Hennepin County Chief Judge Toddrick Barnette was in his second year of law school at the University of Minnesota when a client insisted on speaking to him alone, away from the professor overseeing his work at the school's clinic.
Barnette had doubts about staying in law school after his first year buried in books. But when the client, who was Black, wanted advice from him, an inexperienced Black student, and not the white professor, his desire to be an advocate was cemented.
"Even though you're in law school and he knows it, he's trusting you to handle it," Barnette said.
Now 54, the veteran public defender, prosecutor and judge has begun a two-year tenure as the chief judge of Hennepin County, making him the first person of color to hold the post. He takes the helm during unprecedented upheaval, facing the challenges of COVID-19 and a global racial reckoning sparked by the death of George Floyd, a Black man killed by four former Minneapolis police officers.
"He walked into a job with more on his table than probably any other chief in … decades, if not ever," said his longtime friend, Ramsey County District Judge JaPaul Harris.
Barnette will oversee the state's busiest judicial district, which has a maximum of 63 judges and saw 460,000 cases last year. He took over July 1 and he understands the moment.
"This is the time for us to really understand what our role is and what the community needs is to walk in here and feel like they're being heard," Barnette said, adding that "Black Lives Matter" is not complicated. "It's: Treat me like a person," he said. "Treat me like that person over there."
Barnette said he will push for more diversity in hiring.