Donna L. Cooper is a candidate for the Turkington vacancy in the 1st Judicial Subcircuit.
I was born in and educated in Chicago. I am a graduate of Northwestern University and DePaul University Law School. My legal experience has been in the public sector.
I was a staff attorney at the Illinois Industrial Commission, where I wrote decisions and opinions for the Arbitrators and Commissioners from 1981 to 1985.
I served as an Assistant Public Defender from 1985 to 1989. I began at Juvenile Court on the abuse and neglect calendar for nine months and then went to delinquency. I took a little break from juvenile and spent about 6 months in the Appeals Division. I wrote appeals on two of the delinquency cases that I tried at juvenile. I was promoted and returned to juvenile as an assistant supervisor for about a year.
I joined the City as an Assistant Corporation Counsel in the Municipal Prosecutions Division in 1989. From Muni, I went to the Chicago Park District in 1992 as an Assistant General Attorney handling workers’ compensation cases. In 1995 returned to the City where I first started in the Torts Division doing worker's compensation. In 2000, I transferred to the 1st Municipal group and was promoted to the law division in February 2002. I have tried at least 14 jury cases to verdict.
I am an active member of St. Joachim Church and a founding member of my neighborhood block club. I have been a youth mentor in the State of Illinois Lincoln's Challenge Program, as well as the Cook County Bar Association's Legal Explorers and a past volunteer with Southwest Women Working Together "Read With Me" program.
I am a military lawyer in the Judge Advocate General’s Corps. I was commissioned as a First Lieutenant in the U.S. Army Reserves in 1988, transferred to the Illinois Army National Guard in 1993 where I became the first African–American JAG in the Illinois Army National Guard. In fact, I am still the only Black JAG in the IL Army Guard.
I was the first Illinois Army National Guard JAG deployed to Iraq. I was activated and deployed to Iraq in August of 2003 as part of a special team sent to work with Polish troops. However, I did not get to assist setting up the courts as initially planned. I served as the liaison officer between the Polish and the U. S. legal office of the Combined Joint Task Force 7 (CJTF7). I was also initially Deputy Chief, then Chief, of LEGAD (Legal Advisors) Section of the Multi-National Division, Central South (MND–CS). This was the Area of Responsibility (AOR) of the Polish, Ukrainian, Spanish and other international troops.
My duties with the MND-CS included: advising the Command of the MND-CS, on legal aspects during the planning and conducting of military and humanitarian operations; advising and interpreting International Law of War, Rules of Engagement and Memorandum of Agreement issues; and detention operations. I supervised and worked with foreign attorneys. In addition, I reviewed and interpreted foreign legal documents. I helped the Polish establish procedures for claims made by Iraqi citizens against the various nations and handled claims filed against the United States. I was promoted to Lieutenant Colonel while there and was pinned by a Polish Brigadier General.
While I was deployed, I took early retirement from the City of Chicago in February 2004. My intent was to pursue and do something new legally when I returned. However, since I’ve been home, the Illinois National Guard has been short on lawyers and I have been performing additional duties and training with the Guard. I have also taken courses at the JAG school in Charlottesville, Virginia and attended military legal conferences and seminars around the country. In August 2006, I went to Germany on a keep up tour for two weeks.
I was previously on the "short list" for associate judge in 1998, 1999 and most recently in February, 2007. I have been found "Qualified or Recommended" by the 10 major bar associations.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Anonymous comments are once again permitted on this blog but, for crying out loud, please be civil. Comment moderation remains in effect. The management reserves its right to refuse to publish comments.