W. Cary Edwards

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W. Cary Edwards (July 20, 1944, Ridgewood, New Jersey) was the Attorney General of New Jersey from 1986 – 1989.

Edwards grew up in Bergen County, New Jersey. His parents separated when he was 11, and he moved with his mother Virginia, along with a brother and a sister, to East Paterson (now Elmwood Park, New Jersey).[1] He graduated from St. Luke's High School and studied business administration at Seton Hall University, where he graduated in 1967. He received his law degree from Seton Hall University School of Law in 1970 and was admitted to the New Jersey bar the same year.[2]

Edwards married Lynn Cozzolino in 1970. In 1974 they moved to Oakland, New Jersey, and a year later Edwards was elected councilman there. In 1977 he was elected to the New Jersey General Assembly. He would serve three terms in the Assembly and be named assistant minority leader. Thomas Kean served as Edwards' mentor in the Assembly, and when Kean became Governor of New Jersey in 1982, he selected Edwards as his chief counsel.[1]

Kean then named Edwards Attorney General, and he was sworn in on January 21, 1986, the day of Kean's second inauguration. As Attorney General, Edwards sought to increase the size of the Department of Law and Public Safety; initiated a new anti-drug program; instituted a task force to combat organized crime; planned a virtual overhaul of the Division of Motor Vehicles; and confronted problems such as insurance fraud and state land use planning.[2]

Edwards ran for Governor of New Jersey in 1989, losing to Jim Courter in the Republican primary. He ran again in 1993, losing out to Christine Todd Whitman, who went on to victory in the general election.

In 1997 Whitman named Edwards to the New Jersey State Commission of Investigation, and in 2004 Governor Richard Codey appointed him chairman of the commission.[3]

Preceded by
Irwin I. Kimmelman
Attorney General of New Jersey
1986 – 1989
Succeeded by
Peter N. Perretti, Jr.

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