Roy Moore

Lawyer

Birthday February 11, 1947

Birth Sign Aquarius

Birthplace Gadsden, Alabama, U.S.

Age 77 years old

Nationality United States

#27185 Most Popular

1947

Roy Stewart Moore (born February 11, 1947) is an American politician, lawyer, and jurist who served as chief justice of the Supreme Court of Alabama from 2001 to 2003 and again from 2013 to 2017, each time being removed from office for judicial misconduct by the Alabama Court of the Judiciary.

1954

In 1954, the family relocated to Houston, Texas, the site of a postwar building boom.

After about four years, they returned to Alabama, then moved to Pennsylvania, and then returned permanently to Alabama.

His father worked for the Tennessee Valley Authority, first building dams and later the Anniston Army Depot.

1965

Moore attended his freshman year of high school at Gallant near Gadsden, and transferred to Etowah County High School for his final three years, graduating in 1965.

Moore was admitted to the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York, on the recommendation of outgoing Democratic U.S. representative Albert Rains, and after confirmation of that nomination by incoming Republican representative James D. Martin of Gadsden.

1967

Moore was born in Gadsden, Alabama, the seat of Etowah County, to construction worker Roy Baxter Moore, who died in 1967, and Evelyn Stewart.

He is the oldest of five children, and grew up with two brothers and two sisters.

1969

He graduated in 1969 with a Bachelor of Science degree.

With the Vietnam War underway, Moore served in several posts as a military police officer, including Fort Benning, Georgia, and Illesheim, West Germany, before being deployed to South Vietnam.

1974

Moore was discharged from the United States Army as a captain in 1974, and was admitted to the University of Alabama School of Law that same year.

Professors and fellow students held him in low regard due to his incapacity for keen analysis.

1977

After graduating from the University of Alabama Law School, he joined the Etowah County district attorney's office, serving as an assistant district attorney from 1977 to 1982.

He graduated in 1977 with a Juris Doctor degree and returned to Gadsden.

Moore soon moved to the district attorney's office, working as the first full-time prosecutor in Etowah County.

During his tenure there, Moore was investigated by the state bar for "suspect conduct" after convening a grand jury to examine what he perceived to have been funding shortages in the sheriff's office.

1982

Several weeks after the state bar investigation was dismissed as unfounded, Moore quit his prosecuting position to run as a Democrat for the county's circuit-court judge seat in 1982.

The election was bitter, with Moore alleging that cases were being delayed in exchange for payoffs.

The allegations were never substantiated.

Moore overwhelmingly lost the Democratic runoff primary to fellow attorney Donald Stewart, whom Moore described as "an honorable man for whom I have much respect, (who) eventually became a close friend".

1992

In 1992, he was appointed as a circuit judge by Governor Guy Hunt to fill a vacancy, and was elected to the position at the next term.

Democrat Doug Jones won the election, becoming the first Democrat since 1992 to win a U.S. Senate seat in Alabama.

Moore's political views have been characterized as far-right and Christian nationalist.

*

2001

In 2001, Moore was elected to the position of chief justice of the Supreme Court of Alabama.

2003

Moore was removed from his position in November 2003 by the Alabama Court of the Judiciary for refusing a federal court's order to remove a marble monument of the Ten Commandments that he had placed in the rotunda of the Alabama Judicial Building.

2006

Moore sought the Republican nomination for the governorship of Alabama in 2006 and 2010, but lost in the primaries.

2013

Moore was elected again as chief justice in 2013, but he was suspended in May 2016, for defying a U.S. Supreme Court decision about same-sex marriage (Obergefell v. Hodges), and resigned in April 2017.

2017

He was the Republican Party nominee in the 2017 U.S. Senate special election in Alabama to fill the seat vacated by Jeff Sessions, but was accused by several women of sexually assaulting them while they were underage and lost to Democratic candidate Doug Jones.

On September 26, 2017, he won a primary runoff to become the Republican candidate in a special election for a U.S. Senate seat that had been vacated by Jeff Sessions.

In November 2017, during his special election campaign for U.S. Senate, several public allegations of sexual misconduct were made against Moore.

Three women stated that he had sexually assaulted them when they were at the respective ages of 14, 16 and 28; six other women reported that Moore – then in his 30s – pursued sexual relationships with them while they were as young as 16.

Moore acknowledged that he may have approached and dated teenagers while he was in his 30s, but denied sexually assaulting anyone.

President Donald Trump endorsed Moore a week before the election, after which some Republicans withdrew their opposition to Moore.

2018

Serving as the commander of 188th Military Police Company of the 504th Military Police Battalion, Moore was perceived to be reckless, but very strict.

He insisted his troops salute him on the battlefield, despite official training which discourages such behavior because salutes can identify an officer to enemy targeting.

Some of his soldiers gave him the derogatory nickname "Captain America", due to his attitude toward discipline.

This role earned him enemies, and in his autobiography he recalls sleeping on sandbags to avoid a grenade or bomb being tossed under his cot, as many of his men had threatened him with fragging.

2020

Moore ran for the same Senate seat again in 2020 and lost the Republican primary.

Moore attended West Point and served as a company commander in the Military Police Corps during the Vietnam War.