John Suthers

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

John Suthers
John Suthers

Incumbent
Assumed office 
January 4, 2005
Preceded by Ken Salazar

Born October 18, 1951 (1951-10-18) (age 56)
Denver, Colorado
Political party Republican
Spouse Janet Suthers
Profession Lawyer
Religion Roman Catholic

John William Suthers (born October 18, 1951) is the current Attorney General of Colorado. He is a practicing Catholic and member of the Republican Party.

Contents

[edit] Background

Suthers was born in Denver, Colorado and adopted a month later by a Colorado Springs couple.

He attended St. Mary's High School, and the University of Notre Dame, from which he graduated in 1974 with a degree in government. Suthers also attended the University of Colorado School of Law, graduating in 1977.

[edit] Professional career

From 1977 to 1981, Suthers served as a deputy and chief deputy district attorney in Colorado Springs. From 1979 to 1981, he headed the Economic Crime Division of the district attorney’s office and co-authored a book on consumer fraud and white-collar crime.

In 1981, Suthers became a litigation partner in the Colorado Springs law firm of Sparks Dix, P.C. He remained with the firm until 1988, at which time he was elected district attorney of the Fourth Judicial District. At the conclusion of his second term, he returned to Sparks Dix in 1997 as senior counsel in charge of the firm’s litigation section.

In 1999, Suthers was appointed executive director of the Colorado Department of Corrections by Governor Bill Owens. In August of 2001, Suthers was appointed by President George W. Bush as United States Attorney for the District of Colorado. He was confirmed unanimously by the United State Senate.

[edit] Attorney General

Following the election of Ken Salazar to the United States Senate, John Suthers was nominated by Governor Owens and confirmed by the State Senate as the 37th Attorney General of Colorado in 2005. Suthers served the remaining two years of Salazar's term before running for reelection in 2006.

In November 2006, Suthers won election to the Attorney General’s Office, defeating challenger Fern O’Brien by nine points. During the same election cycle, the Republican candidate for Governor, Bob Beauprez, lost 56-40, and the Republican Secretary of State won by 1.5 percent.[1]

As Attorney General, Suthers has made criminal justice and consumer protection his main priorities. He has launched a Safe Surfing Initiative[2] to protect children from online predators. Legislation backed by Suthers made it a crime in Colorado to solicit a child online for a meeting. In the first two years of implementation, 250 alleged pedophiles were arrested on the new charges.[3]

Suthers also convened a Mortgage and Foreclosure Fraud Task Force in 2005 to study Colorado’s burgeoning foreclosure problem.[4] As Attorney General, he has backed legislation promoted by the task force to reduce appraisal fraud and criminalize unscrupulous “foreclosure consulting”.[5]

During the 2008 legislative session, Suthers spearheaded two consumer protection initiatives. Senate Bill 77, dubbed the "Hannah Montana Bill", will criminalize the use of software to circumvent online ticket sales limits.[6] Suthers' second measure would have banned most robocalls in the state of Colorado.[7] Despite being favored by more than 92 percent of Coloradans,[8] the measure was killed by a legislative committee.

John Suthers currently serves as co-chair of the National Association of Attorneys General criminal law committee. He also acts as one of four Attorneys General on United States Attorney General Michael Mukasey's Executive Working Group on Prosecutorial Relations, a group composed of federal, state, and local prosecutors from across the United States.[9]

[edit] Personal

John Suthers previously weighed a run for the U.S. Senate, where he would have vied to replace Senator Wayne Allard. He was considered a front runner for the Republican nominamtion[10] before yielding to former Congressman Bob Schaffer. He has authored five books, including his most recent, No Higher Calling, No Greater Responsibility: A Prosecutor Makes His Case (Fulcrum Publishing, 2008).

Suthers and his wife Janet have two daughters, Alison, a lawyer in Denver, and Kate, an officer in the United States Navy.

[edit] References

[edit] External links


Legal offices
Preceded by
Ken Salazar
Attorney General of Colorado
2005-Present
Succeeded by
Incumbent