Pretty surprising news announced late Friday afternoon — Julie Carnes, appointed by President Obama in 2014, is retiring. This will give President Trump his third appointment to the 11th Circuit (Newsom, Branch) and a real opportunity to shape the small court.
It also shows a big difference between Obama and Trump. If the measure is quickly filling openings with young judges who share your judicial philosophy on courts, Obama was slow and ineffective with his judicial appointments, while Trump has been very successful. He has been aggressive, appointing young Federalist Society members in a relatively quick manner. The Julie Carnes seat, for example, was open for quite some time before Obama cut a deal to put a right-leaning judge on the court, who only stayed for a few years. Say what you will about Trump, he has been much more effective for his party on judicial appointments.
Carnes says she is going to “render substantial judicial service as a senior judge.” That’s very nice, but she is also giving Trump an opportunity to replace her with a judge who will sit on the court for a long long time.

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
Monday, March 26, 2018
Friday, March 23, 2018
News and notes, Ultra Spring Break edition
It's Ultra time in downtown Miami, which means the lawyers will be fleeing around lunchtime today. And then it's spring break next week.
Scott Rothstein is writing his own motions. Paula McMahon has the interesting story here:
In other news, Colbert asked RGB whether a hotdog is a sandwich. This is pretty funny.
Scott Rothstein is writing his own motions. Paula McMahon has the interesting story here:
Ponzi schemer Scott Rothstein is imprisoned and disbarred from practicing as an attorney but it hasn’t stopped him from flexing his jailhouse lawyer muscles – on his own behalf.
Rothstein, 55, personally filed court documents on Thursday in his bid to try to force the feds to reduce his 50-year prison sentence.
Rothstein, who pleaded guilty to orchestrating a $1.4 billion Ponzi scheme, first had to obtain permission from Senior U.S. District Judge James Cohn to file his own court pleadings.
The judge consented and Rothstein, who is being held in the U.S. Bureau of Prisons’ secretive witness protection program for inmates, typed up a 13-page legal argument and submitted it Thursday.
In other news, Colbert asked RGB whether a hotdog is a sandwich. This is pretty funny.
Thursday, March 22, 2018
New Ft. Lauderdale federal courthouse is in the works
From the Sun-Sentinel:
In other news, the 11th Circuit held today that possession of a round of ammunition is not sufficient to conduct a search for a firearm. The suppression motion should have been granted. The case is United States v. Johnson. The court framed the issue this way:
A new federal courthouse for Fort Lauderdale is included in a massive $1.3 trillion federal spending agreement that has bipartisan support and is expected to be approved in the next few days.
News that the $190 million downtown project was part of the package reached the city Wednesday from U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson, who phoned the city’s current and former mayors with the good news.
***
The 39-year-old current courthouse at Broward Boulevard and Northeast Third Avenue has had a leaking roof and mold problems, doesn’t have sufficient office space and wasn’t designed for current federal security requirements. The courthouse has been No. 3 on the priority list for new courthouses since 2016.
The General Services Administration is conducting a feasibility study for the new courthouse that should be completed by June. It will then be up to the GSA to pick a site for the new courthouse.
In other news, the 11th Circuit held today that possession of a round of ammunition is not sufficient to conduct a search for a firearm. The suppression motion should have been granted. The case is United States v. Johnson. The court framed the issue this way:
This appeal requires us to consider whether the pat down of a burglary suspect and the identification of a round of ammunition in the suspect’s pocket constitutionally allowed the officer to retrieve the round and another item from the suspect’s pocket.
Wednesday, March 21, 2018
Newest 11th Circuit Judge Lisa Branch sworn in
Here are the cool pictures posted by Judge Stephen Dillard, who did the swearing in:
Judge Elizabeth L. “Lisa” Branch, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit.. pic.twitter.com/xzkV4ep6db
— Chief Judge Stephen Dillard (@JudgeDillard) March 20, 2018
Imagine how prosecutors would react if your client gave this story
MUST WATCH: Ben Carson is actually pinning all of this on his wife: "I left it with my wife. I said, 'help choose something' ... The next thing that I, quite frankly, heard about it, was that this $31,000 table had been bought." pic.twitter.com/uYTPUihNFA— Amee Vanderpool (@girlsreallyrule) March 20, 2018
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