Click here to remove Verdict from subsequent Justia newsletter(s). | New on Verdict Legal Analysis and Commentary | Trump’s Lawyers Will Get Away with Facilitating His Anti-Democratic Antics and They Know It | AUSTIN SARAT | | Austin Sarat—Associate Provost and Associate Dean of the Faculty and William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Jurisprudence & Political Science at Amherst College—predicts that because the lawyer discipline process is broken, President Trump’s lawyers will get away with facilitating his anti-democratic misconduct. Professor Sarat notes that Lawyers Defending American Democracy (LDAD) released a letter calling on bar authorities to investigate and punish members of Trump’s post-election legal team, but he points out that while LDAD can shame those members, it still lacks the ability itself to discipline or disbar. | Read More |
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Florida Supreme Court Opinions | State v. Maisonet-Maldonado | Docket: SC19-1947 Opinion Date: December 10, 2020 Judge: Ricky Polston Areas of Law: Criminal Law | The Supreme Court answered in the negative a certified question asking whether the single homicide rule found in House v. State, 474 So. 2d 1193 (Fla. 1985), precludes separate convictions of vehicular homicide and fleeing and eluding causing serious injury or death that involve the same victim. Defendant stabbed his girlfriend and ran over her with a car, resulting in her death. During a high-speed chase with law enforcement officers after fleeing the scene, Defendant crashed into another vehicle, killing two passengers. Defendant was convicted of one count of first-degree murder with a weapon, three counts of fleeing or attempting to elude a law enforcement officer causing serious injury or death, and two counts of vehicular homicide. On appeal from the denial of Defendant's postconviction motion, the Fifth District Court of Appeals concluded that Defendant's convictions were prohibited under the single homicide rule. The Supreme Court quashed the Fifth District's decision, holding that Defendant's dual convictions for vehicular manslaughter and fleeing or eluding causing serious injury or death are not prohibited under the same-elements test codified in Fla. Stat. 775.021(4). | | State v. Marsh | Docket: SC18-1108 Opinion Date: December 10, 2020 Judge: Ricky Polston Areas of Law: Criminal Law | The Supreme Court quashed the decision of the Second District Court of Appeal concluding that Defendant's dual convictions for driving under the influence (DUI) with serious bodily injury and driving while license suspended (DWLS) with serious bodily injury as to the same victim were prohibited, holding that Defendant's dual convictions were not prohibited. Relying on its decision in Kelly v. State, 987 So. 2d (Fla. 2d DCA 2008), the Second District concluded that Defendant's convictions violated the single homicide rule. The Supreme Court disagreed, holding (1) the appropriate analysis for whether dual convictions for DUI with serious bodily injury and DWLS with serious bodily injury are prohibited under the constitutional protection against double jeopardy is the same-elements test in Fla. Stat. 775.021; and (2) therefore, dual convictions for these offenses do not violate the constitutional prohibition against double jeopardy. | |
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