Mary Yu could be the primary to acknowledge that her lengthy, impactful profession as a lawyer, trial court docket decide and Washington Supreme Court docket justice was removed from what she’d envisioned rising up the daughter of immigrants simply outdoors of Chicago. In actual fact, the principle aspirations instilled in her and her brother have been to be taught to learn and keep out of hassle.
She succeeded in each and whilst a school scholar at Dominican College she was on monitor to turn out to be a trainer. However it was her expertise working on the Archdiocese of Chicago that pointed her to the sphere of legislation. And now, almost 50 years later, she has determined to depart that profession.
Yu, 68, will retire on the finish of the yr after 11 years as a justice. Although her six-year time period doesn’t expire till the tip of 2028, her choice was influenced by the death of Washington Justice Susan Owens in March, three months after she retired.
“I need to attempt various things whereas I’m nonetheless wholesome and might do it,” Yu stated.
Amongst her famous written opinions was for the unanimous ruling in a 2023 voting rights case the place Latino voters in Franklin County complained of voter suppression. Yu wrote: “The WVRA (Washington Voting Rights Act) protects all Washington voters from discrimination on the premise of race, shade and language minority group.”
A 2024 choice stated legal defendants can’t be required to look for nonjury proceedings from an “in-court holding cell” with out a outlined safety threat. Yu wrote: Requiring a defendant to look from an in-court holding cell “undermines the presumption of innocence, interferes with a defendant’s means to speak with counsel, and violates the dignity of the defendant and the court docket proceedings.”
And in 2022, the court docket addressed racial profiling in police stops. Yu wrote: “At the moment, we formally acknowledge what has all the time been true: In interactions with legislation enforcement, race and ethnicity matter” when figuring out the legality of police seizures.
Her dedication to public service stretched past the halls of justice.
The pivotal second in her profession, and what she stated she’s most happy with, is officiating lots of of weddings, significantly same-sex unions. She referred to as it “a privilege.”
She has mentored dozens of legislation college students and younger attorneys; she has volunteered her time and expertise with the Seattle Women Faculty Mock Trials; and she or he has taught legislation at Seattle College Faculty of Legislation, the place a scholarship is endowed in her name.
Yu stated she is going to spend her time presumably writing youngsters’s books, championing voters rights and tutoring. The subject material? Studying, in fact.

