Charles J. Cooper

Charles J. Cooper (born 1955) is an appellate attorney and litigator in Washington, D.C., where he is a founding member and chairman of the law firm Cooper & Kirk, PLLC. He was named by The National Law Journal as one of the 10 best civil litigators in Washington.

Cooper has more than 25 years of legal experience in government and private practice, with numerous cases in trial and appellate court. He has argued several cases before the United States Supreme Court.

Biography

Charles J. Cooper was born in 1955 in Birmingham, Alabama. He attended local schools and completed his undergraduate degree in business in 1974 at the University of Alabama. Ranking first in class, he was editor-in-chief of the Alabama Law Review.

Cooper graduated in 1977 from the University of Alabama Law School. He passed the bar in Alabama and Washington, DC. He had two clerkships with judges: 1977-1978: Judge Paul Roney, United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, and 1978-1979: Justice William H. Rehnquist, United States Supreme Court.

A member of the Republican Party, Cooper started working in 1981 in the Office of Civil Rights in Washington, DC. In 1985 he was appointed as an Assistant Attorney General in the Office of Legal Counsel, United States Department of Justice during the Reagan administration. At a lunch at the Old Ebbitt Grill with other administration officials, he saw documents showing the administration's role in the Iran–Contra affair of 1986.[1]

After his government service, he entered private practice in the office of McGuire Woods, working there from 1990 until co-founding Cooper & Kirk in 1996. His practice in concentrated in constitutional, commercial, and civil rights litigation.

Cooper led the legal team for the defendant-intervenors in Hollingsworth v. Perry, defending California Proposition 8 in 2008, which banned same-sex marriage in the state. He argued this case before the US Supreme Court.[2]

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