CLEVELAND — When Cassandra Collier-Williams was first elected as a Cuyahoga County Common Pleas General Division judge in 2012, she was one of the few African Americans to ever hold the title. 


What You Need To Know

  • A group of judges across the state are forming an association to address the lack of diversity in the courtroom and better serve communities of color

  • The Ohio Black Judges Association, Inc., the first group of its kind in the state

  • Black judges representing counties across the state will mentor future lawyers and judges of African descent, support one another and collectively advocate for Black judicial issues

“We have 34 judges on our bench in the General Division, and at the time that I got on the bench, I was No. 3. There were three African American judges,” Collier-Williams said. 

Almost 10 years later, that still hasn’t changed. 

“Now there are still three, but historically, I am just the fourth African American female judge to be elected to the Court of Common Pleas in the history of the court," Collier-Williams said.

The disparity isn’t only seen on a county level, but it can be found across the state. 

“In Ohio, right now there's about 56 African American judges out of over 700. So we're about 8% or a little less than that," Collier-Williams said. 

She and her colleague, Judge Emanuella Groves of Ohio's 8th District Court of Appeals, are sphere-heading efforts to change that by forming the Ohio Black Judges Association. Black judges representing counties across the state will mentor future lawyers and judges of African descent, support one another and collectively advocate for Black judicial issues.

“When we look at sentencing, I think when we look at the overpopulation and the disproportionate number of Blacks in jail. I think when we look at issues of mental health, when we look at addiction and how addiction is being addressed and how it was addressed," Groves explained.

Groves and Collier-Williams said diversity in the courtroom helps give a voice to those who are too often seen in front of the bench but too infrequently seen sitting on it. 

“It makes a difference when you come into a courtroom, and the person who is in authority looks like you," Collier-Williams said.

“There's an instant sense of, 'OK, I think maybe this this judge is gonna understand you know where I'm coming from,'” Groves said. 

Groves said since judges play a large roll in what justice looks like, it’s so important that they have shared experiences with the communities they serve.  

“Certainly we have to hold people accountable, but we also have to recognize where they come from,” Groves said.