Categories: All - balance - community - family - passion

by Courtney Stephens 5 years ago

170

courtney.stephens@ttu.edu

A dedicated judge with deep roots in her community, she attributes her passion for the legal field to her early experiences in her parents' law office. Raised in an environment where law and justice were daily conversations, she developed a profound commitment to giving back.

courtney.stephens@ttu.edu

Judge Ann-Marie Carruth

Picture Ideas:

Her sitting in a chair in front of the seal in a courtroom.

Her standing with the gavel and her robe on.

A detail picture of the gavel.

Her speaking to the Intro to ACOM class.

A picture of her family.

Her receiving an award.

Her sitting in the courtroom listening to a case with the back of the defendant in the foreground.

Maybe a picture of the outside of the courthouse.


Graduated Ag Communications

She received a lot of support.
"If I told someone that I wanted to go to law school or this was my career path and these are my goals, I was just always encouraged by everyone and someone would find a way for me to do an internship that I wanted to do or locate a mentor for me to talk to. So it was just this built-in support system that I had absolutely no idea that I would get going off to college. "
ACOM is like a small community
"When I decided that college was obviously the next step, I wanted to go somewhere where I could combine my love for agriculture with a university that I very much loved and respected so it just seemed like the perfect fit to come to Texas Tech."

Her passion for pursuing a legal career

"It was just something that I wanted to do – I wanted to give back."
"My motivation was always just to serve the community. I think it goes back to those small town agricultural roots where we all sort of pitch in and help each other and try to better our community and leave the community in a better place than we found it."
"I think law school can be difficult in a lot of ways regardless of how bright a student is, and so I think if you can find a passion for why you’re going or honestly for why you do anything in life, I think it just makes it easier and more enjoyable. "

Boards she currently sit on

Ronald McDonald House, YWCA of Lubbock and the Community Foundation of West Texas

She juggles having a family and being a judge.

She tries to keep her family life and work life separate.
"My rule has become that I will do my job to the best of my ability all day every day but after 5 is sort of my time with my family because that's where my time is most importantly spent."
Her family is very supportive of her career which is important for her.
"The great thing is my boys understand what I do, and they think it's so cool what Mom does, and they're supportive of what I do. But the other part of that is my husband because I absolutely could not do it if I didn't have a built-in support system."

Was an attorney, recently became a judge

"So the thing that I like most about being a judge is I get to help everyone come to the best result, doesn't always mean that everyone wins, but I get to work through the problem and help come to a solution or to an answer that people have been waiting a long time to get. So I think that's the best part."

Went straight to law school after undergrad

"So 18 year old Ann-Marie thought it would be a great idea to go to undergrad in the same place where she hoped to also go to law school, and with Tech being one of the only universities in the country that has both undergrad and law school on the same campus, it just seemed like the right fit. "

From Lamesa

"There was something about growing up in a small agricultural community that defined who I was. The work ethic, the caring for other, being responsible for others in the community in the sense of stewardship, I just don’t think you can get anywhere else."
Did not grow up in an agricultural family.
Extremely involved in FFA in high school.
"I was obviously influenced by what was around me and just caught this FFA bug and loved every minute of it. So I wasn’t ready to let it go after high school. I think that was honestly what spurred me on to pursuing agriculture as a degree and being able to use some of that scholarship money too."
"I grew up in a small town in rural west Texas so agriculture had always been really important to me."

Both parents were involved in the legal profession

"My parents ironically were not traditional agriculturists. I didn’t grow up on a farm or a ranch. They were in the legal profession, but I think in any small community like that in an agricultural area, agriculture just has a way of shaping the community and the people that are in it."

Possible anecdotal lead

"I actually wear my dad's robe."
"When I got sworn in four years ago I asked if I could wear his robe, so I had it tailored, it was a little bit too long so I had it shortened and taken up just a bit, and so I get to wear his robe. So it’s something that we share that I love."
"I was born in Lubbock and whenever my parents drove back to Lamesa with me in the car headed home from the hospital we went straight back to their law office. I had a little crib in the back, and that's where I would take naps. As I got older, my parents put in a TV so that after school I could go have a snack and watch TV. And for better or worse, it was just everything that I knew but it also gave me that passion. It gave me that desire and passion to give back to my community and help people. So I don't think I could have had any better role models because I really just got to experience it first-hand. It wasn't something that I thought about in theory or hypothetically, I saw it every day, and I knew it was something that I wanted to do."