Belize

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Overview
Located on a sliver of the Caribbean coast of Central America, Belize is both Central American and Caribbean, and belongs to international organizations pertaining to both regions. Belize is the second smallest country in the Americas, and has one of the smallest capitals (Belmopan, pop. 14,000) in the world. It’s warm climate and the prevalence of English speakers has made Belize a popular destination for American tourists and expatriates. 
 
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Basic Information
Lay of the Land: Belize, known as British Honduras until 1973, is the only English speaking country in Central America. Belize is located at the southern end of the Yucatán peninsula; Mexico borders Belize to the north, Guatemala to the west and south, and the Caribbean to the east. Coastal swamps rise gradually in the south to almost 4,000 foot peaks, but the country's basic profile is low-lying jungle and extensive coastline. The Caribbean coast is lined with a coral reef and about 450 islets and islands, which form the 200 mile long Belize Barrier Reef, the longest in the Western Hemisphere and the second longest in the world after Australia’s Great Barrier Reef. Belize is the only country in Central America without direct access to the Pacific Ocean. With an area of 8,867 square miles (slightly larger than Massachusetts) and a population just more than 300,000, Belize is the most sparsely populated country in Central America at just 35.4 people per square mile. Massachusetts, in contrast, has a population density of 810 people per square mile. About half the population of Belize lives in rural areas, while a quarter of Belizeans live in its largest city and former capital, Belize City.  
 
Population: 314,300
 
Religions: Catholic 58.4%, Protestant (e.g. Pentecostals, Anglicans, Baptists, Methodists) 32.7%, Baha'i 2.5%, Hindu 2.0%, Jewish 1.1%, Spiritist 1.0%, Ethnoreligious 0.6%, Buddhist 0.5%, non-religious 0.7%
 
Ethnic Groups: Mestizo 48.7%, Creole 24.9%, Maya 10.6%, Garifuna 6.1%, other 9.7%.
 
Languages: Spanish 46%, Belize Kriol English 32.9%, Maya (Mopán, Yucatán) 8.9%, English (official) 3.9%, Plautdietsch (Mennonite German) 3.3%, Garifuna 3.4%, Kekchí 1.4%.
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History
The territory that eventually became Belize was initially settled by the Maya people around 1500 BC, and Mayan civilization flourished until around 1300 AD. At the height of the Mayan civilization, there were probably about 400,000 people living in Belize. By 1500, when Columbus sailed past but did not disembark in Belize, the Maya empire was long gone, but the Maya people remained. Although Spain claimed sovereignty over the whole of Central America, the Spanish did not successfully colonize Belize, which was gradually settled by the British, who engaged in logging for export. Because of Spain’s claims to the territory, Britain did not organize Belize as a colony until 1840, four years after the liberation of Central America from Spanish rule. Although slavery was abolished in the late 1830s, limited access to land and credit meant that the plight of the many slaves working as loggers improved little. For most of the 19th century, Belize was controlled by a small group of wealthy landowners, including several thousand ex-Confederates who emigrated there after the American Civil War. Labor activism in the 1930s for a minimum wage and recognition of the workers’ right to form unions led to an independence movement. Independence was delayed by Guatemala’s assertion that it had succeeded to Spain’s claim to all of Belize’s territory, a dispute that has not yet been resolved. Belize won self-rule in 1964 and independence in 1981, which was accompanied by a British commitment to station troops in the country to deter potential aggression by Guatemala. Since independence, Belize has been a parliamentary democracy with a history of peaceful elections.
 

 

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Belize's Newspapers
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History of U.S. Relations with Belize
Relations between the United States and Belize have been friendly and cooperative for many years. During the 1960s, when Belize had gained self-rule, the U.S. attempted to mediate the long running border dispute with Guatemala, but without success. Like other countries of the Caribbean, Belize has experienced serious problems with drug smuggling, money laundering and other transnational criminal activities. Since the 1980s, the U.S. has provided assistance in these areas. 
 
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Current U.S. Relations with Belize
The United States and Belize traditionally have had close and cordial relations. The United States is Belize's principal trading partner and major source of investment funds. Because Belize’s economic growth and accompanying democratic political stability are important U.S. objectives, Belize benefits from the U.S. Caribbean Basin Initiative. International crime issues dominate the agenda of bilateral relations between the United States and Belize. The United States is working closely with the Government of Belize to fight illicit narcotics trafficking, and both governments seek to control the flow of illegal migrants to the United States through Belize. Belize and the United States brought into force a Stolen Vehicle Treaty, an Extradition Treaty, and a Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty between 2001 and 2003.
 
Americans constitute 70% of all tourists to Belize. 151,510 Americans visited Belize in 2006. More and more Americans have been visiting Belize, with the annual number of visitors up about 50% from the 104,603 that visited in 2002. Not only are Americans visiting Belize in record numbers, they are also settling there, especially those seeking a low cost retirement in an English-speaking country. Although precise numbers are unavailable, several thousand American expatriates currently live in Belize, which made it easier for them to do so in 1999 by passing The Qualified Retired Persons Incentive Act (PDF), which allows persons over age 45 with sufficient income to retire to Belize and enjoy a tax-free life. On the flip side, the U.S. is home to the largest Belizean community outside Belize, estimated to be 70,000 strong, and 21,968 Belizeans visited the U.S. in 2006. 
 
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Where Does the Money Flow
Belize has little industry, and virtually none for export. Oil was discovered in 2002, and although production is not large and reserves are somewhat small, it is a growing sector of the economy. Tourism is the mainstay of the Belizean economy, followed by financial services. Belizean exports to the U.S. totaled $105 million in 2007, consisting mainly of food products ($54.47 million, 51.8%) and crude oil ($28.9 million, 27.5%). American exports to Belize totaled $234 million in 2007, dominated by fuel ($33.4 million, 14.2%), food products ($33.6 million, 14.3%), and machinery of many different kinds. 
 
The United States is one of the largest providers of economic assistance to Belize, contributing $2.5 million in various bilateral economic and military aid programs to Belize in FY 2006. Of this amount, nearly half a million dollars was provided by the U.S. Military Liaison Office. The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) closed its Belize office in August 1996 after a 13-year program during which USAID provided $110 million worth of development assistance to Belize. Belize still benefits from USAID regional programs. In addition, during the past 42 years, almost 2,000 Peace Corps volunteers have served in Belize. As of February 2008, the Peace Corps had 63 volunteers working in Belize. The U.S. military has a diverse and growing assistance program in Belize that has included the construction and renovation of several schools and youth hostels, medical assistance programs, and drug reduction programs. All of the $492,000 in U.S. aid to Belize in 2006 was dedicated to Peace and Security. International Military Education and Training received $294,000, and Foreign Military Financing received $198,000. In the 2008 budget request, aid will be slightly decreased to $370,000. In the 2008 budget, which is also fully dedicated to Peace and Security, Development Assistance will receive $200,000, and International Military Education and Training will receive $170,000.
 
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Controversies
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Human Rights
Belize is a parliamentary democracy with freedom of expression, religious liberty, and other basic human rights. Elections have been free and fair without violence or intimidation. The government generally respects the human rights of its citizens.  Human rights problems include brutality and the use of excessive force by security forces,.  Lengthy pretrial detention remains a problem.  Domestic violence, discrimination against women, sexual abuse of children, trafficking in persons for sexual and labor exploitation, and child labor are also problems.
 
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Debate
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Past Ambassadors
Name: Malcolm R. Barnebey
State of Residency: Texas
Foreign Service officer
Title: Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
Appointment: May 17, 1983
Presentation of Credentials: Jun 23, 1983
Termination of Mission: Left post, Jul 10, 1985
 
Name: James L. Malone
State of Residency: Virginia
Non-career appointee
Title: Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
Note: Nomination withdrawn Oct 14, 1986. Keith Guthrie served as Chargé d'Affaires ad interim, Jul 1985-Sep. 1987.
 
Name: Robert G. Rich, Jr.
State of Residency: Florida
Foreign Service officer
Title: Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
Appointment: Jul 31, 1987
Presentation of Credentials: Sep 14, 1987
Termination of Mission: Left post, Jul 7, 1990
 
Name: Eugene L. Scassa
State of Residency: Virginia
Foreign Service officer
Title: Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
Appointment: Oct 22, 1990
Presentation of Credentials: Nov 22, 1990
Termination of Mission: Left post, Jul 6, 1994
 
Name: George Charles Bruno
State of Residency: New Hampshire
Non-career appointee
Title: Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
Appointment: Jul 5, 1994
Presentation of Credentials: Aug 29, 1994
Termination of Mission: Left post, Nov 25, 1997
 
Name: Carolyn Curiel
State of Residency: Indiana
Non-career appointee
Title: Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
Appointment: Nov 12, 1997
Presentation of Credentials: Jan 19, 1998
Termination of Mission: Left post Mar 1, 2001
In 2002, Ms. Curiel joined the editorial board of the New York Times, focusing on local government, social issues, national trends & the environment.
 
Name: Russell F. Freeman
State of Residency: North Dakota
Non-career appointee
Title: Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
Appointment: Aug 3, 2001
Presentation of Credentials: Sep 11, 2001
Termination of Mission: Left post, Apr 7, 2005
 
 
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Belize's Ambassador to the U.S.
ambassador-image Méndez, Néstor

Néstor Méndez is both Belize’s Ambassador to the United States and its Ambassador to the Organization of American States (OAS). He presented his credentials to the OAS on June 16, 2008, and to the U.S. government six weeks later. Méndez did graduate work at the Eliot School of International Affairs at George Washington University. He was counselor of the Belize High Commission in London from 1997 to 1999.
 
 

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Belize's Embassy Web Site in the U.S.
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U.S. Ambassador to Belize

Moreno, Carlos
ambassador-image

The next ambassador to the Central American nation of Belize—the only country in the region where English is the official language—will be a retired jurist from California. Nominated July 8, Carlos R. Moreno, who served ten years on the California Supreme Court, would succeed Vinai K. Thummalapally, whose service started in August 2009.

 

Born November 4, 1948, in Los Angeles, Moreno grew up in a Spanish-speaking home in the small community of Solano Canyon in Elysian Park, not far from Dodger Stadium. Although his Mexican immigrant mother arrived in the U.S. with few skills and no resources after his father’s death, Moreno graduated public high school, earned a B.A. in Political Science at Yale University in 1970 and a J.D. at Stanford Law School in 1975. 

 

Moreno began his legal career in 1975 as a deputy city attorney with the Los Angeles City Attorney’s office, prosecuting criminal and civil consumer protection cases. Leaving public service for private practice, Moreno worked at the firm of Mori & Ota (which became part of Kelley, Drye & Warren) from 1979 to 1986, representing clients in the firm’s general commercial litigation practice.

 

Moreno’s judicial career began in the fall of 1986, when California Gov. George Deukmejian (R) appointed him to the Municipal Court, Compton Judicial District, where Moreno handled criminal matters and supervised the court’s civil department. After seven years, in October 1993, Gov. Pete Wilson (R) elevated Moreno to Los Angeles County Superior Court, where he presided over felony trials for nearly five years.

 

Moreno became a federal judge when he was nominated by President Bill Clinton to the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California, where he served from February 1998 to mid-2001.

 

Nominated by Gov. Gray Davis (D), Moreno served as an associate justice of the Supreme Court of California from October 18, 2001 until his retirement on February 28, 2011. Moreno won electoral confirmation in November 2002 to finish the term of his deceased predecessor, Justice Stanley Mosk, and again in 2010, when voters confirmed him to a full 12-year term.

 

In May 2009, it was reported that Moreno was being considered by President Barack Obama as a possible successor to Justice David Souter on the U.S. Supreme Court, but the President chose Judge Sonia Sotomayor instead—on the same day Moreno cast the California high court’s only vote to overturn anti-same sex marriage Proposition 8.

 

Since 2011, he has been a counsel at Irell & Manella LLP.

 

Moreno has served as President of the Mexican American Bar Association, and on the Board of Visitors of Stanford Law School and the Board of Governors of the Association of Yale Alumni. He is a Director of the Arroyo Vista Family Health Center.

 

He and his wife, Christine, an artist, have two children, Keiko and Nicholas.

-Matt Bewig

 

To Learn More:

Official Biography

Carlos Moreno, California High Court Justice, is Raising his Profile (by Maura Dolan, Los Angeles Times)

more
Bookmark and Share
News
more less
Overview
Located on a sliver of the Caribbean coast of Central America, Belize is both Central American and Caribbean, and belongs to international organizations pertaining to both regions. Belize is the second smallest country in the Americas, and has one of the smallest capitals (Belmopan, pop. 14,000) in the world. It’s warm climate and the prevalence of English speakers has made Belize a popular destination for American tourists and expatriates. 
 
more less
Basic Information
Lay of the Land: Belize, known as British Honduras until 1973, is the only English speaking country in Central America. Belize is located at the southern end of the Yucatán peninsula; Mexico borders Belize to the north, Guatemala to the west and south, and the Caribbean to the east. Coastal swamps rise gradually in the south to almost 4,000 foot peaks, but the country's basic profile is low-lying jungle and extensive coastline. The Caribbean coast is lined with a coral reef and about 450 islets and islands, which form the 200 mile long Belize Barrier Reef, the longest in the Western Hemisphere and the second longest in the world after Australia’s Great Barrier Reef. Belize is the only country in Central America without direct access to the Pacific Ocean. With an area of 8,867 square miles (slightly larger than Massachusetts) and a population just more than 300,000, Belize is the most sparsely populated country in Central America at just 35.4 people per square mile. Massachusetts, in contrast, has a population density of 810 people per square mile. About half the population of Belize lives in rural areas, while a quarter of Belizeans live in its largest city and former capital, Belize City.  
 
Population: 314,300
 
Religions: Catholic 58.4%, Protestant (e.g. Pentecostals, Anglicans, Baptists, Methodists) 32.7%, Baha'i 2.5%, Hindu 2.0%, Jewish 1.1%, Spiritist 1.0%, Ethnoreligious 0.6%, Buddhist 0.5%, non-religious 0.7%
 
Ethnic Groups: Mestizo 48.7%, Creole 24.9%, Maya 10.6%, Garifuna 6.1%, other 9.7%.
 
Languages: Spanish 46%, Belize Kriol English 32.9%, Maya (Mopán, Yucatán) 8.9%, English (official) 3.9%, Plautdietsch (Mennonite German) 3.3%, Garifuna 3.4%, Kekchí 1.4%.
more less
History
The territory that eventually became Belize was initially settled by the Maya people around 1500 BC, and Mayan civilization flourished until around 1300 AD. At the height of the Mayan civilization, there were probably about 400,000 people living in Belize. By 1500, when Columbus sailed past but did not disembark in Belize, the Maya empire was long gone, but the Maya people remained. Although Spain claimed sovereignty over the whole of Central America, the Spanish did not successfully colonize Belize, which was gradually settled by the British, who engaged in logging for export. Because of Spain’s claims to the territory, Britain did not organize Belize as a colony until 1840, four years after the liberation of Central America from Spanish rule. Although slavery was abolished in the late 1830s, limited access to land and credit meant that the plight of the many slaves working as loggers improved little. For most of the 19th century, Belize was controlled by a small group of wealthy landowners, including several thousand ex-Confederates who emigrated there after the American Civil War. Labor activism in the 1930s for a minimum wage and recognition of the workers’ right to form unions led to an independence movement. Independence was delayed by Guatemala’s assertion that it had succeeded to Spain’s claim to all of Belize’s territory, a dispute that has not yet been resolved. Belize won self-rule in 1964 and independence in 1981, which was accompanied by a British commitment to station troops in the country to deter potential aggression by Guatemala. Since independence, Belize has been a parliamentary democracy with a history of peaceful elections.
 

 

more less
Belize's Newspapers
more less
History of U.S. Relations with Belize
Relations between the United States and Belize have been friendly and cooperative for many years. During the 1960s, when Belize had gained self-rule, the U.S. attempted to mediate the long running border dispute with Guatemala, but without success. Like other countries of the Caribbean, Belize has experienced serious problems with drug smuggling, money laundering and other transnational criminal activities. Since the 1980s, the U.S. has provided assistance in these areas. 
 
more less
Current U.S. Relations with Belize
The United States and Belize traditionally have had close and cordial relations. The United States is Belize's principal trading partner and major source of investment funds. Because Belize’s economic growth and accompanying democratic political stability are important U.S. objectives, Belize benefits from the U.S. Caribbean Basin Initiative. International crime issues dominate the agenda of bilateral relations between the United States and Belize. The United States is working closely with the Government of Belize to fight illicit narcotics trafficking, and both governments seek to control the flow of illegal migrants to the United States through Belize. Belize and the United States brought into force a Stolen Vehicle Treaty, an Extradition Treaty, and a Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty between 2001 and 2003.
 
Americans constitute 70% of all tourists to Belize. 151,510 Americans visited Belize in 2006. More and more Americans have been visiting Belize, with the annual number of visitors up about 50% from the 104,603 that visited in 2002. Not only are Americans visiting Belize in record numbers, they are also settling there, especially those seeking a low cost retirement in an English-speaking country. Although precise numbers are unavailable, several thousand American expatriates currently live in Belize, which made it easier for them to do so in 1999 by passing The Qualified Retired Persons Incentive Act (PDF), which allows persons over age 45 with sufficient income to retire to Belize and enjoy a tax-free life. On the flip side, the U.S. is home to the largest Belizean community outside Belize, estimated to be 70,000 strong, and 21,968 Belizeans visited the U.S. in 2006. 
 
more less
Where Does the Money Flow
Belize has little industry, and virtually none for export. Oil was discovered in 2002, and although production is not large and reserves are somewhat small, it is a growing sector of the economy. Tourism is the mainstay of the Belizean economy, followed by financial services. Belizean exports to the U.S. totaled $105 million in 2007, consisting mainly of food products ($54.47 million, 51.8%) and crude oil ($28.9 million, 27.5%). American exports to Belize totaled $234 million in 2007, dominated by fuel ($33.4 million, 14.2%), food products ($33.6 million, 14.3%), and machinery of many different kinds. 
 
The United States is one of the largest providers of economic assistance to Belize, contributing $2.5 million in various bilateral economic and military aid programs to Belize in FY 2006. Of this amount, nearly half a million dollars was provided by the U.S. Military Liaison Office. The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) closed its Belize office in August 1996 after a 13-year program during which USAID provided $110 million worth of development assistance to Belize. Belize still benefits from USAID regional programs. In addition, during the past 42 years, almost 2,000 Peace Corps volunteers have served in Belize. As of February 2008, the Peace Corps had 63 volunteers working in Belize. The U.S. military has a diverse and growing assistance program in Belize that has included the construction and renovation of several schools and youth hostels, medical assistance programs, and drug reduction programs. All of the $492,000 in U.S. aid to Belize in 2006 was dedicated to Peace and Security. International Military Education and Training received $294,000, and Foreign Military Financing received $198,000. In the 2008 budget request, aid will be slightly decreased to $370,000. In the 2008 budget, which is also fully dedicated to Peace and Security, Development Assistance will receive $200,000, and International Military Education and Training will receive $170,000.
 
more less
Controversies
more less
Human Rights
Belize is a parliamentary democracy with freedom of expression, religious liberty, and other basic human rights. Elections have been free and fair without violence or intimidation. The government generally respects the human rights of its citizens.  Human rights problems include brutality and the use of excessive force by security forces,.  Lengthy pretrial detention remains a problem.  Domestic violence, discrimination against women, sexual abuse of children, trafficking in persons for sexual and labor exploitation, and child labor are also problems.
 
more less
Debate
more less
Past Ambassadors
Name: Malcolm R. Barnebey
State of Residency: Texas
Foreign Service officer
Title: Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
Appointment: May 17, 1983
Presentation of Credentials: Jun 23, 1983
Termination of Mission: Left post, Jul 10, 1985
 
Name: James L. Malone
State of Residency: Virginia
Non-career appointee
Title: Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
Note: Nomination withdrawn Oct 14, 1986. Keith Guthrie served as Chargé d'Affaires ad interim, Jul 1985-Sep. 1987.
 
Name: Robert G. Rich, Jr.
State of Residency: Florida
Foreign Service officer
Title: Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
Appointment: Jul 31, 1987
Presentation of Credentials: Sep 14, 1987
Termination of Mission: Left post, Jul 7, 1990
 
Name: Eugene L. Scassa
State of Residency: Virginia
Foreign Service officer
Title: Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
Appointment: Oct 22, 1990
Presentation of Credentials: Nov 22, 1990
Termination of Mission: Left post, Jul 6, 1994
 
Name: George Charles Bruno
State of Residency: New Hampshire
Non-career appointee
Title: Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
Appointment: Jul 5, 1994
Presentation of Credentials: Aug 29, 1994
Termination of Mission: Left post, Nov 25, 1997
 
Name: Carolyn Curiel
State of Residency: Indiana
Non-career appointee
Title: Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
Appointment: Nov 12, 1997
Presentation of Credentials: Jan 19, 1998
Termination of Mission: Left post Mar 1, 2001
In 2002, Ms. Curiel joined the editorial board of the New York Times, focusing on local government, social issues, national trends & the environment.
 
Name: Russell F. Freeman
State of Residency: North Dakota
Non-career appointee
Title: Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
Appointment: Aug 3, 2001
Presentation of Credentials: Sep 11, 2001
Termination of Mission: Left post, Apr 7, 2005
 
 
more less
Belize's Ambassador to the U.S.
ambassador-image Méndez, Néstor

Néstor Méndez is both Belize’s Ambassador to the United States and its Ambassador to the Organization of American States (OAS). He presented his credentials to the OAS on June 16, 2008, and to the U.S. government six weeks later. Méndez did graduate work at the Eliot School of International Affairs at George Washington University. He was counselor of the Belize High Commission in London from 1997 to 1999.
 
 

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Belize's Embassy Web Site in the U.S.
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Comments

Leave a comment

U.S. Ambassador to Belize

Moreno, Carlos
ambassador-image

The next ambassador to the Central American nation of Belize—the only country in the region where English is the official language—will be a retired jurist from California. Nominated July 8, Carlos R. Moreno, who served ten years on the California Supreme Court, would succeed Vinai K. Thummalapally, whose service started in August 2009.

 

Born November 4, 1948, in Los Angeles, Moreno grew up in a Spanish-speaking home in the small community of Solano Canyon in Elysian Park, not far from Dodger Stadium. Although his Mexican immigrant mother arrived in the U.S. with few skills and no resources after his father’s death, Moreno graduated public high school, earned a B.A. in Political Science at Yale University in 1970 and a J.D. at Stanford Law School in 1975. 

 

Moreno began his legal career in 1975 as a deputy city attorney with the Los Angeles City Attorney’s office, prosecuting criminal and civil consumer protection cases. Leaving public service for private practice, Moreno worked at the firm of Mori & Ota (which became part of Kelley, Drye & Warren) from 1979 to 1986, representing clients in the firm’s general commercial litigation practice.

 

Moreno’s judicial career began in the fall of 1986, when California Gov. George Deukmejian (R) appointed him to the Municipal Court, Compton Judicial District, where Moreno handled criminal matters and supervised the court’s civil department. After seven years, in October 1993, Gov. Pete Wilson (R) elevated Moreno to Los Angeles County Superior Court, where he presided over felony trials for nearly five years.

 

Moreno became a federal judge when he was nominated by President Bill Clinton to the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California, where he served from February 1998 to mid-2001.

 

Nominated by Gov. Gray Davis (D), Moreno served as an associate justice of the Supreme Court of California from October 18, 2001 until his retirement on February 28, 2011. Moreno won electoral confirmation in November 2002 to finish the term of his deceased predecessor, Justice Stanley Mosk, and again in 2010, when voters confirmed him to a full 12-year term.

 

In May 2009, it was reported that Moreno was being considered by President Barack Obama as a possible successor to Justice David Souter on the U.S. Supreme Court, but the President chose Judge Sonia Sotomayor instead—on the same day Moreno cast the California high court’s only vote to overturn anti-same sex marriage Proposition 8.

 

Since 2011, he has been a counsel at Irell & Manella LLP.

 

Moreno has served as President of the Mexican American Bar Association, and on the Board of Visitors of Stanford Law School and the Board of Governors of the Association of Yale Alumni. He is a Director of the Arroyo Vista Family Health Center.

 

He and his wife, Christine, an artist, have two children, Keiko and Nicholas.

-Matt Bewig

 

To Learn More:

Official Biography

Carlos Moreno, California High Court Justice, is Raising his Profile (by Maura Dolan, Los Angeles Times)

more