Subject: The Judicial Accountability Amendment Needed In Florida
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Date: Thu, 31 Mar 2022 08:44:03 -0800
To: "www.jail4judges.org"
J.A.I.L. News
Journal ______________________________________________________ Los
Angeles,
California
March
31, 2005 ______________________________________________________
The Judicial Accountability Amendment
Needed In
Florida
Judicial Accountability Initiative Law (J.A.I.L.)
(Florida J.A.I.L.
Initiative)
(a)
Preamble. We, the People of Florida, find that the doctrine of judicial immunity
has been greatly abused; and when judges abuse their power, the people are
obliged - it is their duty - to correct that injury, for the benefit of
themselves and their posterity. In order to ensure judicial accountability and
domestic tranquility, we hereby amend Article I of our Constitution to add these
provisions, which shall be known as "The Judicial Accountability
Amendment."
(b) Definitions. For purposes of this
amendment:
1. The term "blocking" shall mean any act that impedes the lawful
conclusion of a case, to include unreasonable delay and willful rendering of a
void judgment or order.
2. The term "judge" shall mean justice, judge, magistrate,
commissioner, judge pro tem, private judge, judicial mediator, arbitrator and
referee, and every person shielded by judicial
immunity.
3. The term "Juror" shall mean a Special Grand
Juror.
4. The term "seat" shall mean a situs and facility that is
suitable for usage by the Jury.
5. The term "strike" shall mean an adverse immunity
decision.
Where appropriate, the singular shall include the
plural.
(c) Immunity.
Notwithstanding common law or any other provision to the contrary, no immunities
shall be extended to any judge of this State except as is specifically set forth
in this Amendment. Preserving the purpose of protecting judges from frivolous
and harassing actions, no immunity shielding a judge shall be construed to
extend to any deliberate violation of law, fraud or conspiracy, intentional
violation of due process of law, deliberate disregard of material facts,
judicial acts without jurisdiction, blocking of a lawful conclusion of a case,
or any deliberate violation of the Constitutions of Florida or the United
States.
(d) Special Grand
Juries. There are hereby created within this State two twenty-five member
Special Grand Juries with statewide jurisdiction having power to judge both law
and fact. This body shall exist independent of
statutes governing county Grand Juries.Their responsibility shall be limited to determining,
on an objective standard, whether a civil suit against a judge would be
frivolous and harassing, or fall within the exclusions of immunity as set forth
herein, and whether there is probable cause of criminal conduct by the judge
complained of.
(e) Professional
Counsel. Each Special Grand Jury shall have exclusive power to retain
non-governmental advisors, special prosecutors, and investigators, as needed,
who shall serve no longer than one year, after which term said officers shall be
ineligible. Notwithstanding the one year, a special prosecutor may be retained
to prosecute current cases in which they are involved through all appeals and
any complaints for judicial misconduct.
(f) Establishment of
Special Grand Jury Seats. Within ninety days following the ratification of this
Amendment, the Legislature shall provide a seat for each Special Grand Jury. No
seat shall be located within a mile of any judicial body, and each seat shall be
reasonably placed proportionately according to population throughout the State.
Should the Legislature fail to so act within ninety days, its members shall
permanently forfeit their salaries and per diem pay, beginning on the
ninety-first day, until such time that it abides by the terms of this (f)
section.
(g) Annual Funding.
The Legislature shall cause to be deducted two and nine-tenths percent from the
gross judicial salaries of all judges, which amount shall be deposited regularly
into the exclusive trust account created by this Amendment in paragraph (k) for
its operational expenses, together with filing fees under paragraph (h),
surcharges under paragraph (i), forfeited benefits of disciplined judges under
paragraph (q), and fines imposed under paragraph
(r).
(h) Filing Fees.
Attorneys filing a civil complaint or answer before the Special Grand Jury in
behalf of their client, shall at the time of filing, pay a fee equal to the
filing fee due in a civil appeal to the State Supreme Court. Individuals filing
a civil complaint or answer before the Special Grand Jury in their own behalf as
a matter of right, shall, at the time of filing, post a fee of fifty dollars, or
file a declaration, which shall remain confidential, stating they are
impoverished and unable to pay and/or object to such
fee.
(i) Surcharges.
Should this Amendment lack sufficient funding through its fines, fees, and
forfeitures (including deductions in paragraph (g)), the Legislature shall
impose appropriate surcharges upon the civil court filing fees of corporate
litigants as necessary to make this Amendment
self-supporting.
(j) Compensation of
Jurors. Each Juror shall receive a salary commensurate to a Circuit Court judge prorated according to the number
of days actually served.
(k) Annual Budget.
The Special Grand Juries shall have an annual operational budget commensurate to
double the combined salaries of the fifty
Jurors serving full time, which sum shall be initially deposited by the
Legislature into an exclusive trust account to be annually administered by the
State Controller. Should the trust balance, within any budget year, drop to less
than an amount equivalent to the annual gross salaries of thirty Circuit Court judges, the State Controller shall so
notify the Legislature which shall replenish the account, prorated based on the
actual average expenditures during the budget year. Should the trust balance in
any subsequent year exceed the annual operational budget at the beginning of a
new budget year, the State Controller shall return such excess to the state
treasury.
(l) Jurisdiction.
Each Special Grand Jury shall
have exclusive power to establish rules assuring their attendance, to provide
internal discipline, and to remove any of its members on grounds of misconduct.
The Special Grand Jury shall immediately assign a docket number to each
complaint brought before it, unless such case is transferred to another Special
Grand Jury to achieve caseload balance. A transfer shall not prejudice a
docketing deadline. The Special Grand Jury first docketing a complaint shall
have sole jurisdiction of the case. Except as provided in paragraphs (s) and
(w), no complaint of misconduct shall be considered by any Special Grand Jury
unless the complainant shall have first attempted to exhaust all judicial
remedies available in this State within the immediately preceding six-month
period. (Such six-month period, however, shall not commence in complaints of
prior fraud or blocking of a lawful conclusion until after the date the Special
Grand Juries become functional. This provision applies remedially and
retroactively.) Should the complainant opt to proceed to the United States
Supreme Court, such six-month period shall commence upon the disposition by that
court.
(m) Qualifications of
Jurors. A Juror shall have attained to the age of thirty years, and have been
nine years a citizen of the United States, and have been an inhabitant of
Florida for two years immediately prior to having his/her name drawn. Those not
eligible for Special Grand Jury service shall include elected and appointed
officials, members of the State Bar, judges (active or retired), judicial,
prosecutorial and law enforcement personnel, without other exclusion except
previous adjudication ofmental
incapacity, imprisonment, or parole from a conviction of a felonious crime
against persons.
(n) Selection of
Jurors. The Jurors shall serve without compulsion and shall be drawn by public
lot by the Secretary of State from names on the voters rolls and any citizen
submitting his/her name to the Secretary of State for such
drawing.
(o) Service of
Jurors. Excluding the establishment of the initial Special Grand Juries, each
Juror shall serve one year. No Juror shall serve more than once. On the first
day of each month, two persons shall be rotated off each Special Grand Jury and
new Citizens seated, except in January it shall be three. Vacancies shall be
filled on the first of the following month in addition to the Jurors regularly
rotated, and the Juror drawn to fill a vacancy shall complete only the remainder
of the term of the Juror replaced. A majority of thirteen shall determine any
matter. Special Grand Jury files shall always remain public record following
their final determination.
(p) Procedures. The
Special Grand Jury shall serve a copy of the filed complaint upon the subject
judge and notice to the complainant of such service. The judge shall have twenty
days to serve and file an answer. The complainant shall have fifteen days to
reply to the judge's answer. (Upon timely request, the Special Grand Jury may
provide for extensions for good cause.) In criminal matters, the Special Grand
Jury shall have power to subpoena witnesses, documents, and other tangible
evidence, and to examine witnesses under oath. Each Special Grand Jury shall
determine the causes properly before it with their reasoned findings in writing
within one hundred twenty (120) calendar days, serving on all parties their
decision on whether immunity shall be barred as a defense to any civil action
that may thereafter be pursued against the judge. A rehearing may be requested
of the Special Grand Jury within fifteen days with service upon the opposition.
Fifteen days shall be allowed to reply thereto. Thereafter, the Special Grand
Jury shall render final determination within thirty days. All allegations of the
complaint shall be liberally construed in favor of the complainant. The Jurors
shall keep in mind, in making their decisions, that they are entrusted by the
People of this State with the duty of restoring a perception of justice and
accountability of the judiciary, and are not to be swayed by artful presentation
by the judge. They shall avoid all influence by judicial and government
entities. The statute of limitations on any civil suit brought pursuant to this
Amendment against a State judge shall not commence until the rendering of a
final decision by the Special Grand Jury.
(q) Removal. Whenever
any judge has received three strikes, the judge shall be permanently removed
from office, and thereafter shall not serve in any State judicial office,
including that of private judge. Judicial retirement for such removed judge
shall not exceed one-half of the benefits to which such person would have
otherwise been entitled. Retirement shall not avert third strike
penalties.
(r) Indictment.
Should the Special Grand Jury also find probable cause of criminal conduct on
the part of any judge against whom a complaint is docketed, it shall have the
power to indict such judge except where double jeopardy attaches. The Special
Grand Jury shall, without voir dire
beyond personal impartiality, relationship, or linguistics, cause to be
impaneled twelve special trial jurors, plus
alternates, which trial jurors shall be instructed that they have power to judge
both law and fact. The Special Grand Jury shall also select a non-governmental
special prosecutor and a judge with no more than four years on the bench from a
county other than that of the defendant judge. The trial jury shall be selected
from the same pool of jury candidates as any regular jury. The special
prosecutor shall thereafter prosecute the cause to a conclusion, having all the
powers of any other prosecutor within this State. Upon conviction, the special
trial jury shall have exclusive power of sentencing (limited to incarceration,
fines and/or community service), which shall be derived by an average of the
sentences of the trial jurors.
(s) Criminal
Procedures. In addition to any other provisions of this Amendment, a complaint
for criminal conduct of a judge may be brought directly to the Special Grand
Jury upon all the following prerequisites: (1) an affidavit of criminal conduct
has been lodged with the appropriate prosecutorial entity within ninety (90)
days of the commission of the alleged conduct; (2) the prosecutor declines to
prosecute, or one hundred twenty (120) days has passed following the lodging of
such affidavit and prosecution has not commenced; (3) an indictment, if sought, has not been specifically
declined on the merits by a county Grand Jury; and (4) the criminal
statute of limitations has not run. Any criminal conviction (including a plea
bargain) under any judicial process shall constitute a
strike.
(t) Public
Indemnification. No judge complained of, or sued civilly by a complainant
pursuant to this Amendment, shall be defended at public expense or by any
elected or appointed public counsel, nor shall any judge be reimbursed from
public funds for any losses sustained under this
Amendment.
(u) Enforcement. No
person exercising strict enforcement of the findings of a Special Grand Jury
shall be held liable civilly, criminally, or in
contempt.
(v) Redress. The
provisions of this Amendment are in addition to other redress that may exist and
are not mutually exclusive.
(w) Challenges. No
judge under the jurisdiction of the Special Grand Jury, or potentially affected
by the outcome of a challenge hereto, shall have any jurisdiction to sit in
judgment of such challenge. Such pretended adjudication shall be null and void
for all purposes and a complaint for such misconduct may be brought at any time,
without charge, before the Special Grand Jury by class-action, or by any
adversely affected person.
(x) Preeminence.
Preeminence shall be given to this
Amendment in any case of conflicts with statute, case law, common law, or
constitutional provision. The foreperson of each Special Grand Jury shall read,
or cause to be read, this Amendment to the respective Jurors semi-annually
during the first week of business in January and July. Should any part of this
Amendment be determined unconstitutional, the remainder shall remain in full
force and effect as though no challenge thereto existed.