Verda Colvin | |
Office: | Associate Justice of the Georgia Supreme Court |
Appointer: | Brian Kemp |
Term Start: | July 29, 2021 |
Predecessor: | Harold Melton |
Office1: | Judge of the Georgia Court of Appeals |
Appointer1: | Brian Kemp |
Term Start1: | April 10, 2020 |
Term End1: | July 28, 2021 |
Predecessor1: | Carla Wong McMillian |
Successor1: | Andrew Pinson |
Birth Place: | Atlanta, Georgia, U.S. |
Education: | Sweet Briar College (BA) University of Georgia (JD) |
Verda M. Colvin (born 1965)[1] [2] is an associate justice of the Supreme Court of Georgia and former judge of the Georgia Court of Appeals.[3]
Colvin received her bachelor's degree from Sweet Briar College and her Juris Doctor from the University of Georgia School of Law in 1993.[4] [5]
Previously, she served as an Assistant United States Attorney for the Middle District of Georgia, Assistant District Attorney for the Clayton County District Attorney's Office, Assistant General Counsel for Clark Atlanta University, Assistant Solicitor for the Solicitor's Office in Athens-Clarke County, and as an associate for Ferguson, Stein, Watt, Wallas, and Gresham.[6]
Colvin was appointed to the Macon Circuit Superior Court by Georgia Governor Nathan Deal on March 24, 2014. A March 25, 2016, address by Colvin to a group of students as part of a “Consider the Consequences” program for at-risk students that Judge Colvin was unaware was being recorded went viral and was viewed hundreds of thousands of times, picked up by local, national and international media, and played by teachers for their students.[7] In June 2019, she was appointed to a state judicial commission.
On March 27, 2020, Governor Brian Kemp appointed Colvin to the Georgia Court of Appeals. She was sworn in on April 10, 2020.[8] She is the state's first African-American female appointed to the Georgia Court of Appeals by a Republican governor.
On July 20, 2021, Colvin was appointed to the Supreme Court of Georgia by Governor Brian Kemp, to the seat vacated by justice Harold Melton, who retired on July 1, 2021.[9]