Two Missouri Supreme Court judges to retire this year

MO Constitution requires judges to retire by 70 years of age

Two Missouri Supreme Court judges are retiring this year, Chief Justice Paul Wilson announced Wednesday during the annual State of the Judiciary address to state lawmakers.

Lawmakers stood to applaud Judges Patricia Breckenridge and George Draper when Wilson announced their upcoming retirements this fall.

A court spokeswoman said the judges have not yet announced when their last days will be.

Both Breckenridge and Draper are nearing their 70th birthdays, and the Missouri Constitution requires judges to retire by age 70, or they automatically forfeit their pensions.

MISSOURI FEDEX DRIVER DIES IN COLLISION WITH AMTRAK TRAIN

Chief Justice Paul Wilson announced Wednesday that two Missouri Supreme Court judges are set to retire sometime this year. 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Former Republican Gov. Matt Blunt appointed Breckenridge to the high court in 2007, and former Democratic Gov. Jay Nixon picked Draper for the court in 2011.

In Missouri, a special panel of lawyers, governor-chosen citizens and the chief justice recommend three candidates to fill Supreme Court vacancies. The governor picks from those three candidates.

These will be Republican Gov. Mike Parson's second and third Supreme Court appointments since he took office in 2018. He appointed Judge Robin Ransom to the court in 2021.

Load more..