Robert Lougy

Robert Lougy is a judge on the New Jersey Superior Court and the former acting New Jersey Attorney General.

Robert Loughy
Judge of the New Jersey Superior Court
Assumed office
2016
Acting Attorney General of New Jersey
In office
March 2016  June 2016
Preceded byJohn Jay Hoffman
Succeeded byChristopher Porrino
Personal details
Alma materPennsylvania State University
Columbia Law School

Lougy graduated from Pennsylvania State University in 1994 and from Columbia Law School in 2002.[1]

New Jersey Attorney General

A resident of Cranbury, New Jersey, Lougy was appointed by Governor Chris Christie on February 29, 2016 to serve as the state’s Attorney General following the resignation of John Jay Hoffman, who left to become General Counsel of Rutgers University.[2] Christie hailed Lougy for his deep public service experience, which spanned across both Democrat and Republican administrations.[3] Despite criticisms that Governor Christie had assembled one third of his cabinet without the required Senate confirmation, politicians and special interests from both sides of the aisle commended his appointment.[4] Beginning his position on March 15, 2016, Lougy oversaw more than 7,000 employees and served as the state’s top law enforcement official.[5]

Christie appointed Lougy to serve as a Superior Court Judge on May 20, 2016, after only two months as acting Attorney General.[6] Lougy resigned from his position as Attorney General on March 14, 2016. He was approved by the Senate and assigned to the Family Division of Mercer County.[7]

gollark: Oh yes, I suppose at infinite *program* size.
gollark: Really? It doesn't have unbounded cells.
gollark: Wrong.
gollark: I thought Python objects were about 30 bytes each?
gollark: It was less efficient, I think.

References

Legal offices
Preceded by
John Jay Hoffman
Acting
Attorney General of New Jersey
2016
Succeeded by
Christopher Porrino
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.