Steve C. Jones facts for kids
Quick facts for kids
Steve C. Jones
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Judge of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia | |
Assumed office March 3, 2011 |
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Appointed by | Barack Obama |
Preceded by | Orinda Dale Evans |
Judge of the Georgia Superior Court for the Western Judicial Circuit | |
In office 1995–2011 |
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Appointed by | Zell Miller |
Judge of the Municipal Court of Athens-Clarke County | |
In office 1993–1995 |
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Personal details | |
Born |
Steve CarMichael Jones
January 26, 1957 Athens, Georgia, U.S. |
Education | University of Georgia (BBA, JD) |
Steve CarMichael Jones (born January 26, 1957) is a United States district judge for the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia and a former Georgia Superior Court judge.
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Early life and education
Jones graduated from Cedar Shoals High School in Athens, Georgia. He received a Bachelor of Business Administration degree from University of Georgia in 1978. He then ran the Child Support Recovery Office for the local District Attorney for six years. Jones attended the University of Georgia School of Law and earned his Juris Doctor in 1987. He went to work as an assistant district attorney.
Judicial career
Georgia state judicial service
Jones served as a municipal court judge in Athens-Clarke County from 1993 to 1995. In 1995, Gov. Zell Miller appointed Jones to be a Georgia Superior Court judge for the Western Judicial Circuit, which includes Clarke and Oconee counties.
Federal judicial service
In April 2009, Jones was one of three candidates recommended by Democratic members of the Georgia House delegation to replace judge Hugh Lawson on the United States District Court for the Middle District of Georgia. Jones did not receive the nomination, which went to Macon attorney Marc T. Treadwell in February 2010.
After Jones was passed over for the Middle District of Georgia, which serves his hometown of Athens, Jones received consideration for a judgeship on the Atlanta-based United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia. On July 14, 2010, President Barack Obama nominated Jones to replace Orinda D. Evans on the Northern District of Georgia. His nomination was confirmed by the Senate on February 28, 2011 by a 90–0 vote. He received his commission March 3, 2011.
Notable decisions
- On December 17, 2019, Jones appeared in multiple news headlines after declining in an interlocutory order to stop a purge of 309,000 Georgia voters from the state's list of registered voters. Jones later found that plaintiff Fair Fight Action and other plaintiffs had not shown that they were likely to prevail on the question of constitutionality, but wrote that the State of Georgia was required to conduct “additional diligent and reasonable efforts” to make people aware of the need of canceled voters to re-register, and that the plaintiffs could seek “emergency relief” utilizing a state court that was better suited to deal with the matter. Georgia is one of nine states with a law allowing voters to be removed from the list of registered voters for inactivity, under the latest statute anyone who has three years of voting inactivity followed by non-voting in two federal election cycles and then failing to respond to a notice mailed out by the secretary of state’s office being eligible for removal. However Republican Secretary of State for Georgia, Brad Raffensperger was purging voters years before the legal deadline set in the new legislation based on a prior statute. Lawyers for Fair Fight Action contested this purge, and Fair Fight's CEO Lauren Groh-Wargo argued, "Georgians should not lose their right to vote simply because they have not expressed that right in recent elections." Articles by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution added in context that Fair Fight Action has also been challenging other obstacles that have previously prevented Georgia voters from being able to vote including rejections of absentee ballots, long lines at the polls, and precinct closures that have disproportionately harmed the ability of African Americans to vote in prior years, which could have prevented voters from voting previously and resulted in their placement on the inactive voters list. The list of past voters that Jones did not enjoin from being purged does not have any included data regarding racial disparities among the affected voters.
- On January 2, 2024, Jones ruled that right-wing group True the Vote's challenging of 364,000 voter registrations did not amount to "voter intimidation".
Personal life
Jones is married to Lillian Kincey, a teacher.