Beverly Cutler (born September 10, 1949) is an American lawyer who was the first woman to sit on the state Superior Court in Alaska. [1]
Cutler was born September 10, 1949 [1] [2] to Lloyd Cutler, the White House Counsel during the administrations of Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton, [1] and his wife, Louise Winslow Howe Cutler. She grew up outside of Washington, D.C. [3] Cutler, one of four children, had a brother and a sister who also became lawyers. [1] One sister, Louisiana Winslow Cutler, also lives in Alaska. [4]
Cutler attended Yale Law School. [3] Her husband retired as a state trooper to grow potatoes. [5] She has four children [1] and lives in Palmer, Alaska. [3]
In 1974, Cutler moved to Alaska to work as a research attorney for the Alaska Judicial Council. [3] She then went to work as a public defender. [3] [6] Cutler was appointed by Governor Jay Hammond as a district court judge in Anchorage, Alaska and was sworn in on September 26, 1977. [6] [3] [1] At 28 years old, she replaced Dorothy Tyner, who was much older. [6] [3] [1] When first appointed to the bench, Cutler was the only judge in a one-courtroom courthouse. [1] As the court grew, they expanded into a nearby apartment where files were kept in the bathtub. [2]
In 1982, she was appointed the first judge at what is, as of 2012, the Superior Court in Palmer. [3] When she became a superior court judge there was no district court in that jurisdiction, and so the duties of that role were Cutler's as well. [2]
She received criticism after John Pearl Smith II, a prisoner she temporarily released to attend his deceased father's memorial service, escaped and was later recaptured. [1] She also presided over a case involving the mother of Levi Johnston. [5]
Cutler retired in 2009 after spending 32 years as a judge. [1] [3] She was also the superior court's administrative judge. [2] At the end of her career, she served alongside three other judges in Palmer, Alaska, where she presided for 27 years. [1]