Wayne L. Kidwell Explained

Wayne Kidwell
Office:Justice of the
Idaho Supreme Court
Appointer:Election
Termstart:January 1999
Termend:January 2005
Predecessor:Byron Johnson
Office1:Attorney General of Idaho
Termstart1:January 1975
Termend1:January 1979
Governor1:Cecil Andrus
John Evans
Predecessor1:W. Anthony Park
Successor1:David Leroy
Office2:Member of the Idaho Senate
Term Start2:January 13, 1969
Term End2:January 10, 1972[1]
Office3:Prosecuting Attorney
of Ada County, Idaho
Term3:1966[2]
Birth Name:Wayne LeRoy Kidwell
Birth Date:15 June 1938
Birth Place:Council, Idaho
Education:University of Idaho (BS, JD)
Spouse:Cheryl Ann "Shari" Linn Kidwell
Children:3 sons
Profession:Attorney
Party:Republican
Branch: U.S. Army
Rank: Captain
Unit: Military Police
Serviceyears:1961–1963
Battles:Cold War

Wayne LeRoy Kidwell (born June 15, 1938) is an American lawyer and jurist who is a retired Idaho Supreme Court justice, state attorney general, majority leader of the state senate.[3] He was also an associate deputy attorney general in the administration of President Ronald Reagan.[4]

Early life and education

Born in Council, Idaho, Kidwell graduated from Boise High School in 1956.[5] He attended the University of Idaho in Moscow, was a member of the Sigma Chi fraternity,[6] and graduated in 1960 with a degree in pre-law.[7] He spent a year in law school and then went on active duty with the U.S. Army,[8] as an officer in the military police in New Jersey and South Korea.[8] After his military service, Kidwell returned to the UI and earned a J.D. from its College of Law.[8] During law school, he served for a summer as an aide to U.S. Senator Len Jordan.[8]

Career

After a few years representing insurance companies in Boise, Kidwell ran successfully for Ada County prosecutor.[8] Two years later, Kidwell won a race for a seat in the Idaho Senate,[8] and a year later became the majority leader.[9] He ran for the congressional seat in 1972 that Jim McClure was vacating for the U.S. Senate, but lost in the Republican primary to Steve Symms and returned private legal practice for several years.

Idaho Attorney General

In 1974, Kidwell defeated incumbent Idaho Attorney General Tony Park.[8] [10] He served one four-year term and considered a run for governor in 1978,[11] but withdrew from the race in August 1977;[12] [13] he returned campaign donations, telling Idaho voters that he was taking a sabbatical to travel with his family.[8] [11]

Kidwell tried again for the congressional seat in 1980 vacated by Symms,[14] [15] but lost the primary to state senator and then moved his family

Federal service

After joining a notable firm in Hawaii as a partner, Kidwell in 1982 was appointed U.S. associate deputy attorney general, and he represented the Republic of the Marshall Islands as its appointed attorney general.[8]

Idaho Supreme Court

After returning to Idaho and working in private practice for close to a decade, Kidwell ran for the Idaho Supreme Court in May 1994 against incumbent Justice Cathy Silak and lost.[16] Four years later, Kidwell ran again for an open seat and won a three-way race in May and the run-off in November;[17] [18] he was the second in Idaho history to win elections in all three branches of state government (after former Chief Justice Allan Shepard), and was sworn in on

Kidwell served one full six-year term on the court and retired at age 66 in January 2005, succeeded by Jim Jones.[8]

Notes and References

  1. https://sos.idaho.gov/blue_book/2004/04_legislative.pdf 2003/2004 Idaho Blue Book, Chapter 4 - Legislative Branch
  2. https://books.google.com/books?id=-RLwAAAAMAAJ&q=ada+county+prosecuting+attorney+1966+kidwell RM-, Issue 612 (1977)
  3. News: Kidwell sworn in as Idaho high court justice . Moscow-Pullman Daily News . Idaho-Washington . Associated Press . Fick . Bob . January 5, 1999 . 5A.
  4. News: Wayne Kidwell tries for a comeback as a relative unknown . Moscow-Pullman Daily News . Idaho-Washington . Kenyon . Quane . Associated Press . May 7, 1994 . 4A .
  5. Web site: Wayne L. Kidwell . Boise High School, Class of 1956 . August 17, 2015.
  6. Web site: Sigma Chi . Gem of the Mountains, University of Idaho yearbook . 1960 . 216.
  7. Web site: Seniors . Gem of the Mountains, University of Idaho yearbook . 1960 . 312.
  8. News: Kathy . Hedberg . Off the bench; Retiring justice reflects on life spent in public service . Lewiston Morning Tribune . Idaho . October 17, 2004 . 1A .
  9. News: Kidwell hopes to build Northern Idaho ties . Lewiston Morning Tribune . (Idaho). Hall . Bill . December 8, 1971 . 13 .
  10. News: Kidwell – at Grangeville – favors Sunshine with changes . Lewiston Morning Tribune . (Idaho). Roche . Kevin R. . October 19, 1974 . 7.
  11. News: Kidwell says he would relish primary race against Symms . Spokane Daily Chronicle . Washington . Associated Press . December 19, 1978 . 24 .
  12. News: Ravenscroft believes door open to others . Spokane Daily Chronicle . Washington . Associated Press . August 4, 1977 . 3 .
  13. News: Kidwell explains withdrawal . Spokane Daily Chronicle . Washington . Associated Press . August 26, 1977 . 3 .
  14. News: Kidwell says he may run for House . Spokesman-Review . Spokane, Washington . Associated Press . May 22, 1979 . 6 .
  15. News: Kidwell courts conservative . Spokane Daily Chronicle . Washington . Associated Press . April 17, 1980 . 17 .
  16. Web site: Primary election results . State of Idaho . May 24, 1994 . August 17, 2015.
  17. Web site: Primary election results . State of Idaho . May 26, 1998 . August 17, 2015.
  18. Web site: General election results . State of Idaho . November 3, 1998 . August 17, 2015.