Robert D. “Rob” Hunter has been selected as Alumni Fellow for the James Worth Bagley College of Engineering for 2014. He is a 1973 MSU graduate who earned a Bachelor of Science degree in mechanical engineering.
Hunter has long been associated with MSU, as his parents Bob and Dean were both graduates of the class of 1951. As an MSU student, Hunter served as president of the Stephen D. Lee Honors program for two years and credits that as one of his major accomplishments while on campus. He also states that his greatest accomplishment “may have been passing Thermodynamics on the first try!”
He is a 1973 MSU graduate who earned a Bachelor of Science degree in mechanical engineering.
After graduating first in his class, Hunter received his Doctor of Law degree from Cornell University. In 1976, he moved to Birmingham, Alabama, to defend manufacturers in product liability litigation around the country. During this time, he worked at the law firm of Lange, Simpson, Robinson & Somerville.
Hunter spent 23 years at Lange Simpson before accepting a position of general counsel for Altec Inc., and its subsidiaries. He is currently Altec’s senior vice president, general counsel and secretary. Altec Inc. is a global provider of products and services for the electric utility, telecommunications and contractor industries. Among his many accolades is having been named to the inaugural Corporate 100, a list of the top 100 in-house counsel in the United States, in 2013. Under his leadership, the 2014 Altec legal team was named best in the United States in technology by Legal 500.
The impact Mississippi State has had on Hunter’s life is easily recognizable and he appreciates the time he spent at the institution.
“The memory that haunts me comes from walking across the quad late at night, sensing the quiet beauty of the campus and taking pride in being part of the long Maroon line who received an MSU education and experiences that would benefit them for life,” Hunter states. “To this day I still feel that when I walk across the quad.”
In addition to his successful defenses of manufacturers in trials around the country, Hunter’s career in private practice has been marked by numerous other achievements, one being representing five of the last six governors of Alabama.
Hunter serves on the advisory boards of the Mississippi State University Bagley College of Engineering and the University of Alabama at Birmingham Center for Palliative Care. He was named a Distinguished Fellow by MSU’s Bagley College in 2008.
Hunter and his wife Carol live in Birmingham, Alabama. They have three children, Debbie McGillicuddy, Kadee and Robert.