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Sabita Singh to be sworn in as Massachusetts Judge Aziz Haniffa in Washington, DC | December 11, 2006 16:32 IST
Indian American attorney Sabita Singh was confirmed as a district court judge in Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney had nominated Singh for the post of District Court judge last October but had to wait till the Governor's Council approved her nomination. She is the first Asian American appointed to the state bench. Currently, Singh is special counsel for criminal rights enforcement in the Office of the US Attorney in Bihar-born Singh is the former founding president of the South Asian Bar Association of Greater Boston and the current president of the North American South Asian Bar Association. She migrated to the Of the four nominees Romney appointed to the Singh enjoyed a stint as assistant district attorney in the Middlesex County District Attorney's Office, where she did both trials and appeals and was also the point person on juvenile, school and hate crimes issues. She was also legal director to Project Alliance, a youth crime prevention initiative. She worked on some high-profile cases during her tenure there, including the Eddie O'Brien juvenile murder case that Court TV covered extensively in which she ultimately secured a conviction for first-degree murder. Her biggest case was the prosecution of British nurse Louise Woodward before the Woodward had been convicted for second-degree murder in the death of Matthew October 30, 1997, but presiding Judge Hiller Zobel overturned the jury's conviction November 10, reducing it to manslaughter and sentencing Woodward to 279 days in jail, a term she had already served since being taken into custody for Matthew's death. In her arguments before the After her stint in the Middlesex County District Attorney's Office, she went to work for Binghal McCutchen LLP, an 850-attorney international firm, where she specialised in the firm's white-collar crime and business regulation division. Annapoorni R Sankaran of the law firm of Greeburg Traurig LLP, the current president of SABA of Greater Boston, spoke of the "major significance for the South Asian community." Another
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