Office of Administrative Hearings: Goodie Bio
DC Home Mayor DC Guide Residents Business Visitors DC Government Kids

Office of Administrative Hearings

OAH HOME
OAH HOME
About OAH
SERVICES
SERVICES
INFORMATION
INFORMATION
ONLINE SERVICE
REQUESTS

ONLINE SERVICE
  REQUESTS

About OAH
How To Reach Us
Ask the Director
FOIA Requests
Helpful Links
Performance
Site Map
Responding to a
  Notice of Infraction

Responding to a
  Notice of Violation

Requesting a
  Hearing

OAH Statute &
  Rules

Quality Assurance
Jurisdiction
Accessibility of
  the Court

Case Orders &
  Decisions

Forms for Unemployment
  Insurance Cases

Mission & Vision
Hours of Operation
Chief Judge's
  Biography

Administrative Law
  Judges

Biography
Sharon E. Goodie
Administrative Law Judge
 
Sharon E. Goodie is an Administrative Law Judge for the District of Columbia Office of Administrative Hearings. She was appointed in 2005. Prior to her appointment, Judge Goodie worked as a prosecutor for the District of Columbia Office of the Attorney General, prosecuting juvenile delinquency (criminal) and child abuse and neglect (civil) cases from 1997-2004. She handled civil litigation matters for a law firm in Washington, DC from 1996-1997.

 

Judge Goodie received a BA cum laude from Brandeis University in 1985, and received a JD from Georgetown University Law Center in 1994. Following law school, Judge Goodie clerked for the Honorable Harriett R. Taylor at the District of Columbia Superior Court from 1994-1995. Prior to attending law school, Judge Goodie worked for a child abuse treatment center in Boston, and a negotiation consulting firm in Cambridge, MA.

 

Judge Goodie has taught Juvenile Justice as an adjunct professor at George Mason University. She is also a faculty member for the annual National Institute of Trial Advocacy (NITA) Litigation Skills Workshop at Georgetown University Law Center. 

 

Judge Goodie is a volunteer tutor at the Maya Angelou Public Charter School in Washington, DC. During law school, Judge Goodie taught Street Law, Family Literacy and Legal Research and Writing to prisoners at the Lorton Correctional Facility.