• FloridaBail411.com

    This site will continue to add and update online links and information to guide you through the Arrest, Bail Bond, and Criminal Court Case Process in Florida. Search our site by for specific County Information in one place. Our services and features are always free to Florida Residents and Visitors.
  • Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

    Join 4 other subscribers
  • Florida Arrest, Bailbond & Court Case Information

    Arrested in
    Coconut Creek Arrest Cooper City Arrest Coral Springs Arrest Dania Beach Arrest Davie Arrest Deerfield Beach Arrest Fort Lauderdale Arrest Hallandale beach Arrest Hillsboro Beach Arrest Hollywood Arrest Lauderdale Lakes Arrest Lauderdale-by-the-sea Arrest Lauderhill Arrest Lazy Lake Arrest Lighthouse Point Arrest Margate Arrest Miramar Arrest North Lauderdale Arrest Oakland Park Arrest Parkland Arrest Pembroke Park Arrest Pembroke Pines Arrest Plantation Arrest Pompano Beach Arrest Sea Ranch Lakes Arrest Southwest Ranches Arrest Sunrise Arrest Tamarac Arrest West Park Arrest Weston Arrest Wilton Manors Arrest Broward Bail Bonds, Broward County Bail Bonds, Felony Bail, Misdemeanor Bail, Domestic Violence Bail, Fort Lauderdale Bail Bond, Broward County Jail, Broward Arrests, Ft. Lauderdale Bail Bondsman, Cash Bond, bail bonds fort lauderdale, nationwide bail bonds, bail bondsman, bail bond collateral, miami dade bail bonds, cooper city bail bonds, weston bail bonds, plantation bail bonds, davie bail bonds, sunrise bail bonds, hollywood bail bonds, ft. lauderdale bail bonds, Bail bond broward, Bond Bail Broward Jail, Andrews Avenue Bail Bonds, Bail Out Bail Bonds, Florida Bail, Florida Bail Bonds

Do you know your Broward County Judge?

Do you know your Judge?

Going to Court can be an extremely scary and unnerving experience.  Judges come off so powerful and fault finding, almost Inhuman at times.  Your complete ‘Rapp Sheet’ and criminal history is about to be unveiled and evaluated and you are about to be JUDGED by a Judge.  Wouldn’t it be helpful to know a little bit about the elected official who is Judging you?  Maybe you can find some common ground that you can relate with.  Or a community cause, Volunteer Program, shared Ministry, or organization you both support.

  You may just see them as human after all!

Be prepared!judge

Know who will be judging you and your alleged actions!

What is the most important factor in winning your case? Believe it or not, it’s the judge who gets to hear the case. That’s right. The judge has the power to determine what evidence comes before or is withheld from a jury.  The judge decides pre-trial motions that often significantly affect the final outcome of your case.  The judge controls the pace and the tone of a trial.  All of these decisions are very important. Therefore, you need to really know your judge.

Those who take the time to do a little homework by knowing more about the judge, often get better results.

Honorable Judge Ilona Holmes 

Honorable Judge Michael A. Usan

Don’t see your Judge here?  This is a new thread and we will be updating this information ASAP.

Check Back Soon! -or- drop us a email or a comment and we’ll do the research for you and post it here!

Lift your Broward Bench Warrant before the Holidays

Did you receive a letter from the Sheriff’s office that there is a warrant for your arrest?

 

Have one less worry this season & lift the warrant before the Holidays!

Our Agents can walk you through the Jail System and post your bond, with a turn-around time of about an hour! No Jail Time!

Don’t get caught up in the system. Speak to an Agent NOW that knows.

For more information email browardbail@gmail.com

 

Federal Judge Throws Out Florida’s Drug Law

A federal judge ruled July 27 that Florida’s drug law was unconstitutional, leaving thousands of criminal cases up in the air. US District Court Judge Mary Scriven of Orlando threw out the Florida Drug Abuse Prevention and Control law on the grounds that it violates due process because it does not require prosecutors to prove a person knew he or she possessed illegal drugs.  In 2002, Florida legislators amended the state’s drug law, eliminating the requirement that prosecutors prove mens rea, or criminal intent, as part of obtaining a conviction. Florida was the only state in the nation to not require mens rea as part of a drug conviction.

“Not surprisingly, Florida stands alone in its express elimination of mens rea as an element of a drug offense,” Scriven wrote in her order. “Other states have rejected such a draconian and unreasonable construction of the law that would criminalize the ‘unknowing’ possession of a controlled substance.”

The ruling came in the case of Mackle Vincent Shelton, 33, who was convicted in 2005 of drug charges in Osceola County. Shelton, who is currently serving an 18-year prison sentence for cocaine delivery and other charges, appealed his conviction on the grounds that the jury wasn’t required to consider intent in order to convict him.

In his instructions to the jury in Shelton’s case, the trial judge told jurors that “to prove the crime of delivery of cocaine, the state must prove the following two elements beyond a reasonable doubt: that Mackle Vincent Shelton delivered a certain substance; and, that the substance was cocaine.” The state did not have to prove that he knew he was carrying or distributing cocaine or any controlled substance at all.

The National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (NACDL), which filed an amicus curiae brief in the case, pointed out that without the criminal intent requirement, “a Federal Express delivery person who unknowingly delivers a parcel containing a controlled substance, would be presumed a felon under Florida’s drug law.” Joining the NACDL in filing the brief, which was favorably cited by the court, were the Florida Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, the ACLU of Florida, the Drug Policy Alliance, the Calvert Institute for Policy Research, and 38 professors of law.

Florida defense attorneys applauded the ruling, saying the impact could be huge. Several told the St. Petersburg Times they intended to file motions seeking dismissal of pending drug cases, citing the judge’s order.

“It has one of the largest potential effects on criminal law in the past decade,” said St. Petersburg lawyer Jeff Brown. “We’re talking hundreds of thousands of drug cases.”

“In declaring the statute unconstitutional on its face, it appears that all drug prosecutions in the state are at risk,” said Tampa defense lawyer Eddie Suarez.

That’s tough, said Tampa attorney James Felman, who represented Shelton. Legislators should not have written an unconstitutional law removing mens rea, he said. “It takes the presumption of innocence and throws it in the garbage can,” Felman said. “I think the legislature must immediately fix the statute,” he said. “This is not a close call. No state has ever done this before. Legally, it’s beyond the pale.”

“This is a victory for the most fundamental notions of fairness and justice in our system — the idea that no one should suffer a conviction unless the state proves criminal intent beyond a reasonable doubt,” said NACDL executive director Norman Reimer. “As I previously said about this case, the country has been drifting away from the moral anchor of a clearly defined mens rearequirement in its criminal laws. Laws like these would run it aground.”

Orlando, FL

United States
by Phillip Smith, July 29, 2011, 03:49pm, (Issue #695)