CONTACT:
Nadine Maeser
Public Information Officer
[email protected]
410-260-1488

Terri Charles
Asst. Public Information Officer
[email protected]
410-260-1488
 

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
September 18, 2019

Government Relations and Public Affairs
187 Harry S. Truman Parkway
Annapolis, Maryland 21401
410-260-1488
 

Judge Audrey J. S. Carrión named Baltimore City circuit administrative judge

ANNAPOLIS, Md. -- Maryland Court of Appeals Chief Judge Mary Ellen Barbera has named Judge Audrey J. S. Carrión administrative judge of the Eighth Judicial Circuit, Baltimore City, effective Jan. 12, 2020.

Judge Carrión will succeed Judge W. Michel Pierson as circuit administrative judge upon his retirement in January after nearly 16 years on the Circuit Court for Baltimore City. Judge Pierson joined the court in January 2004 and has served as circuit administrative judge since Dec. 1, 2013.

“Judge Pierson has been a committed and exceptional leader of the Circuit Court for Baltimore City. He has provided exemplary service to the Judiciary, the residents of Baltimore, and the people of Maryland,” Chief Judge Barbera said. “Judge Carrión is eminently qualified to lead the court to meet the mandate of equal justice under law. She brings a wealth of experience as a jurist and a capable, dynamic manager. I look forward to working with her to meet the challenges the future will bring.”

The Circuit Court for Baltimore City is the only circuit court in the Eighth Judicial Circuit. As a result, the circuit administrative judge of the Eighth Judicial Circuit is responsible, in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City, for the administration of the court, budget, and procurement functions, as well as management of trial calendars to ensure the expeditious resolution of cases.

“I am honored to have Chief Judge Barbera’s trust and support in this new chapter of service,” Judge Carrión said. “It has been a privilege to work with Judge Pierson, and I intend to build upon his wonderful example of thoughtful leadership. I look forward to this opportunity to serve my community and the courts in a new role.”

Judge Carrión was appointed to the District Court in Baltimore City in December 1995 and served there until November 1999, when she was elevated to the Circuit Court for Baltimore City. Judge Carrión was judge-in-charge of the court’s family division from November 2003 to December 2009. Since 2013, she has represented the Eighth Judicial Circuit on the Judiciary’s Conference of Circuit Judges. She has been actively involved in several Judiciary committees and most recently, from 2015 to 2016, was a member of the Judicial Council’s Court Access and Community Relations Committee, chair of its language access subcommittee, and a member of the Judicial Council’s Specialty Courts and Dockets Committee.

After attending Colegio Espiritu Santo in Puerto Rico, Judge Carrión graduated from the College of Notre Dame of Maryland in 1981 and earned her Juris Doctor from the University of Baltimore School of Law in 1984. She was admitted to the Maryland Bar in 1985. Before joining the bench, Judge Carrión was in practice with Russell and Thompson, P.A., from June 1985 to October 1986, and Piper & Marbury from October 1986 to March 1990. She served in the Office of the Maryland Attorney General, Correctional Litigation Unit, from March 1990 to December 1995.

Judge Carrión has received numerous awards and was twice named by The Daily Record as one of “Maryland’s Top 100 Women.” In 2011, she received The Daily Record’s Maryland Leadership in Law Award and earned an Outstanding Achievement Award from the Maryland Hispanic Bar Association. Judge Carrión is a fellow of the Maryland Bar Foundation and the Baltimore City Bar Foundation. She has been a member of the Maryland Hispanic Bar Association since 1993 and was a member at large from 1994 to 1999.

“I have had the honor of working with Judge Carrión since I came to the bench and know her as an astute judge and dynamic leader,” Judge Pierson said. “I am grateful to have been of service to Baltimore and the people of Maryland as a judge and leader of the Eighth Judicial Circuit. It is reassuring to leave the management of the court in such capable hands.”

###