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Florida Public Records and Open Meetings Attorney's
Fees Database
The following is a chronology of cases in which plaintiffs obtained
litigation expenses in legal actions filed under Florida’s
Open Meetings or Open Records laws. In some cases, the court awarded
attorney’s fees or court costs, or both. The chronology also
notes those cases in which government actions were nullified.
The amounts of litigation expenses awarded or agreed to in settlements
have been provided when possible. In some cases, judges awarded
litigation expenses, but did not specify amounts.
According to the known data, media and non-media plaintiffs obtained
at least $2,100,554.32 in attorney’s fees and costs in Open
Records or Sunshine Law suits since 1981.
Each decade has seen an increase in the amount of attorney’s
fees collected in open government lawsuits. From 1981 to 1989,
at least $240,048.50 in attorney’s fees was awarded. During
the 1990s, this figure quadrupled, with at least $996,119.90 in
attorney’s fees and court costs awarded. Since 2000, plaintiffs
have already been awarded nearly $1 million in attorney’s
fees. From 2000 to 2005, $864,385.92 in attorney’s fees was
awarded.
To date, the single largest amount of legal fees and court costs
obtained in a public records or open meetings dispute is the $331,000
awarded to the Miami Herald in 2002.
The Brechner Center welcomes information about open meetings or
Sunshine Law cases in which litigation expenses were awarded or
obtained. The Center would also like to receive additional information
on any of the cases listed in the chronology. If you have such
information, please contact us.
JUNE 2006: Pinellas county was ordered to pay the St. Petersburg Times’ legal expenses related to a successful public records lawsuit. A circuit judge ruled that Pinellas County violated the Public Records Law when it refused to release a settlement agreement between the county and a former employee. Since the county lost the lawsuit, it must pay the newspaper’s $19,806 legal bill.
MAY 2006: A doctoral student who sued University of Florida President Bernie Machen for failing to provide some public records was ordered to pay the university's court costs of approximately $1,300. A circuit judge ruled against Charles Grapski in the public records suit.
MAY 2005: Highlands County was ordered to pay a Sebring man court
costs and attorney’s fees for a lawsuit he filed after
being charged $65.12 to inspect a hurricane committee’s
public records. In considering Preston H. Colby’s lawsuit,
Circuit Judge David Langford ruled that the county could charge
residents to inspect public documents. However, Judge Langford
found that the 30 percent surcharge for employee research time
could not be charged.
JANUARY 2004: The 5th District Court of Appeal ruled that Hernando
County must pay the attorney’s fees of the Coalition for
Anti-Urban Sprawl and the Environment (CAUSE). CAUSE filed suit
against the county in 2002 over a Wal-Mart Super Center. The group
claimed that the development review committee meetings violated
the state’s open government laws by excluding the public
and, therefore, Wal-Mart’s permit should be invalid. The
court found that the meetings did violate the Sunshine Law, but
did not invalidate the permit.
APRIL 2003: Dunedin officials agreed to pay more than $3,600 in
legal fees to the Liberty Council of Orlando in a settlement reached
after the Liberty Council sued the library for not allowing the
group to use its public meeting room. The public library declined
the religious group access to its meeting room on two occasions,
citing that the library’s policy did not allow political,
religious and formal social meetings and programs to use the room,
exercising separation of church and state. The city will now change
its policy, allowing programs of a political or religious nature
to use the room.
MARCH 2002: The Miami Herald won $331,000 in legal fees from Dade
Aviation Consultant after the Third District Court of Appeal ruled
the company’s efforts to keep documents secret could be criminal.
The Herald first sued the consulting firm in 2000 after it refused
to turn over records indicating how much the firm paid lobbyists
who helped win a county contract to manage Miami International
Airport’s $5.4 billion expansion project. At that time, the
judge said the company did not have to pay legal fees and the Herald
appealed.
OCTOBER 2001: The Flagler County Sheriff’s Office has paid
$10,000 in lieu of attorney's fees to The News-Journal of Daytona
Beach after the office refused to release requested jail transportation
logs. The Sheriff’s Office argued that releasing the records
would have violated the confidentiality of inmate medical records.
Sheriff Jim Manfre settled with the newspaper to pay $10,000, which
the newspaper will use to support a Sunshine Law seminar.
JUNE 2001: The Sanford Housing Authority Board agreed to settle
a lawsuit with two tenants who claimed the board violated the state
Open Meetings Law when they made an agreement behind closed doors
allowing four former board members to resign. The housing board
members will pay $24,000 in the settlement; $5,000 to the tenants
and $19,000 in attorney's fees.
JUNE 2001: Since a 1997 ruling against Prison Health Services
for withholding public records from The Ledger of Lakeland, the
Polk County Sheriff’s Office has asked Chief Judge Charles
Curry, 10th Judicial Circuit, to force the newspaper to pay its
legal bills. The Sheriff’s Office argued that the newspaper
should have sued only the Prison Health Services and never involved
the Sheriff’s Office in the suit. Curry refused to require
the newspaper to pay the legal fees, ruling the lawsuit was not
frivolous and that public records requests did not have to be put
in writing.
APRIL 2001: The Florida Supreme Court ordered Memorial Hospital-West
Volusia, Inc. to pay an estimated $100,000 in legal fees to the
Daytona Beach News-Journal after the Court ruled that a Public
Records Law exemption governing some hospital records cannot be
applied retroactively. The 1998 statute exempts records of public
hospitals that are leased to private companies, and the newspaper
sued for the pre-1998 records of the hospital.
DECEMBER 2000: A judge ruled that Martin County commissioners
violated the Sunshine Law by meeting in closed-door sessions after
The Palm Beach Post filed suit against the county. The judge ordered
the county to release written transcripts of the meetings and to
pay the newspaper’s attorney fees.
NOVEMBER 2000: Judge Manuel Menendez Jr., 13th Judicial Circuit,
ordered the Tampa Palms Community Development District supervisors
to pay attorney fees for former supervisor, Bob Doran, who sued
the district in 1999, citing four Sunshine Law violations. The
community development group will pay $40,000 in legal fees.
NOVEMBER 2000: The St. Petersburg Times was awarded $4,750 in
legal fee reimbursement after the newspaper filed suit with the
city of St. Petersburg when they refused to provide a reporter
with copies of public documents. The city has since turned over
all documents, and the newspaper is donating the money from the
lawsuit to local charities so that community residents are not
penalized by their local government actions.
DECEMBER 2000: The Town Council of Golden Beach agreed to pay
more than $15,000 in legal fees for three town officials, including
more than $7,000 for a councilman accused of a Sunshine Law violation.
Council member Al Paruas was involved in an Open Meetings Law case
in 1999 after he ejected a resident from a November meeting. Investigators
with the State Attorney’s Office are still investigating
the case. Paruas’ current legal fees add up to $7,125.15.
SEPTEMBER 2000: Judge Gasper Ficarrotta, 13th Judicial Circuit,
ordered the Tampa Bay Buccaneers football organization to pay
legal fees after refusing to turn over public records revealing
how they made money from publicly financed Raymond James Stadium.
The Hillsborough County Commission was awarded $32,500 and the
Tampa Sports Authority $15,000 in the suit.
SEPTEMBER 2000: The Nassau County Sheriff’s Office has been
ordered to pay legal fees after attorney John Cascone requested
records from the office via certified letter. Nine days after the
request, Cascone requested a court order, which states the sheriff’s
office must release the records as well as pay legal fees.
MAY 2000: A circuit court judge ordered that the Escambia County
School Board members attend a seminar about access to government
information and pay the plaintiff $904.92 in expenses after failing
to provide school board members’ e-mails and an e-mail address
book to a parent.
MAY 2000: The Miami Herald brought a public records suit against
the mayor of Hialeah after the mayor’s office refused to
hand over records of phone calls received in the office. When the
mayor provided the records, the newspaper dropped the suit. The
mayor paid the newspaper $500 in legal fees.
JANUARY 2000: Hillsborough County Judge Edward Ward has ordered
Tampa General Hospital (TGH) to pay $65,000 in attorney fees to
the St. Petersburg Times and $227,131 to The Tampa Tribune. The
newspapers had filed and won public records suits against TGH.
In October, Ward had ruled that the hospital's records were public,
even thought the hospital converted from a public to a private
non-profit corporation in 1997. Lawyers for the hospital are appealing
the ruling and award.
OCTOBER 1999: An appellate court has affirmed the initial award
of $8,030, plus interest and appellate attorney's fees, to Barbara
Herskovitz, a private citizen. She had filed a public records lawsuit
against Leon County. In June, Judge Terry Lewis, 2nd Judicial Circuit,
ruled that given the nature of volume of the materials that Herskovitz
requested, the county's delay in producing them was reasonable
(See December 1998 summary below).
JULY 1999: A circuit judge awarded the St. Petersburg Times attorney's
fees in a suit against the governing foundation of Helen Ellis
Memorial Hospital, even though he previously had decided that the
foundation was exempt from state access laws. The case stemmed
from the paper's public records request to the hospital and a request
to attend meetings.
APRIL 1999: The former health-care provider for the Polk County
Jail has agreed to pay The Lakeland Ledger $22,500 in legal fees
the newspaper spent during its successful public records suit against
the company. The Ledger sued Prison Health Services in 1997 to
obtain the details of a $500,000 settlement paid to the widow of
a man who died in jail in 1995.
DECEMBER 1998: The Vero Beach City Council settled a Sunshine
Law suit brought by community activist Frank Zorc for $575,000.
About $300,000 of that went to his attorney, Jon Kaney of Daytona
Beach. The city also paid $456,000 in legal fees to four law firms
involved in the case. Recently, in a 5-0 vote, the council decided
against a malpractice suit to recover part of the fees.
DECEMBER 1998: Judge Terry Lewis, 2nd Judicial Circuit, ruled
that a private citizen, Barbara Herskovitz, was entitled to recover
$8,030 in attorney's fees and court costs from Leon County in a
public records suit against the county. Herskovitz claimed that
the county was not precise in identifying some 9,000 confidential
documents and that the delay in producing documents was unreasonable
(See also October 1999)
SEPTEMBER 1997: Orange County paid $35,000 in settlement costs
and $15,000 in attorney’s fees to settle a lawsuit stemming
from a closed meeting. A county committee had met behind closed
doors to discuss a construction company’s protest of a contract
award.
JULY 1997: Judge John J. Hoy, 15th Judicial Circuit, ordered Florida
Atlantic University President Anthony J. Catenese to pay attorney's
fees of $8,595.90 and taxable costs of $533.40 to a plaintiff in
her public records lawsuit. Sandra K. Norton had sued Catenese
for the release of documents related to the spending of a $10 million
gift from Charles E. Schmidt to the university. In a previous ruling,
Hoy ordered Catenese to release the documents.
JUNE 1997: The Lantana Town Council voted to pay a local resident
$1,426 in legal fees to settle a lawsuit in which the town was
accused of violating the Open Meetings Law. The town did not admit
wrongdoing. The resident sued after the town released a statement
indicating the council had decided not to seek prosecution of former
Mayor Robert A. McDonald, who resigned and repaid the city $50,000
that he had deposited into his business' bank account. Town Manager
Ron Ferris said the statement was poorly worded and that the council
members had not formally decided what to do about McDonald. Ferris
said the statement was based on his conversations with individual
board members that indicated "a general feeling" that
McDonald should not be prosecuted.
JUNE 1997: Judge Robert Boylston, 12th Judicial Circuit, ruled
that Ken Peterson, a private citizen, was entitled to recover attorney's
fees from the city of Anna Maria in a public records suit against
the city. Peterson had to wait 26 days for records, which Boylston
said was unreasonable and constituted an unlawful refusal to produce
public records. Boylston also ruled that the city's charge of $112.95
for the records.
MAY 1997: Martin County commissioners admitted violating the Open
Meetings Law by settling lawsuits in closed-door meetings and agreed
to pay The Palm Beach Post $15,900 in attorney's fees. The Post
had sued in February after learning that the commission had agreed
to settle a number of lawsuits in executive session without taking
a public vote on the settlements. The settlements were approved
in a public vote when the commission voted to settle the lawsuit
by the Post.
APRIL 1997: The city of Fort Pierce agreed to pay $15,000 in legal
expenses incurred in a public records dispute by The Stuart News/Port
St. Lucie News, although the city did not admit any wrongdoing.
The dispute stemmed from a memo written by City Manager Dennis
Beach saying that Amy Rippel, a reporter for the newspaper, could
not view public documents without a written application, an appointment
and Beach's approval. Beach wrote the memo after Rippel published
a story against Beach's wishes about the city's ongoing negotiations
to purchase a theater in connection with a redevelopment project.
Also, the city was charging the newspaper 10 cents more per copy
for public records than other newspapers.
NOVEMBER 1996: The Duval County School Board agreed to pay The
Florida Times-Union $25,000 for attorney's fees in a court action
filed by the paper seeking the release of transcripts of closed
school board meetings. In 1995, Judge Virginia Q. Beverly, 4th
Judicial Circuit, ruled that the meetings should have been open
to the public and ordered the release of the transcripts. The ruling
was upheld in 1996 by the 1st District Court of Appeal.
SEPTEMBER 1996: The 5th District Court of Appeal held that the
town of Eatonville must pay attorney's fees and court costs after
violating the Public Records Law. The ruling reversed a lower court
ruling that the town was not obligated to pay fees and costs because
the town was too small and did not have the financial resources.
Michael Barfield sued the town after being denied access to public
records related to the opening of a topless club in the town. He
sought $65,000 in attorney's fees from the town.
SEPTEMBER 1996: The Palm Beach County School Board agreed to pay
$39,000 in attorney's fees and court costs to resolve a public
records action filed by the Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel and The
Palm Beach Post. The 4th District Court of Appeal upheld a judgment
against the Palm Beach County School Board awarding attorney's
fees and court costs incurred by The Palm Beach Post and the Ft.
Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel in a public records lawsuit. 15th Judicial
Circuit Court Judge Moses Baker had ruled that the board violated
the Public Records Law by refusing to release a survey that was
commissioned by the board and conducted by a private research company.
Baker awarded the papers $30,163 in attorney's fees and court costs
and ordered the research company to pay an additional $345.
AUGUST 1996: Judge R. Wallace Pack, 20th Judicial Circuit, ordered
State Attorney Joseph P. D'Allessandro to pay $2,054 for attorney’s
fees and court costs incurred by the Ft. Myers News-Press after
the paper obtained a court ruling releasing portions of a surveillance
audiotape recording of a Ft. Myers city council member. The judge
had ruled that those parts of the tape that been had been released
to the council member's attorney by D'Allessandro's office were
no longer exempt criminal investigative information under Fla.
Stat. § 119.07(3)(b).
JUNE 1996: To resolve a public records action filed by the St.
Petersburg Times, Tampa General Hospital stipulated in court documents
that it illegally withheld public records concerning the search
for a new president of the public hospital. The hospital agreed
to pay $12,100 to the newspaper for attorney's fees and court costs.
FEBRUARY 1996: The 5th District Court of Appeal held that Dunnellon
Mayor Larry Winkler violated the Open Meetings Law by not naming
two attorneys who attended a private city council meeting. As a
result, the city was ordered to pay nearly $17,000 for the attorney's
fees of Dunnellon police Sgt. Luis Aran, a non-media party who
had requested the records.
MAY 1995: A 1st Judicial Circuit Court judge ordered the Florida
Department of Law Enforcement and the Okaloosa County Sheriff's
Department to pay more than $6,200 to the Northwest Florida Daily
News for attorney's fees and court costs incurred to obtain access
to a convicted serial killer's confession.
MARCH 1995: The Ocala Star-Banner was awarded $5,473 for attorney's
fees and court costs after gaining access to police records dealing
with a 1989 criminal complaint filed against a private citizen
who later became a city employee. The trial court had ruled that
the records were exempt criminal investigation materials, but the
5th District Court of Appeal reversed.
NOVEMBER 1994: Following a court order commanding the City of
St. Petersburg to permit St. Petersburg Junior College to inspect
and copy certain documents, a 6th Judicial Circuit court awarded
the college attorney's fees incurred in the court action.
OCTOBER 1994: The 2nd District Court of Appeal awarded attorney's
fees to a law firm that had sued to gain access to water authority
records. The trial court had refused to award Smith & Williams
attorney's fees for its litigation against West Coast Regional
Water Supply Authority. Smith & Williams sued the water authority
to gain access to records of payments to private attorneys handling
water authority litigation.
JANUARY 1994: The Palm Beach County Property Appraiser's Office
paid $5,000 in costs to settle a public records suit brought by
The Downtown Group, Inc., a non-media party which sought access
to appraisal records of certain West Palm Beach properties.
DECEMBER 1993: The Palm Beach Post won $55,222 in attorney's fees
and court costs from the Palm Beach Community College Foundation,
which had tried to keep its financial records secret, arguing that
it was not covered by the Public Records Act.
OCTOBER 1993: The Palm Beach Post won access to a written agreement
settling a sexual harassment lawsuit that had been filed against
the City of Lake Worth. The city agreed to pay all of The Post's
$17,421 in legal fees.
AUGUST 1993: Broward Circuit Judge Mietta K. Burnstein ordered
the City of Plantation to pay $4,220 in legal fees and costs to
reimburse Daniel and Susan Vermut, non-media plaintiffs.
JULY 1993: The Palm Beach County School District paid $2,800 in
legal fees and costs to The Palm Beach Post for refusing to provide
copies of a proposal to settle a grievance filed by its former
lawyer.
JULY 1993: Hillsborough Circuit Judge Manuel Menendez awarded
$11,837 in legal fees and costs to be paid to the St. Petersburg
Times by Tampa General Hospital for withholding public records.
JULY 1993: The Florida Times-Union won an award of $23,000 in
legal fees from Harry L. Shorstein, as State Attorney for the Fourth
Judicial Circuit, for his office's failure to provide access to
investigatory records.
MARCH 1993: The Clay County School District and Superintendent
Ann B. Wiggins were required to pay $5,500 in fees incurred by
Florida/Tampa Television, Inc. (WFLA-TV Channel 8, Tampa) and reporter
Steve Andrews as part of a settlement agreement. Andrews and WFLA
sought school construction and fire inspection records.
APRIL 1993: The 4th District Court of Appeal affirmed a circuit
court's ruling that the Palm Beach Community College Foundation's
financial records are open to the public and affirmed an award
of attorney's fees and court costs to The Palm Beach Post. A Palm
Beach circuit judge had ruled that the foundation had to open its
financial records to the public and ordered the foundation to pay
the Post's attorney's fees.
AUGUST 1992: The 2nd District Court of Appeal ruled that the results
of a polygraph examination conducted by a private firm as part
of a police investigation were public records. The ruling stated
that the Tampa Police Department improperly refused to give James
P. Wisner the results of his polygraph, claiming that the test
was not part of the records because it was held by a private polygraph
examiner. The city was ordered to pay Wisner's attorney's fees
and court costs to obtain test results.
AUGUST 1992: The state Department of Environmental Regulation
paid $3,875 to a non-media party, Floral Greens International,
for unlawfully withholding an environmental study conducted by
the University of Florida in which Floral Greens was a subject.
JUNE 1992: A Palm Beach circuit judge ruled that the Royal Palm
Beach Village Council violated the Sunshine Law when it sold a
parcel of land. The judge voided the sale and reserved jurisdiction
to award costs and attorney's fees.
JUNE 1992: The Osceola School Board settled a public records dispute
with Orlando Sentinel. The paper agreed not to collect attorney's
fees awarded by the trial judge and the school board agreed to
drop its appeal and to open all meetings concerning public business.
An Osceola County circuit judge had ruled that the school board
violated the Sunshine Law and ordered the board not to hold any
more closed-door meetings. Circuit Judge R. James Stroker also
awarded more than $15,000 in attorney's fees to the Orlando Sentinel
in the ruling, which the school board had appealed.
FEBRUARY 1992: The state Department of Health and Rehabilitative
Services paid $44,250 in legal fees to The Tampa Tribune. HRS lost
a public records lawsuit over internal reports examining cases
in which children die from abuse and neglect.
DECEMBER 1991/JANUARY 1992: A Lee County circuit judge voided
an action of the School Board of Lee County and awarded more than
$30,600 in attorney's fees to the plaintiffs in a Sunshine suit
against the school board. Judge William C. McIver ruled that the
school board and a committee created by the board violated the
Sunshine Law by not properly advertising their meetings.
NOVEMBER 1991: Palm Beach Circuit Judge Stephen A Rapp ordered
the Palm Beach County Solid Waste Authority to pay $17,548 to reimburse
Magill Properties for attorney's fees in a public records lawsuit
over a two-page letter on solid-waste removal and treatment.
NOVEMBER 1991: The St. Petersburg City Council and the Chicago
White Sox agreed to pay half each of a $100,000 legal bill incurred
by the St. Petersburg Times in a Public Records Law case. The case
arose from the 1988 negotiations with the baseball team to play
in the Florida Suncoast Dome and a refusal by the team to provide
the newspaper with access to the draft lease. The Times donated
$57,836 to the Brechner Center for Freedom of Information.
NOVEMBER 1991: The City of Delray Beach, having lost a public
records lawsuit, settled an attorney's fee claim by Michael Barfield,
a non-media plaintiff seeking access to police investigative records,
for $15,000.
MAY 1991: The Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services
paid $3,568 in attorney's fees and court costs to the Ft. Lauderdale
Sun-Sentinel. HRS paid the fees after losing an appeal in the 4th
District Court of Appeal. The agency had sought to withhold records
pertaining to hospitals cited for refusing to accept patients.
FEBRUARY 1991: Palm Beach County Sheriff Richard Wille paid $5,000
in attorney's fees after the court found he had unlawfully withheld
documents from a private investigator.
DECEMBER 1990: Palm Beach Circuit Judge Richard L. Oftedal ordered
Palm Beach County Sheriff Richard Wille to pay the attorney's fees
of The Palm Beach Post after Wille denied the newspaper access
to transcripts of taped interviews. The paper had sought access
to transcripts of interviews with alleged sexual assault victims
of a suspect in a murder investigation. The court ruled that the
transcripts were public records because they were available to
defense attorneys in the case under state evidence rules.
AUGUST 1990: The City of West Palm Beach paid $6,500 in attorney's
fees to settle a public records lawsuit brought by attorney Frank
Kreidler of Lake Worth. Kreidler sought resumes of applicants for
city manager, and was told by city authorities he would have to
go to an Atlanta consultant's office to review such documents.
APRIL 1990: Circuit Judge Dean Moxley ordered Brevard State Attorney
Norman Wolfinger to pay more than $31,000 to the Orlando Sentinel
and Florida Today for legal fees incurred trying to gain access
to prosecution records in the murder trial of William Cruse. Before
Cruse's trial in 1989, Wolfinger denied reporters' requests for
copies of autopsy records, Cruse's blood-alcohol tests, ballistics
reports and other records.
APRIL 1990: Broward Circuit Judge Patricia Cocalis ordered the
state Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services to pay the
Ft. Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel $7,637 in legal costs resulting from
a 1988 lawsuit. The newspaper had sued HRS for access to 10,000
pages of unusual-incident reports. In her order to release all
the reports, Cocalis said the agency appeared to be trying to thwart
reporters' investigations.
MARCH 1990: Judge John Gordon awarded the Miami Association of
Firefighters, Local 587, $5,500 in attorney's fees in a lawsuit
against the City of Miami. The union sought documents pertaining
to a special investigative panel the city established to review
the fire department.
MARCH 1990: Circuit Judge Kevin Davey awarded $7,000 to an environmental
group after ruling that that nine Jefferson County officials violated
Open Meetings laws on four occasions in 1989. Davey ruled that
a recess of a county commission meeting and several inspection
tours were in violation of the law. All the violations related
to the commissions consideration of a proposed Texaco petroleum
terminal in Lloyd.
MARCH 1990: Youth Homes of Florida paid the St. Petersburg Times
$17,000 in attorney's fees. The youth organization lost a public
records lawsuit over access to personnel records and employee disciplinary
records. The Times later donated the award to the Brechner Center
for Freedom of Information.
JANUARY 1990: Palm Beach Circuit Judge Mary Lupo awarded $4,200
in fees to the Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel in a case against the
Florida Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services. The newspaper
sought access to HRS documents concerning a complaint by one Palm
Beach County hospital against another for an alleged failure to
treat a patient.
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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