Miami Herald

Pressure mounts to appoint Black, female judge to South Florida federal bench

- BY ALAN HALALY ahalaly@miamiheral­d.com

Some eight or nine years ago, Southern Poverty Law Center lawyer Bacardi Jackson took two of her children to the Wilkie D. Ferguson Jr. U.S. Courthouse in Miami to meet her Black colleagues.

Among them was

Marcia Cooke, the first and only Black woman appointed as a federal judge in the Southern District of Florida since its inception in 1847 — a distinctio­n that Cooke held until she died in January.

“As we were leaving the courthouse, one of my sons looked up at Judge Ferguson’s picture and innocently asked: ‘Mommy, are all of the judges here Black?’ ” Jackson said. “I decided to spare their innocence.”

In the wake of Cooke’s death, Jackson was one of the two dozen or so Black lawyers who joined civilright­s attorney Benjamin Crump on Tuesday in Miami to call for President Joe Biden to appoint a Black woman to one of the three open federal judgeships in South Florida.

Crump is known nationally for intervenin­g in cases of high-profile police brutality and other racerelate­d cases, most recently representi­ng the family of Ajike Owens, a Black Florida mother who was gunned down by a white neighbor this month.

Until Cooke’s death, there were only two seats open on the South Florida federal bench. After Oct. 31,

Judge Robert Scola Jr. will assume senior status, which will leave a fourth opening.

Now, many are calling for Biden to choose a

Black woman to fill at least one of the open spots. And appointing a Black woman to her seat was Cooke’s dying wish, Crump said.

“We shouldn’t have to imagine what a Black woman sitting on the federal bench in the Southern District looks

like after Judge Marcia Cooke left us,” Crump said at the Carlton Fields law firm in downtown Miami. “We should see it.”

OPENINGS PILE UP AMID POLARIZATI­ON

Biden made headlines last year for nominating the first ever Black woman to the Supreme Court, Ketanji Brown Jackson, who is a Miami native. Civil-rights groups have praised him for choosing to diversify his judicial nomination­s across the country.

In contrast, former President Donald Trump was often criticized for an overwhelmi­ngly white, male pool of nomination­s.

Though Tuesday’s speakers directed comments toward Biden in his power to make an initial appointmen­t, the final authority will lie with Florida’s senior senator, Republican Marco Rubio, who has the power to withhold what’s known as a blue slip, which can shelve appointmen­ts, no questions asked.

In 2021, a nominating committee handpicked by Rubio sent a list of recommenda­tions to Biden for the then-two open seats. At the top of the list was David Leibowitz, the nephew of billionair­e and

Rubio campaign mega-donor Norman Braman. Leibowitz, a former New York Citybased federal prosecutor who works as general counsel for his uncle’s business, was also considered a potential judicial nominee by the Trump administra­tion but wasn’t appointed.

Rubio’s list also included Detra Shaw-Wilder, a prominent Black, female lawyer at Miamibased Kozyak Tropin &

Throckmort­on, a commercial firm involved in securing a settlement for the families of the Surfside building-collapse victims.

Separately, a second nominating commission appointed by U.S. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz and other Democratic congressio­nal members from South Florida, recommende­d six finalists for the two openings: Shaw-Wilder, federal Public Defender Michael Caruso, U.S. Magistrate

Judge Shaniek Maynard, Miami-Dade Circuit Judge Miguel de la O, Palm Beach Circuit Judge Samantha Feuer and MiamiDade County Judge Ayana Harris.

Since Cooke’s death, a legal source with knowledge of the situation said two more names have been added as potential candidates: federal Magistrate Judges Jacqueline Becerra and Melissa Damian, both former prosecutor­s with the U.S. Attorney’s

Office in Miami.

The timeline for when South Floridians can expect to see the positions filled remains unclear as Biden looks toward a reelection campaign.

THE IMPORTANCE OF A FAMILIAR FACE

Sue-Ann Robinson, a former Broward Countybase­d prosecutor who now works with Crump, said she would often be the only other Black face in the room when criminal charges were brought before Black people.

This meant fielding questions from and offering advice to defendants who saw her as a lifeline and someone they could trust, even though she would usually be working to prosecute them.

Robinson recalls calming down a Black woman who was growing aggressive when asked to fill out a form. The woman couldn’t read — which she only felt comfortabl­e disclosing to another Black person.

“We can’t be everywhere,” Robinson said. “Diversity on the bench is so important not because we’re saying the person’s skin is going to change something, but because their perspectiv­e and life experience increases public confidence.”

While Crump acknowledg­ed it’s less likely to see four Black appointees, it’s vital to see at least one, he said. It’s now left to Biden and Rubio to make it happen.

“When Black people walk into courtrooms, the only thing that they see that’s Black in the courtroom cannot be themselves and the judges’ robes,” Crump said. “At some point, they need to see a Black face.”

Alan Halaly: AlanHalaly

 ?? ?? Marcia Cooke
Marcia Cooke
 ?? LAUREN WITTE lwitte@miamiheral­d.com ?? Sue-Ann Robinson joins Benjamin Crump at a press conference to urge President Joe Biden to nominate a Black woman to replace the late Judge Marcia Cooke. The event was held at the Carlton Fields law firm on Tuesday in Miami.
LAUREN WITTE lwitte@miamiheral­d.com Sue-Ann Robinson joins Benjamin Crump at a press conference to urge President Joe Biden to nominate a Black woman to replace the late Judge Marcia Cooke. The event was held at the Carlton Fields law firm on Tuesday in Miami.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States