Gotta love technology. Here's Rachel Maddow on the Zimmerman trial getting Skype Bombed:
And here's the actual raw footage of the whole thing:
The SDFLA Blog is dedicated to providing news and notes regarding federal practice in the Southern District of Florida. The New Times calls the blog "the definitive source on South Florida's federal court system." All tips on court happenings are welcome and will remain anonymous. Please email David Markus at dmarkus@markuslaw.com
Friday, July 05, 2013
Wednesday, July 03, 2013
Happy Birthday to the Blog!
Yesterday, the blog turned 8 years old. Pretty neat.
This was the original post, asking the President to appoint a Floridian to the Supreme Court. We are still waiting 8 years later....
Since then, your first local legal blog has had 2,361 posts and almost 2 million page views.
The most popular post this year was breaking the story that AUSA Mike Garofola was going to be a contestant on the Bachelorette. Second, was Dore Louis' NSA motion.
After the United States, the blog's readership is as follows:
The blog has broken a number of stories this year, including your newest magistrate judges and the nomination of Will Thomas to the federal bench (he needs to get confirmed already!). Speaking of magistrates, Alicia Valle was officially named to the bench yesterday. Congrats to her!
It's been really fun for me to post over the last 8 years, and I hope you have enjoyed the blog as much as I have had doing it.
Happy Fourth of July!
--David
This was the original post, asking the President to appoint a Floridian to the Supreme Court. We are still waiting 8 years later....
Since then, your first local legal blog has had 2,361 posts and almost 2 million page views.
The most popular post this year was breaking the story that AUSA Mike Garofola was going to be a contestant on the Bachelorette. Second, was Dore Louis' NSA motion.
After the United States, the blog's readership is as follows:
| Entry | Pageviews |
|---|---|
United States
|
918641
|
Russia
|
12746
|
Germany
|
12597
|
United Kingdom
|
11530
|
Canada
|
10289
|
France
|
8799
|
Norway
|
7695
|
Netherlands
|
3722
|
Ukraine
|
3142
|
Malaysia
|
1532
|
The blog has broken a number of stories this year, including your newest magistrate judges and the nomination of Will Thomas to the federal bench (he needs to get confirmed already!). Speaking of magistrates, Alicia Valle was officially named to the bench yesterday. Congrats to her!
It's been really fun for me to post over the last 8 years, and I hope you have enjoyed the blog as much as I have had doing it.
Happy Fourth of July!
--David
Monday, July 01, 2013
What was Chief Judge Roberts' favorite case of the Term?
A. DOMA
B. Voting RightsC. Affirmative Action
D. DNA
E. Fane Lozman's house boat case
Yup, you got it -- E. The Chief Justice loved the case from the Southern District of Florida about whether the floating structure was a house or a boat. From Forbes:
Turns out the Chief Justice felt the same way. In this interview on C-SPAN, John Roberts called the lawsuit over whether a floating house was a boat one of his favorites from the last term.It’s surprising to hear this, given the momentous cases that were also before the court: The Voting Rights Act, gay rights, affirmative action, human gene patents — nearly all of them had broader implications for society at large than Fane Lozman’s Quixotic battle with the authorities of a coastal city in Florida over whether they had the power to haul his home away.“There are going to be half-dozen cases people are going to be talking about,” Roberts said in the interview with Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals Judge J. Harvie Wilkinson III.“The littler ones can be quite fascinating,” he said, however. “My favorite from last term was a case called Lozman."“The way cases develop in the law, you have something that seems to fit not comfortably on either category,” Roberts said. “Depending on which side you were on, it was either a floating home or a house boat.”In Lozman’s case, it was a seedy-looking house on a floating platform, connected to shore with a garden hose and an extension cord. Lozman had towed it hundreds of miles around the Florida peninsula, but the house didn’t have any power to move itself. City officials argued it was a boat for purposes of obtaining a maritime lien and impounding it. The court decided otherwise, in a decision with implications for much more significant structures like floating casinos.“We had a lot of fun with it …looking at the different characteristics and posing a lot of interesting hypotheticals at the argument,” Roberts said. At one point, the justices seemed to be toying with the lawyer for Riviera Beach, trying to back him into ridiculous definitions of a boat.Roberts asked if an inner tube qualified. After all, it could support a human and move him from place to place. Then Justice Stephen Breyer chimed in: “This cup. what about the cup?” Justice Sonia Sotomayorasked, “what about a garage door?” And Elena Kagan followed up with: Take the inner tube, and you know, paste a couple of pennies on the inner tube. Now it carries things.”On a separate note, I haven't been watching the Bachelorette, but I'm told that local AUSA Michael Garofola has made the top 5.... And that he is very against other contestants cursing on the show.
So you wanna be a federal judge?
The Federal JNC is reconstituted and its finally taking applications for Judge Seitz's open seat. Applications are due July 31, and interviews will take place on August 21.
The Florida Bar website listing the JNC members was wrong, and so my prior post had the wrong list of JNC members. The correct list is:
The Florida Bar website listing the JNC members was wrong, and so my prior post had the wrong list of JNC members. The correct list is:
Kendall Coffee
Alex Acosta
Georgina Angones
Reginald Clyne
Vivian de las Cuevas-Diaz
Albert Dotson
Phil Freidin
Carey Goodman
Cynthia Johnson-Stacks
Manny Kadre
Ira Leesfield
Dexter Lehtinen
Richard Lydecker
Thomas Panza
David Prather
Dennis Alan Richard
Jon Sale
Stephen Zack
Marilyn Holifield
Harley Tropin
Danny Ponce
You can grab the application here if you are interested.
Meantime, Holly Skolnick's memorial service was Sunday, and it was an amazing outpouring of love and support. Really nice memories of her from her family and friends... What a big loss for the community. Holly is survived by her husband Richard Strafer,* their daughter, and her parents.
*As an aside, Richard is working on the Kaley case (along with Howard Srebnick), headed to the Supreme Court next Term, which Curt Anderson covered yesterday:
When Kerri and Brian Kaley came under federal investigation for allegedly stealing medical devices, they took out a $500,000 line of credit on their New York house to hire lawyers. Yet after their indictment in 2007, prosecutors sought to prevent the Kaleys from using the money because the government intended to seize the house.
Meantime, Holly Skolnick's memorial service was Sunday, and it was an amazing outpouring of love and support. Really nice memories of her from her family and friends... What a big loss for the community. Holly is survived by her husband Richard Strafer,* their daughter, and her parents.
*As an aside, Richard is working on the Kaley case (along with Howard Srebnick), headed to the Supreme Court next Term, which Curt Anderson covered yesterday:
When Kerri and Brian Kaley came under federal investigation for allegedly stealing medical devices, they took out a $500,000 line of credit on their New York house to hire lawyers. Yet after their indictment in 2007, prosecutors sought to prevent the Kaleys from using the money because the government intended to seize the house.
The Kaleys insisted they were legally reselling the medical items. At the very least, they wanted a hearing to determine whether the government's case was strong enough to justify freezing most of their assets and denying them the right to hire the attorney of their choice.
It's an issue federal courts around the country are deeply divided over. Now, the U.S. Supreme Court has a chance to settle the matter after agreeing earlier this year to hear the Kaleys' appeal.
Thursday, June 27, 2013
Snitching ain't easy
Paula McMahon from the Sun-Sentinel has been covering an interesting "pill-mill" prosecution before Judge Marra. There have been a series of articles (here, here, and here) covering one cooperating witness in particular -- a Christopher George. Apparently, Mr. George discussed some of the prior testimony with his father, which was recorded on a jail phone:
Although the defense moved to exclude George's testimony entirely based on these recordings, he has been permitted to testify. Sounds like the stuff of movies:
Some great in-depth coverage by Ms. McMahon.
-- Meantime, another court is fed up with discovery/Brady violations. This time the 6th Circuit.
-- Finally, a big congrats to Robert Luck, who was named Circuit Court Judge by Governor Scott. Luck is a good guy, and smart. A nice addition to the bench.
Christopher George is hoping to get his prison term reduced, provided that federal prosecutors think his anticipated testimony against two South Florida doctors is worth a reward. But a recorded call the 32-year-old inmate made to his father from the Palm Beach County Jail may have put a kink in his plans.
Despite a message that plays at the start of every jail inmate call warning all parties that they are being recorded, the two men had a phone conversation that went on for about 15 minutes last week — with dad John George giving a play-by-play of how another witness testified in court and coaching his son on what questions might come up and what might sound good on the witness stand.
***
On the recorded call, George, his father and a woman who accompanied the dad to court last week, were heard hashing out the details of the first trial witness's testimony and what appeared to be playing well to the jury and what wasn't working.
"We took a lot of notes …. we took pages of notes," John George, 62, told his son during the call, explaining that it didn't look good when a witness downplayed any benefit he might receive for his testimony. "The defense attorneys … jump on that. They will say, 'How much time to do you expect to get off.'"
After detailing the highlights of the defense's strategy and line of questioning, John George threw in a critique of attorney Michael D. Weinstein's cross-examination of the witness: "This guy … really can slice things up … He was pretty good."
Although the defense moved to exclude George's testimony entirely based on these recordings, he has been permitted to testify. Sounds like the stuff of movies:
The businesses brought in so much cash that his staff quickly stopped using cash registers because they filled up too quickly, he said. They tried cash drawers for a while but George said that slowed down business too much and eventually they settled on dropping the cash into two-gallon trash bins by their desks.
Hassled by police and reporters, George said he moved from the first clinic to locations on Cypress Creek Road in Fort Lauderdale, then Boca Raton and Palm Beach County.
As the business evolved, he realized that a prior criminal conviction for illegally importing and selling steroids was bringing more unwanted attention and he put the clinics in a friend's name, though he still ran them.
George testified he saved some money, stashing $5 million in safes in his mom's attic and bedroom, but he also blew a lot of it. He bought three homes, some boats and so many luxury cars that he struggled to recall the details.
"I went through a lot, I don't remember all of them," George testified, listing off Range Rovers, BMWs, a Mercedes, a Lamborghini, a Bentley, and a freightliner truck that cost more than $200,000.
Some great in-depth coverage by Ms. McMahon.
-- Meantime, another court is fed up with discovery/Brady violations. This time the 6th Circuit.
-- Finally, a big congrats to Robert Luck, who was named Circuit Court Judge by Governor Scott. Luck is a good guy, and smart. A nice addition to the bench.
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