A former Senior Vice President of a major insurer and Assistant District Attorney of the Manhattan District Attorney’s office, Kim Dean Hogrefe has been elected Chair of the Board of Trustees of The National Judicial College, the nation’s oldest and largest institution of judicial education.
Hogrefe was among four board officers elected for the
2017-18 term at the trustees’ meeting in Reno, Nevada in June. The others are:
Sandra S. Yamate, chair-elect; J. Matthew Martin, secretary; and Peter
Bennett, treasurer.
Secretary Martin, an administrative law judge with
the Social Security Administration in Asheville, North Carolina, joined the
board in 2012. He first attended the College in 2002 before receiving a
master’s in judicial studies through the NJC and the University of Nevada,
Reno.
Martin also serves as the first ABA Tribal Courts Fellow. In
2013 he retired after a decade of service as an associate judge of the Cherokee
Court for the Tribal Court for the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians. Martin
received his bachelor’s and law degree from the University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill.
“These four individuals represent four different areas of
the law and have each demonstrated their dedication to the College’s mission of
advancing justice through judicial education,” said NJC President Benes Z.
Aldana. “We are in good hands with their leadership of our board.”
Hogrefe, a lawyer who lives in the Greater New York City
area, joined the College’s board in 2013 and was named chair-elect in 2016. He
previously served as Chair of the Finance and Audit Committee. Hogrefe succeeds
Wm. T. (Bill) Robinson III as chair. Robinson, a former president of the
American Bar Association, passed away in April 2017.
Hogrefe worked for property and casualty insurer Chubb &
Son for nearly 30 years before retiring in 2016 as Worldwide Claim Technical
Officer. His earlier positions included Worldwide Specialty Claim Manager,
Claim Counsel and Manager of Chubb’s New York House Council Office.
Prior to joining Chubb & Son, he spent nine years as a
trial attorney, supervisor and administrator in the Manhattan District
Attorney’s Office. He is a member of the American Bar Association and has
served as a financial officer of the ABA’s Tort Trial and Insurance Practice
Section. He is a graduate of Yale University and the University of Pennsylvania
Law School.
Chair-elect Yamate, a trustee since 2014, serves as chief
executive officer of the Institute for Inclusion in the Legal Profession, an
organization dedicated to creating diversity and inclusivity in the legal
profession. Chair Hogrefe is a member of the institute’s board.
Previously, she was the director of the ABA’s Commission on
Racial and Ethnic Diversity and the first executive director of the Chicago
Committee on Minorities in Large Law Firms. Prior to that, she was a litigator
in Chicago for 10 years. She graduated from the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign and Harvard Law School.
Treasurer Bennett, an attorney from Portland, Maine, has
been a member of the board since 2014. He also currently serves as managing
partner of The Bennett Law Firm, which focuses on labor and employment law in
the eastern United States.
Bennett currently serves as a member of the Standing
Committee on the Federal Judiciary and as a trustee with the Appellate Judges
Education Institute. He is the past chair of the ABA’s Standing Committee on
Judicial Independence and the Tort Trial and Insurance Practice Section. He
graduated from Harvard College and Boston University School of Law.
The 21-member
Board of Trustees sets policy and provides leadership in achieving the
College’s mission. Members come from diverse fields, including the law and the
judiciary, as well as business and corporate areas.
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