Judge Gershwin A. Drain (B.A. '70, Secondary Education) | WMU Alumni Skip to main content

Judge Gershwin A. Drain (B.A. '70, Secondary Education)

Judge Gershwin A. Drain (B.A. '70, Secondary Education)

Judge Gershwin A. Drain (B.A. ’70, Secondary Education) has spent his career advancing through the court systems to his current position as U.S. District Judge for the Eastern District of Michigan.

Judge Drain attended Western Michigan University on a football scholarship and played for the Broncos from 1967-70. Upon graduating from WMU, he earned a Juris Doctor from the University of Michigan Law School in 1972. In the same year, Judge Drain began his career as a law clerk for the Third Circuit Court of Michigan.

In 1973, he became counsel for the Detroit Department of Transportation, and in 1974 became an attorney in the Federal Defender’s Office for the Eastern District of Michigan. For the next 12 years, Judge Drain would represent defendants charged with felonies in federal court for approximately 144 cases. In 1986, he was appointed to the Recorder’s Court for the City of Detroit, where he presided over felony prosecutions. In 1997, Judge Drain was elected to Michigan’s Third Judicial Circuit Court in Wayne County. In 2012, Judge Drain was nominated by President Barack Obama and confirmed by senate for his current position as a U.S. District Court Judge.

“As a fellow Judge, who has known Judge Drain in both the state court and the federal court, I can personally attest to his outstanding credentials. Judge Drain has had an extraordinary career because of his integrity, scholarship, empathy, hard work, and good judgement.” Judge Richard Allen Griffin recalled when nominating Judge Drain for the WMU Distinguished Alumni Award. Judge Griffin is a 1973 WMU alumnus and 2010 Distinguished Alumni Award recipient.

Aside from his courtroom duties, Judge Drain has been a columnist for the Michigan Chronicle, and was named Michiganian of the Year by the Detroit News in 1997. He has served on the boards of Southfield Christian School, Highland Park Baptist Church, InnerChange Freedom Initiative and Justice Fellowship (divisions of Prison Fellowship Ministries), New Creations Community Outreach, the Wayne County Criminal Advocacy Program, and Cornerstone Schools.

Judge Drain is a member of the Michigan Judges Association, the Wolverine Bar Association, the Association of Black Judges of Michigan, the Michigan Bar Association, the Prison Ministry for the Mound Correctional Facility, and is a lifetime member of the NAACP. He is a member of the WMU W Club.

Judge Drain also earned a Masters of Judicial Studies from University of Nevada-Reno in 1991. He and his wife, Meredith, have two daughters, both of whom are lawyers.