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  1. E. Joseph Bleich was an associate justice of the Louisiana Supreme Court and a judge for Louisiana's 1st Judicial District. [1] [2] On October 1, 2020, the Louisiana Supreme Court appointed Bleich as judge pro tempore to fill the vacancy created by the retirement of Felicia Toney Williams .

  2. E. Joseph Bleich (born 1950) was a justice of the Louisiana Supreme Court in 1996. Born in Shreveport, Louisiana, Bleich graduated from Ruston High School in 1968 and attended Louisiana Tech University before receiving his J.D. from the Louisiana State University law school (now the Paul M. Hebert Law Center) at Louisiana State University in 1973.

  3. Following is a list of justices of the Louisiana Supreme Court and their years of service.

  4. The seven justices on the Louisiana Supreme Court are selected through partisan elections. Justices are elected to 10-year terms, and must face re-election if they wish to serve again. [4] Unlike most states, supreme court justices in Louisiana are elected to represent specific districts.

  5. With a total of seven justices on the Louisiana Supreme Court, one justice is running for re-election without opposition. As of April 2024, there were five Republican and two Democratic judges on the court.

  6. 21 sie 2024 · The high court’s decision Tuesday evening to drop two candidates from the ballot for failing to meet qualification requirements leaves 1st Circuit Court of Appeal Judge John Michael Guidry unopposed in the Nov. 5 election.

  7. Louisiana Legislature, 1980-1982. Judge, Louisiana District Court for the Parishes of Lincoln and Union, 1982-1985. Associate Justice, Louisiana Supreme Court, May 3, 1996-December 31, 1996. Born in Shreveport, Louisiana • Honor Graduate of Ruston High School, 1968 • Graduate of Louisiana Tech University • Received J.D. from LSU School of ...

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