Early life and education Charlotte M. Cooksey was born on October 30, 1947, in Baltimore, Maryland. She grew up in Louisiana, where she would pursue an undergraduate degree from
Tulane University. She graduated with a B.A. in 1968. In 1971, she received her
Juris Doctor from
Loyola University School of Law. She would serve in the role for the next twenty five years. The program resulted in increased attendance rates and a drop of daytime crime by 20 percent. In Maryland, she was noted as one of the first jurists to recognize the criminalization of the mentally ill, and the
biological basis of addiction. In 2002, she developed Baltimore's
Mental Health Court, the first court of its kind in Maryland and one of the first mental health courts in the United States. The Mental Health court serves defendants with mental health diagnoses with a problem solving, rather than adversarial approach. It has since expanded beyond Baltimore's District 1. Cooksey further advocated on behalf of the incarcerated, acting as a whistleblower and speaking out about inhumane conditions in Maryland's jails during a severe heatwave. Later, she worked with former judge Ellen M. Heller to establish Tamar's Children, a program for incarcerated prisoners who were pregnant.
Retirement and legacy Judge Cooksey retired from the bench in 2008. In 2012, Cooksey wrote the State of Maryland's Mental Health Procedures handbook, which was still being used by the state's judicial system over a decade later. == Publications ==