In Re Henson

913 So. 2d 579, 2005 WL 2522502
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedOctober 12, 2005
DocketSC04-1
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 913 So. 2d 579 (In Re Henson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Henson, 913 So. 2d 579, 2005 WL 2522502 (Fla. 2005).

Opinion

913 So.2d 579 (2005)

Inquiry Concerning a Judge, No. 03-14, re: James E. HENSON.

No. SC04-1.

Supreme Court of Florida.

October 12, 2005.

*582 Honorable James R. Wolf, Chairman, Hearing Panel, Brooke S. Kennerly, Executive Director, Tallahassee, FL, Thomas G. MacDonald, Jr., General Counsel, Tampa, FL, E. Lanny Russell of Smith, Hulsey and Busey, Jacksonville, FL, for Florida Judicial Qualifications Commission, Petitioner.

Kirk N. Kirkconnell of Lindsey, Snure and Yates, P.A., Winter Park, FL, for Judge Henson, Respondent.

PER CURIAM.

Article V, section 12 of the Florida Constitution vests this Court with the authority to determine both whether a judge has engaged in misconduct and whether that misconduct justifies discipline or removal from office. This is a responsibility of the utmost importance to the integrity of the justice system. In this case we review the determination of the Hearing Panel of the Judicial Qualifications Commission (JQC) that Circuit Judge James E. Henson violated provisions of the ethics rules governing judges and attorneys in this state, and its recommendation that he be removed from office.

We conclude, based on the evidence presented to the Hearing Panel, that Judge Henson practiced law while still a judge and that, acting as an attorney between his terms of judicial service, he advised a client in a criminal matter to flee the country rather than face prosecution. We further conclude that these two extremely serious violations of the Code of Judicial Conduct and Rules of Professional Conduct constitute "conduct unbecoming a member of the judiciary demonstrating a present unfitness to hold" the position of judge. Art. V, § 12(c)(1), Fla. Const. Neither those who appear before Judge Henson nor the public at large can have confidence in a judge who has committed these flagrant violations of our ethics rules. We therefore remove Judge Henson from office.

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The charges on which the Hearing Panel found Judge Henson guilty stem from conduct during his final weeks as a county judge in December 2000 and then into 2001 when he practiced law before returning to the bench as a circuit judge. Count I involves the allegation that Judge Henson practiced law while still a judge; Count II concerns the charge that he advised a client facing a felony trial to flee the country.

Judge Henson served as a county judge in Orange County but was defeated in a re-election bid. His term ended on January 5, 2001. He returned to the practice of law, doing criminal defense work. He won election to a new judicial post as a circuit judge, and assumed office on January 5, 2003. In the light most favorable to the findings of the Hearing Panel, the facts bearing on Judge Henson's misconduct are as follows:

Diana Jimenez was a Florida resident from Colombia who came to the United States with a valid Colombian passport. Ms. Jimenez was involved in a December 16, 2000, automobile accident in which two people were killed. She tested positive for *583 driving while intoxicated, and gave an incriminating videotaped statement in which she admitted drinking at a bar before the accident. The State charged Ms. Jimenez with DUI manslaughter and numerous related charges, for which she faced a prison sentence of more than thirty years. Her father, Dr. Alberto Jimenez, initially hired another attorney to represent her. After hearing favorable comments about Judge Henson and learning that he was a judge, Dr. Jimenez dismissed the lawyer he had hired and retained Judge Henson to represent his daughter. Judge Henson, who had been defeated in his re-election bid in November of 2000, had cleared his judicial calendar at the courthouse and had completed his judicial duties by December 15, 2000.

When he was first contacted by Dr. Jimenez, Judge Henson stated that he could not actively participate in the case until after his term as judge ended in January 2001. On December 20, 2000, Judge Henson and Dr. Jimenez signed a contract for Henson to represent Ms. Jimenez for $40,000, and Dr. Jimenez gave Judge Henson a check for the initial $15,000. Judge Henson then went to the county jail where Ms. Jimenez was in custody. He signed in as the attorney representing her and met with her. During this meeting, Ms. Jimenez also signed the contract and discussed with Judge Henson information for an upcoming bond hearing. This interview concerned the details of Ms. Jimenez's home and ties with the community. Judge Henson learned that Ms. Jimenez's Colombian passport was still valid and that she had several close relatives still living in Colombia. The subject of Ms. Jimenez fleeing to Colombia arose during several subsequent discussions. During a January 2001 trip to the bar to look for witnesses, Judge Henson asked Ms. Jimenez whether she still had her Colombian passport, and she said she did.

Judge Henson asked a fellow attorney, Robert Nesmith, to handle Ms. Jimenez's bond hearing because Judge Henson had a "conflict." Judge Henson introduced Nesmith to Ms. Jimenez at the bond hearing on December 22, 2000. Judge Henson sat in the audience with Dr. Jimenez. When the hearing ended, Judge Henson went forward to the bench and obtained papers from the presiding judge which were necessary to secure the bond. Judge Henson has admitted both the foregoing facts and that these facts demonstrate that he was improperly practicing law while still a judge.

Judge Henson contested the JQC's allegation in Count II that while representing Ms. Jimenez after he left the bench, he advised her to flee the United States. On this count, the Hearing Panel found:

The testimony on the issue of whether Judge Henson advised Diana Jimenez to avoid prosecution by fleeing to Colombia was in dispute. Judge Henson testified that although the subject of Colombia came up, he never advised or counseled Jimenez to flee. Judge Henson stated this position repeatedly throughout his testimony. However, Diana Jimenez, Dr. Alberto Jimenez and attorney Nesmith testified to facts supporting the charge and the Panel has rejected the testimony of Judge Henson and found the testimony of the other three witnesses on this issue to be credible and believable. The Panel is charged with the responsibility of resolving the conflicts in evidence. The Panel thus accepts the testimony of Diana Jimenez, Dr. Alberto Jimenez and Mr. Robert Nesmith and finds this testimony to be clear and convincing.
Diana Jimenez testified on video deposition and was subjected to cross examination by counsel for Judge Henson. *584 Diana Jimenez testified that although Judge Henson did not specifically tell her to flee to Colombia, that Judge Henson gave her to understand on more than one occasion that fleeing to Colombia was an option which she should consider. Diana Jimenez stated that she told Judge Henson that she did not wish to flee to Colombia and have to be looking over her shoulder for the rest of her life. She further stated that Judge Henson told her that Colombia had no extradition treaty and therefore she would not be the subject of a search by U.S. authorities in Colombia. She stated that he further told her that this was not the kind of charge on which a search would be mounted for her in a foreign country. Ms. Jimenez stated that Judge Henson was very interested in learning that she had a valid passport from Colombia and that she had close relatives in Colombia who would cooperate with her if she went there. He discussed this with her more than once [during] meetings in December, January and August.

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Bluebook (online)
913 So. 2d 579, 2005 WL 2522502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-henson-fla-2005.