This is expected to be the last order of its kind. I'll post the administrative order as soon as it goes up on the court website.
UPDATED -- here's the order.
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 expected to be the last order of its kind. I'll post the administrative order as soon as it goes up on the court website.
UPDATED -- here's the order.
It's June. The country is re-opening. Everyone is getting back to work, vacations, travel, in person court hearings, and jury trials. It's cool to see. Two things are closing for the summer -- school and the Supreme Court. All outstanding opinions will be issued this month. Here are some things to watch at the end of the Term, according to USA Today:
After mostly avoiding controversy for the past eight months, the Supreme Court is heading into the final, frenzied few weeks of its 2020-21 term with a docket full of outstanding cases and rampant speculation about one its most senior justices.
From health care to voting to a dispute pitting LGBTQ rights against religious freedom, the nation's highest court will soon start churning through blockbuster cases, dropping decisions that will reshape the law – and the political landscape.
Twenty-six cases – all of which were argued virtually because of the COVID-19 pandemic – remain on the docket.
"This term is a lot like the first few episodes of a new TV show," said David Lat, a court observer who founded a legal newsletter and website called Original Jurisdiction. "It's really just setting the stage. Sometimes you wish you could just fast forward through it, but it's still important because we're getting to know the characters...and we're getting to know the issues."
After the flurry of opinions, attention is sure to shift to Associate Justice Stephen Breyer, who at 82 is under pressure from progressives to retire so that President Joe Biden can name his replacement while Democrats hold their tenuous majority in the Senate. When justices step down, they often do so at the very end of the term.
I’m being told from multiple sources that the finalists for the two open district judge seats are:
Michael Caruso
Miguel de la O
Samantha Feuer
Ayana Harris
Shaniek Maynard
Detra Shaw Wilder
*These have been confirmed. Congrats to the finalists.
UPDATED -- The finalists for Marshal are:
Amos Rojas and Gadyaces Serralta
The finalists for U.S. Attorney are:
Jackie Arango
Michael Hantman
Markenzy Lapointe
Harvard Law professor emeritus Alan Dershowitz on Tuesday secured a significant procedural victory in federal court against CNN as part of his ongoing defamation lawsuit against the network.
CNN’s attorneys filed a motion to dismiss the $300 million lawsuit for failure to state a claim last November. The U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida was not convinced, and the parties will now move on to the discovery phase of proceedings.
“Looking forward to deposing the commentators and heads of CNN and of the truth coming out,” Dershowitz told Law&Crime in an email.
The famed celebrity attorney sued the liberal media outlet last September after CNN aired an edited clip of his defense argument in favor of then-president Donald Trump during the latter’s 2020 Senate impeachment trial over the Ukraine phone call affair.