(ANNE ARUNDEL COUNTY, MD – April 5, 2026) — Rowena Nelson isn’t campaigning to be a different kind of judge. She’s campaigning to be a disciplined one. In a legal culture where candidates often speak in broad promises, Nelson grounds her message in something more concrete: respect—for the law, for the litigants, and for the time of the court. After more than two decades in practice, she says most people who enter a courtroom are not looking for ideology or experimentation. They are looking for consistency, clarity, and fairness. “They want the law applied as it is,” Nelson said. “Not stretched, not reshaped into something unrecognizable. They want decisions that make both legal and practical sense.” Nelson, a candidate for Circuit Court Judge in Anne Arundel County, brings a career defined by both range and precision. She is licensed in Maryland, Washington, D.C., and Virginia, has handled hundreds of cases across criminal, civil, family, business, and bankruptcy law, and represented litigants in 20 appellate cases in Maryland. That’s not braggadocio — that’s a resume. From Jamaica to the Courtroom Born in Jamaica, Nelson immigrated to the United States at age 12 and settled in Gary, Indiana. The transition was abrupt—new country, new culture, and a Midwest winter that made an immediate impression—but it forged a resilience that continues to define her path. She went on to complete her higher education at Nova Southeastern University, earning degrees in psychology and mental health counseling before obtaining her law degree. That interdisciplinary background remains central to how she approaches the law. “I don’t see cases in isolation,” she said. “There are often human factors—stress, trauma, mental health—that are present whether they’re acknowledged or not.” A Full-Spectrum Legal Perspective Nelson’s experience extends beyond private practice. She has served as a judicial law clerk in a Maryland Circuit Court, worked in a State’s Attorney’s Office Domestic Violence Unit, and led victim advocacy efforts as a Director of Victim Services. Those roles have given her a comprehensive understanding of the courtroom—from the bench, from the prosecution, and from the perspective of those navigating the system under difficult circumstances. It is also why she is deliberate in her speech during this campaign. “I am constrained in what I can say about others,” Nelson noted, referencing the ethical rules governing judicial candidates. “But I can distinguish myself by what I bring.” What she brings is breadth of experience across jurisdictions, appellate work requiring precision and discipline, and a perspective she describes as “not boxed in.” Discipline On and Off the Bench That mindset shows up in more than her legal work. In 2021, Nelson earned her private pilot’s license—an achievement that demands preparation, focus, and the ability to make decisions under pressure. “Aviation requires precision,” she said. “You have to be prepared, you have to be accountable, and you have to think clearly in real time.” It is a philosophy that translates directly to the bench. Service Without Recognition While not required in the jurisdictions where she practices,…

You may have missed

Advertisement

Dr. Frederick W. Oliver Honored at Black Wall Street Sparrows Point for Legacy in Physics, STEM Leadership, and Mentorship

(BALTIMORE – April 20, 2026) — Some build careers. Others build institutions. Dr. Frederick W. Oliver has spent more than half a century doing both. A distinguished physicist, educator, and mentor, Dr. Oliver’s legacy is deeply rooted in academic excellence and the advancement of Black scientists. His journey began at Morgan State University (then Morgan State College), where he earned his Bachelor of Science degree in Physics in 1962. He would go on to earn both a Master of Science degree in Physics (1965) and a Ph.D. in Condensed Matter Physics (1972) from Howard University. Dr. Oliver joined the faculty…

Black Wall Street BENEDETTO 2.0 Honoree: Dionne Waldron McNeal

(BALTIMORE – April 20, 2026) — At Black Wall Street BENEDETTO 2.0 ft. the Joe Manns Black Wall Street Awards, we proudly recognize Dionne Waldron McNeal, a leader whose work sits at the intersection of community, finance, and opportunity. Since joining Fulton Bank in August 2017 as Vice President of Community Outreach for the Baltimore Market, Dionne has been a driving force behind the bank’s community impact strategy. She leads the Fulton Forward Initiative, a transformative effort focused on four critical pillars: Affordable housing and homeownership Job training and workforce development Financial literacy Economic empowerment Through this work, Dionne collaborates…