Orlando Sentinel

Florida’s payment of legal bills has grown to $19 million

- By Gary Fineout

TALLAHASSE­E — Florida’s price tag for losing legal battles — which has included courtroom fights over drug testing, voting rights and gay marriage — continues to grow under Gov. Rick Scott.

Scott recently agreed to pay $1.1 million to cover the legal bills of physicians and medical organizati­ons in their successful challenge of a law that restricted doctors’ ability to talk to patients about guns. The so-called “Docs vs. Glocks” law had been pushed through the Florida Legislatur­e at the urging of the National Rifle Associatio­n.

In early July, the state also agreed to a $2 million payment that will go to lawyers who sued on behalf of disabled inmates.

A review of records by The Associated Press shows that since Scott took office in 2011, the state has paid at least $19 million to cover expenses and fees for lawyers who have sued the state. Many of those lawsuits took aim at policies put in place by Scott and the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e.

The Scott administra­tion has defended the legal expenses in the past, saying the governor will “vigorously defend” Florida’s laws.

In February, a federal appeals court ruled that Florida doctors can talk to patients about gun safety, declaring a law aimed at restrictin­g such discussion­s a violation of the First Amendment's right to free speech. The state did not appeal the decision and reached a settlement in late June to pay $1.1 million for attorney fees and costs.

John Tupps, a spokesman for Scott, defended the state’s fight over the law. He said the governor was a “strong supporter” of the Second Amendment and that he signed the bill “after it was approved by a large, bipartisan majority in the Florida Legislatur­e.”

Earlier this month, the state agreed to pay $2 million to cover the fees and costs for groups that sued the state in 2016 over its treatment of inmates with hearing, vision and mobility disabiliti­es.

Randall Berg of the Florida Justice Institute said the money will go to reimbursin­g the institute, Disability Rights Florida, Jacksonvil­le Area Legal Aid and the well-known personal injury law firm Morgan & Morgan.

An AP review found that between 2011 and early 2017, Florida had spent more than $237 million on outside lawyers hired to defend the state.

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