Background
Walter Thompson Cox III was born on August 13, 1942, in Anderson, South Carolina, the son of Walter Thompson Cox, Junior. (1918-2006), an official at Clemson University for almost fifty years.
Walter Thompson Cox III was born on August 13, 1942, in Anderson, South Carolina, the son of Walter Thompson Cox, Junior. (1918-2006), an official at Clemson University for almost fifty years.
He graduated from Clemson University with a Bachelor of Surgery in 1964 and from University of South Carolina School of Law in 1967. He joined the army in May 1964 and attended the Defense Language Institute and then served as the Liaison Officer to the Minister of Justice for the State of Bavaria and as the Liaison Officer to the American Embassy in Austria.
He left the army in January 1973. From his election in 1978, Cox served until 1984 as resident Circuit Court Judge for the Tenth Judicial Circuit of South Carolina. Cox served as a judge for 22 years on both state and federal courts.
In 1984, President Ronald Reagan nominated him to the United States. Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces.
He began his service in September 1984. He was the court"s chief judge from October 1, 1995 until his term ended September 30, 1999.
He retired from the court on September 30, 2000. In May 2001, he was appointed chairman of a five-person Commission on the 50th Anniversary of the Uniform Code of Military Justice created by the National Institute of Military Justice to review the courts-martial system.
lieutenant recommended requiring at least 12 people on a military jury in a case where the death sentence was a possibility and that in capital cases judges give an anti-discrimination instruction to the jury.
lieutenant also recommended an examination of the military"s rape and sodomy codes. In 2009, he chaired a second commission, a group of eight that made seven recommendations largely addressing the courts-martial and appeals process, as well as advocating the repeal of Article 125 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice (sodomy). Cox teaches criminal law at the Charleston School of Law.
The Judge Advocates Association sponsors the annual Cox III Symposium on Military History named in his honor.
The United States. Department of Defense awarded Cox the Distinguished Civilian Service Award. Cox is of counsel to Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough Limited Liability Partnership in Charleston.