Sam Sutter
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Sam Sutter | |
|---|---|
| 43rd Mayor of Fall River, Massachusetts | |
| In office December 29, 2014 – January 4, 2016 | |
| Preceded by | William A. Flanagan |
| Succeeded by | Jasiel Correia |
| District Attorney of Bristol County, Massachusetts | |
| In office January 21, 2007 – December 29, 2014 | |
| Preceded by | Paul F. Walsh Jr. |
| Succeeded by | Thomas M. Quinn III |
| Personal details | |
| Born | Clifford Samuel Sutter August 3, 1952 Greenwich, Connecticut |
| Party | Democratic |
| Occupation | Attorney |
Clifford Samuel “Sam” Sutter is an American attorney and politician who served as the District Attorney of Bristol County, Massachusetts, from 2007 to 2014, and then as the 43rd Mayor of Fall River, Massachusetts from 2014 to 2015. He lost the campaign to Mayor Paul Coogan on November 7, 2023.
Sutter was born August 3, 1952, in Greenwich, Connecticut, to former tennis player Cliff Sutter and Suzanne T. Sutter. Sutter attended Brown University from 1971 to 1976, graduating with a Bachelor of Arts in American Civilization. While at Brown, he played for the varsity tennis team. After spending several years traveling the world while working as a tennis instructor and professional tournament player, Sutter enrolled at Vanderbilt University Law School, graduating with a Juris Doctor in 1983.
Before running for Bristol County District Attorney in 2006, Sutter worked as both an Assistant District Attorney in the Bristol County District Attorney's office and as a private attorney specializing in criminal defense and personal injury.
District Attorney & Congressional Run
Sutter ran against 16-year incumbent Bristol County District Attorney Paul Walsh in 2006, and beat him in a closely contested Democratic Primary election, with Sutter getting 33,967 votes and Walsh getting 32,186 votes.[1] Sutter was outspent by almost 7 to 1 in the race, spending just $164,000 on his campaign, while Walsh spent $740,000. According to a column written in the New Bedford Standard-Times at the time: "He [Sutter] focused in on District Attorney Paul Walsh's lackluster record of solving major crime in New Bedford and on the lack of accountability in the district attorney's office in several areas."[2] There was no Republican candidate in the race, so Sutter faced no opponent in the general election, and faced no opponents in either the Democratic primary or the general election in his two re-election bids for DA in '10 and '14.
In 2012 Sutter ran for Congress in the newly re-districted 9th Congressional District against incumbent Bill Keating. The 2011 redistricting process significantly changed Keating's district, cutting out Keating's hometown of Quincy and adding large sections of Bristol County where Sutter was well known but Keating was not.[3] Despite this advantage, Sutter was soundly defeated in the Democratic Primary, receiving just 21,675 votes to Keating's 31,366 votes, which many local political experts credited to the advantages of incumbency.[4]
Sutter was considered a potential candidate for Massachusetts Attorney General, with incumbent Martha Coakley leaving the office open when she ran for Governor in 2014.[5]