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DECEMBER 1989: Alachua County Circuit Judge Benjamin
Tench nullified an action by the Gainesville Board of Adjustment
in which the board had denied a building permit, adjourned, then
reconvened six minutes later and reversed the denial. Tench awarded
Darnell Rhea, a former board member who initiated the suit, $833
in legal fees.
OCTOBER 1989: The Orlando Sentinel received $4,500
in attorney's fees in a case arising out of Sunshine Law violations
by the City of Kissimmee. The city had refused access to meetings
of a police board created to review use of deadly force by officers.
SEPTEMBER 1989: The Milton Press Gazette was
awarded more than $1,300 in attorney's fees in a suit to gain access
to public records held by Pensacola Junior College. The Press Gazette
was denied access to information about the college's legal expenses
in a labor dispute.
NOVEMBER 1988: The Orlando Sentinel received
$6,750 in legal fees in a suit seeking access to records held by
the Orlando chief of police. Orange County Circuit Judge Lawrence
J. Kirkwood held that the newspaper was entitled to the records,
which concerned internal investigations of officers.
OCTOBER 1988: The City of New Port Richey was
ordered to pay the cost of its unsuccessful appeal of Pasco Circuit
Judge W. Lowell Bray Jr.'s ruling that city officials violated
the public records law. Those fees were in addition to $22,000
the city already owed a Tampa attorney who represented plaintiffs
seeking access to documents in a civil rights suit brought against
the city in 1985.
SEPTEMBER 1988: The Orlando Sentinel received
$5,000 in fees from the city of Longwood in a suit in which the
paper sought access to investigative records compiled by an independent
contractor. The Seminole Circuit Court ruled that the records,
concerning suspended police department employees, were public.
MAY 1988: An 11th Circuit judge ordered Dade
County State Attorney Janet Reno to pay $5,000 in attorney's fees
to The Miami News. The newspaper filed suit to obtain eight categories
of documents provided to the defense in a criminal case.
NOVEMBER 1986: The 4th District Court upheld
a lower court's ruling ordering the Palm Beach County Sheriff's
Office to pay The Miami Herald's legal expenses in a public records
case. The lower court had held that Sheriff Richard Wille violated
the Public Records Law when he refused to release investigation
records concerning an employee.
SEPTEMBER 1986: A Broward Circuit judge ordered
the Port Everglades Authority to pay more than $3,000 in fees in
a suit filed by the Ft. Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel. The newspaper
had requested documents concerning Port Everglade's attempt to
bring U.S. Lines ships to the port.
JUNE 1986: A Broward Circuit judge ordered the
Florida Alliance to pay $1,000 in legal fees to the Ft. Lauderdale
Sun-Sentinel. The newspaper sought documents concerning Florida
Alliance's relationship with Port Everglades.
JUNE 1986: Lee Circuit Judge James R. Thompson
ruled that the City of Fort Myers violated the Sunshine Law during
bargaining sessions in December 1985 between a police union and
city representatives. Thompson ordered the city to pay the Fort
Myers News-Press' attorney’s fees.
MAY 1986: Circuit Judge R. William Rutter ordered
State Attorney David Bludworth to pay $48,097 in legal fees incurred
by four news organizations in a lawsuit to gain access to information
in the 1984 drug overdose death of David Kennedy. The media organizations,
the Palm Beach Newspapers, the Miami Herald Publishing Co., the
Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel Company and Scripps Howard Broadcasting
Company, donated the fees to the Florida First Amendment Foundation.
MAY 1985: A circuit judge ordered the Polk County
State Attorney's Office to pay $2,568.50 in attorney's fees and
court costs to The Ledger (Lakeland). The Ledger won the suit in
1985 after then-State Attorney Quillian Yancey refused to release
records involving investigations completed by his office.
FEBRUARY 1984: The 1st District Court of Appeal
ruled that Thomas R. Julin and Terri Wood, who as University of
Florida law students sued in 1980 to open the selection process
of a law school dean, were entitled to $37,500 in attorney's fees
from the university. The Florida Supreme Court had remanded the
question of fees to the 1st District in 1983, after ruling that
the activities of a search committee should have been open to the
public. Total fees in the case eventually came to $70,000. Julin,
Wood, and Gainesville attorney Sandra Bieber-Allan contributed
$50,000 from the award to the FOI Clearinghouse at the University
of Florida (now the Brechner Center for Freedom of Information).
MAY 1981: The Miami Herald and The Miami News
were awarded attorney's fees totaling more than $70,000 in a public
records lawsuit filed against the Metro-Dade Police Department.
The Herald, which was awarded $53,330.30, filed the suit after
Public Safety Director E. Wilson Purdy refused to release certain
internal police records. The News, which later joined the suit,
was awarded $20,229.92.
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