HCBA Lawyer Magazine Vol. 28, No. 5 | Page 11

E X E C U T I V E D I R E C T O R ’ S M E S S A G E J o h n F. K y n e s - H i l l s b o r o u g h C o u n t y B a r A s s o c i a t i o n Continued from page 8 bring about change in Tampa’s legal profession, and the community as a whole. To celebrate these legal trailblazers, a committee from the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida — in partnership with the Tampa Bay Chapter of the Federal Bar Association and other local voluntary bar groups — organized the “Hidden Figures: Honoring Trailblazers in Tampa Bay” luncheon, held in February. It featured a panel discussion about the barriers they each encountered early in their legal careers, as well as their legacies. Judge Anthony Porcelli and Judge Julie Sneed, both from the Middle District, helped organize the luncheon, and they moderated the panel discussion. Porcelli told me it was important for the legal community to recognize leaders who helped pave the way for others because it can “set a tone” in the community. “When you have women and minority leaders in the Bar, that can help cultivate leaders in other parts of the community,” Porcelli said. “The legacies of the honorees cannot be overstated,” said Porcelli. “There are still many barriers to be broken, and hopefully this will help inspire the next generation of lawyers.” One panelist, retired appellate judge E.J. Salcines, who in 1968 became the first Hispanic elected as a state prosecutor in Florida, recalled what it was like when he first started practicing law in the Tampa in 1963. “It was a lily white society,” Salcines told the audience. “There was no diversity.” Salcines recounted a private meeting with a senior circuit judge in 1969 who issued a profanity-laced warning when word got out that Salcines was thinking about hiring George Edgecomb, an up-and-coming African-American attorney, as an assistant prosecutor. Salcines said he disregarded the judge’s warning and hired Edgecomb anyway. Edgecomb later became a top prosecutor in the office, and, in 1973, Gov. Reuben Askew appointed Edgecomb as the first African-American county judge in Hillsborough County. Another panelist, U.S. District Judge Elizabeth Kovachevich, aka “Judge K,” talked about the difficulties she had with being one of just a handful of women attending law school in the late 1950s at Stetson University. Kovachevich also discussed the strong opposition she encountered from male colleagues in the legal community when she later decided to run for judge. But, in 1972, Kovachevich prevailed and she became the first woman elected to the Circuit Court in Pinellas County. She was appointed to the federal bench by President Ronald Reagan in 1982. Continued on page 10 Left: Local trailblazers Hon. Mary Scriven, Delano Stewart, Arthenia J