Following law school, Aquilina worked for 10 years as administrative assistant and campaign manager for state senator John F. Kelly, and then as a partner in his lobbying firm, Strategic Governmental Consultants, PLLC.[1] During this time, she also formed Aquilina Law Firm, PLC, practicing for several years with her sister, Helen Hartford.[4] She later became the host of Ask the Family Lawyer, a syndicated radio talk show.[1][5][6]
Aquilina then joined the Michigan Army National Guard, where she became the state's first female member of the Judge Advocate General's Corps and acquired the nickname "Barracuda Aquilina" due to her dedication to service and advocating on behalf of the soldiers she worked with.[1][6] She served in the Michigan Army National Guard for twenty years before retiring.[7]
Aquilina is currently an adjunct professor at Cooley Law School where she teaches a variety of courses.[1] She was awarded by Cooley Law School with the Griffen Award for Teaching Excellence.[1] Aquilina also serves as an adjunct professor at Michigan State University College of Law, where she teaches classes in criminal and civil trial practice, trial practicum, criminal law, and criminal procedure in both the LL.M. and J.D. programs.[1] She was honored with the College of Law Student Bar Association Adjunct Faculty Award for exceptional teaching.[1] In the 1990s, Aquilina ran for Michigan Senate as Laura Baird contested a seat on the Michigan House of Representatives, though Aquilina did not win.[8] In 2004, she was elected a judge of the 55th Michigan District Court, and in November 2008, she was elected as judge of the 30th Circuit Court for Ingham County.[4][1] In July 2013, Aquilina ruled that the city of Detroit's bankruptcy filing violated the state constitution, and sent an advisory memorandum to president Barack Obama.[4][9] This ruling was stayed less than a week later by the Michigan Court of Appeals,[10][11] and one day later the federal bankruptcy court issued a stay of all state court proceedings on the Detroit bankruptcy, ordering that all other legal challenges to the city's bankruptcy petition be litigated in federal bankruptcy court.[12] In December 2013, bankruptcy judge Steven W. Rhodes issued an opinion rejecting all the federal and state constitutional challenges to Detroit's bankruptcy and allowing the city to go through the Chapter 9 bankruptcy process.[13]
In 2018, Aquilina presided over the USA Gymnastics sex abuse scandal case.[14] She allowed over 150 women and girls involved with the US Olympics gymnastics team doctor, Larry Nassar, to present personal testimony on their sexual abuse.[14] Aquilina sentenced Nassar to 40–175 years in prison for sexual abuse of juveniles and young women over the past two decades.[6][14] An appeals court found some of her remarks during the trial "wholly inappropriate" and "challenges basic notions of judicial neutrality [and] due process". However, in a 2–1 decision, the court did not find a new trial was warranted; a dissenting judge said that it was not the role of judges to "act as an advocate".[15][16][17] She attended the 2018 ESPY Awards, where she was honored for her efforts in sentencing Nassar.
Aquilina is also an author and has published two novels: Feel No Evil (2003) and Triple Cross Killer (2017).[18]
On May 11, 2018, she was chosen by the graduates to deliver an address at the commencement ceremony of the Michigan State University College of Law, where she is a professor.
On June 19, 2023, she called for national inquiry into Canadian sport amid widespread allegations of harassment, abuse and bullying. [19]
Personal life
Aquilina has five children.[20] Aquilina also has two grandchildren.[21] She currently resides with three of her children, her father, and her mother in East Lansing, Michigan.[21][1]