Multnomah County Circuit Court

The Multnomah County Circuit Court, which composes the 4th Judicial District of the Oregon Circuit Court system, is the general jurisdiction trial court of Multnomah County, Oregon. Judith Matarazzo is the presiding judge of the Court, serving with 37 others. The chief prosecutor is Multnomah County District Attorney Mike Schmidt.

The four court locations are


 * Multnomah County Courthouse (Central Courthouse), located at 1200 SW 1st Ave, Portland
 * Justice Center, located on the third floor of the County Jail / Police HQ building, 1120 SW 3rd Ave, Portland
 * Juvenile Justice Center, 1401 NE 68th Ave, Portland
 * East County Courthouse, 18480 SE Stark St, Portland

Judiciary
As of August 2023, the following are currently serving judges in the Circuit Court: • Criminal and civil judges

• Judith Matarazzo, Presiding Judge

• Cheryl Albrecht, Chief Criminal Judge

• Christopher Marshall, Chief Civil Court Judge

• Steffan Alexander

• Amy Baggio

• Eric Bloch

• Leslie Bottomly

• Adrian Brown

• Eric Dahlin

• Bryan Francesconi

• Rima Ghandour

• Michael Greenlick

• Celia Howes

• Andrew Lavin

• Angela Lucero

• Heidi Moawad

• Melvin Oden-Orr

• Jenna Plank

• Christopher Ramras

• David Rees

• Shelley Russell

• Thomas Ryan

• Chanpone Sinlapasai

• Kelly Skye

• Benjamin Souede

• Katharine von Ter Stegge

• Nan Waller

• Family and juvenile judges

• Patrick Henry, Chief Probate Judge

• Susan Svetkey, Chief Family Court Judge

• Jacqueline Alarcón

• Maurisa Gates

• Amy Holmes Hehn

• Morgan Long

• Michael Loy

• Patricia McGuire

• Susan Svetkey

• Xiomara Torres

• Francis Troy

• Kathryn Villa-Smith

Architecture
The new Multnomah County Courthouse on SW 1st Ave opened October 2020. The 17-story building spans 450,000 square feet and cost $324 million. SRG Partnership was the lead architect, and Hoffman Construction Company lead contractor, both Portland based.

The previous building, a century-old courthouse, was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1979. It was sold in 2018 to NBP Capital for $28 million, who said it was "considering various creative uses" that would preserve the historic building. The county assessor valued it at $40 million, but estimated necessary upgrades for earthquake resistance at $70 million.