Adjunct Professor and Broward Judge Wins Community Award

Broward Judge Ginger Lerner-Wren, an adjunct faculty member in the College of Psychology, was honored with the prestigious Community Champion of Mental Health Award by the United Way at the 10th Annual South Florida Behavioral Health Conference.
The award celebrates Lerner-Wren’s decades of groundbreaking mental health advocacy. Since 1997, when she became the inaugural judge of Broward County’s Mental Health Court, one of the first such courts in the country, Lerner-Wren championed a pioneering judicial model focused on treatment and rehabilitation rather than punishment for individuals with mental illness charged with misdemeanors.

Credit: Broward County Courthouse
Her impact has extended far beyond the local level. In 2002, President George W. Bush appointed her to the President’s New Freedom Commission on Mental Health, where she chaired the Criminal Justice Subcommittee and helped shape national mental health policy.
Over the years, Lerner-Wren has received numerous honors, including awards from the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI), the Hague Institute for Innovation of Law, and the National Council for Mental Wellbeing. Accepting her latest honor, Lerner-Wren credited the “courageous community” behind Broward’s Misdemeanor Mental Health Court, calling it a symbol of hope, dignity, and compassion for people living with mental illness and co-occurring disorders.
Currently, Lerner-Wren serves as a county court judge in Florida’s 17th Judicial Circuit, the state’s second largest, while also lecturing nationally and internationally on topics like mental health courts, therapeutic jurisprudence, and legal innovation. In 2018, she published A Court of Refuge: Stories from the Bench of America’s First Mental Health Court, telling how the court developed from her criminal division’s lunch-hour efforts without federal funding. The book holds a near-perfect 4.9-star rating on Amazon and has drawn praise from figures like SNL alum Darrell Hammond, who likened Lerner-Wren’s contributions to mental health reform to the Wright brothers’ transformative role in aviation. Her recent award brings much-needed positive attention to a judicial circuit recently under public scrutiny for judicial misconduct.