Miami Herald

5 things to know about the work of the suspended state attorney

- BY KIRBY WILSON AND DAN SULLIVAN kwilson@tampabay.com dsullivan@tampabay.com

Gov. Ron DeSantis shocked Tampa Bay on Thursday when he suspended Andrew Warren, the state attorney for Hillsborou­gh County.

DeSantis said Warren, a Democrat and rising star in progressiv­e law enforcemen­t circles, had put himself “above the law” by promising not to enforce laws limiting abortion or the ability of children to seek certain gender dysphoria treatments.

Let’s take a closer look at Warren’s record, examining where he came from and how we got to Thursday’s decision.

1. WARREN SCORED A MAJOR UPSET IN 2016.

Andrew Warren was a relatively anonymous Democratic attorney until election night 2016, when he unseated Mark Ober, the Republican incumbent, in the race for Hillsborou­gh County prosecutor. At the time, the Tampa Bay Times called Warren’s victory a “stunning election-night

upset.”

Warren, a former federal prosecutor, ran an aggressive campaign attacking his opponent for alleged absenteeis­m and a lack of sensitivit­y toward crime victims. (At the time, Ober said both characteri­zations were misleading.) Warren also pledged to rehabilita­te those convicted of crimes, and enact policies that would stop criminals from

becoming repeat offenders.

2. HIS OFFICE HELPED EXONERATE A WRONGFULLY CONVICTED MAN.

In 2018, Warren establishe­d a conviction review unit in the Hillsborou­gh State Attorney’s Office. Not long after, evidence submitted to the unit by the Innocence Project led a judge to throw out the conviction of Robert DuBoise, a man who had been wrongfully imprisoned for 37 years. DuBoise was convicted in the 1980s of murdering Barbara Grams.

Warren was poised to make a major announceme­nt related to the case on Thursday, but DeSantis’ announceme­nt scuttled those plans.

The unit was one of many progressiv­e initiative­s by Warren. He has seldom sought the death penalty in capital murder cases. And he had steered his office away from charging people for driving with a suspended license if the suspension was due to a financial obligation like an unpaid speeding ticket.

3. HE’S A THORN IN THE SIDE OF CONSERVATI­VES.

Perhaps the highest profile flap of Warren’s tenure as prosecutor came during the worst of the coronaviru­s pandemic. In April 2020, the prosecutor supported the arrest of a megachurch pastor who had held church services in person. Then DeSantis signed an executive order allowing the in-person services to continue.

In response, Warren called DeSantis’ move “weak” and “spineless.” The charges against the pastor were later dropped.

Warren also criticized some of DeSantis’ legislativ­e priorities. He said 2021′s HB 1, the so-called “anti-riot” bill was tantamount to “criminaliz­ing peaceful protests.”

He declined to prosecute 67 people arrested during the 2020 summer of protests over police brutality, enraging some conservati­ves.

And following the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn the abortion precedent set by Roe v. Wade, Warren said he would not press charges against abortion patients. In a tweet, he reasoned that Florida’s Constituti­on has a clause protecting the right to privacy. That proclamati­on was one of DeSantis’ justificat­ions for suspending the prosecutor.

4. HE’S BEEN ACCUSED OF BEING FUNDED BY LIBERAL OUT-OF-STATE BILLIONAIR­ES.

On Thursday, in response to a question about whether it was appropriat­e to remove an elected official, DeSantis alluded to Warren’s campaign support from wealthy progressiv­es hoping to remake the criminal justice system.

“We can go back and look at some of these elections and all the money that’s coming in from people that do not live in Florida and are really trying to push an agenda on the people of Florida,” DeSantis said. (The governor has received tens of millions of dollars in campaign contributi­ons from out-of-state billionair­es.)

Rumors of support for Warren from financiers such as George Soros date back to 2016.

According to a profile of Warren the Times published in 2020, Soros likely did help Warren’s campaign.

“We understand that he gave money to the state [Democratic] party,” Warren said then. “And the state party money ... went to support different candidates. And I have very little insight into the amount of money he gave, who it went to, etc.”

5. TAMPA HAS SEEN MORE MURDERS IN RECENT YEARS.

Tampa’s violent crime rate has spiked in recent years, with the city in 2021 recording the most murders it had seen since 1994, according to statistics from the Tampa Police Department compiled by the Times editorial board.

Although such crimes are up around the state and around the country, Tampa has seen somewhat more killings than most other cities in Florida, the editorial board said in April.

 ?? LAUREN WITTE Tampa Bay Times ?? Gov. Ron DeSantis said Andrew Warren, above, put himself ‘above the law’ by promising not to enforce laws limiting abortion or the ability of children to seek certain gender dysphoria treatments.
LAUREN WITTE Tampa Bay Times Gov. Ron DeSantis said Andrew Warren, above, put himself ‘above the law’ by promising not to enforce laws limiting abortion or the ability of children to seek certain gender dysphoria treatments.

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