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Gentry, Rouse and Roush named by Judicial Nominating Committee for Kenton Family Court vacancy


The Judicial Nominating Commission, led by Chief Justice of Kentucky John D. Minton Jr., has announced nominees to fill the vacant Family Court judgeship in Kenton County, which is the 16th Judicial Circuit.

The three nominees for the judgeship are attorneys Dawn Michelle Gentry of Edgewood, Thomas L. Rouse of Erlanger and Peter Allen Roush of Edgewood.

Dawn

Dawn Michelle Gentry

Gentry practices family law. She earned her juris doctor from Northern Kentucky University Salmon P. Chase College of Law.

Rouse is a sole practitioner with a focus on family law cases. He earned his juris doctor from the University of Kentucky College of Law.

Roush is a partner in the Roush & Stiltz law firm and handles family law cases. He earned his juris doctor from Northern Kentucky University Salmon P. Chase College of Law.

These names are submitted to Gov. Matt Bevin, who will make the final choice.

One of these nominees will be named to a vacancy created by the resignation of Lisa Bushelman.

Family Court
Family Court is a division of Circuit Court. In counties that have a Family Court, the court has primary jurisdiction in cases involving family issues, including divorces, adoption, child support, domestic violence and juvenile status offenses.

Thomas Rouse

Thomas Rouse

Judicial Nominating Commission
The Judicial Nominating Commission helps fill judicial vacancies by appointment when a vacancy occurs outside of the election cycle. The Kentucky Constitution established the JNC. Ky. Const. § 118; SCR 6.000, et seq.

Judicial Nominating Process
When a judicial vacancy occurs, the executive secretary of the JNC publishes a notice of vacancy in the judicial circuit or the judicial district affected. Attorneys may recommend someone or nominate themselves. The names of the applicants are not released. Once nominations occur, the individuals interested in the position return a questionnaire to the Office of the Chief Justice. Chief Justice Minton then meets with the Judicial Nominating Commission to choose three nominees. Because the Kentucky Constitution requires that three names be submitted to the governor, in some cases the commission submits an attorney’s name even though the attorney did not apply. A letter naming the three nominees is sent to the governor for review. The governor has 60 days to appoint a replacement and his office makes the announcement.

Peter Roush

Peter Roush

Makeup of the Judicial Nominating Commission
The commission has seven members. The membership is comprised of the chief justice of Kentucky (who also serves as chair), two lawyers elected by all the lawyers in their circuit/district and four Kentucky citizens who are appointed by the governor. The four citizens appointed by the governor must equally represent the two major political parties, so two must be Democrats and two must be Republicans. It is the responsibility of the commission to submit a list of three names to the governor and the governor must appoint a judge from this list of three.

Administrative Office of the Courts
The Administrative Office of the Courts in Frankfort is the operations arm for the state court system. The AOC supports the activities of nearly 3,400 court system employees and 403 elected justices, judges and circuit court clerks. As the fiscal agent for the state court system, the AOC executes the Judicial Branch budget.

From Kentucky.gov


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