Mary P. Easley

Summary

Mary Pipines Easley is an American attorney, academic, and former university administrator who, as the wife of Governor Mike Easley, served as First Lady of North Carolina from 2001 to 2009. A member of the Democratic Party, she was the first woman to maintain her own career while serving as first lady, and also the first Catholic and first Greek American to serve in this position. As first lady, Easley championed educational, artistic, and public health initiatives in North Carolina. She focused on promoting childhood immunization, access to public libraries, and teacher recruitment across the state. An avid arts patron, she partnered with the North Carolina Museum of Art to help procure funding and bring in international exhibits, including exhibits on Monet and Auguste Rodin. Prior to serving as first lady, Easley was one of the first women to serve as an assistant district attorney in eastern North Carolina.

Mary P. Easley
Easley at her husband's inauguration as Governor in 2001.
First Lady of North Carolina
In role
January 6, 2001 – January 10, 2009
GovernorMike Easley
Preceded byCarolyn Hunt
Succeeded byBob Eaves (as First Gentleman)
Personal details
Born
Mary Pipines
Political partyDemocratic
SpouseMike Easley
ChildrenMichael F. Easley Jr.
Parent(s)James Pipines
Ann Pipines
Alma materWake Forest University (BA, JD)
Occupationattorney, professor, academic administrator

She served on the faculty at both North Carolina Central University and North Carolina State University, teaching law, police management, and running a public safety center. In 2009 she and her husband became the subjects of a financial scandal regarding the misuse of campaign funds. She was later fired from North Carolina State University after it was revealed that she had obtained her job, with an annual salary of $175,000, with the help of her husband's influence as governor.

Early life and education edit

Easley is the daughter of James and Ann Pipines.[1] She has a sister, Irene.[1] Easley is of Greek descent, the granddaughter of Greek immigrants.[1][2] Raised in Wyckoff, New Jersey, she graduated from Ramapo High School in 1968.[3]

Easley attended Wake Forest University to study political science, graduating magna cum laude in 1972.[4] She was inducted into Phi Beta Kappa while an undergraduate.[4] In 1975 she obtained a J.D.[5] degree from the Wake Forest University School of Law, where she was a member of Phi Delta Phi.[2][4][6]

Career edit

After graduating from law school at Wake Forest, Easley worked as an assistant district attorney for Pender and New Hanover counties, working out of the office in Burgaw.[2] She was one of the first woman to serve as an assistant district attorney in eastern North Carolina.[2] Prior to moving to Raleigh, Easley ran a private law firm in Southport, North Carolina.[2]

During her husband's unsuccessful campaign for the United States Senate in 1990, she and her husband were accused of breaching ethical standards since she represented drug offenders whom her husband's office prosecuted.[2]

Easley worked as a law professor at North Carolina Central University, teaching trial practice, trial advocacy, and appellate advocacy.[2][6] She also supervised law students representing criminal defendants through the university's clinic and was a faculty member for the National Institute of Trial Advocacy's southeast region.[4][6] Easley helped lead a course in police management at North Carolina State University, joining the administration there in 2005 to run the university's Center for Public Safety Leadership.[2][7][8] She was hired at North Carolina State University as an executive-in-residence and a senior lecturer, running a program for emergency rescue workers and coordinating law education initiatives.[6][9][10] She built the Millenium Seminar series at North Carolina State, bringing in guest speakers including David Gergen, Robert Reich, Charlie Rose, Senator Lindsey Graham, Myles Brand, Bill Bradley, and Donna Shalala.[7]

First Lady of North Carolina edit

Easley became First Lady of North Carolina in 2001, when her husband was elected as the 72nd Governor of North Carolina.[11] She was the first woman to maintain a separate career while serving as First Lady, and also the first Catholic to serve in the role.[2][12][13]

As First Lady, Easley promoted the arts and education, and led a campaign against underage drinking called The First Ladies' Initiative to Keep Children Alcohol Free.[4][6] She established initiatives in teacher recruitment and infant immunization with a focus on North Carolinians who speak English as a second language.[4] Easley served as the spokesperson for McDonald's Immunize for Healthy Lives Campaign, speaking to groups around the state about the importance of immunizing children in a timely manner.[4][14] Easley led the North Carolina Institute of Medicine's Latino Health Task Force, a partnership between the institute and El Pueblo, Inc., as honorary chair.[15]

In 2002 she served as the spokesperson for the State Library of North Carolina's The Very Best Place to Start initiative, going on a state-wide speaking tour to ensure library access to children in North Carolina.[16]

 
Easley with in Estonian artist Jüri Arrak in 2008.

She volunteered at the North Carolina Museum of Art, recruiting international exhibits, organizing events, and assisting in fundraising efforts.[6][17] In 2007 Easley went to France as part of a cultural exchange that brought a Monet exhibit to the museum.[6] She also traveled as part of a cultural delegation to Estonia and St. Petersburg, Russia meeting with famous artists including Jüri Arrak, and helping the museum receive loaned art from the Hermitage Museum.[6] Through her cultural exchanges, she obtained a $35 million collection of Auguste Rodin's work, and assisted in raising funds for the construction of a new Greek Art wing for the museum.[18][19]

Easley commissioned a painting of the North Carolina Executive Mansion, titled The Governor's Mansion, by the artist William Mangum.[20]

Financial scandal edit

News broke that the total cost of Easley's trips to Europe was $109,000.[6] Her expenses, which paid for an interrogee of nine people, included hotels, meals, transportation, and tickets to the Mariinsky Ballet.[6] She became the target of editorial writers, radio hosts, and bloggers who questioned the value of her trips.[6] Her husband and other state officials stated that her trip to France brought the state an economic benefit of more than $20 million from the Monet exhibit, and that the trip to Russia and Estonia could potentially produce a similar result.[6] They argued her presence in the international delegation, as a first lady, helped impress foreign art officials.[6]

She received an eighty-percent pay increase for her job at North Carolina State University.[6] The raise she received was $90,300- a much larger raise than that received by other academic administrators, providing her with an annual salary of $170,000.[21][22][23] She was criticized by members of the North Carolina State Employees Association, who claimed she was given preferential treatment as the governor's wife.[6] The governor responded saying people were making an issue of Easley's raise because of her gender.[6] In June 2009 the university's board of trustees voted to terminate Easley's contract after newly released documents came forth indicating that her husband was involved in her hiring.[24][25][26] She began a formal grievance process following her termination.[27] Easley agreed not to sue the university for severing its contract with her.[28] In return, she received an additional $40,000 in annual pension benefits.[28][29]

Towards the end of her term, she and her husband were involved in a financial scandal related to the misuse of campaign funds.[6] They were the subject of an investigation by a North Carolina grand jury and the North Carolina State Board of Elections which looked into the couple's relationships with land dealers, car dealers, and the use of government aircraft for personal vacations.[30]

Personal life edit

Easley was introduced to Mike Easley, then an assistant prosecutor, by her district attorney.[2] They married in 1980.[2] Easley and her husband lived in an oceanfront house in Brunswick County before moving to Raleigh when her husband was elected as the North Carolina Attorney General.[2] She and her husband live in Charlotte and have a summer home in Southport.[1] They have one son, Michael F. Easley Jr.[2]

Easley is a practicing Catholic.[2]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "The Mother Of North Carolina's First Lady Mary Easley Has Died". wfmynews2.com. January 3, 2008.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Dyer, Eric (January 6, 2001). "INTO THE SPOTLIGHT\ EXTROVERTED AND CAREER-ORIENTED, MARY EASLEY LOOKS FORWARD TO SELLING VISITORS ON HER ADOPTED STATE". Greensboro News and Record.
  3. ^ "Mary Pipines, Michael Easley wed March 29 in No. Carolina", The News, April 10, 1980. Accessed December 7, 2023, via Newspapers.com, "The new Mrs. Easley attended Coolidge and Lincoln Schools in Wyckoff and graduated from Ramapo High School w here she was president of the Student Council and an Honor Graduate in 1968."
  4. ^ a b c d e f g "Attorney, N.C. First Lady Mary Easley to speak at fall convocation Sept. 13". Wake Forest News. August 29, 2001.
  5. ^ "Ms. Mary P. Easley Lawyer Profile on Martindale.com". www.martindale.com.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q "article8994284". Charlotte Observer. Retrieved November 14, 2020.
  7. ^ a b "North Carolina State University :: Provost's Statement Regarding First Lady Mary Easley". projects.ncsu.edu.
  8. ^ "Feds subpoena Mary Easley's employment records". Salisbury Post. December 1, 2009.
  9. ^ "Web Only: Mary Easley discusses her job at N.C. State". WRAL.com. July 2, 2008.
  10. ^ "University Diaries » Search Results » mary easley".
  11. ^ "First Ladies and Gentlemen of North Carolina | NCpedia". www.ncpedia.org.
  12. ^ "NC's private first lady finds herself in spotlight". Gaston Gazette.
  13. ^ "Mary Easley has active public life, but she's no Hillary Clinton". newsobserver.com. Archived from the original on December 9, 2006.
  14. ^ "NC First Lady Appears On NCNN".
  15. ^ "NC Latino Health, 2003" (PDF). February 7, 2003. Retrieved November 14, 2020.
  16. ^ "The Very Best Place to Start". www.provokemedia.com.
  17. ^ "Report - Mary Easley rarely spent full days at N.C. State". Wilmington Star News.
  18. ^ "Rodin sculptures highlight reopening of North Carolina Museum of Art - Travel - LATimes.com". April 27, 2010. Archived from the original on April 27, 2010.
  19. ^ Iovine, Julie V. (June 30, 2010). "Easily Accessible Pleasures". Wall Street Journal – via www.wsj.com.
  20. ^ "Governor's Mansion - Limited Edition Art Print". William Mangum Fine Art.
  21. ^ Baker, Mike (May 22, 2009). "Lawyer: Former NC first lady won't quit her job". SCNow.
  22. ^ "NC State settles with former first lady". WRAL.com. December 1, 2012.
  23. ^ "Mary Easley, your life is calling". INDY Week. May 27, 2009.
  24. ^ "N.C. State trustees fire Mary Easley". Winston-Salem Journal. June 8, 2009.
  25. ^ "Open letter from Mary Easley says goodbye to N.C. State". Winston-Salem Journal. June 11, 2009.
  26. ^ "Mary Easley terminated from NCSU position | ABC11 Raleigh-Durham | abc11.com - ABC11 Raleigh-Durham".
  27. ^ "Mary Easley files grievance over N.C. State job termination". www.mcclatchydc.com. July 23, 2009. Retrieved November 13, 2020.
  28. ^ a b "CJ Editorial: Mary Easley Gets A Holiday Gift". Carolina Journal. December 20, 2012.
  29. ^ "Mary Easley's pension soars after legal settlement". The Daily News.
  30. ^ "Former North Carolina first lady Mary Easley appeared at a news conference Thursday to defend her hiring to a $170,000 a year job at NC State". ABC7 San Francisco.
Honorary titles
Preceded by First Lady of North Carolina
2001–2009
Succeeded by
Bob Eaves (as First Gentleman)