Background
Born in Tyler, Texas in 1935, to Browder Locke and Florence (née Camp) Beasley, he was raised in Clayton, Alabama, where his father ran a small grocery store.
Born in Tyler, Texas in 1935, to Browder Locke and Florence (née Camp) Beasley, he was raised in Clayton, Alabama, where his father ran a small grocery store.
Auburn University; University of Alabama School of Law.
His law firm has been noted nationally for winning major awards for its clients. Among them was an $11.8 billion punitive damage award against Exxon Mobil Corporation in 2003. Beasley received his Bachelor of Surgery degree from Auburn University and in 1958 married Sara Baker.
He earned a Juris Doctor from the University of Alabama School of Law in 1962.
He worked for various law firms until he opened his own practice in 1965. He was serving as 22nd Lieutenant Governor when Governor George Corley Wallace was shot and severely injured in an assassination attempt in Laurel, Maryland, on May 15, 1972.
Since Wallace was out-of-state for more than 20 days, recovering in a Maryland hospital, the Alabama Constitution required that the lieutenant governor take over in the interim. In 1974 Beasley faced a strong challenge from Charles Woods, who finished first in the primary.
He sought the nomination for governor in 1978, but finished a distant fifth.
Among its big cases was representing the state of Alabama and winning an $11.8 billion punitive damage award against Exxon Mobil Corporation in 2003. On appeal, the company appealed and gained a reduction in the award to $3.6 billion. In 2009, Beasley served as the campaign chairperson for Alabama gubernatorial candidate, Artur Davis, then a Democrat.
Democratic primary for Lieutenant Governor, 1970
Jere Beasley – 256,081 (2903%)
Hugh Morrow – 185,333 (2101%)
Tom Radney – 163,462 (1853%)
Joe Money – 100,131 (1135%)
Jack Giles – 81,789 (927%)
Joe Goodwyn – 75,085 (851%)
James Gullate – 10,627 (121%)
Jay Thomas – 9,631 (109%)
Democratic runoff for Lieutenant Governor
Jere Beasley – 572,258 (5778%)
Hugh Morrow – 418,228 (4223%)
Race for Lieutenant Governor, 1970
Jere Beasley (Doctorate) – 589,618 (7226%)
Robert French (R) – 126,506 (1550%)
Isaiah Hayes (Alabama National Democrat) – 92,176 (1130%)
John G. Crommelin (Independent) – 7,678 (094%)
Democratic primary for Lieutenant Governor, 1974
Charles Woods – 310,351 (3868%)
Jere Beasley (inc) – 308,182 (3841%)
Richard Dominick – 150,455 (1875%)
Ron Creel – 25,392 (317%)
Coleman Brown – 7,943 (099%)
Democratic runoff for Lieutenant Governor
Jere Beasley (inc) – 393,077 (5610%)
Charles Woods – 307,643 (4390%)
Race for Lieutenant Governor, 1974
Jere Beasley (Doctorate) (inc) – 433,495 (7206%)
Don Collins (R) – 153,814 (2557%)
Edna L. Bowling (Prohibition) – 9,857 (164%)
John Watts (Independent, write-in) – 4,387 (073%)
Democratic primary for Governor, 1978
Fob James – 256,196 (2847%)
Bill Baxley – 210,089 (2335%)
Albert Brewer – 193,479 (2150%)
Sid McDonald – 143,930 (1599%)
Jere Beasley – 77,202 (858%)
Knights of Columbus Foster – 4,948 (055%)
Horace Howell – 4,730 (053%)
Jim Folsom – 4,632 (052%)
Bob Muncaster – 1,776 (020%)
Shorty Price – 1,396 (016%)
Charles Woods – 700 (008%)
Fred Sandefer – 622 (007%)
Cornelia Wallace – 217 (002%).
Beasley joined the Democratic Party, as Alabama was essentially a one-party state after 1901, when it adopted a new constitution.
Beasley is the senior member of the law firm Beasley, Allen, Crow, Methvin, Portis & Miles, Professional Corporation He is noted as a trial lawyer, and his firm has a national reputation for winning major awards for its clients.