The longest-serving judge on Minnesota's district court bench ends his 36-year tenure on Wednesday.
Hennepin County Judge Kevin Burke turned 70 on Sept. 17, hitting the mandatory retirement age for a Minnesota judge.
"My critics said I was too young when I was appointed in 1984 so there is, I suppose, some poetic justice that I end my career at the end of September when I turn 70," he said.
The line is signature Burke: factual, humorous and gently poignant. As much as anything, a hallmark of Burke's time on the bench is his personality and commitment to kindness and openness with everyone from colleagues and defendants to the media.
Burke was appointed by then-Gov. Rudy Perpich and sworn in as a judge in July 1984. Over the course of his tenure, he served in numerous leadership positions both statewide and locally, including eight years as the chief judge of the busy district headquartered in Minneapolis.
Until the pandemic quashed travel this year, he traveled the world to train new judges, preach the gospel of "procedural fairness" and deliver a warning about the danger of judicial arrogance with another classic line, "If you don't think you can get black robe disease you are practicing unsafe judging."
His accomplishments are significant. He originated the groundbreaking drug court that opened in 1997 that steered defendants into intensive court-supervised treatment rather than prison and served as the model for DWI and veterans' courts. All continue to this day.
Current Chief Judge Toddrick Barnette, who has worked in Hennepin County since he was a law student at the University of Minnesota in the early 1990s, said Burke's leadership on the court extends beyond specific programs.