May 6, 2026

Molly E. Newton Awarded 2026 Specialty Bar Leader of the Year

Molly E. Newton, president of the Greater Peninsula Women's Bar Association (GPWBA), has been awarded Specialty Bar Leader of the Year by the Virginia State Bar Local and Specialty Bar Section (LSBS). The award recognizes specialty bar association leaders “who have committed to offer important service to the bench, bar, and public.” Newton was nominated for the award by Cynthia Paoletta, treasurer for the GPWBA, and the Hon. Tyneka L. D. Flythe of the Seventh Judicial Circuit of Virginia.

Over the past decade, she has served as President (2018–2019 and 2025–present), Vice President (2017–2018 and 2024–2025), Immediate Past President (2019–2020), and Board Member (2023–2024) of the GPWBA. Beyond these leadership roles, Newton has served on the Awards Committee, Bylaws Committee, Judicial Screening Committee, Nominating Committee, and Programs Committee. She has also served multiple times as Social Media Coordinator, helping to improve communication and engagement among members. Paoletta said through Newton's dedication to the GPWBA and its mission, "Molly exemplifies the kind of sustained service and meaningful contribution this award is intended to exemplify."

Newton's return to leadership in 2024, and then the presidency in 2025, came at a critical time for the organization. The GPWBA had been working to rebuild after a trying period of reduced programming and declining participation. Newton took on that challenge by focusing on restoring and improving upon prior initiatives while also developing new ones. Under her leadership, paid membership increased from 19 to 56 members in six months, and approximately 82 percent of members participate in GPWBA events and initiatives, reflecting a revitalized and engaged membership.

"Molly has been instrumental in strengthening the GPWBA's role as a resource for its members and for the local bar," Paoletta said. "She has reestablished a consistent schedule of high-quality CLE programming, working in coordination with judges, attorneys, nonprofit legal service providers, and Virginia State Bar committees to ensure programming is both relevant and accessible across the peninsula."

Judge Flythe said she has known Newton for nearly 20 years and says her performance of her duties in the courtroom is done with fervor, poise, and scholarship, but her work outside of the courtroom is a cornerstone of her contributions to the legal community and her community at large. "In addition to her work on administrative and governance committees, Ms. Newton has served on judicial selection, awards, Jazz 4 Justice committees [GPWBA and the Newport News Bar Association]," she said. "She has gone further to work, perhaps most splendidly, with the youth of our community."

In 2018, alongside Judge Judith Kline, Newton helped launch a local Color of Justice event. Color of Justice is a youth outreach program initiated by the National Association of Women Judges. It is designed to encourage girls and minority students to pursue legal and judicial careers. Judge Flythe said Newton was instrumental in bringing together judges and lawyers from around the peninsula on a Saturday morning to share a meal and mentor young middle and high school girls.

"The program was a great success and repeated annually until COVID hit," Flythe said. "In her second term as president of the GPWBA, Ms. Newton has reinstated the program."

To combat misinformation about the purpose of judicial review and the rule of law, the GPWBA formed a Law Education Committee that Newton chairs. The committee's first project is an open house for Law Day at the Newport News courthouses. In this effort, she is coordinating with the Newport News Circuit Court Clerk’s Office, the judiciary, the Sheriff’s Office, and representatives from Legal Aid, the Commonwealth’s Attorney’s Office, and the Public Defender’s Office. This novel program will feature educational sessions on a wide range of legal topics and a community art contest tied to the national Law Day theme. The initiative is designed to be replicated in future years and expanded into additional jurisdictions, showing both innovation and sustainability.

Paoletta says that taken together, Newton's work reflects exactly what the Specialty Bar Leader of the Year award is intended to recognize: sustained, active leadership and meaningful contributions to the bar, the bench, and the public. "She has not only helped rebuild and strengthen the GPWBA, but has done so in a way that ensures its continued growth, relevance, and impact within the legal community," Paoletta said. "Her ability to bring people together, develop innovative programming, and maintain long-standing initiatives speaks to her leadership and her commitment to service."

Newton will receive her award at the VSB's Annual Meeting in Virginia Beach.