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ATLANTA – Georgia’s largest and busiest trial court has become the first in the state to adopt specialty courts focusing exclusively on civil and criminal cases.

Judges of the Superior Court of Fulton County have created two, three-judge specialty court teams. One group of three judges will focus exclusively on civil cases; the second will preside only over criminal cases.

“With our jail bursting at the seams we as elected judicial officers have a responsibility to do everything within our means to streamline and improve the courts; this is only the latest of a number of efforts by our court,” said Chief Judge Doris L. Downs.

Members of the new civil court team are: Chief Judge Downs and Judges Jerry Baxter and Melvin K. Westmoreland. Their pending criminal cases were assigned to members of the criminal case team.

Criminal court team judges are: Judges Marvin S. Arrington Sr., T. Jackson Bedford and Michael D. Johnson.

With more than 30,000 new cases filed in the Court each year the Fulton Superior Court has already taken a number of other innovative steps to improve case-flow while ensuring that each case receives adequate attention and due legal process.

Some 10 years ago the Fulton Superior Court established a specialty team of three judges to hear litigation arising from domestic relations issues. This Family Court is currently overseen by Judges Cynthia D. Wright, Gail S. Tusan and Bensonetta T. Lane.

Another case management innovation by the Fulton Superior Court is the creation of Non-Complex felony case calendar. In this process, begun in 2006, prosecution and defense lawyers and court staff stay assigned to a case from arrest through conclusion.

Judge Alfred J. Dempsey Jr. oversees cases in the Non-Complex felony court.

The Non-Complex felony court has had a large impact on the length of time it takes to conclude cases because the process includes from 75 percent to 80 percent of all felony cases filed each year in Fulton. Now more than 90 percent of these cases are resolved within nine weeks of arrest. The small number remaining are immediately set to begin trial.

“Since beginning the Non-Complex felony court we have seen a reduction in the time it takes to resolve the vast majority of our felony cases,” Judge Downs said. “This directly affects the safety of the public and reduces costs to Fulton taxpayers.”

Since 2002, the Fulton Superior Court’s caseload has increased 27 percent and it expected to exceed 38,100 cases by year’s end. The court is Georgia’s busiest, serving the judicial needs of approximately 980,000 county residents and hearing all lawsuits filed against Georgia’s state government. The Court’s nineteen judges preside over administrative appeals, major criminal cases, civil cases and all domestic relations cases.

The Fulton Superior Court also administers a variety of programs and services designed to provide the citizens of Fulton County with meaningful access to the judicial system.

 
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