Inquirey Concerning Johnson

692 So. 2d 168
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedApril 17, 1997
Docket87482
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 692 So. 2d 168 (Inquirey Concerning Johnson) 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
Inquirey Concerning Johnson, 692 So. 2d 168 (Fla. 1997).

Opinion

692 So.2d 168 (1997)

INQUIRY CONCERNING a Judge No. 95-412, re June Laran JOHNSON.

No. 87482.

Supreme Court of Florida.

April 17, 1997.

*169 Frank Kaney, Chairman and Thomas C. MacDonald, Jr., General Counsel, Tallahassee, Timothy W. Ross, Special Counsel, Coconut Grove, and Lauri Waldman Ross, Special Counsel, Miami, for Judicial Qualifications Commission, Petitioner.

Bruce S. Rogow and Beverly A. Pohl of Bruce S. Rogow, P.A., Fort Lauderdale, for Respondent.

PER CURIAM.

The Judicial Qualifications Commission (JQC) has filed with this Court a recommendation that June LaRan Johnson be removed from her position as a county court judge in Broward County. We have jurisdiction under article V, section 12(f) of the Florida Constitution.

In support of its recommendation, the JQC made the following findings of fact:

1. June LaRan Johnson is a County Court Judge for the Seventeenth Judicial Circuit, Broward County, Florida. She has served in that position since her election to the bench in 1982.
2. On or about September 18, 1995, Joann Headrick, a secretary for State Attorney Michael Satz (Broward County) fielded a telephone call from an irate citizen who complained about Judge Johnson's handling of Defendant William Rodda's pending DUI cases. (T. 33-34). Ms. Headrick ran a computer report, determining that Judge Johnson had reset one case some 33 times between July 1991 and September 18, 1995, and had re-set the arraignment of Mr. Rodda in the second (1992) case some 7 times after the case was assigned to her and after it was set for trial by the prior judge. (T. 35-39; 46; Pet. Ex. 2). Ms. Headrick reported this to SA Satz, who assigned ASA Howard Scheinberg to investigate why the cases were so old. (T.44; 50-52).
3. Howard Scheinberg is an assistant state attorney in charge of the Broward Court division. He reviewed a series of Judge Johnson's cases and issued a status report to Mr. Satz on aged cases in Judge Johnson's division on September 22, 1995. (T. 52-55, Pet.Ex. 3). Mr. Scheinberg testified that an arraignment is the first proceeding following arrest, that typically arraignments were reset only once or twice when necessary for a Defendant to obtain legal counsel. In contrast, Judge Johnson had a practice of resetting arraignments repeatedly over a period of years. Mr. Scheinberg concluded that "the majority of cases pending before Judge Johnson have an inordinate number of continuances," and that the procedure Judge Johnson used of "repeatedly resetting what the Judge terms as `arraignments' appeared to be geared towards minimizing her reported cases for statistical purposes." (T. 114-15, Pet.Ex. 3). Mr. Scheinberg explained that the clerk's statistics generated to measure a judge's caseload are triggered by a plea entered on the court's docket, thereby generating a trial setting. If a case is constantly re-set for arraignment, it would not show up as part of a judge's pending caseload. (T. 245-46).
4. The information obtained by the State Attorney's Office was conveyed to Judge Dale Ross, Chief Judge, 17th Judicial Circuit who met with Judge Johnson in approximately October 1995. (T. 497). Chief Judge Ross told Judge Johnson that she was not to reset any further arraignments. (T. 506-07). He termed Judge Johnson cooperative and said that she agreed not to do so in the future. (T. 527).
5. Sandra (Sandi) Langley has been employed by the Clerk of Broward County for 25 years, in the misdemeanor division. During the years 1994 and 1995, she was assigned to Judge Johnson (T. 266). As the clerk in the "hot seat," Ms. Langley actually marked the files.
*170 6. Clerk Langley only kept docket sheets as far back as September, 1994. Therefore, she could not testify with regard to records earlier than that date. (T. 268). After September 1994, Clerk Langley testified that the Judge directed her to enter dates on the disposition sheet which materially varied from the actual date of the plea. At the beginning, Clerk Langley wrote up each plea to specifically reflect that the defendant was being convicted nunc pro tunc to an earlier date. She stopped when the Judge told her that she didn't want pleas written up that way. (T. 354). Instead, Judge Johnson announced "Today's date is" and gave a date which differed from the actual date of the hearing. (T. 272-74). When attorneys used the term "retroactive," Judge Johnson would say "It's not retroactive" and give the fictitious date. (T. 354). In some instances where Ms. Langley had already noted the actual date of the hearing on her paperwork, she would have to cross through that date and enter the date the Judge directed. (T. 272-74). Judge Johnson ofttimes referred to these backdates as "quantum leaps" after a favorite television show. (T. 287).
7. When Judge Johnson took a plea in a DUI case, Ms. Langley would mark the file and fill out several documents. These included a disposition sheet, an original of which stayed with the file, while one copy was provided to the probation department and 2 copies to the Defendant. The citation or ticket was forwarded to the Department of Motor Vehicles in Tallahassee. (T. 270).
8. When a driver is convicted of a DUI, the Department of Motor Vehicles ordinarily dates revocation of the driver's license from the date of conviction (which is taken from the citation). Entry of an improper, earlier date on the citation gives the driver more time to use the license and thus can have serious consequences for the Department. (T. 474-5).
9. Pursuant to Judge Johnson's directions, Clerk Langley backdated the date of convictions to earlier dates on the citations forwarded to the Department. However, nothing on the citation reflected that backdates, instead of actual conviction dates, were being used. (T. 363).
10. Clerk Langley became concerned over the perception her supervisors might have that she was not performing her job, because the records she dated back pursuant to Judge Johnson's instructions made it look as though she was not turning in her records in a timely fashion. She brought this to the attention of her supervisor. She was told that "[she] was to do what the Judge told [her] to do." (T. 276). On her own initiative, Clerk Langley began to record the Judge's directions to her in dating the files by referencing the backdates as made "per Judge Johnson." (T. 355).
11. In 1994 and 1995, proceedings in Judge Johnson's courtroom were transcribed on tape. When Judge Johnson wanted to stop transcription, she either signaled Clerk Langley by tapping or told her to "push the button." (T. 269). On several occasions, when Judge Johnson directed Clerk Langley to enter a backdate, she also directed her to turn off the tape. (T. 282-284).
12. Judge Johnson made numerous statements of record reflecting a conscious awareness of the impropriety of her actions, as well as her intention to mislead the Department of Motor Vehicles:
A. On March 14, 1995, the Judge directed clerk Langley to backdate paperwork to July 20, 1994, indicating "I don't nunc pro tunc because they don't accept nunc pro tuncs;" (Pet.Ex. 8, pp. 16-17)
B. On May 5, 1995, the Judge announced "Today is January the 25th, 1995" and directed clerk Langley to correct the already-marked paperwork accordingly.

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692 So. 2d 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inquirey-concerning-johnson-fla-1997.