Ramsey County District Judge Kathleen Gearin told a defendant before her for sentencing in a road rage incident that she was giving him a chance.
"You made a mistake," Gearin said after sentencing him to six months in the county workhouse. "It's a mistake that's going to stay with you a while. I don't think it's reflective of who you are, that's why I'm giving you a chance."
It was among the last criminal proceedings Gearin will oversee as she prepares to retire at the end of July, ending a career that included some of the most controversial cases in recent memory to everyday crimes, all of which, colleagues said, she attended to with the same care and diligence. Sensibility was her hallmark.
Gearin, a St. Paul native, taught high school social studies before working as a Ramsey County prosecutor for 11 years. She was first elected judge in 1986 and became one of the few women on the county's bench at the time, serving as a mentor to those who followed, including current Ramsey County Chief Judge Teresa Warner.
Gearin served as chief judge from 2008 to 2012, which landed her in some of the most difficult cases of her career. The experience, she later said, was part of the reason she decided to retire this year at age 68, two years shy of the mandatory retirement age for Minnesota judges.
A salute from state's lawyers
The Minnesota State Bar Association awarded her its lifetime achievement award at a ceremony in late June.
"She brings great common sense to her decisionmaking," said State Bar Association secretary Michael Unger, chair of the awards committee. "She's very much a straight shooter in how she analyzes issues and expresses her decisions."
"I've dealt with an unusual number of high-publicity cases as a judge," Gearin said in her acceptance speech. "But that's not what I'm going to remember the most.