This is for Judge Scola's seat. Stay tuned!
Dolphins open the season this Sunday at the Colts. Don't have a good feeling at all about this season (I expect them to be very bad this year) but they should be able to beat Daniel Jones on Sunday.
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
This is for Judge Scola's seat. Stay tuned!
Dolphins open the season this Sunday at the Colts. Don't have a good feeling at all about this season (I expect them to be very bad this year) but they should be able to beat Daniel Jones on Sunday.
Here's the 2-1 order (Lagoa for the majority, joined by Branch and Jordan in dissent).
Judge Lagoa ends her order with this:
While the power to determine immigration policy lies with the Federal government, “[t]he pervasiveness of federal regulation does not diminish the importance of immigration policy to the States,” which “bear[ ] many of the consequences of unlawful immigration.” Arizona, 567 U.S. at 397. Many of those harmful con-sequences are present here. Governor DeSantis has declared a state of emergency under Florida law because Florida is experiencing an “immigration crisis of unprecedented magnitude.” DE 137-1 ¶ 3. According to Joseph Harrison, a Lieutenant Colonel and Deputy Director for the Florida Highway Patrol (“FHP”), forcing Florida to shutter the detention facility will lead to overcrowding and will kneecap the State’s immigration-enforcement efforts. Id. ¶¶ 5, 6. Furthermore, he offers non-speculative evidence that in-sufficient detention space will lead to detainees being released back into the community: “[B]efore the detention facility at the Dade-Collier Training and Transition Airport was established,” he ex-plains, “ICE regularly informed FHP officers that the federal government lacked sufficient detention capacity to detain illegal aliens intercepted by FHP,” and, “[i]n those instances, FHP was forced to let those illegal aliens go.” Id. ¶ 5. We are convinced that, if the injunction were to stay in place, it would bring the State’s already stressed and overcrowded system to a breaking point.
On the other hand, the Plaintiffs have submitted declarations indicating that the conversion of the Site from a working air-port into a detention center will have a range of deleterious effects on the environment, including “light, water, and noise pollution, increased vehicular traffic, wildlife habitat degradation, and waste management issues.” These declarations assert that these effects may “negatively impact” the ecosystem of the Everglades and the survival of various threatened or endangered species, although it is unclear whether these declarations have accounted for the Site’s former use as an airport in order to establish a reliable baseline to evaluate possible future environmental impacts. DE 5-2 ¶¶ 13–14. We need not, however, wade into that issue here. As the Supreme Court reminds, there is no governmental project, especially one enacted in exigent circumstances, that does not pose some coun-tervailing risk. Cf. Winter v. Nat. Res. Def. Council, Inc., 555 U.S. 7, 26 (2008) (holding that the balance of equities and consideration of overall public interest weighed in favor of the Navy, in spite of the fact that the Navy’s use of “mid-frequency active” sonar might cause “harm to an unknown number of the marine mammals,” be-cause blocking the Navy from using this technology would jeop-ardize the “safety of the fleet”). Our job, at this stage, is to balance the equities, as well as the overall public interest, and we are com-pelled in this case to conclude that these factors favor the Defend-ants: While the environmental effects mentioned by the Plaintiffs may result in down-the-line harm, the injuries facing the Defend-ants and the public are critical, immediate, and concrete.
We conclude that the balance of the harms and our consideration of the public interest favor a stay of the preliminary injunction.
Judge Jordan starts his dissent this way:
Given the applicable burden on litigants who move for a stay, the deferential abuse of discretion standard that governs review of a preliminary injunction, and the clearly erroneous standard that limits appellate review of factual findings, the stay motion filed by the state and federal defendants should be a relatively simple denial. The majority, however, essentially ignores the burden borne by the defendants, pays only lip service to the abuse of discretion standard, engages in its own factfinding, declines to consider the district court’s determination on irreparable harm, and performs its own balancing of the equities. I therefore respectfully dissent from its decision to grant a stay of the preliminary injunction.
The Southern District of Florida has a new magistrate judge. Detra Shaw-Wilder was officially appointed to the bench, effective September 2, 2025. The administrative order is below.
Judge
Shaw-Wilder is a graduate of the University of Florida and the University of
Miami School of Law. She brings decades of litigation experience to the federal
judiciary. Prior to her appointment, she was a partner at Kozyak Tropin &
Throckmorton, where she handled complex commercial litigation, corporate
disputes, and high-stakes arbitration matters. This makes her the fourth judge
on the Southern District of Florida bench that was associated with Koyzak Tropin
Throckmorton, joining Judge Huck, Judge Isicoff, and Judge Lopez-Castro.
Despite
strong recommendations and near-universal praise, Judge Shaw-Wilder’s appointment
follows a stalled nomination for a district court judgeship by President Biden
in 2024, which was ultimately returned by the Senate in early 2025 after
Florida’s senators withheld their blue slips. She now joins the bench as a
magistrate judge and will sit in Fort Lauderdale.
The defendants in those cases (usually mopes) used to get arrested, charged, and sentenced to monster sentences... And there has always been really interesting litigation surrounding jurisdiction and sentencing, etc.
But yesterday, the United States military blew up one of these drug boats, killing 11.
Was this legal?
Some time ago, we covered Judge Singhal's grant of summary judgment to CNN in the defamation lawsuit filed against the network by Alan Dershowitz. The 11th Circuit just drove another nail into the lawsuit's coffin, affirming that order. The Court held there was no evidence that the reporters had spoken with actual malice (to the contrary, the Court noted that the evidence indicated that the reporters believed in the truth of their statements).
Perhaps more interesting, though, were the concurring opinions, written by Judges Lagoa and Wilson, which discussed the New York Times Co. v. Sullivan standard applicable to defamation cases. In short, Judge Lagoa doesn't like it, Judge Wilson does.
Opinion here.
1. Dave Macey walks. From the AP:
Prosecutors have agreed to drop criminal charges against a prominent Miami defense attorney accused of orchestrating a bribery conspiracy involving two former U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration supervisors who leaked confidential information.
Charges will be dismissed against David Macey in a year as long as he does not break any laws, according to a deferred prosecution agreement announced Thursday in Manhattan federal court.
Prosecutors offered no explanation for the sudden reversal. But Judge Jennifer H. Rearden said the “extraordinary opportunity” for Macey to avoid trial was in part the result of his experienced legal team.
“I feel great. I’m elated,” Macey said, grinning as he walked out of the courthouse and embraced his attorneys.
2. Cardi B puts on a masterclass on how to be an authentic witness while the cross-examiner completely fails
Cardi B gives a hilarious description of Emani Ellis weight as she takes a stand in court today. pic.twitter.com/cev8V7rsLg
— Red Media (@RedMedia_us) August 27, 2025
Cardi needs her own show or something because i was ctfu the whole time 😭 pic.twitter.com/iLZ4A26ugl
— Brimcess (@Belcardi11) August 27, 2025
Over the past few years, we’ve seen an increase in threats to federal judges, including to several judges in our district. Beyond increasing judicial security, though, what else can be done?
The South Florida Chapter of the Federal Bar Association is trying something different—social media. The idea, spearheaded by current president, Courtney Cunningham, is to have several of our judges film short, social-media-friendly videos designed to educate the general public about the roles of federal judges. The hope is that it’ll help lower the rhetorical temperature while humanizing our judges in the process. Judges Bloom and Scola have already filmed segments, and others have agreed to participate. The Florida Bar recently covered the initiative here. It's worth a read.
Finally, I would be remiss if I didn’t acknowledge the epic college football weekend ahead of us. There’s FSU v. Bama (corrected from earlier!). And, of course, Notre Dame v. UM or, as some people have been referring to it locally, Catholics vs. Cafecitos. Give me the Noles and Canes in close ones.This weekend a dinner was held in honor of Judge Federico A. Moreno, celebrating his 35 years of service on the Southern District of Florida bench. The event brought together members of Judge Moreno’s family, his courtroom staff, his local law clerks, and their families.
Over dinner, the Judge regaled the room with personalized stories about each of his clerks, recalling important cases, their accomplishments, and their not-so-serious gaffes. The Judge also took time to thank the hosts, Mariela Martínez-Cid (Moreno ‘01–‘02, ‘06, ‘08–Present) and Ricardo Martínez-Cid (King ‘01–‘02), for what was objectively, despite the author’s many biases, a beautiful event.
Be on the lookout for impersonators. I don’t think anyone will go full V for Vendetta, but I can imagine another judge, maybe Judge Ruiz (Moreno ‘05–‘06), wearing Judge Moreno’s face on the bench.