Talbot becomes chief judge to start Court of Appeals’ 50th year
The Michigan Supreme Court has issued an administrative order appointing Judge Michael J. Talbot the chief judge of the Michigan Court of Appeals. He will serve the remaining year of a two-year term starting on Jan. 1, 2015, and will succeed outgoing Chief Judge William B. Murphy, who served the first year of the term.
Talbot was appointed by Gov. John Engler to the Michigan Court of Appeals in 1998, and was most recently re-elected to the court on Nov. 4, 2014, for another six-year term commencing on Jan. 1, 2015, and expiring on Dec. 31, 2020. In May 2013, he was appointed by the Michigan Supreme Court to serve as the Special Judicial Administrator of Detroit’s 36th District Court, where he led the effort to restructure the court until September 2014.
Previously, Talbot had been appointed by governors of Michigan to serve as a judge of the Wayne Circuit, Detroit Recorder's, and Detroit Common Pleas courts. He was a member of the Judicial Tenure Commission from 2004 to 2010, and presently serves by appointment of the Michigan Supreme Court as chair of the Court Reporting Board of Review.
Talbot received his bachelor's degree from Georgetown University and his law degree from the University of Detroit.
Tab for bankruptcy professionals: $170M
The bankruptcy was the largest by a government in U.S. history. The case was closed earlier this month, but the judge still must sign off on the professional fees.
Detroit got rid of $7 billion in debt, slashed pensions and eliminated retiree health care. The city also is pledging to spend more than $1 billion on better services for residents.
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