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Florida judicial elections, 2014
| Florida judicial elections, 2014 | |
| Overview | |
|---|---|
| Total candidates: | 439 |
| Primary candidates: | 153 |
| General election candidates: | 48 |
| Incumbency | |
| Incumbents: | 308 |
| Incumbent success rate: | 96% |
| Competition - general election | |
| Percent of candidates in contested races: | 54% |
| Percent uncontested*: | 0% |
| Percent retention: | 46% |
| *264 candidates (60% of total) were uncontested and automatically re-elected in August | |
2015 →
← 2013
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| Judicial Elections |
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| Judicial elections, 2014 |
| Judicial election dates |
| Candidates by state |
| Supreme court elections |
Last updated: November 2014
The Florida judicial elections in 2014 included over 400 candidates. Appellate court candidates faced retention elections, while candidates for the circuit and county courts ran in nonpartisan elections. After the August primary, nine circuit and four county court races remained undecided and advanced to the November election.[1]
In total, 439 judicial candidates ran in Florida's 2014 elections; 308 incumbents ran for re-election, and 264 candidates ran unopposed.
See: Florida elections summary, 2014 for an overview of the 2014 results.
Election dates
- May 2: Filing deadline
- August 26: Primary
- November 4: General election[2]
In addition to candidate lists, this page includes information about how the state's judicial elections work, as well as articles about noteworthy news in races across the state.
General election: Contested races
(I) denotes incumbent
Fifth Circuit Court, Group 3
- Denise A. Dymond Lyn, 40.9%

- Mary P. Hatcher, 59.1%

Seventh Circuit Court, Group 20
- Adam Warren, 46.1%

- Kathy Weston, 53.9%

Thirteenth Circuit Court, Group 34
- Melissa Polo, 48.7%

- Robert Bauman (Florida), 51.3%

Thirteenth Circuit Court, Group 8
- Barbara Twine Thomas, 51.2%

- Carl C. Hinson, 48.8%

Sixteenth Circuit Court, Group 4
- Bonnie J. Helms, 57.9%

- Jack Bridges, 42.1%

Seventeenth Circuit Court, Group 16
- Dennis Bailey, 50.6%

- Rhoda Sokoloff, 49.4%

Eighteenth Circuit Court, Group 13
- Christina Sanchez, 45.2%

- George T. Paulk, 54.8%

Eighteenth Circuit Court, Group 19
- Susan Stacy, 59.5%

- Mitch Krause, 40.5%

Eighteenth Circuit Court, Group 23
- John Moser, 40.9%

- Nancy Maloney (I), 59.1%

Broward County Court, Group 27
- Claudia Robinson, 50.1%

- Ian Richards (I), 49.9%

Miami-Dade County Court, Group 19
- Frank C. Bocanegra, 42.3%

- Jacqueline Schwartz (I), 57.7%

Orange County Court, Group 10
- Kenneth A. Barlow, Jr. (I), 48.3%

- Tina Caraballo, 51.7%

St. Lucie County Court, Group 4
- Albert B. Moore, 42.3%

- Kathryn Nelson, 57.7%

Retentions
The following judges faced a retention election in order to keep their seat. In such elections, the incumbent judge is not being evaluated against an opponent. Rather, he or she simply receives votes of "yes" to retain or "no", do not retain.
One-third of the state's intermediate appellate judges were up for retention this year. There were no significant efforts to unseat any of the judges.
Appellate courts
Primary
For candidate lists and results from the judicial primary on August 26, 2014, please see: Florida judicial primary elections, 2014.
Process
Primary election
The primary is held 12 weeks before the general election.[3] To get on the ballot, candidates for judicial office are required to obtain signatures equal to at least one percent of the number of registered electors in the geographic boundary of the district.[4] Trial court judicial candidates compete in nonpartisan primaries designed to narrow the field to two candidates for the general election. Candidates who receive a simple majority (fifty percent plus one vote) of the vote in the primary are considered winners and are not on the ballot in the general election unless a write-in candidate qualifies for the same office.[5]
General election
In the general election, appellate court judges stand for retention and trial court candidates compete in nonpartisan elections. Political parties and partisan political organizations are forbidden from endorsing, supporting, or assisting candidates in a campaign for judicial office.[6]
Retention election
Retention elections for appellate judges ask voters a "yes" or "no" question of whether or not to retain a judge to another term. The judges do not face competition on the ballot. If a majority of votes are in favor of a particular judge, that judge will be retained to a new term.[7]
Unopposed candidates
Unopposed candidates for the circuit and county courts do not appear on any ballot and are considered elected following the general election.[7]
Ballot measure
Gubernatorial appointments for judicial vacancies
The Florida Prospective Judicial Vacancies, Amendment 3 ballot measure would have altered the method of judicial selection in Florida. This measure was defeated in the November 4 general election.[8] Instead of waiting for a judge or justice's term to end before a successor is named, the governor of Florida would have been permitted to appoint a successor when one of three conditions is met:
- a judge approaches mandatory retirement,
- a sitting judge does not qualify for a retention election, or
- a judge loses a retention election.
Three justices of the Florida Supreme Court had terms that were set to expire on January 8, 2019, due to the mandatory retirement age in Florida: Fred Lewis, Barbara Pariente, and Peggy Quince. This bill was approved in the Florida House of Representatives and Florida Senate in April 2014 along party lines, with Republicans favoring the measure.
Noteworthy events
The following articles were current as of the dates listed.
Spotlight on the Sunshine StateOctober 9, 2014 | Click for story→ |
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| See: JP Election Brief: Spotlight on the Sunshine State | |
A look at Florida's Fourth Appellate DistrictSeptember 18, 2014 | Click for story→ |
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| See also: JP Election Brief: Candidate in contempt of court and a 3-month retirement
In Florida, appellate judges are appointed by merit selection and subject to retention elections at the end of their six-year terms.[9] In retention elections, voters are presented with a "yes" or "no" choice to retain the judicial candidates. No opposing candidates are presented to voters on the ballot. If a judge fails to be retained by receiving a majority of "no" votes, the governor appoints a replacement. As of 2014, the current salary for a Florida appellate judge was $154,140 a year.[10]
Alan O. Forst was appointed to the court on March 7, 2013, by Governor Rick Scott. Prior to his appointment, he served as chairman of the Florida Reemployment Assistance Appeals Commission for 12 years. Forst earned his undergraduate degree from Georgetown University and later received his J.D. from the Catholic University of America. The Florida Bar polled its members on their opinions of the appellate judges up for retention in 2014. 79 percent of respondents in the poll recommended Forst's retention.[10][11]
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Florida Bar poll gives voters insight into judicial electionsSeptember 11, 2014 | Click for story→ |
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| See also: JP Election Brief: Party switches and the soaring cost of campaigning
As it has done every alternate year since 1978, the Florida Bar conducted a poll of its membership and published the results, along with a voter information guide (published in Spanish and English) that seeks to help Floridians understand the judicial elections process, the importance of participation, and the role that judges fulfill in civil society. In 2014, voters decided whether or not 22 appellate court judges should retain their seats.[15]
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Newcomers perform well in Florida's Miami-Dade County electionsAugust 28, 2014 | Click for story→ |
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| See also: JP Election Brief: Florida primary results are in; supreme court races are heating up
New judicial candidates in Florida's most populous county performed well in Tuesday's primary.[18] Over fifty judicial candidates filed to run for election or re-election in Miami-Dade County in 2014, though only those facing opposition appeared on primary ballot. Of the seventeen candidates who did compete in the primary, only four were incumbents—and of those four, only one secured re-election.[18] In Florida, candidates garnering more than 50 percent of the primary vote win the election by default. If no candidate receives a majority, the top two candidates face each other in the general election. This was the situation that applied to County Judge Jacqueline Schwartz's race. She missed the 50 percent mark by 0.6 percent in a three-way race against Frank C. Bocanegra and Rachel Glorioso Dooley. She was then required to compete against Bocanegra in November.[18] Incumbent circuit judge Fleur J. Lobree was defeated by defense lawyer Mavel Ruiz, and County Judge Nuria Saenz lost the primary to personal injury attorney Victoria Ferrer. Only incumbent Rodney Smith defeated his challenger Christian Carrazana.[18] All primary winners or previously unopposed candidates are considered to have won their respective seats. Their names did not appear on the general election ballot on November 4, 2014.[19] | |
7 incumbents defeated in Florida primaryAugust 28, 2014 | Click for story→ |
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| See also: JP Election Brief: Florida primary results are in; supreme court races are heating up
During Florida's primary election on August 26, 2014, seven incumbent judges across the state were defeated. Circuit court judges
County court judges
These incumbents left office at the end of their terms on January 5, 2015. Approximately 84 percent of the incumbents that faced primary opposition either moved on to the general runoff in November, or were elected outright due to receiving over 50 percent of the vote. | |
Florida primary election previewAugust 21, 2014 | Click for story→ | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| See also: JP Election Brief: Primary previews and a 19-person race
Over 100 candidates faced contested elections in the Florida judicial primary on August 26, 2014, and any one of them who received over 50 percent of the votes were elected without having to run in November. Races with only two candidates are indicated by an asterisk in the table below.
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Impartiality v. Perception: A campaign promise retracted prior to electionAugust 21, 2014 | Click for story→ | |||
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| See also: JP Election Brief: Primary previews and a 19-person race
Florida Fifteenth Circuit Court candidate Peggy Rowe-Linn signed a pledge supporting a constitutional amendment that would make all abortions illegal in the state, regardless of the circumstances surrounding the pregnancy. She was one of approximately 300 judicial candidates in Florida who signed the pledge. Rowe-Linn later withdrew her pledge, citing concerns about how it might impact public perception of her impartiality on issues related to abortion. Rowe-Linn released the following statement regarding her decision:
The group that circulated the pledge, the Personhood FL ProLife PAC, said that some judicial candidates declined to sign it, referencing judicial ethics rules as their reason. Canon 7 of Florida’s judicial code states that a judge or judicial candidate may not make statements that could reasonably be interpreted as committing to a particular stance prior to hearing a case. Michael Schneider of Florida's Judicial Qualifications Commission emphasized the importance of neutrality, saying, "The hallmark of the judicial position is impartiality – that you give everybody a fair shake and you don't predetermine your ruling on something."[21] Schneider noted the inherent tension between the impartiality expected of judicial candidates and their First Amendment right to express personal views. A spokesperson for the Florida Bar clarified that signing such a pledge does not automatically constitute a violation of judicial conduct rules, but added that the bar evaluates such matters on a case-by-case basis rather than issuing broad determinations. Rowe-Linn’s opponents, Jaime Goodman and Maxine Cheesman, both raised concerns about the appropriateness of signing the pledge in light of the impartiality required of judges. Goodman stated, "[he] believe[s] it's conduct barring [Rowe-Linn] from being the impartial judge that the Palm Beach County community deserves."[21] Cheesman emphasized the importance of public confidence in judicial neutrality, stating, "There has to be that appearance of impartiality because when someone comes before you, if they think you have preconceived notions, they're not going to feel they're being heard fairly. It might just be a perception, but perception is very important as well." In a message to voters, Rowe-Linn urged the public not to base their decisions solely on a candidate’s personal beliefs. She stated: "[p]ersonal opinions or lifestyle should not be a deciding factor in who becomes a judge. Qualifications, a sense of justice and integrity should decide."[21] | ||||
Two challengers face incumbent in Seminole County judicial electionAugust 21, 2014 | Click for story→ |
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| See also: JP Election Brief: Primary previews and a 19-person race
Jerri L. Collins, judge for the Seminole County Court in Florida, faced two challengers in the primary on August 26. Sandra Rivera and Alex Finch challenged the sitting judge who had been on the bench for eight years.[22] Jerri L. Collins, originally from southern Illinois, obtained a B.A. from Eastern Illinois University and earned her J.D. from Mercer University. She moved to Longwood, Florida, in 1990 to marry her husband, Mike Pinnock. After being admitted to the Florida Bar in 1991, she began a legal career as an assistant state attorney for Seminole County. She left this job to open a private practice, but would return to the Seminole County State Attorney's office later to lead a new unit dedicated to prosecuting crimes against the elderly and disabled. In 2005, she was appointed to the Seminole County Court by Governor Jeb Bush. Sandra Rivera at the time of the election was a solo practitioner for the Law Offices of Sandra Rivera P.A. which she founded in 2012. She graduated in 1999 from Salem College and earned her J.D. from the Florida State University School of Law in 2001. She began her legal career as an assistant state attorney for the Florida 9th Circuit Court in 2002. in 2011 she left to pursue a career in private practice.[23] She is a member of the Orange County Bar Association and the Seminole County Bar Association, Hispanic Bar Association, and also serves as a volunteer guardian ad litem for the Orange County Legal Aid Society.Cite error: Invalid | |
Candidate changes campaign materials after criticismAugust 7, 2014 | Click for story→ |
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| See also: JP Election Brief: Pricey retention campaigns in Tennessee and Florida candidates in the news
There was a four-way race for the bench in the Seventeenth Circuit Court of Florida. As the campaigns prepared for the August 26 primary, one of the candidates, Dennis Bailey, drew public attention for distributing two versions of his campaign cards. One version featured the image of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and listed several supporters from the Black community; this card did not include Bailey's photo. The other version included Bailey’s photo and highlighted endorsements from the Police Benevolent Association and the Fraternal Order of Police. These law enforcement endorsements were not listed on the version featuring Rev. King's image. Bailey responded to concerns by stating that some critics alleged he was attempting to portray himself as Black in materials distributed in predominantly Black communities, which he denied.[25] Corey Shearer, president of the Broward County Democratic Black Caucus, criticized Bailey on Facebook and in fliers that read, "Warning! There is a fox in the hen house." Shearer also addressed Bailey directly about the materials prior to a judicial candidates' forum in Pembroke Pines. Bailey responded that the changes—removing the image of Rev. King and substituting endorsements from law enforcement groups—were made because he believed group endorsements were more effective at that stage of the campaign. He said that he had initially featured four individual community leaders before receiving broader institutional endorsements. During their exchange, Shearer expressed concern about the use of Rev. King’s image, to which Bailey replied, "I respect that."[25] In an interview, Bailey emphasized that he did not intend to target different racial groups with the separate versions of the card. Other candidates and political consultants acknowledged awareness of the differing campaign materials. Rhoda Sokoloff, one of Bailey’s three opponents, declined to comment to the Sun Sentinel, saying, "I may have an opinion, but I'm not going to say what my opinion is." Another opponent, Andrea Ruth Gundersen, confirmed she had seen the two versions but added, "It's not my place to judge my opponent and what he chooses to do or not do. If he chooses to do that that's his business."[25] On August 26, Bailey faced Andrea Ruth Gundersen, Rhoda Sokoloff, and Russell Thompson in the primary election and advanced. He then defeated Rhoda Sokoloff in the general election.[26] | |
No election for Fourth Circuit CourtAugust 7, 2014 | Click for story→ | ||||||
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| See also: JP Election Brief: Pricey retention campaigns in Tennessee and Florida candidates in the news
Under a decision released by a Florida circuit court, Judge Donald Moran of the 4th Judicial Circuit was to be replaced by appointment rather than election.[27]
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Hillsborough County Court raceJuly 31, 2014 | Click for story→ |
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| See also: JP Election Brief: Attorneys weigh in on nonpartisan elections, Tennessee judges and conspiracy
The son of a prominent Florida lawyer challenged an incumbent on the Hillsborough County Court. Norman S. Cannella, Jr. challenged Judge Chris Nash in the primary on August 26.
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The contested races of Florida's 20th CircuitJuly 3, 2014 | Click for story→ |
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| See also: JP Election Brief: Election laws challenged
There were two contested races in Florida's Twentieth Circuit Court in 2014. The 20th Circuit serves the counties of Charlotte, Collier, Glades, Hendry and Lee.
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Three challengers face incumbent in county court primaryJune 26, 2014 | Click for story→ |
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| See also: JP Election Brief: Survival of the fittest as more candidates are eliminated
Three challengers ran in the August 26 primary against incumbent Judge Kathryn Nelson of the St. Lucie County Court in Florida. Lawyers Roseanna Bronhard, Albert B. Moore and Leonard S. Villafranco ran against Nelson, who was arrested in 2011 and charged on counts of DUI with property damage and resisting arrest without violence.[34][35] Nelson, 55, served on the St. Lucie County Court since 2005 and raised a total of $24,710 for her campaign from loans and donations so far, according to the TCPalm.[36]
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The race for Florida's 16th Judicial Circuit CourtJune 19, 2014 | Click for story→ | |||
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| See also: JP Election Brief: Retention tension, a supreme court candidate on trial, and an election decided by coin toss
Two challengers ran in the August 26 primary against incumbent Tegan Slaton in the race for Florida's 16th Judicial Circuit Court. Jack Bridges and Bonnie J. Helms both ran against Slaton to win his seat on the bench.
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One judicial candidate secures pre-election winJune 5, 2014 | Click for story→ |
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| Sandy Upchurch was guaranteed a win with the announced retirement of Judge Terrill J. LaRue of the Seventh Judicial Circuit. Upchurch, a mediator and local attorney from Daytona Beach, ran unopposed. Though she had no competitors, her name was still be required to appear on the August ballot. Upchurch was the only non-incumbent candidate in Florida to be running unopposed. LaRue announced his retirement and declined to run for an additional term. Upchurch began serving on the court in January 2015.[44] | |
Open seats, swing districts attract challengers in FloridaMay 15, 2014 | Click for story→ |
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| See also: JP Election Brief: Candidate attacks
Four sitting judges on the Broward County Court faced challengers, and two dozen ran unopposed. Additionally, six candidates competed for two open seats on the court.[45]
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See also
- Florida judicial elections, 2014 - Circuit Courts
- Florida judicial elections, 2014 - County Courts
- Florida judicial elections
- Judicial selection in Florida
External links
Footnotes
- ↑ The Florida Bar, "50 judicial races decided; 13 headed to November runoffs," September 15, 2014
- ↑ Florida Division of Elections, "Calendar of Election Dates"
- ↑ Florida Secretary of State,"General Voting Information," accessed April 29, 2014
- ↑ Florida Election Law, "Sec. 105.035(e)," accessed April 29, 2014
- ↑ Florida Division of Elections, "Frequently Asked Questions"
- ↑ Florida Election Code, "Sec. 105.09," accessed May 4, 2014
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 Florida Election Law, "Sec. 105.051," accessed April 29, 2014
- ↑ Florida Division of Elections, Amendments Election Results"
- ↑ Judgepedia, "Florida judicial elections," accessed September 17, 2014
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 10.4 10.5 The Sun Sentinel, "Appeals court judges run to keep their jobs," September 16, 2014
- ↑ Judgepedia, "Alan O. Forst," accessed September 17, 2014
- ↑ Judgepedia, "Martha Warner," accessed September 17, 2014
- ↑ Judgepedia, "W. Matthew Stevenson," accessed September 17, 2014
- ↑ Judgepedia, "Mark W. Klingensmith," accessed September 17, 2014
- ↑ My News 13.com, "Florida Bar voters' guide for judicial races, merit retention," July 24, 2012
- ↑ The Florida Bar, "Merit Retention Polls," accessed September 10, 2014
- ↑ The Florida Bar, "Florida Bar Poll Shows Overwhelming Support For Appellate Judges in Merit Retention Elections," September 8, 2014
- ↑ 18.0 18.1 18.2 18.3 Miami Herald, "Two incumbent Miami-Dade judges lose; Miami assistant city attorney wins seat," August 26, 2014
- ↑ Judicial selection in Florida
- ↑ 20.0 20.1 Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.
- ↑ 21.0 21.1 21.2 Sun Sentinel, "Judicial candidate recants pledge to pro-life group," August 20, 2014
- ↑ Jerri Collins Campaign Website, "About," accessed August 20, 2014
- ↑ Sandra Rivera Campaign Website, "Biography," accessed August 20, 2014
- ↑ Alex Finch Campaign Website, "Home," accessed August 20, 2014
- ↑ 25.0 25.1 25.2 Sun Sentinel, "Candidate alters campaign pitch after criticism," July 31, 2014
- ↑ Florida Division of Elections, "Circuit Court Judge primary results," accessed August 27, 2014
- ↑ 27.0 27.1 27.2 27.3 27.4 27.5 The Florida Times-Union, "Judge rejects Jacksonville lawyer's claim that judicial replacement for Donald Moran should go to election," August 4, 2014
- ↑ 28.0 28.1 Tampa Bay Times, "In Hillsborough judge's race, legendary lawyer's son squares off against appointed incumbent," July 19, 2014
- ↑ 20th Judicial Circuit, "Amy Hawthorne Appointed to Circuit Bench," accessed July 2, 2014
- ↑ Hawthorne Campaign Website, "About Judge Amy R. Hawthorne," accessed July 2, 2014
- ↑ Leskovich Campaign Website, "About Steven S. Leskovich," accessed July 2, 2014
- ↑ Branning for Circuit Judge, "About Robert Branning," accessed July 2, 2014 (dead link)
- ↑ Mary Evans for Judge, "Meet Mary Evans," accessed July 2, 2014
- ↑ 34.0 34.1 34.2 34.3 TCPalm.com, "Voters to select 2 county judges, 2 circuit judges in November; decide whether to retain 4 district judges," May 2, 2014
- ↑ TCPalm.com, "St. Lucie County Judge Kathryn Nelson released on bail following DUI arrest," October 26, 2011
- ↑ 36.0 36.1 TCPalm.com, "Kathryn Nelson top money raiser for circuit judge seat," June 12, 2014 (dead link)
- ↑ Roseanna Bronhard Campaign Website, accessed June 25, 2014
- ↑ Albert Moore Campaign Website, "About," accessed June 25, 2014
- ↑ Leonard Villafranco Campaign Website, "Biography," accessed June 25, 2014
- ↑ Keys News, "Bridges to run for judge seat," January 3, 2014
- ↑ Judgepedia.org, "Jack Bridges," accessed June 18, 2014
- ↑ Facebook.com "Bonnie J. Helms, Committee to Elect," accessed June 18, 2014
- ↑ Re-elect Judge Tegan Slaton, "Experience," accessed June 18, 2014 (dead link)
- ↑ PR Web, "Florida Mediator Sandy Upchurch Unopposed, Elected Circuit Judge," May 07, 2014
- ↑ 45.0 45.1 45.2 The Sun Sentinel, "Four Broward judges face election challenge," By Rafael Olmeda, May 2, 2014
- ↑ 46.0 46.1 Broward County, "2008 primary election results," accessed May 14, 2014
- ↑ Florida Department of State, "2014 Judicial Candidates, Broward County," accessed May 14, 2014
- ↑ See: Florida judicial elections
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Federal courts:
Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals • U.S. District Court: Middle District of Florida, Northern District of Florida, Southern District of Florida • U.S. Bankruptcy Court: Middle District of Florida, Northern District of Florida, Southern District of Florida
State courts:
Florida Supreme Court • Florida District Courts of Appeal • Florida Circuit Court • Florida County Court
State resources:
Courts in Florida • Florida judicial elections • Judicial selection in Florida