Miami Herald

Governor names a second Miami appellate judge, Robert Luck, to state’s high court

- BY DAVID OVALLE dovalle@miamiheral­d.com

Robert Luck, a well-respected appellate judge, was named to the Florida Supreme Court on Monday, the second judge from Miami’s appeals court to be named to the high court under new Gov. Ron DeSantis.

The governor appointed the 39-year-old Luck, who has served less than two years on the Third District Court of Appeal. Last week, in his first official act as governor, DeSantis elevated Third DCA Judge Barbara Lagoa, the first Cuban-American woman to serve on the high court.

DeSantis’ appointmen­ts for Supreme Court are part of what observers say will be a conservati­ve makeover of the high court. The Republican governor, who was sworn in last week, will select one more candidate after Luck.

Florida’s new governor on Monday named Robert Luck, a Miami appellate court judge, to the Florida Supreme Court. He is DeSantis’ second Supreme Court selection, both of whom served on the Third District Court of Appeals.

back down, testifying at hearings or deposition­s at least seven times over the years.

But on the eve of the trial itself, Finklea was returning from buying a chicken dinner Saturday night when an unknown gunman walked up to his car on Northwest 30th Avenue, firing over a dozen shots.

The volley of bullets killed Finklea, 61, and his friend, Ira Williams, 70.

Miami-Dade homicide detectives are now hunting for the gunman — and trying to figure out if the ambush was committed to silence Finklea. The shooting stunned Miami-Dade prosecutor­s, who had been selecting a jury for the accused killer, Julio Morris, 30.

On Monday, a judge agreed to postpone the trial.

“He had to testify more than any witness I’ve ever had because we had a lot of different hearings in this case,” said Assistant State Attorney Tiffany Finger, who is prosecutin­g Morris. “He was very brave and it’s a great loss. He cooperated at the expense of his own safety.”

Morris’ defense attorney declined to comment.

Finklea grew up in Northwest Miami-Dade and joined the U.S. Army Special Forces at age 18, serving for nearly a decade, according to his family.

After his service was complete, he and his father, Ezell Finklea Sr., ran a successful janitorial business, Allied Cleaning Company of Florida. The younger Finklea — an avid baseball fan — also drove trucks for a living.

His life changed on April 18, 2012, when he witnessed the killing of Jazzmon Parker, 29.

Police say Morris and another man, Clifton Dickson, opened fire on Parker outside a house at 2952 NW 63rd St. The motive was unclear but was believed to be drug-related: Investigat­ors suspected Dickson and Morris were drug dealers.

Finklea told police that he was changing the locks of a nearby house when he saw Morris take a handgun from Dickson and finish off the wounded man in the middle of the street.

Morris was not a stranger. He lived next to Finklea, and the two knew each other from the neighborho­od.

Eight days after the murder, with Morris and Dickson still on the lam, Finklea was in his bedroom when he heard noises in the living room. He grabbed a knife and stepped into the hallway.

According to a police report, Morris and Dickson had busted into the home armed with a gun. Morris ordered Finklea to drop the knife — which he did. But Finklea tried to wrestle the gun away. A struggle ensued.

Police said Morris punched and kicked Finklea, stabbing him several times with shards of glass from a glass table that broke during the scuffle. The intruder took a flatscreen television and dropped it on Finklea before leaving.

Morris and Dickson were eventually arrested and charged with murder and the break-in.

That’s not all. Morris’ cousin, Deron Morris, was arrested for witness tampering after showing up at Finklea’s home and threatenin­g him. Deron Morris wound up serving 364 days in jail.

Dickson’s girlfriend was also arrested for witnesstam­pering.

According to police, Marquetta Boyd showed up at Finklea’s house and offered him money to drop his testimony. She was accompanie­d by a private investigat­or hired by Dickson’s attorney, Allen Soven.

Boyd, the mother of Dickson’s four children, entered a “pretrial interventi­on” program for firsttime offenders and the charge was eventually dropped. Dickson wound up getting acquitted of the murder, despite Finklea’s testimony.

Jury selection began last week in Morris’ murder case, and Finklea was expected to testify sometime this week.

But Saturday night, Finklea and Williams were driving up Northwest 30th Avenue when more than a dozen shots rang out. A 2003 silver Honda Accord was found parked on the swale of a home at 6290 NW 30th Ave.

A neighbor reported an “unknown male” running from the scene.

As detectives work to solve the murder, prosecutor­s have no plans of dropping the case against Morris.

At least one other eyewitness is expected to testify, while Finklea’s prior testimony could be read to the jury. MiamiDade Circuit Judge Alberto Milian reschedule­d the trial for March.

Anyone with informatio­n on the murder of Ezell Finklea can call Miami-Dade’s homicide bureau at 305471-2400, or Miami-Dade CrimeStopp­ers at 305-471TIPS.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE AP ?? The mid-Atlantic digs out from a storm that brought snow, ice and extensive power outages to the region and hit the nation’s capital hard. On Monday in Washington, D.C., and nearby areas, federal offices and public school systems were closed, as were many private schools, colleges and local government­s. Above, a man shovels snow on an icy Washington sidewalk. At right, a snowman with a message is at the Capitol on the 24th day of a partial government shutdown. The storm had earlier contribute­d to at least five deaths in the Midwest. By late Monday, power had largely returned to customers in the region as well as in North Carolina, according to PowerOutag­e.us. National Weather Service meteorolog­ist Luis Rosa said the storm is the most significan­t the area has seen in three years, but because of the partial shutdown, the service can’t provide details about any records that were set.President Donald Trump says he’ll ‘never back down’ in shutdown fight,
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE AP The mid-Atlantic digs out from a storm that brought snow, ice and extensive power outages to the region and hit the nation’s capital hard. On Monday in Washington, D.C., and nearby areas, federal offices and public school systems were closed, as were many private schools, colleges and local government­s. Above, a man shovels snow on an icy Washington sidewalk. At right, a snowman with a message is at the Capitol on the 24th day of a partial government shutdown. The storm had earlier contribute­d to at least five deaths in the Midwest. By late Monday, power had largely returned to customers in the region as well as in North Carolina, according to PowerOutag­e.us. National Weather Service meteorolog­ist Luis Rosa said the storm is the most significan­t the area has seen in three years, but because of the partial shutdown, the service can’t provide details about any records that were set.President Donald Trump says he’ll ‘never back down’ in shutdown fight,
 ?? CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com ?? Judge Robert Luck, right, speaks at Scheck Hillel Community School on Monday as Casey and Gov. Ron DeSantis watch.
CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com Judge Robert Luck, right, speaks at Scheck Hillel Community School on Monday as Casey and Gov. Ron DeSantis watch.
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