Colleen Mary O'Toole


Colleen Mary O'Toole presently serves as an Appellate Judge of the Ohio Eleventh District Court of Appeals. Judge O'Toole was first elected in 2004. Judge O'Toole left the Eleventh District at the end of her term in February 2011 after being defeated in the 2010 election, and founded award-winning, On Demand Interpretation Services, LLC, an entrepreneurial start up that provides certified interpretation in 170 languages and American sign-language to public entities and their support networks. In 2012, she was re-elected by defeating sitting Judge, Mary Jane Trapp, to the Eleventh District Court of Appeals.

Legal career

Judge O'Toole began her legal career in 1991 as a law clerk and a litigation and appellate attorney in the Cuyahoga County Public Defender's Office. After this, she worked as a litigation manager for the National Interstate Company. In 1995, she began working as counsel with the firm Kramer and Niermann, LPA. Then, in 1998, she opened her own "Law Offices of Colleen M. O'Toole". She has practiced in the areas of civil, criminal, corporate and family law.
In 2004, she was elected to the Court of Appeals. She lost her re-election bid in 2010. She was then elected again to the bench in 2012. She has decided over 1500 cases 72 murders and authored over 500 opinions. She established a case management system which reduced backlog by 60% in the court of appeals. She advocated for efficiency and increased access to pro se litigants.
Judge O'Toole is admitted to practice before the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio, the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, and the United States Supreme Court. She has held memberships in the American, Ohio, Cleveland, Lake County and Geauga County Bar Associations and has been a member of the Cuyahoga County Criminal Defense Lawyers Association. She was an adjunct professor at John Carroll University, and presently serves as one for Kent State University.

Judicial campaign complaint against O'Toole

Prior to the 2012 election, a close personal friend of her electoral opponent, Mary Jane Trapp, filed a 12-count grievance against O'Toole alleging that she had violated the Ohio Code of Judicial Conduct. Nine of the charges were dismissed at the probable-cause stage. One month before the 2012 election, two of the three remaining violations were found to have merit. Despite this finding O'Toole won the election, resoundingly defeating her opponent, Trapp.
O'Toole appealed and in 2014, the Ohio Supreme Court dismissed one of the two remaining counts, finding O'Toole had violated the remaining charge related to a name badge that she wore during the 2012 election. O'Toole relied upon the case of In re Judicial Campaign Grievance Against O'Neill, 132 Ohio St.3d 1472, 2012-Ohio-3223, in asserting her first amendment right to use the honorary title as she had earned in her prior election. Two of the judges appointed to hear O'Toole's case, had dissented in the O'Neill case. The Ohio Supreme Court fined O'Toole and ordered her to pay the complainant's attorney's fees.
Justice Paul E. Pfeifer, concurring in part and dissenting in part, wrote the following

Personal

Colleen O'Toole enjoys angling, and lives on the Grand River with her husband, a marine veteran and NRA Certified Instructor, their three children one of whom is a foster child and their dog, Lucky O'Toole. She is licensed to carry a concealed weapon and enjoys target shooting.