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Affiliation | Republican |
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Name | Roy Moore |
Address | Gallant, Alabama , United States |
Email | None |
Website | http://www.roymoore.org/ |
Born |
February 11, 1947 |
Died |
Still Living
(78 years) |
Contributor | Wabash |
Last Modifed | Rob Ritchie Jan 22, 2018 12:57pm |
Tags |
Caucasian - Married - Army - Removed From Office - Baptist - Christian - Southern Baptist - Straight -
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Info | Roy S. Moore is a native of Etowah County, Alabama. He graduated from Etowah High School in 1965 and obtained a Bachelor of Science Degree in 1969 from the United States Military Academy at West Point. Moore then returned to Alabama where he completed his Juris Doctorate Degree in 1977 from The University of Alabama School of Law.
Chief Justice Moore served our country as a Captain in the Military Police Corps of the United States Army. He also served as Battalion Staff Officer at Ft. Riley, Kansas, and as a Company Commander in Vietnam. During his professional career, Justice Moore became the first full-time Deputy District Attorney in Etowah County and served in this position from 1977 until 1982. He returned to private law practice in Gadsden until he was elected Circuit Judge, Place Number One of the Sixteenth Judicial Circuit in Gadsden, in 1992. He served in this capacity from 1992 until his election as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Alabama in November 2000.
Chief Justice Moore has received a number of national honors during his career. In 1995, he was presented with the George Washington Honor Medal from the National Freedom Foundation in Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, and honored with Alabama State Senate Joint Resolution 40 (McDowell Lee, Secretary of State, both Houses concurring). In 1996 he was awarded the Christian Citizenship Award from Samford University, Birmingham, Alabama; in 1997 he received the Bill of Rights award, the Christian Statesman of the Year Award (D. James Kennedy Center for Christian Statesmanship, Washington, D.C.), the God and Country Award (American Family Association), and the Spirit of America Founders Award. Justice Moore continued to be honored in 1998 by the United States Taxpayers Party, who presented him with the Andrew Jackson Champion of Liberty Award. Kentucky Governor Paul Patton awarded Justice Moore the highest honor awarded by the State of Kentucky (Kentucky Colonel, Honorable Order of Kentucky Colonels), the Liberty & Union Award (New Hampshire Center for Constitutional Studies), and the Delaware House of Representatives honored him with Resolution No. 47. That same year, the State of California Republican Assembly endorsed Justice Moore by formal resolution at their annual convention calling him a "tireless defender of individual freedom and liberties."
In 1999, Justice Moore received the Family, Faith, and Freedom Citation presented by the Family Research Council in Washington, D.C., and the American Heritage of Faith Award (Freedom Flyer Ministries, Chicago, Illinois). He also received the 1999 National Spirit of Life Award from the African American Family Association, and Michigan Governor John Engler and the State of Michigan presented him with a special tribute, calling Justice Moore, "a great American and an honorable judge." In 2002, the National Hero of Faith Award was presented by Vision America (Houston, Texas), and in 2003, he received a Doctor of Divinity Ecclesiastical Degree which was conferred upon him by the Methodist Episcopal Church USA (Washington, D.C.).
Chief Justice Moore has appeared on the Today Show, 20/20, NBC Nightly News, ABC World News, CNN, CBN's "700 Club," Dr. D. James Kennedy's "Coral Ridge Hour," James Dobson's "Focus on the Family," C-Span, and other numerous national and regional radio and television programs. Articles concerning Justice Moore have appeared in USA Today, the Los Angeles Times, the Washington Times, the Washington Post, the Houston Chronicle, the Atlanta Constitution, New American, Chalcedon Report, Citizen Magazine, and others.
Chief Justice Moore has authored numerous articles and poetry. Among his selected writings are "Religion In The Public Square," published by Cumberland Law Review, Cumberland School of Law, Volume 29, No.2, 1998-1999, and "Putting God Back in the Public Square," Imprimis, Hillsdale College, Volume 28, No. 8, August, 1999.
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ENDORSEMENTS |
AL US Senate - R Runoff - Jun 21, 2022 |
R |
Morris J. "Mo" Brooks |
AL US Senate - R Runoff - Jul 14, 2020 |
R |
Jeff Sessions |
MO US Senate - R Primary - Aug 07, 2018 |
R |
Courtland Sykes |
AL Attorney General - R Runoff - Jul 17, 2018 |
R |
Troy King |
AL District 02 - R Primary - Jun 05, 2018 |
R |
Rich Hobson |
[AL] Proposed Statewide Amendment No. 2 (Segregation Amendment) - Nov 02, 2004 |
NO |
No |
FL US Senate - R Primary - Aug 31, 2004 |
R |
Larry Klayman |
AL Sup Ct Assoc Just Place 1 - R Primary - Jun 01, 2004 |
R |
Tom Parker |
AL Sup Ct Assoc Just Place 2 - R Primary - Jun 01, 2004 |
R |
Pam "Walking" Baschab |
AL Sup Ct Assoc Just Place 3 - R Primary - Jun 01, 2004 |
R |
Jerry Stokes |
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