Alice Martin

Alice Martin
Deputy Attorney General of Alabama
Assumed office
May 1, 2015[1]
Governor Robert Bentley
Kay Ivey
Attorney General of Alabama
Acting
In office
February 9, 2017  February 10, 2017
Governor Robert Bentley
Preceded by Luther Strange
Succeeded by Steve Marshall
United States Attorney for the Northern District of Alabama
In office
September 29, 2001  June 8, 2009
President George W. Bush
Barack Obama
Governor Don Siegelman
Bob Riley
Preceded by G. Douglas Jones
Succeeded by Joyce White Vance
Personal details
Born 1955/1956 (age 61–62)[2]
Sledge, Mississippi, U.S
Political party Republican
Education Vanderbilt University (BSN)
University of Mississippi,
Oxford
(JD)

Alice H. Martin (born 1955/56) is an American politician who is current Chief Deputy Attorney General of Alabama.[3] Martin was the United States Attorney for the Northern District of Alabama from 2001 until 2009. She was nominated by President George W. Bush in 2001.[4] During her term the office established a healthcare fraud task force which collected approximately $750M in qui tam settlements, as well as obtaining over 125 convictions of elected and appointed officials and contractors in public corruption prosecutions. In 2017, Martin served as the acting Attorney General of Alabama for a short period of time.

Martin tendered her resignation from office in June 2009, five months after the inauguration of Democratic President Barack Obama.[5]

Early life and education

Martin is a native of Sledge, Mississippi, and has lived in Alabama since 1988.[2]

Martin graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Nursing from Vanderbilt University and is a Registered Nurse. She worked as a nurse during law school and received her Juris Doctorate in 1981 from the University of Mississippi.[6]

Career

Martin began her legal career in Memphis, Tennessee in 1981 but soon entered a career of public service with the United States Attorney's Office for the Western District of Tennessee in 1983. She served as an Assistant U. S. Attorney from 1983-1988, and as a Special Assistant U. S. Attorney from 1988-1990. She focused on white collar prosecutions and medical malpractice defense for VA, military and Bureau of Prison hospitals. She entered the private legal sector upon moving to Alabama specializing in insurance defense work before being appointed as a Circuit Court Judge by Governor Fob James in 1997, to fill an unexpired judicial term.

Martin is licensed to practice law in Alabama, Mississippi and Tennessee. She is a Certified Fraud Examiner (CFE), and certified in Healthcare Privacy (HCPC), Healthcare Compliance (CHC), and civil and domestic relations mediation.

U.S. Attorney

After running as a Republican in a county which had not elected a Republican since Reconstruction, Martin re-entered private practice. She then returned to public service when nominated by President George W. Bush as the first female U. S. Attorney for the Northern District of Alabama in September 2001. During her 8 years of service, from 2001 to 2009, she was recognized nationally for a top ranked Healthcare Fraud Task Force which returned over $750M in qui tam settlements/recoveries to the U. S. Treasury, as well as the North Alabama Public Corruption Task Force which obtained over 125 convictions of elected/appointed officials and contractors including the mayor of Birmingham, 5 of 6 Jefferson County commissioners, the Chancellor of Alabama Post-Secondary and several state legislators. Martin led the prosecution of the HEALTHSOUTH $2.8B accounting fraud which netted the first conviction under Sarbanes-Oxley and 17 convictions of corporate officers for various frauds and FCPA violations. She also oversaw the successful prosecution of Eric Robert Rudolph, the FBI's Most Wanted domestic terrorist for his bombing of a Birmingham abortion clinic.

After leaving public office, Martin served as the Vice President of Ethics and Compliance for RegionalCare Hospital Partners of Brentwood, Tennessee from 2010 until 2012. She then served as a healthcare compliance expert for various entities and returned to public service as Deputy Attorney General for the Alabama Department of Public Examiners, the financial watchdog agency for the State of Alabama. There she oversaw implementation of the Recovery Audit statute for Alabama.

Deputy Attorney General

Martin was selected to serve as Chief Deputy Attorney General by Attorney General Luther Strange in April 2015 and oversaw the legal and administrative operation of the Office of the Attorney General for the State of Alabama. Following the resignation of Strange on February 9, 2017, she served as acting Attorney General for one day until her replacement by Steve Marshall.

References

Legal offices
Preceded by
Luther Strange
Attorney General of Alabama
Acting

2017
Succeeded by
Steve Marshall
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