Age, Biography and Wiki
Gabrielle Kirk McDonald (Gabrielle Anne Kirk) was born on 12 April, 1942 in Saint Paul, Minnesota. Discover Gabrielle Kirk McDonald's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is She in this year and how She spends money? Also learn how She earned most of networth at the age of 81 years old?
Popular As |
Gabrielle Anne Kirk |
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N/A |
Age |
82 years old |
Zodiac Sign |
Aries |
Born |
12 April 1942 |
Birthday |
12 April |
Birthplace |
Saint Paul, Minnesota, U.S. |
Nationality |
United States |
We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 12 April.
She is a member of famous with the age 82 years old group.
Gabrielle Kirk McDonald Height, Weight & Measurements
At 82 years old, Gabrielle Kirk McDonald height not available right now. We will update Gabrielle Kirk McDonald's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
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Dating & Relationship status
She is currently single. She is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about She's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, She has no children.
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Gabrielle Kirk McDonald Net Worth
Her net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Gabrielle Kirk McDonald worth at the age of 82 years old? Gabrielle Kirk McDonald’s income source is mostly from being a successful . She is from United States. We have estimated
Gabrielle Kirk McDonald's net worth
, money, salary, income, and assets.
Net Worth in 2023 |
$1 Million - $5 Million |
Salary in 2023 |
Under Review |
Net Worth in 2022 |
Pending |
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Under Review |
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Not Available |
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Timeline
McDonald has received numerous awards and honors, including the National Bar Association's first Equal Justice and Ronald Brown International Law Awards; the American Society of International Law's Goler T. Butcher Award for Human Rights; the American Bar Association Commission on Women in the Profession's Margaret Brent Women Lawyers of Achievement Award; the Open Society Institute's first Women Groundbreakers in International Justice Award (2007); and the 2008 Dorothy Height Lifetime Achievement Award.
At the 2004 Horatio Alger Award short biographical film, McDonald also spoke about an incident where a taxi driver apologized to her mother for the unpleasant smell in his car because a previous passenger had been an African-American. Seeing her mother challenge these incidents taught McDonald early in her life that "you just don't sit back quietly . . . you say something."
In 2001, McDonald was called to serve another historic tribunal, the Iran-United States Claims Tribunal, as one of three American Arbitrators. The International Claims Tribunal, also based in The Hague, was established by agreement between the United States and Iran in 1981, and has, since then, adjudicated claims by United States nationals for compensation for assets nationalized by the Iranian government, and claims by the governments against each other. McDonald is the only woman among the panel of nine arbitrators.
When President McDonald left the Tribunal in 1999, she had led the Tribunal through a pivotal stage in its history as it made the transition to a fully functioning international criminal court. The late Antonio Cassese, her colleague and the first president of the ICTY, wrote in the War Report that she "is the best that America can offer: she is straightforward, direct, intelligent and hard-working; . . . she is firm in her conviction; she is principled but she is not jingoistic."
She has received the Doctor of Law Honoris Causa from various institutions – the Georgetown University Law Center, the University of Notre Dame, Howard University, the Stetson College of Law and Amherst College. In a 1999 ceremony at the United States Supreme Court hosted by former Associate Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, McDonald received the Leadership Award from the Central Eastern European Law Initiative, now consolidated under the ABA Rule of Law Initiative.
In her September 1998 interview with St. Paul Magazine, McDonald remembered her mother as an ambitious woman with dreams of pursuing a career in acting and writing. Her father was a World War II veteran and like his father, worked as a dining car waiter for the Northern Pacific Railway. Her parents divorced in 1944, shortly after McDonald's brother, James G. Kirk III was born.
She is a former United States district judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas and a former judge of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY). McDonald was one of the first eleven judges elected by the United Nations to serve on the Yugoslav Tribunal and went on to become its president between 1997 and 1999, the only woman to occupy the position since its founding in 1994.
The Tadić trial lasted almost a year during which Judge McDonald and the panel she presided reviewed hundreds of documentary evidence and heard from numerous witnesses. In May 1997, Tadić was found guilty of committing crimes against humanity, namely, persecution on political, racial and/or religious grounds, and inhumane acts; violations of the laws or customs of war, namely, cruel treatment. The ICTY's findings in the Tadić case were significant in that they proved under international law the Serb policy of "ethnic cleansing" and set a precedent for further prosecutions. International commentators noted that, as the presiding judge, McDonald skillfully balanced her concern for the victims of the war crimes, especially rape victims, with scrupulous fairness and respect for the rights of the defendants. McDonald also presided over Trial Chamber II in evidentiary hearings in the Ivica Rajić case, the deferral hearings in the Lašva Valley and Dražen Erdemović cases; she was also in charge of proceedings in the Slavko Dokmanović case, presided over the hearing of preliminary motions in the Čelebići and Blaškić cases, and sat as a member of the Appeals Chamber in the Erdemović case.
On May 20, 1997, McDonald was re-elected for a second term, and on November 19, 1997, was nominated and elected by her fellow judges as the president of the ICTY.
In February 1993, the community of nations, through United Nations Security Council Resolution 808, decided to establish a war crimes tribunal to prosecute persons responsible for serious violations of international humanitarian law committed in the former Yugoslavia since 1991.
The Department of State submitted her name to the United Nations as a judge to the newly formed International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY), which had been created by another Security Council resolution in May 1993. The United Nations General Assembly selected a total of eleven judges, including McDonald, to serve on the Tribunal; Judge McDonald was the sole American on the court and one of only two women. She was elected by the largest number of votes.
In late 1993, McDonald and her colleagues began drafting the Tribunal's rules of procedure and evidence and following an intensive two-month rule-drafting period, in February 1994, the judges adopted the ICTY's Rules of Procedure and Evidence.
McDonald returned to academia after she left the federal judiciary in 1988; she taught Civil Procedure, and Race, Racism & American Law at St. Mary's University School of Law. After she returned to Houston in 1993, she taught several courses at the Thurgood Marshall School of Law, including Legal Methods, Federal Courts, and a seminar on the jurisprudence of Associate Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall.
After resigning from the bench in 1988, McDonald joined the law firm of Matthes & Granscomb and in 1992, became counsel to Walker & Satterhwaite. She served as special counsel to the chairman on human rights for Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold, Inc.
During her tenure on the bench, McDonald ruled on a number of high-profile cases. One of these cases involved Vietnamese shrimpers and the Ku Klux Klan. In that case, the Grand Dragon of the Klan attempted to disqualify her from the case, arguing that her race would prevent her from being impartial. She refused to recuse herself, stating in 1984, that "... if my race is enough to disqualify me from hearing this case, then I must disqualify myself as well from a substantial portion of cases on my docket ... an action that would cripple my efforts to fulfill my oath as a federal judge." She told the defendant, during the highly publicized hearing in a courtroom that included robed Klansmen, "You are not entitled to a judge of your choosing but one who will be fair. And I will do that." At the time, Daniel Hedges, United States Attorney for the Southern District of Texas, praised her for "not permitting her civil rights background to cloud her judgment as a federal judge. She was always evenhanded."
McDonald was nominated by President Jimmy Carter on February 27, 1979, to the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas, to a new seat created by 92 Stat. 1629. She was confirmed by the United States Senate on May 10, 1979, and received her commission on May 11, 1979, when she was 37 years of age. She was the first African-American appointed to the federal bench in Texas and only the third African-American woman to be appointed to be a federal judge in the United States. Her service was terminated on August 14, 1988, due to resignation.
In 1970, while maintaining her private practice, McDonald began pursuing what would become a lifelong passion: teaching law. Her first venture into academia was running the Legal Aid Clinic and teaching Trusts at Thurgood Marshall School of Law, Texas Southern University. As assistant professor of law, she went on to teach several courses at Texas Southern concurrent with her practice, including Federal Civil Procedure, Evidence, and Employment Discrimination Law. She served as a lecturer at the University of Texas School of Law in Austin, Texas, and as a professor of law at St. Mary's University School of Law in San Antonio, Texas.
In 1969, she joined her then-husband attorney Mark T. McDonald in solo practice in Houston, Texas. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 had paved the way for lawsuits based on racial discrimination, and together, the McDonalds built a reputation for pursuing plaintiff discrimination cases against major corporations and unions with significant operations in Texas. The firm's largest success came in 1976 when the McDonalds won a case against a multinational company and its union on behalf of 400 black workers for $1.2 million in back wages. As Chris Dixie, a union-side lawyer in Houston who often opposed McDonald told The Houston Post in 1978, "She must be the best in the South, if not better." She was one of the few African-American lawyers who appeared regularly in federal courts in Texas in the early 1970s.
For the next three years, McDonald canvassed Alabama, Mississippi, and Georgia to assist local residents and lawyers with issues involving school desegregation, equal employment, housing, and voting rights. She worked on some of the first plaintiff employment discrimination cases asserting violations of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. In 1967, she served as the lead LDF staff attorney in a successful action against a major company for its discriminatory seniority system, which was the first significant plaintiff victory under Title VII since the enactment of the Civil Rights Act.
In 1963, determined to become a civil rights lawyer, McDonald enrolled at Howard University School of Law. At Howard Law, she worked as a research assistant in her first year and in her second, earned a scholarship from the Ford Foundation.
The family eventually moved to Teaneck, New Jersey, where McDonald graduated from Teaneck High School in 1959. Tall and athletic, she played field hockey and was president of the girls' leadership club. Her yearbook states that she is one of the "nicest" and "most liked girls" in the class in which there was only one other African-American student. She attended Boston University (1959–61) and Hunter College (1961–63) for her undergraduate education.
She first served as presiding judge in the Tribunal's Trial Chamber II and in this role, conducted evidence and deferral hearings in a number of cases, and also heard the historic case of Duško Tadić, the first war crimes trial since the Nuremberg Trials, the series of military tribunals held by the Allied forces of World War II that prosecuted, in 1945–46, members of the political, military, and economic leadership of Nazi Germany.
Gabrielle Anne Kirk McDonald (née Kirk; born April 12, 1942) is an American lawyer and jurist who, until her retirement in October 2013, served as an American arbitrator on the Iran–United States Claims Tribunal seated in The Hague.
McDonald was born in Saint Paul, Minnesota on April 12, 1942 to Frances Retta (née English) and James G. Kirk Jr.