Orlando Sentinel

Contributi­ons

Legal-fees agreement announced 5 months after court decision

- By Jim Saunders

to Florida Hospital for Women’s milk depot have more than doubled since last year.

TALLAHASSE­E — Florida will pay $1.1 million in legal fees to attorneys who challenged a controvers­ial state law that sought to prevent doctors from asking patients about guns, a group representi­ng opponents said Monday.

The Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence announced the legal-fees agreement more than five months after a federal appeals court sided with doctors and medical groups in striking down key parts of the 2011 law, which became known as the “Docs vs. Glocks” law. The state did not appeal the Feb. 16 decision by the full 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

A copy of the legal-fees agreement had not been posted in an online court file Monday, but documents indicate the state and the law’s opponents had been in mediation on the fees.

The law, which was backed by groups such as the National Rifle Associatio­n, included a series of restrictio­ns on doctors and health providers. For example, it sought to prevent physicians from entering informatio­n about gun ownership into medical records if the physicians knew the informatio­n was not “relevant” to patients’ medical care or safety or to the safety of other people.

Also, the law said doctors should refrain from asking about gun ownership by patients or family members unless the doctors believed in “good faith” that the informatio­n was relevant to medical care or safety. Also, the law sought to prevent doctors from discrimina­ting against patients or “harassing” them because of owning firearms.

Opponents argued, in part, that the law violated free speech rights. The full appeals court found that the record-keeping, inquiry and anti-harassment parts of the law were unconstitu­tional, but upheld the portion of the law that bars doctors from discrimina­ting against patients who have guns.

“Legislator­s across the country should learn from Florida’s example that if you side with the corporate gun lobby instead of your constituen­ts, you endanger the safety of children and families, impinge upon First Amendment rights of doctors, and force taxpayers to pay mil-

lions to unsuccessf­ully defend unconstitu­tional laws,” Jonathan Lowy, director of the Brady Center’s Legal Action Project and an attorney in the case, said in a prepared statement Monday. “Thankfully, in this case, justice prevailed and the court recognized that doctors have a First Amendment right to tell the truth about guns, and the risks they can pose to children and families.”

When asked for comment Monday about the legal fees, John Tupps, a spokesman for Gov. Rick Scott, said in an email that Scott signed the 2011 law after it “was approved by a large, bipartisan majority in the Florida Legislatur­e.”

“Governor Scott is a strong supporter of the Second Amendment,” Tupps said. “Much of this law was either never challenged or upheld in court. This [legal fees] settlement is in accordance with Florida law and a recommenda­tion from the Department of Financial Services.”

The challenge to the law was filed in June 2011 and played out over nearly six years. A U.S. District Court judge blocked the law from taking effect, but a three-judge panel of the appeals court upheld the law in three rulings before the full appeals court agreed to take up the case.

Supporters of the law said it was necessary to prevent doctors, such as pediatrici­ans, from harassing and discrimina­ting against patients and parents about gun ownership. They also described the law, formally known as the Firearm Owners’ Privacy Act, as a Second Amendment issue.

But Douglas Hallward-Driemeier, an attorney with the firm Ropes & Gray, who argued the case for the plaintiffs, said in a statement Monday that the case allows doctors to “go back to giving their best advice to patients when it comes to gun safety.”

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