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Judge Michael Finkle

Michael Finkle has served as a judge of the King County District Court (KCDC) since March 2010. He currently presides at the KCDC Issaquah courthouse, where he handles primarily civil matters and East King County Regional Youth Traffic Court. Judge Finkle also has an extensive background in criminal law. In addition to previously serving as a criminal trial judge, Judge Finkle has presided over the district court’s Regional Mental Health Court and Regional Veterans Court.

Throughout his judicial career, Judge Finkle has been a leader in working to improve the judicial system. He is a member of the Washington State Supreme Court’s Gender and Justice Commission, the judicial member of the Washington State Bar Association’s Well-Being Task Force, and a board member of the Joint Minority Mentorship Program. Judge Finkle is a faculty member for the state Judicial College for 2024-2026 on sexual assault and domestic violence, and taught from 2013-2015 on inability to proceed based on mental illness.

Judge Finkle also chairs the statewide subcommittee that is responsible for creating and maintaining standard form orders for criminal cases in which defendants have a mental illness that might interfere with their ability to proceed. As a result of a recent massive change to the protection order statute, he serves on another statewide subcommittee that is responsible for creating and maintaining forms for civil protection order cases. Judge Finkle previously chaired the groups that created Regional Veterans Court and Regional Youth Court.

Judge Finkle currently serves on many other statewide committees, such as the Judicial Assistance Services Program, and the District and Municipal Court Judges Association’s (DMCJA) Therapeutic Courts Committee (which he previously chaired). He is a past member of the DMCJA Board and the DMCJA’s Legislative and Rules Committees.

Judge Finkle is known throughout the state for his expertise in mental health law and the judicial system. He currently serves on the “Trueblood General Advisory Committee,” or GAC. The GAC is part of the governance structure for a settlement agreement to improve the state’s response to people who have a mental illness and encounter the criminal justice system. He has also served on King County’s Mental Illness and Drug Dependency (MIDD) Oversight Committee, which administers a multi-million-dollar budget. The MIDD was established to help stabilize people who have mental illness or chemical dependency and to divert them from jails and emergency rooms by giving them proper treatment.

In 2013, Judge Finkle co-chaired a statewide work group that examined laws governing therapeutic court practices in Washington. The legislature adopted the work group’s recommendations in 2014. In 2012, Judge Finkle chaired the work group that created King County District Court’s Regional Veterans Court, and previously served on a national advisory panel examining constitutional issues relating to mental health courts.

As an attorney, Judge Finkle served on several other work groups and task forces devoted to increasing access to justice while protecting public safety. He served on the statewide task force that recommended creating mental health courts in this state. Soon after, he participated in forming Seattle Municipal Mental Health Court, the fifth mental health court in the nation (King County Regional Mental Health Court was the second). He also served on the State Bar’s Diversity Committee for two years, the state’s Designated Mental Health Professional Protocol Advisory Committee for two years, and the Sexual Offender Civil Commitment Subcommittee of the State Bar’s Committee on Public Defense for two years. He also served on the task force that recommended creating a domestic violence unit within the Seattle City Attorney’s Office. He helped create that unit and served as its interim co-director for one year. He also served on a Domestic Fatality Review work group.

Judge Finkle is a Past President (2000) and former Board Member of the Washington State Association of Municipal Attorneys (WSAMA). In 2010, he received WSAMA’s Ernest H. Campbell Award for sustained excellence in the practice of municipal law, and in 2003, he received its inaugural “Outstanding Service Award.”

Judge Finkle has taught law at all levels, from judges to psychiatrists to high school students. He is a currently on the faculty of the Kessler-Eidson Trial Techniques Program at Emory University Law School in Atlanta. He also served as an adjunct professor of law at Seattle University School of Law for 17 years. Once each year, Judge Finkle helps the psychiatry residents at the University of Washington Medical School learn skills for testifying at contested hearings. In addition, Judge Finkle has taught courses at the National Judicial College, the Washington State Judicial College, and the National Institute for Trial Advocacy. Judge Finkle taught in the Trial Advocacy Program for the State Bar from 1991-2000 and received a special recognition award from the Bar in 1997.

Judge Finkle also teaches through his volunteer efforts. He hosts and judges at one of the regional tournaments for the YMCA High School Mock Trial program, serves as a judge at the State Tournament, and as an assistant coach and consultant for several schools as they prepare for the state tournament.  The Issaquah School District recently, bestowed their VIP award on Judge Finkle for his work in the career and technical education area. They recognized his work with mock trial, as well as the pathways advisory committee, which helps develop innovative and meaningful curriculum for students within the CTE program.

A popular speaker, Judge Finkle has given over 135 presentations nationally, regionally, statewide, and in Canada on law-related topics such as understanding mental health law and policy issues. His audiences have included judges, prosecutors, public defenders, private criminal defense attorneys, law enforcement, mental health professionals the elderly, students from elementary school through law school, and members of the public.

Judge Finkle’s publications include:

  • Determining a Criminal Defendant’s Competency to Proceed With An Extradition Hearing (co-author), Volume 43, Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law (2015)
  • Commitment Based on Mental Illness, Ch. 4C, Washington Health Law Manual (3rd ed. 2007 and 2015, 4th ed. 2019)
  • Limited Jurisdiction Section of Criminal Chapter, King County Bar Association’s Washington Lawyers’ Practice Manual (co-chief author) (2002-2004, 2011-15)
  • Mental Health Courts: Judicial Leadership and Effective Court Intervention (co-author), Volume 51, ABA Judges Journal (2012)
  • Competency Court: A Creative Solution for Restoring Competency to the Competency Process (lead author), Volume 27, Behavioral Sciences and the Law (2009)
  • Washington’s Criminal Competency Laws: Getting From Where We Are to Where We Should Be, Volume 5, Seattle Journal for Social Justice (2006)
  • Ethics Primer for Government Lawyers (co-editor and contributing author) (1998 and 2nd ed. 2010)
  • For Whom The Period Tolls: Discovery of Loss Provisions in Fidelity Insurance Policies, 9 Century City Bar Association Journal 19 (1984)
  • Voluntary Affirmative Action Under Title VII: Standards of Permissibility, 28 UCLA Law Review 291 (1980)

Judge Finkle graduated from the UCLA School of Law, where he was a managing editor and staff member of the UCLA Law Review.  He also holds a Bachelor of Business Administration from Loyola Marymount University and a Master of Business Administration from Seattle University.

Judge Finkle began his legal career in 1981 as a business lawyer at a medium size private law firm.  In 1986, he entered public service as a deputy city attorney with the Los Angeles City Attorney's Office.  He was assigned to the Criminal and Special Operations Divisions.  His duties included trying criminal cases, handling writs and appeals, and advocating for the rights of indigent tenants as a member of the city’s elite Housing Enforcement Section in a large-scale civil unfair business practice lawsuit.  In 1990, Judge Finkle joined the Seattle City Attorney’s Office, where he served as a supervising attorney in the Criminal Division until he took the bench in 2010.

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