L. Todd Burke

L. Todd Burke (born October 14, 1961, Winston-Salem, North Carolina) is a Resident Superior Court Judge in Forsyth County. Burke is the son of former State House Representative Logan Burke and Mayor Pro Tempore and City Council Member Vivian H. Burke.
Early life
A lifelong resident of Winston-Salem, Burke graduated from East Forsyth High School. He is a graduate of Morehouse College and North Carolina Central University School of Law.
Law and politics
Upon graduation from law school, Burke became a prosecutor initially in Kinston, North Carolina then returning to Winston-Salem. Afterwards, he went into private practice at the law firm of Friende and Burke. In December 1994, only nine years after graduating from law school, Governor James B. Hunt appointed Burke to the Superior Court Bench, at the time serving as the youngest Resident Superior Court Judge in the State.
Burke formed a drug awareness and educational support workshop for youth at the Piedmont Public Housing Development. He served as vice-chairman to his political party in his county, president of that party's young persons club and played integral roles in both his mother's and father's political campaigns. While presiding in Wilkesboro, North Carolina, Burke heard a case where a drunken female driver killed a driver in another vehicle. As a result of her guilty plea, he ordered her to wear a sign that stated she was a convicted drunk driver and as a result a life was taken. The sign was to be worn for an hour once a month outside of the courthouse for a year. Additionally, she was to maintain a memorial site at the scene of the accident, obtain an alcohol assessment, serve six months in jail, and to be on probation for a period of time to perfect the aforementioned. This creative sentencing received national and international attention. Burke appeared on a British radio talk show, Nancy Grace's Pros and Cons, Fox National News, John Walsh and numerous local news outlets from print to audio and video media.
In 2018, following a challenge to a new law requiring that the Legislature confirm cabinet appointees, Burke's judicial district was merged with that of another incumbent. The American Bar Association stated that this was a Legislative "attack on the independence of North Carolina courts." Burke and four other judges later spoke out against the legislature's actions.
Personal life
Burke is a member of Omega Psi Phi fraternity. He also has received several honors and recognitions which are as follows: Selected - National Directory of Who’s Who in Executives and Professionals Recognition - Winston-Salem Housing Authority for Participation With Youth in Public Housing Life Member - Morehouse College Alumni Association Life Member - North Carolina Central University Alumni Association Member - Outstanding Young Men in America Member - Who’s Who Among American Colleges and Universities - Page - North Carolina General Assembly, The Honorable Judson D. DeRamus, Jr. Special Recognition - Winston-Salem Chronicle Board of Sponsors - Martin Luther King International Chapel, Morehouse College
 
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