James F. Williams (1963- )

May 31, 2022 
/ Contributed By: Carol Sue Janes

James F. Williams (University of Virginia School of Law)|James Williams and his Mother

James F. Williams (University of Virginia School of Law)

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]James F. Williams serves as the managing partner of the Perkins Coie office in Seattle, Washington, the largest law office in Washington State.

Born and raised on a small farm in South Carolina, Williams obtained his undergraduate degree in political science with honors from The Citadel (The Military College of South Carolina) in Charleston, South Carolina and was the recipient of a United States Air Force R.O.T.C. scholarship. Upon receiving an educational delay from his service obligation, Williams obtained his J.D. degree in 1988 from the University of Virginia School of Law, where he served as an executive editor of the Virginia Journal of International Law. After working for one year in private practice in Columbia, South Carolina, Williams began active duty service with the Judge Advocate Generalโ€™s Corps for the Air Force, attaining the rank of captain.

James Williams and his Mother, Annie Mae Williams (James Williams)

James Williams and his Mother, Annie Mae Williams (James Williams)

In 1993 Williams joined the Seattle office of the law firm Perkins Coie. In 2017, Williams was named as the managing partner for the Seattle office, which has over 370 attorneys. He is the first African American to serve in the role of office managing partner for Perkins Coie since it was founded in 1912.

Williamsโ€™ legal practice focuses on complex business litigation. He has also litigated civil rights cases, including Wilbur v. Cities of Mt. Vernon and Burlington, a class action suit for the American Civil Liberties Union in which he and his litigation team fought for the right of misdemeanor criminal defendants to have effective legal representation.

Williams has volunteered as a leader with various civic organizations, including United Way of King County, Treehouse, the King County Charter Review Commission, the King County Bar Foundation, the Loren Miller Bar Association, the Seattle Foundation, and the Urban League of Metropolitan Seattle. He serves as Washingtonโ€™s state delegate to the American Bar Association (ABA) House of Delegates.

James Williams Giving Presentation at the 2014 American Civil Liberties Award Presentation, Seattle, Washington (Tino Tran)

James Williams Giving Presentation at the 2014 American Civil Liberties Award Presentation, Seattle, Washington (Tino Tran)

In 2004, Williams became the inaugural chair of the Washington Leadership Institute (WLI), which recruits, trains, and develops attorneys from traditionally underrepresented groups for future leadership positions in the bar and their local communities. He continues to serve as co-chair of the WLI. In 2014, Williams joined the American Law Institute (โ€œALIโ€). As the nationโ€™s premier assembly of jurists, legal academicians, and practitioners, the ALI publishes the restatements of the common law for the benefit of courts and practitioners all over the country. In 2021, Williams received the Washington State Bar Associationโ€™s Justice Charles Z. Smith Excellence in Diversity Award and was honored by the Puget Sound Business Journal as one of the Power 100 business influencers within the region. Also in 2021, Williams helped create the Black Boardroom Initiative to increase the number of Black executives on public company boards.

Williams joined Sigma Pi Phi Fraternity in 2005 and served as sire archon (president) of Alpha Omicron Boule, the Seattle chapter of the fraternity, from 2015 to 2017. He is also a member of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity. Williams is married to Carolyn Ladd, a Seattle attorney, and has one daughter, Jacqueline. His mother, Annie Mae Williams, lives in Rembert, South Carolina, where James grew up.

Williams is the direct descendant of enslaved persons. He is proud that three of his great-great grandfathers registered to vote in South Carolina in 1868 โ€“ as soon as they could so after emancipation.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]

About the Author

Author Profile

Carol Sue Janes is an attorney practicing in Seattle, Washington. She is a past chair of the Washington State Bar Association Health Law Section, and a past chair of the King County Bar Association Appellate Practice Section. She taught at the University of Washington School of Law, served as a staff attorney for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, and served as a law clerk to a Washington State Supreme Court chief justice. She has been selected to the Washington State Super Lawyers List every year since 2014. She is a member of the Loren Miller Bar Association and the Mother Attorneys Mentoring Association of Seattle.

A native of Seattle, Carol Sue has a B.A. in History (magna cum laude, with honors in History, Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Alpha Theta, from the University of Washington, and a J.D. with honors and Executive Editor of Washington Law Review, from the University of Washington School of Law. She is an active amateur genealogist.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Janes, C. (2022, May 31). James F. Williams (1963- ). BlackPast.org. https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/james-f-williams-1963/

Source of the Author's Information:

Ashley Stewart, โ€œNew Perkins Coie Seattle leaderโ€™s career took him from combine to courthouse,โ€ May 1, 2017, Puget Sound Business Journal, https://www.bizjournals.com/seattle/news/2017/05/01/perkins-coie-seattle-leader-james-williams-career.html; โ€œJames F. Williams, Partner,โ€ PerkinsCoie.com, https://www.perkinscoie.com/en/professionals/james-f-williams.html; โ€œABA Midyear event,โ€ Washington Leadership Institute channel, YouTube.com, February 16, 2022, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m7kAIW-S9ms.

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