Greg Coleman (jurist)
Gregory Scott Coleman ( October 31, 1963 in San Francisco, California – November 23, 2010 near Destin, Fla.) was a Texas lawyer and the first Solicitor General of Texas, serving in that capacity from 1999 to 2001. Prior to that, he served as a clerk for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit chief judge Edith Jones and U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, arguing nine cases before the nation's high court in the 1990s. At the time of his appointment as solicitor general, he was working as an adjunct professor at Houston's South Texas College of Law.
In 2007, he established his own law firm, Yetter Coleman.
Personal life and Death
Born in San Francisco to a military family, he graduated magna cum laude from Texas A&M University in 1987, with a degree in applied mathematical sciences, and received an MBA from the same institution in 1989. In 1992, he graduated from University of Texas School of Law; while there, he edited the Texas Law Review.
He married Stephanie Miller Coleman in 1987, and had three sons: Chase, Austin and Reid.
He died on November 23, 2010 when a Piper Malibu plane he was piloting en route to a Thanksgiving family gathering crashed on approach to an airport in Destin, Florida; two other people on board, Coleman's mother-in-law Charlene Miller (63, an assistant vice president of Texas A&M's research and graduate studies division), and her brother, James Black (58,an observer of BP's Gulf Coast restoration program), also died in the crash.
He was a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latterday Saints and is remembered as deeply Christian, known for his integrity, honor and generosity both in his personal life and his professional life. He was eulogized by Clarence Thomas, supreme court justice and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit judge, the honorable Edith Jones. His interment was in the Texas State Cemetery, a privilege for those who have served Texas in an honorable capacity.[citation needed]
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