UH law school alumna, who nearly lost her home in Maui wildfires, named “courageous judge” by National Judicial College

A graduate of the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa William S. Richardson School of Law was recently selected as one of 60 courageous judges to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the founding of The National Judicial College. Judge Adrianne N. Heely Caires is the only honoree from Hawaiʻi. She has served as a Second Circuit District Court judge on Maui since 2012. 

“We are so proud of Judge Heely Caires and grateful for her ongoing service to our communities,” said UH law school Dean Camille Nelson. “This is a high honor and one that is incredibly well deserved.”

The prestigious list includes Frank M. Johnson, the federal judge in the 1956 Rosa Parks trial, tribal judges and judges from foreign countries. But most of the honorees are from state courts. Judges are recognized for their “demonstrated courage in upholding the rule of law and providing justice for all.”

Headshot of Judge Adrianne Heely Caires
Judge Adrianne N. Heely Caires

“We hope this list raises people’s awareness of and appreciation for the thousands of steadfast judges who keep the promise of equal justice under law every day, including those days when it would be more popular or convenient to do something else,” said NJC President Benes Z. Aldana. The National Judicial College is the country’s oldest and largest educational institution where judges learn courtroom skills.

Judge Heely Caires, a 1998 UH law school graduate, has previously served as a deputy corporation counsel for Maui County and a former deputy public defender on Maui and Oʻahu. She was nominated for the honor by Paul Tonnessen, executive director of the Maui Friends of the Children’s Justice Center.

“It was with honor that I nominated Judge Heely Caires as an outstanding judge for not only in her role as a judge but also for her humanitarian presence she gifts our community with on a daily basis,” Tonnessen said. “She is a woman who understands the need to be an instrument of peace for all she encounters both inside and outside the courtroom. While she needs to address the issues coming before her, she also has the empathy to understand why.”

She, her husband, Leo Caires, and their four children had to evacuate their home in Kula during the Maui wildfires and came back a week later to a heavily damaged structure.

“We were lucky our house was not completely destroyed,” she said. “More than 20 of our neighbors lost their homes.”

Despite this personal tragedy, Judge Heely Caires and her judicial colleagues from across the state quickly banded together to work with the Child Welfare Services staff, guardians ad litem and others to find shelters for the foster children in Lahaina who had no place to live.

“We had to act fast and, thankfully, there were so many who responded,” she said. “Chief Justice Mark Recktenwald and Deputy Administrative Director Brandon Kimura came to Maui shortly after the fires to meet with our judges, the Maui County Bar Association and other local leaders to talk about the needs of the community.”

One critical need had little to do with law and order, but proved to be incredibly important — supporting the hundreds of children and adults dealing with extreme trauma.

“Brandon connected me with the Governor’s Office on Wellness and Resilience and we were able to copy and laminate 500 of their mental health resource care cards thanks to funding assistance from the Children’s Justice Act Committee,” Judge Heely Caires said. “The cards, which provide tips on trauma-informed care, were distributed to the judges, public defenders, county prosecutors, Office of Mayor, and all resource centers for the volunteers and leaders helping at the evacuation shelters.”

She added, “But you know, despite this unfathomable tragedy, it was an 8-year-old foster child who gave me hope for our future. Charlie’s mom had passed away two years ago and while at the beach scattering her ashes, she saw another girl about her age. Charlie asked the girl if she could go and live with her. Fast forward two years and Charlie was scheduled to be adopted a week after the wildfires by the other little girl’s family.”

Judge Heely Caires recalled seeing Charlie at the adoption proceeding “with the biggest smile on her face.”

“Despite just losing her home and school and having to re-shelter and re-enroll in a new school, there she was, so happy,” Judge Heely Caires said. “All she wanted was to get another copy of the “Astronaut Girl” book I had previously given her, because she lost it in the fire. Needless to say, there wasn’t a dry eye in the courtroom.”

This little girl, who had experienced life-changing trauma before the wildfires ever happened, was just happy to be alive.

“If everyone had Charlie’s spirit and resiliency, this world would be a better place,” Judge Heely Caires said.

Reposted from the Hawaiʻi State Judiciary