R. W. Buzzard
Quick Facts
Biography
R.W. Buzzard is an American jurist who, as of 2019, is a judge of the District Court of Lewis County, a rural county in the state of Washington.
Early life and education
R.W. (pronounced /ɑɹ ˈdʌb.jə/ in colloquial American English)Buzzard is the child of Steve Buzzard, a former judge of the municipal court of Chehalis, Washington, and Missy Buzzard, the town's former mayor. He graduated from Centralia High School and Eastern Washington University, and later earned a Juris Doctor cum laude from the Seattle University School of Law. He also has a Master of Business Administration from City University of Seattle.
Career
R.W. Buzzard was called to the bar in 2000. In 2003, he was appointed to the municipal court of Centralia, Washington and, the following year, was selected to the bench of the Lewis County District Court.
Buzzard was the subject of criticism in 2018 after it was revealed he would occasionally drink liquor in his chambers and had long kept a loaded firearm in an unlocked drawer of his desk. According to Buzzard, he kept the firearm for personal protection as one of his judicial duties was to ride circuit to the remote town of Morton, Washington. Critics noted that county ordinances prohibited carrying firearms into the Lewis County Courthouse by anyone except security personnel; however, Buzzard explained that he was among the court's security personnel, since he had ultimate responsibility for the order of his courtroom. Nonetheless, Buzzard agreed to begin keeping personal armaments in a locked safe at the courthouse.
Buzzard has criticized the lack of security in the judicial facilities of Washington which have a high rate of courtroom violence; the state has the eighth greatest number of annual courtroom security incidents in the United States, eclipsing even that of New York despite the latter state having three times Washington's population.
In 2018, Buzzard personally intervened in a fight that erupted in his courtroom after a civil defendant punched an attorney. Buzzard responded to the assault by descending from the bench and physically restraining the man. The following year, Buzzard again descended from the bench to give chase after two criminal suspects attempted to escape his courtroom. When the two men fled, Buzzard ripped off his judicial robes and pursued the suspects through the courthouse, ultimately grappling and restraining one of the two. The second man was later apprehended by deputies of the Lewis County Sheriff.
Personal life
Buzzard is a member of the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks and is Methodist. He is married with two children.