Judge Michael Corriero Biography, Age, Spouse, Education, Net Worth

Michael Corriero Biography

Michael Corriero (Michael A. Corriero) is a Television host in the United States, Executive Director and Founder of the New York Center for Juvenile Justice. He serves as one of three judges on CBS Television Distribution’s Emmy-nominated syndicated court show HOT BENCH, created by Judge Judy Sheindlin.

How old is Michael Corriero? – Age

Corriero is 77 years old as of 2020. He was born in 1943 in the United States of America.

Michael Corriero Spouse

Corriero has not revealed his marital status to the public.

Michael Corriero Education

Judge Corriero was an alumnus of the School of Law of St. John’s University in 1967 and the University of St. John’s in 1964. He was a member and served as an assistant editor of the Law Review. He graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree majoring in social science from St. John’s University Campus.

What is Judge Michael Corriero’s Net worth?

Corriero has an estimated Net Worth of $50 Million dollars.

Michael Corriero Career

From July 2008 to July 2010, he served as the Executive Director of Big Brothers Big Sisters of New York City. Big Brothers Big Sisters’ goal is to provide all children who need loving adult role models with mentors.

He previously spent 28 years as a judge in the courts of the State of New York. In June 1990, he was assigned to the New York State Court of Claims. Judge Corriero ruled over Manhattan’s Youth Part from September 1992 to February 2008, a court set aside within the adult court system to deal solely with cases involving 13, 14, and 15-year-olds that are charged with the most extreme and violent offences.

He participated as a Polsky Judicial Fellow at the Aspen Institute’s Justice and Society. Seminar in 2003. He has worked at Pace University as an Adjunct Professor and was an Assistant District Attorney for New York County. As a private lawyer, he later practiced in all phases of criminal practice. He was also Assistant General Counsel to the Society of European Songwriters, Authors and Composers. He was an Associate at Schiffmacher, Rochford & Cullen, a firm that specialized in municipal law. Judge Corriero has served as Chairperson of the Committee on Juvenile Justice of the Association of the Bar of the City of New York.

He is the author of a book entitled: Judging Children as Children: A Proposal for a Juvenile Justice System. He is on the Committee on Judiciary of Mayor Bloomberg and the Task Force on Reforming Criminal Justice of Governor David Paterson. The winner of various honours and distinctions is Judge Corrieros. He also serves on the New. York State Permanent Commission on Justice for Children. He has previously served on the. New York state Probation Commission Task Force. Judge Corriero was called to the New York State Supreme Court and has served as a Judge of the Criminal Court of the City of New York.

In 1997, he was invited by the United Nations to fly to South Africa to give guidance on criminal justice. He travelled to Sierra Leone in 2002 on a trip funded by the Ford Foundation and the Human Rights Committee. In 2005, the Soros Foundation was invited to Kazakhstan to address government officials on the creation of a criminal justice system. In several times, he travelled to Israel at the behest of ELEM, an American/Israeli group, to collaborate on youth justice programs. He is also co-chair of the Juveniles Justice Committee of the American Bar Association and trustee of the Big Brothers Big Sisters of New York City, among others.

He flew to Peru in November 2009 on a trip funded by the United States Department of State. He gave a keynote address at the First World Conference on Restorative Criminal Rights in the Catholic University of Lima.

He has given lectures on youth justice issues at organizations such as Tel Aviv University, the MacArthur Foundation and the Rockefeller Foundation. He has also lectured on criminal justice at several colleges and law schools, including Columbia University, New York University, Fordham University, and Ann Arbor Law School, Michigan University. At the behest of the MacArthur Foundation and the United States of America. The Senate Judiciary Committee briefed the members of the Criminal Justice Committee.

Judge Corriero appeared at local, city and federal congressional hearings on criminal justice issues, gave several addresses and engaged in a variety of state and national panel discussions.