Trial Judges

Thomas LondreganJudge Londregan was born and raised in New London, CT. He attended local schools and thereafter attended Fairfield University in Fairfield, CT where he was a member of the President’s Circle and President of the Cardinal Key Society. After graduating from Fairfield University with a B.A. in Economics, he attended the University of Connecticut School of Law, graduating in 1969.

Upon graduating from law school, he served in the National Guard, completing his active duty at Fort Polk, Louisiana. Thereafter, he returned to New London and began the practice of law. He is admitted to practice in the State of Connecticut, as well as in the United States District Court, District of Connecticut, the U.S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals, and the United States Supreme Court. In addition to his duties as a Judge in the Mashantucket Tribal Court, Judge Londregan is the Director of Law for the City of New London and Town Attorney for the Town of Stonington. He has been a presenter at the National Tribal Judicial Conference, the Connecticut Association of Assessing Officers, Inc., the Annual School for Connecticut Assessors and Assessment Appeals, and the Northeastern Regional Association of Assessing Officers. He was also a panelist at the Rocky Mountain Land Use Institute at Strum Law School – University of Denver, Denver, CO. Judge Londregan has argued over 17 cases in the Connecticut Appellate and Supreme Courts. He resides in New London, CT with his wife Kathleen.

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Edward O'ConnellEdward O’Connell was born in New York City, raised in New Haven, Connecticut and resides in East Lyme, Connecticut with his wife Jeanne. He graduated from the College of the Holy Cross with a B.S. in Biology, and graduated from the University Of Connecticut School Of Law in 1968.

Upon graduating from law school, he began practicing law in New London, Connecticut. He is admitted to practice in the courts of the State of Connecticut, the U.S. District Court for the District Court and the United States Supreme Court. He is a member of the New London County Bar Association (President, 1990), the Connecticut Bar Association and the American Bar Association. Since 1995 he has served as a Judge in the Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Court. He also serves as an Attorney Trial Referee in the New London Superior Court, and as an arbitrator and a mediator. He is the Town Attorney for the towns of East Lyme and Canterbury, and the land use attorney for the town of Lebanon, and is a member of the board of directors of the Connecticut Association of Municipal Attorneys. He has been a speaker and panelist at legal seminars regarding a variety of topics, including Indian law, municipal law, eminent domain and land use issues. He has argued 23 cases before the Connecticut Supreme Court and Appellate Court.

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Jean LucaseyJean Lucasey (Oneida/Blackfeet/Salish descent) was born and raised in the suburbs of Chicago and received her B.A. in art history from the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana. After receiving her M.A. in journalism from the University of Missouri, she worked as a journalist for Gannett Corp. and taught news writing and copy editing at Iona College in New York before earning her J.D. at the University of Connecticut School of Law in 2000.

Judge Lucasey clerked for the Native American Rights Fund in Boulder, Colorado, between her second and third years in law school and served as judicial clerk in the Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Court for two years before her initial appointment as a judge in 2002. Upon the arrival of her twin boys in 2004, she left the bench for a few years, concentrating on home life and working as an education advocate and attorney for a non-profit that helped children in public schools.

Since August 2010, Judge Lucasey has been certified by the New York State Education Department as an Impartial Hearing Officer for Special Education matters. In that capacity, she has presided over more than 100 due process hearings and decided disputes between families and their school districts. She is co-chair of the education committee of the Westchester County Bar Association in White Plains, New York, and has served as a member of the Board of Education of the Dobbs Ferry Union Free School District since June 2014.

Judge Lucasey lives in Westchester County, New York, with her husband, Joe, and their two sons.

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Appellate Judges

Jill E. Tompkins, a Penobscot Nation tribal citizen, was appointed as a Justice for the Mashantucket Pequot Court of Appeals in 1994, after serving as the first Chief Judge at the trial-level. Since October 2023, she has served as the Executive Director of the Maine Indian Tribal-State Commission (MITSC). MITSC is an intergovernmental entity responsible for continually reviewing the effectiveness of the Maine Indian Claims Settlement Act of 1980 and the social, economic, and legal relationship between the Houlton Band of Maliseet Indians, the Passamaquoddy Tribe, the Penobscot Nation, and the State of Maine. She graduated from The King's College with a B.A. in English and History and was the first Native American to graduate from the University of Maine School of Law. She was also the first Native American woman admitted to law practice in Maine, and she has been licensed to practice in the courts of the Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Nation, the Penobscot Nation, and the Passamaquoddy Tribe, as well as the United States Supreme Court and numerous other tribal, federal, and state courts. She has served as a trial and appellate judge in several other tribal court systems.

Before coming to MITSC, Ms. Tompkins worked as the Court Attorney for the Nonremovable Mille Lacs Band of Ojibwe Court of Central Jurisdiction, where she led the establishment of the Band’s Family Healing to Wellness Court, which works with families to help them recover from the effects of substance use disorder.

Ms. Tompkins taught at the National Judicial College and organized the annual National Tribal Judicial Conference sponsored by the National American Indian Court Judges Association. She was the first woman to serve as the Association’s Board of Directors President. As the founding Executive Director for the National Tribal Justice Resource Center in Boulder, Colorado, Ms. Tompkins provided training and technical assistance for tribal courts throughout Indian Country.

For eleven years as a Clinical Professor of Law at the University of Colorado Law School, Ms. Tompkins taught student attorneys participating in the American Indian Law Clinic. She established Colorado Law's American Indian Law Certificate Program. She has been a frequent lecturer and writer on tribal justice systems, the application of the federal Indian Child Welfare Act, and the Maine Indian Land Claim Settlement Act.

Jill resides on Indian Island, Penobscot Nation Reservation, and is the mother of two sons and one daughter. She was a founding Board member of the Maine Indian Basketmakers Alliance.

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Gregory H. Bigler (Euchee, enrolled with Muscogee Creek Nation) is a private practitioner of Indian Law solely representing Native American tribes. In addition to sitting for the Mashantucket Pequot Court of Appeals, Judge Bigler serves as a tribal court judge for the Prairie Band Potawatomi, and sits on the Supreme Court for the Kansas Kickapoo Tribe. He is a Tribal Prosecutor for the Citizen Potawatomi Nation, where he previously served as district court judge. Prior appointments include Attorney General for the Kickapoo Tribe of Oklahoma, Attorney General for the Sac and Fox Nation, and past Chair, Indian Law section of the Oklahoma Bar Association. He is founder and past Chair of the Oklahoma Native Language Association, and the organizer and co-Chair of the Oklahoma Native Language Use Conference. Judge Bigler is a member of the Oklahoma Bar Association, and is admitted to practice before the U.S. Supreme Court, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit, U.S. District Courts for the Northern, Western and Eastern District Courts of Oklahoma, and numerous tribal courts. Judge Bigler’s linguistic interests range from his native Euchee language and efforts to raise awareness of native language preservation, to studies of Mandarin Chinese. Judge Bigler authored “Acting Responsibly: Linguists in American Indian Communities” (with M. Linn), published in Practicing Anthropology, Vol. 20, No. 2, Spring 1999. He is a graduate of Harvard Law School, and received his Master of Law degree (LL.M.) from Wisconsin Law School

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Judge Robert A. Blaeser is a retired District Court Judge of Minnesota’s Fourth Judicial District-Hennepin County. Appointed in 1995 by former Governor Arne Carlson as the first American Indian judge appointed to the busiest judicial district in Minnesota, Blaeser served in Hennepin’s Juvenile Court until January of 2003, when he completed a 2-1/2-year term as Chief. He continued to serve in adult court until his retirement from the bench in October 2012. Blaeser served two terms as Presiding Judge of the Civil Division before his retirement.

Blaeser currently serves as a mediator, special master, and retired judge. An Anishinaabe from the White Earth Reservation in northwestern Minnesota, Blaeser also currently serves his Nation as the Chief Judge of the White Earth Nation Tribal Court.

Blaeser is nationally known for his expertise on racial bias in the justice system and the Indian Child Welfare Act. In his seventeen years on the Hennepin County bench, Blaeser was instrumental in changing how Minnesota enforces the Indian Child Welfare Act, streamlined the Civil Division, and provided leadership to colleagues on the efficiencies and effectiveness of the court’s operations.

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Judge Thomas Weathers is Aleut and an enrolled member of the Qawalangin Tribe of Unalaska in Alaska. He currently practices law in California. Judge Weathers has devoted much of his legal career to Indian law, advising both Native and non-Native clients in complex business and litigation matters. He has served as both a trial and appellate judge for tribal courts and a judge pro tem for small claims in state court. Judge Weathers is a past-president of the National Native American Bar Association and has been named a top attorney by Super Lawyers and Best Lawyers in America. Judge Weathers has dozens of publications and presentations to his credit on issues ranging from civil litigation practice to Indian law basics to economic development in Indian country.

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