THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2012
Remember me:
Just Anticorruption
Also-Ran For Montana USA Sets Sights On State Supreme Court
By Steve Bagley | September 25, 2009 10:41 pm

With the announcement that Michael Cotter was nominated to be the U.S. Attorney for Montana today, a former candidate for the post has turned his attention to an open spot on the state Supreme Court.

Mike Wheat

Mike Wheat

Attorney Mike Wheat, of Cok Wheat and Kinzler PLLP, said he decided to pursue the Supreme Court spot a week and a half before Cotter’s nomination was announced, sending a letter to Democratic Sens. Max Baucus and John Tester.

“It’s pretty stimulating, actually,” Wheat said. “You can have a real impact on your state, from a legal point of view.”

“I had some friends of mine who said that might be  a better fit for me,” Wheat said. He has been a plaintiff’s attorney for more than 30 years, and specializes in litigating allegations of unsafe products, personal injury, bad faith insurance claims, nursing home neglect and medical negligence.

A spot on the Montana Supreme Court opened up at the beginning of September, when 66-year-old Justice John Warner resigned after six years on the bench. Warner was appointed in 2003, re-elected twice, and was serving out a term that would have lasted until 2012. According to the Missoulian, Warner resigned for health reasons. He is battling non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma.

RELATED POSTS:

Comments are closed.

Attorney General Eric Holder pushes back against an aggressive Rep. Raul Labrador at a Feb. 2 House Oversight Committee hearing on the Fast and Furious gun-tracing operation. "What you have just done is disrespectful," Holder told the Idaho Republican.

"The legislative record of these provisions contains no rationale for providing veterans' benefits to opposite-sex spouses of veterans but not to legally married same-sex spouses of veterans." -- Attorney General Eric Holder in a letter to Congress explaining the DOJ's stance on federal benefits to married same-sex military personnel.