1996
Term End1:March 1, 2001
Predecessor1:Frank Howell Seay
Successor1:James H. Payne
Office2:Judge of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Oklahoma
Judge of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Oklahoma
Judge of the United States District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma
Term Start2:June 9, 1994
Term End2:March 1, 2001
Appointer2:Bill Clinton
Predecessor2:H. Dale Cook
Successor2:James H. Payne
Birth Name:Billy Michael Burrage
Birth Date:9 June 1950[2]
Birth Place:Durant, Oklahoma, U.S.
Nationality:American
Choctaw Nation
Party:Independent
Education:Southeastern Oklahoma State University (BS)
University of Oklahoma College of Law (JD)

Billy Michael Burrage (born June 9, 1950), is an attorney and former United States district judge of all three districts of the United States district courts for Oklahoma: the Eastern, Western and Northern. He was appointed and confirmed in 1994 under President Bill Clinton. In 1996, he became Chief Judge of the Eastern District of Oklahoma, and served all three courts until his retirement in 2001. At that time, he returned to private practice, during which he also represented the Choctaw Nation as its general counsel[3] and ambassador to the U.S. government.[4]

Education and career

Burrage was born into a Choctaw family in Durant, Oklahoma, and became an enrolled member of the tribe. After attending local schools, he went to college at Southeastern Oklahoma State University, where he received a Bachelor of Science degree in 1971. He earned a Juris Doctor from University of Oklahoma College of Law in 1974. He is known as Michael Burrage in his professional life.

He went into private practice at the Stamper and Burrage law firm in Antlers, Oklahoma that year, working with them for two decades until 1994. That year he was appointed as a federal district judge for the district courts of Oklahoma. After retiring as federal judge in 2001, he returned to private practice.[5]

Federal judicial service

Burrage served as a United States district judge for all three of the United States district courts in Oklahoma—Western, Northern, and Eastern. He was nominated by President Bill Clinton on March 9, 1994, to the seat vacated by H. Dale Cook. He was confirmed by the United States Senate on June 8, 1994, and received his commission on June 9, 1994.

In 1996 Burrage became the Chief Judge of the Eastern District of Oklahoma, serving until his resignation from the court in 2001. He continued to serve the other two district courts as well.[6]

Post judicial career

Between 1999 and 2002, Burrage, his brothers Steve and David, and Steve's wife Roberta, became the sole owners of FirstBank of Oklahoma.[7] In 2001, Burrage resigned his judicial duties in all three Oklahoma districts, and returned to private law practice. He started Burrage Law Firm PLLC with his younger son David and daughter-in-law Heather (née Hillburn) Burrage.[8]

In 2008, Burrage became a Managing Partner in a second law firm, which was refounded as the Whitten Burrage Law Firm.[9] [10] His practice included representing the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma as general counsel, with his job taking on the makings of an ambassador.[11]

Family

Burrage's brother Steve is a former Oklahoma State Auditor and Inspector. Burrage's older son Sean served as a member of the Oklahoma Senate, and as the President of Southeastern Oklahoma State University in Durant, Oklahoma from 2014 to 2018.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: RIGHTING WRONGS: The Choctaw Nation's Michael Burrage makes opioid producers pay . Oklahoma Super Lawyers Magazine. Oklahoma City. 2019.
  2. https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=pst.000024727686&view=1up&seq=736 Confirmation hearings on federal appointments: hearings before the Committee on the Judiciary, United States Senate, One Hundred Third Congress, first session on confirmations of appointees to the federal judiciary.
  3. News: Oklahoma tribes split over status of descendants of their former slaves. . Ict News . Indian Country Today . Phoenix, Arizona . 2022.
  4. Web site: Oklahoma tribes testify at U.S. Senate hearing over Freedmen . McAlester News Capital . McAlester, Oklahoma . 2022.
  5. Web site: Michael Burrage . History & Bios . FirstBank . Atoka, Oklahoma.
  6. Web site: Burrage, Billy Michael - Federal Judicial Center.
  7. Web site: History of FirstBank . Our History . FirstBank . Atoka, Oklahoma.
  8. Web site: Burrage Law Firm PLLC Attorneys . Burrage Law Firm . Durant, Oklahoma.
  9. Web site: The Common Man's Lawyer . Oklahoma Super Lawyers 2011 . November 2011 . Nancy . Henderson.
  10. Web site: Michael Burrage . Attorneys . Whitten Burrage Law . Oklahoma City, Oklahoma . 2010.
  11. Web site: State's largest tribes split over status of descendants of their former slaves . The Norman Transcript . Norman, Oklahoma . 2022.