Reflecting with Judge Nicole Colbert-Botchway
A Keeper of the Mission
Judge Nicole Colbert-Botchway (â96)âs SLU LAW story has come full circle.
As a high school student participating in ¶¶Òőproâs Upward Bound Program in 1986, she was inspired to pursue a legal career when she heard the programâs guest speaker, an attorney whom she later learned was School of Law alumna Dorothy White-Coleman (â82).
âThat day I realized I wanted to use my time and talent to serve the community by speaking for those who have no voice and I could best fulfill my purpose by becomÂing an attorney like the black female atÂtorney who spoke. Armed with a purpose and knowledge to reach my goal, I began my journey with the end in mind.
âA couple of years later [as an undergradÂuate student], I walked back onto SLUâs campus to the admission office and asked for help fulfilling my dream of becomÂing the attorney [that the institution] had originally inspired me to become,â Colbert-Botchway continued. âThe same day I submitted my application, I was accepted and received a scholarship.â
As a SLU undergraduate pursuing a degree in political science and African American Studies, Colbert-Botchway obtained a work study position in the Law Library and eagerly awaited the day she could start taking law classes.
âI watched and admired the stuÂdents and faculty from a distance and fell in love with everything about the law school before enrolling.â
Colbert-Botchway eventually did get accepted to and attend SLU LAW, which she says prepared her to achieve the professional success and personal satÂisfaction she now enjoys 23 years later, as the associate presiding judge for the 22nd Judicial Circuit. Prior to serving on the bench, she served as assistant cirÂcuit attorney and then assistant attorney general for the city and state, respectively.
âI can truly say that I owe my success to some of the keepers of SLUâs mission and vision, including professors Mike Wolff, Peter Salsich, Leland Ware, John AmÂmann and Judge George Draper,â she said. âI had an enjoyable, well-rounded and supportive environment to advance my legal understanding and development. I am so grateful!â
Colbert-Botchway took that gratitude to heart and has adopted it as her perÂsonal mission to give back as a mentor to the next generation of college and law students and to serve as a leader in her community. She was the first AfriÂcan-American president of the WomÂen Lawyersâ Association of Greater St. Louis and is a past president and lifetime member of the Mound City Bar Association. She remains an active member of the Missouri Bar and is currently its ABA delegate. Among numerous other volunteer activities, she is a member of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc.; the NAACP; St. Alphonsus Liguori âRockâ Catholic Church; and the Knights of Saint Peter Claver â Womenâs Auxiliary.
Today, itâs the students and alumni who admire her.
âFor women like me itâs important to see someone you admire doing the things you aspire to do, and itâs so much more important to have that person kind of carry you along and make time for you,â said Nkechi Ekwunife (â13), one of Colbert-Botchwayâs menÂtees as a law student and currently a sole practitioner in Los Angeles.
âI definitely would not be where I am today without her support, without her influence, without her mentorship,â Ekwunife continued. âIâm from L.A., so I couldnât go home for every holiday, but not even just the holidays â sometimes you just need a mom in law school. She would have me over, she would show me around St. Louis, introducing me to members of her family. I had never been to St. Louis before I decided on SLU.
You can just go to school and not know the city and all that it has to offer, but she reintroduced me to the community. Being someone whoâs not from St. Louis, she is St. Louis for me. ⊠And not only did she do the normal mentor/menteeÂship, she really gave me life advice. Sheâll pray with you and also pray for you.â
According to her mentees, Colbert-BotchÂwayâs influence as an example is profound.
The way that she carries herself in court exemplifies who I would like to be one day."
Monique Abby (â03)
âThe way that she carries herself in court exemplifies who I would like to be one day,â said Monique Abby (â03), another mentee and immediate past president of the Mound City Bar Association, where she has worked closely alongside ColÂbert-Botchway for 15 years. âSheâs so fair, she has so much patience. I go into the courtroom and I can see some people may be struggling. She makes sure they understand whatâs going on, not just rushÂing through â she takes the care to really explain things and remember these are human beings, and these are their lives that weâre dealing with on a daily basis.â
Today, Dorothy White-Coleman, the attorÂney whom Colbert-Botchway had aspired to be like in the 1980s and another of her colleagues through the Mound City Bar Association, is the one singing her praises.
âIt doesnât matter where she is, sheâs always going to do the best job possible,â said White-Coleman. âHer commitment to the community and to the rules of ethics are above and beyond reproach.â
Under Colbert-Botchwayâs leadership, in 2013 the Mound City Bar Association began hosting an annual legislative symÂposium, inviting legislators â particularly African-American legislators â together to talk about common interests, and she remains the chair of this symposium to date. She also hosted a program featuring various people involved in the judgeship selection process to educate younger lawÂyers about what it takes to become a judge.
But beyond her innovations, successful programs and community imprint, her mentees and colleagues agree her defining quality is that she shows up for people.
As president of the Mound City Bar Association, Colbert-Botchway was always there to make sure the law students in the organization had the resources they needed, that the association was particiÂpating in community service projects, that they were honoring the past presidents who came before them, that membership grew, and that the association kept the legal community engaged, Abby said.
âAt every event, she made sure that we were there and we were present and that Mound City Bar was recognized and was a force to be reckoned with. ⊠I just donât see how she does it all, the work that she does in our community. It gives me the energy and the drive to keep going. I think, âIf Judge Colbert-BotchÂway can do it and sheâs a judge, I can definitely do it.â It pushes you to be a better person, to want to do more.â
âSheâs always in the forefront of my mind when Iâm thinking of how to be a great mentor, role model, leader â really wife, mother, sheâs just someone of really high integrity that I look up to,â Ekwunife echoed. âThe way she has mentored me and really been the kind of person sheâs been to me has shaped so much of my life when Iâm trying to pay it forward. She definitely is my reference point.â
Colbert-Botchway sees her role as a mentor as one that simply comes with the territory of having been in the same shoes as a struggling law student.
âIâve passed each test I have faced thus far, thanks to God and the support and kindness I have received from ¶¶Òőpro,â she said. âI will be forever grateful and work to be part of fulfilling SLU LAWâs mission of service to all humanity for years to come.â
â By Maria Tsikalas