The award ceremony was held at the Henry Ford Museum of American Innovation, drawing members of the bench, bar, and legal academy from across Michigan.
For more than three decades, the organization said, Connors has exemplified the very meaning of judicial excellence.
As one of Michigan’s founding business court judges, he has served the citizens, lawyers, and businesses of this state with extraordinary wisdom, fairness, intellect, and humanity.
In his courtroom, every litigant, regardless of background or the nature of the case, has been treated with respect, ensuring that all parties, including individuals and corporations alike, receive a full and fair opportunity to be heard.
His calm and thoughtful demeanor reflects the very best qualities of our justice system.
Connors’ commitment to justice has extended well beyond the bench in Washtenaw County.
He is past co-chair of the Michigan Tribal-State-Federal Forum, has served by appointment as judge pro tem for the Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians, and was the presiding judge of the Washtenaw County Peacemaking Court, which has become a national reference point for restorative approaches to state court justice.
His leadership in implementing new, community-based approaches to dispute resolution has expanded the reach of the courts and strengthened public confidence in the rule of law.
His influence extends equally into the classroom. An award-winning law professor, Connors has taught for decades at the University of Michigan Law School, Wayne State University Law School, and Vermont Law School, and previously at Cooley Law School, with a teaching portfolio spanning trial skills, peacemaking, and other core litigation courses. He is a regular faculty member for the State Bar of Michigan
Negligence Law Section, the Michigan Judicial Institute, Michigan Defense Trial Counsel, and ICLE, and has trained thousands of lawyers and judges with a particular focus on ethics and trial advocacy.
His scholarship — including “Exit, Pursued by a Bear: Why Peacemaking Makes Sense in State Court Justice Systems” (ABA Judges Journal, Fall 2016), “Our Children Are Sacred: Why the Indian Child Welfare Act Matters” (ABA Judges Journal, Spring 2011), “Crow Dogs vs. Spotted Tail: Case Closed?” (Michigan Bar Journal, July 2010), and the co-authored “Tribal Court Peacemaking: A Model for the Michigan State Court System?” (Michigan Bar Journal, June 2015), has contributed meaningfully to the ongoing evolution of Michigan jurisprudence.
In 2024 he received both the State Bar of Michigan’s Lifetime Judicial Excellence Award and the Washtenaw County Bar Association’s Lifetime Excellence Award.
In 2021, the Michigan Supreme Court presented him with the Daniel J. Wright Lifetime Achievement Award for Exemplary Service to Michigan’s Families and Children.
In 2018, the NAACP Ypsilanti Willow Run Branch honored him with its Thurgood Marshall Civil Rights Award.
Among many other recognitions, he is a past recipient of the National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges Innovator of the Year Award, the Hilda Gage Judicial Excellence Award from the Michigan Judges Association, and a three-time recipient of the Justice Blair Moody Award for Significant Contributions to Judicial Excellence.
The Litigation Section serves Michigan’s trial and appellate lawyers through educational programs and learning opportunities focused on litigation and trial preparation, advocacy, and recognition of excellence in the practice and administration of justice.
The section’s Judicial Excellence Award is conferred upon members of the judiciary whose service exemplifies the highest standards of integrity, professionalism, and dedication to the rule of law.
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