• Suspended Florida prosecutor takes fight to DeSantis in opening day of

    From zinn@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 3 08:30:18 2022
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    TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Suspended prosecutor Andrew Warren took his battle
    against Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis to a federal court on Tuesday in the
    first day of a trial that’s exposing the machinations in how the
    governor’s office operates.

    DeSantis suspended the Hillsborough County state attorney in August over a handful of moves the Democratic elected official made, including signing a pledge in June that he would not enforce the state’s abortion laws.
    Florida recently enacted a ban on abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy
    without exceptions for rape or incest.

    Warren contends that DeSantis’ move to suspend him in early August
    violated his First Amendment rights, and in the trial’s opening day he testified for more than three hours, including recounting the day he was suspended. On that day, Warren said he was met at his office by Larry
    Keefe, the governor’s public safety czar, who was accompanied by sheriff’s deputies and a demand that he leave immediately.

    Keefe, who took the stand later in the day, however, provided some of the
    most illuminating testimony, saying he was the “primary driver” in getting Warren’s suspended. His inquiry started in the wake of DeSantis asking
    during a December 2021 meeting whether there were any Florida prosecutors
    not enforcing the law.

    Keefe contended during his testimony that Warren was “crossing the line”
    for signing the statements on abortion — and another one saying he would
    not prosecute anyone for providing gender affirming care to transgender patients even though the state does not have any criminal laws dealing
    with that. Florida approved a rule banning gender-affirming treatment for minors several months after Warren was suspended.

    “This wasn’t a one-off,” said Keefe, a former U.S. attorney who also
    directed the DeSantis administration’s contentious relocation of migrants
    from Texas to Martha’s Vineyard. He said this statements regarding Warren
    were part of a “very problematic” trend from the ousted prosecutor. “I absolutely believed he needed to be suspended.”

    But Keefe acknowledged several times on the stand that he never called
    Warren directly or communicated with anyone in Warren’s office to ask
    about the prosecutor’s statements. Warren and two top officials still
    working in the state attorney’s office said there wasn’t a blanket policy against prosecuting abortion or gender-affirming cases and they have not handled any such prosecutions. Warren’s team even noted a written policy
    that tells prosecutors to evaluate individual cases.

    Keefe, who said he conducted a review of Warren’s actions but not an
    actual “investigation,” brushed aside the written policies. Instead, he contended that Warren was a “state attorney whose approach to his job was harmful” and that he was antagonistic to law enforcement, an opinion based
    on conversations he held with several people, including the current Hillsborough sheriff and the former Tampa police chief.

    Warren had adopted policies that recommend against the prosecution of low
    level crimes such as trespassing and disorderly intoxication or moving
    ahead with charges that stem from initial police encounters where a
    pedestrian or bicycle rider is stopped for a non-criminal violation.

    Keefe went so far as to suggest that there were problems with “violent”
    and “rampant crime” in Tampa and that keeping Warren on the job would lead
    to “chaos.”

    Florida’s Constitution gives the governor the power to suspend elected officials for various reasons, including neglect of duty and malfeasance
    or commission of a felony. Previous governors have primarily suspended
    local officials who have been arrested, but DeSantis has embraced a wider
    use of the suspension powers. He first used it to remove Scott Israel, the Broward County sheriff, over how his office responded to the Parkland
    shooting. Under the Constitution, a suspended official can ask to be
    reinstated by the Florida Senate.

    Warren, however, opted to fight the governor in federal court, a move that caught DeSantis’ own legal team off guard, according to depositions that
    have been filed ahead of the lead up of the trial. Most of Warren’s time
    on the stand included going over the operations of his office — as well as
    his stance on abortion and gender-affirming care and why he chose to sign
    onto statements that were put out by an advocacy group called Fair and
    Just Prosecution. The organization bills itself as a group that brings
    together local prosecutors promoting changes to the criminal justice
    system, but it has come under fire from conservatives because it is linked
    to a group that receives funding from billionaire donor George Soros.

    Warren defended the abortion statement by saying he was more concerned
    about all-out bans on abortion and said he backed the one on gender-
    affirming care as saying he was opposed to discrimination against trans
    youth.

    Moments before he entered the federal courthouse Tuesday morning, Warren
    told reporters that “there’s so much more at stake than my job. We’re not
    just fighting for me to do the job that I was elected to do. We are
    fighting for the rights of voters across Florida to have the elected
    officials of their choice. We’re fighting for free speech, the integrity
    of our elections and the very values of our democracy.”

    During opening statements, Warren’s attorneys cited documents and tweets
    by the governor’s staff, including one by then-press secretary Christina Pushaw, who posted the night before Warren was suspended that stated:
    “Prepare for the liberal meltdown of the year.” George Levesque, an
    attorney with a private law firm assisting the governor’s defense,
    responded during his opening statement that Pushaw was taken to the
    “proverbial woodshed” by DeSantis over her tweet.

    Levesque argued that DeSantis had legitimate reasons to suspend Warren
    because he decisions to sigh the statements on abortion and gender
    affirming care were “tantamount to a functional veto” of state law.

    The trial is expected to last at least two more days. Warren wants U.S. District Judge Robert Hinkle to restore to his job and place a permanent injunction against DeSantis’ executive order that suspended him.

    https://www.politico.com/news/2022/11/29/florida-prosecutor-desantis- trial-00071274

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