About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 47. Chapters: John Nance Garner, Sharon Keller, Sheila Jackson Lee, Louie Gohmert, Robert L. Bobbitt, Marshall Formby, Ted Poe, Ralph Yarborough, John Carter, Tom Vandergriff, Phil Hardberger, Fortunato Benavides, Catherine Crier, Max Sandlin, Tryon D. Lewis, Debra Lehrmann, Charlie Gonzalez, Sarah T. Hughes, David M. Medina, Joan Huffman, Nathaniel Macon Burford, Lee H. Rosenthal, Eva Guzman, Raleigh Brown, Ezequiel D. Salinas, Ben Z. Grant, Jennifer Elrod, Catharina Haynes, Constantine W. Buckley, Edward C. Prado, Robert R. Casey, Harry M. Wurzbach, Scott Brister, Margarito C. Garza, Mathew Ector, Carlos Cadena, Bill Moody, Rebecca Simmons, Frank N. Ikard, Sam Nuchia, Arnold Wilson Cowen, Morris Overstreet, Stephen W. Perkins, Charles S. West, Jeremiah V. Cockrell, John Lafayette Camp, John Andrew Young, Charles Holcomb, Graham B. Purcell, Jr., Charles Barrow, Joseph Abbott, Joseph William Woodrough, John Holt Duncan, Pat Priest, Lana Myers, Robert Emmett Bledsoe Baylor, Augustus McCloskey, Hugh Gibson, Clay Stone Briggs, Kenneth M. Hoyt, Roy Barrera, Jr., Ezekiel B. Turner, Hipolito Frank Garcia, James Babbage Wells, Jr., James Addison Baker the elder, Allen Burroughs Hannay, Micaela Alvarez. Excerpt: Sharon Faye Keller (born August 1, 1953) is the Presiding Judge of the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, the highest court for criminal matters in the State of Texas. Born in Texas, Keller graduated from Rice University in 1975 with a major in philosophy and obtained her J.D. degree in 1978 from Southern Methodist University School of Law. According to the Texas Monthly, when Keller was asked in a preelection interview if she was bound to follow the law, even if it meant an unjust result. "Absolutely," she replied. "Who is going to determine what justice is? Me? I think justice is achieved by following the law." According to some ...