Belvin Perry

Belvin Perry Jr. (born October 10, 1949, in Orlando, Florida) is a personal-injury attorney and former chief judge in the Florida's Ninth Judicial Circuit.[1] He was the presiding judge for the high-profile Casey Anthony murder trial.

Belvin Perry Jr.
Chief Judge of Florida's Ninth Judicial Circuit (retired)
In office
1989–2014
Personal details
Born
Belvin Perry Jr.

(1949-10-10) October 10, 1949
Orlando, Florida, U.S.
NationalityAmerican
ResidenceOrlando, Florida, U.S.
Alma materTuskegee University (BS, MEd)
Texas Southern University (JD)
OccupationAttorney
Professionattorney, judge

Early life and career

Perry's father, the late Belvin Perry, Sr. (born October 8, 1920–died May 16, 1995) served as one of Orlando's first two African-American police officers.[2][3]

Perry earned his Bachelor of Science degree in History in 1972 from Tuskegee University. In 1974 he earned his Masters of Education from the same university. In 1977, Perry received a Juris Doctor degree from Texas Southern University's Thurgood Marshall School of Law.[1] Perry is a member of the Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity.

Judge Perry has been involved in two of Central Florida's most highly publicized trials. As a prosecutor, Perry was the lead attorney in the case of Florida v. Buenoaño, in which Judy Buenoano was tried and convicted of killing her son Michael Goodyear and her husband at the time, James Goodyear. As a Circuit Court Judge, Perry presided over the case "State of Florida v. Casey Marie Anthony" (Case Number 2008 CF15606-0, in which Casey Anthony was charged in the death of her daughter Caylee Anthony. The jury found Anthony not guilty of First Degree Murder, Aggravated Child Abuse, and Aggravated Manslaughter of a child, but guilty of four misdemeanor counts of Providing False Information to a Law Enforcement Officer.[4]

In 2014, Perry retired from the bench and immediately joined the Orlando law firm of Morgan & Morgan as a personal-injury attorney.[5][6]

gollark: Most modern CPUs support "simultaneous multithreading", where one core can run multiple threads by switching between them *very* fast (without OS intervention/context switches, I think). You might expect this to make them slower, and sometimes it does, but each core has a bunch of resources which just one running thread may underutilize.
gollark: Basically, "cores" is the number of physical... concurrent... processing... things on the CPU, and "threads" is how many tasks they can run "at once".
gollark: It's fine. Probably.
gollark: Also, I've heard that currency markets are pretty terrible for individual people doing investing for some reason I forgot.
gollark: I see.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.