My friend, Carmen Beauchamp Ciparick.

AuthorLippman, Jonathan
PositionNew York Court of Appeals Judge - Testimonial

December 2012 saw the retirement of Senior Associate Judge of the Court of Appeals Carmen Beauchamp Ciparick following a long and brilliant career as a lawyer and a jurist. I have had the enormous good fortune to call her my friend for close to four decades. Judge Ciparick and I have spent a lifetime together in the courts that we love so much.

Our friendship began in the mid-1970s, when Judge Ciparick was the Chief Law Assistant of the New York City Criminal Courts and I was the Principal Court Attorney in the Civil Branch of Supreme Court, New York County. We had so much in common--both of us in the early stages of our professional lives, starting families, and building careers in the New York courts. We did not know then what lay ahead and that we would eventually be colleagues together on the Court of Appeals almost forty years after we first met. But what was abundantly clear, even in those early days in the court system, was that Carmen Beauchamp Ciparick was an exceptionally talented lawyer of great intellect, as well as a warm, delightful, and gracious person. She was genuine and caring, and we had a wonderful, mutually supportive relationship in our respective roles in the courts.

From day one, Carmen Ciparick was forging new paths. She worked during the day as a teacher in the New York City public schools while attending St. John's University School of Law at night, where she was one of only eight women in her class. Carmen became a member of the bar at a time when women--much less Latinas--were rare and not always warmly welcomed in the legal profession. Her first job after law school was for the Legal Aid Society in the South Bronx, where she served the legal needs of the less fortunate in society. Although her clients were suspicious of a woman lawyer, she quickly won them over. She met this first challenge in her legal career, as she approaches everything in life, with an even-keeled temperament, a great sense of humor, and an uncommon balance and humanity.

Judge Ciparick continued to be a trailblazer throughout her career in the courts. She joined the court system as assistant counsel to New York's Judicial Conference, the predecessor to the Office of Court Administration, where she was the only woman lawyer. She was in short order asked to serve as Chief Law Assistant of the New York City Criminal Court, where she was the first woman to supervise the court attorney pool. She soon became Counsel to the Deputy Chief...

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