Jack Shultz
Jack Shultz, Attorney
Jack Shultz is a Michigan State University-trained attorney specializing in employment litigation and union representation. His practice can be found in Saginaw, Michigan.
Judge Coale set bond at $500,000. His release would require no contact with the alleged victim and staying within Alabama.
Early Life and Education
Shultz began his professional life at Economy Auto Parts with his family business. Additionally, he joined Mill Hall Volunteer Fire Company and was very involved with community activities. An avid fisherman himself, Shultz loved traveling with his wife to Alaska for fishing trips and vacation.
After graduating college, he served as staff economist on President Dwight Eisenhower’s Council of Economic Advisers before enrolling at Harvard University to teach for two decades.
At that time, he participated in negotiations that eventually resulted in the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty between Reagan and Gorbachev, before returning to Stanford as Professor Jack Steele Parker of International Economics at its Graduate School of Business as well as Hoover Institution Distinguished Fellow.
Professional Career
Jack Schultz is an employment law and labor union attorney. Additionally, he has experience working on issue-based campaigns and ballot initiatives; with particular expertise in representing truck drivers and workers with disabilities.
He served as an informal advisor to President George W. Bush, helping shape his doctrine of preemptive war and also serving on the Global Commission on Drug Policy as well as Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger’s Economic Recovery Council in California.
He aids his clients in cultivating the capacity to be vulnerable as a means of telling their stories and building connections with others. Through deep listening, probing questions, and exercises designed to bring authenticity into storytelling he enables people to find greater freedom and authenticity in their storytelling and lives.
Achievement and Honors
Jack Schultz was named All-Southwestern League after maintaining at least a 3.5 GPA throughout all four years of high school, winning both Middle School basketball championships. Following graduation from college he intends to play professionally overseas.
On May 29, 2002, Foreign Service Institute dedicated their National Foreign Affairs Training Center in honor of Secretary Shultz. Notable guests included Asia Society President Emerita Vishakha Desai and Chong-Moon Lee (Advisory Board Chairman Emeritus), along with performing artist Van-Anh Vo.
Shultz was an extremely demanding yet fair boss who set clear goals. At the same time, he was kind and considerate – often inviting those from remote offices traveling for holiday weekends to his house for barbecues and dinner parties on holiday weekends – making an example for us all to follow. We all admired him.
Personal Life
He was married to Sherry Winchester Schultz and was the father of two children: Jackson and Heidi. Additionally, he leaves many loved ones behind that will cherish his memory.
Schultz often remembered an observation by British mountaineer George Mallory, who died while trying to ascend Mount Everest: “If you want to do great things, begin them now.”
Schultz lived a life full of travel and adventure. An avid hiker and boater, he made history when he became the first person to sail nonstop from U.S. to Europe using solar power. Additionally, Schultz was an acclaimed scholar of industrial economics, teaching both at MIT and Stanford’s graduate school of business; additionally serving as dean of their graduate school of business, serving as Jack Steele Parker Professor of International Economics as well as Hoover Institution Distinguished Fellow.
Net Worth
John Schultz owns a stake in Midland States Bancorp Inc that is worth more than $77,550 as of this writing and owns more than 5,000 shares in total.
Schultz emerged from an economically challenging background as chairman of Starbucks. Under his guidance, it has grown from being a small city retail store into an global enterprise worth billions.
Starbucks founder Howard Schultz had an unconventional vision for his company when he joined it in 1980 that his employers, managers and coffee sale stats didn’t share. Initially he stepped down as CEO but returned 8 years later to help save it when months before bankruptcy had been nearing insolvency. His unconventional approach helped revitalize it while simultaneously offering healthcare coverage and teaming up with an online university for employees – including healthcare insurance and providing Arizona online university classes to them all.