Jacqueline Schwartz

From Ballotpedia
Jump to: navigation, search
BP-Initials-UPDATED.png
This page was current at the end of the official's last term in office covered by Ballotpedia. Please contact us with any updates.
Jacqueline Schwartz
Image of Jacqueline Schwartz
Prior offices
Miami-Dade County Court

Education

Bachelor's

University of Florida

Law

University of Miami


Jacqueline Schwartz was a county judge for the Miami-Dade County Court in Miami-Dade County, Florida. She joined the court in 2003 and resigned effective July 31, 2016.[1][2] Click here to read more about the circumstances of her resignation.

Biography

Email editor@ballotpedia.org to notify us of updates to this biography.

Schwartz earned a B.S. from the University of Florida and a J.D. from the University of Miami. Her professional experience includes work as an attorney in private practice.[3]

Elections

2014

See also: Florida judicial elections, 2014
Schwartz ran for re-election to the Miami-Dade County Court.
Primary: She was successful in the primary on August 26, 2014, receiving 49.4 percent of the vote. She competed against Frank C. Bocanegra and Rachel Glorioso Dooley.
General: She defeated Frank C. Bocanegra in the general election on November 4, 2014, receiving 57.7 percent of the vote. [4][5] 

Endorsements

  • The Miami Herald[6]

Noteworthy events

Resignation from office

Schwartz resigned from office effective July 31, 2016. In April 2016, she was suspended for alleged intoxication on the bench and impairment during a confrontation with waitstaff and police officers at a Coconut Grove restaurant.[1] She announced her resignation while under investigation for the alleged violations, saying "unfortunately, as a consequence of a condition I suffer, I can no longer fulfill the requirements of the office for which I was elected."[2][7]

The 2016 investigation was the second disciplinary action against Schwartz in two years. The Florida Judicial Qualifications Commission filed formal charges against her on February 19, 2015, for removing her notes from an official court file and for her conduct during an exchange with convenience store owner Firas Hussain. On June 2, 2014, Schwartz entered Hussain's store to inquire about an opponent's campaign sign hanging in the store window. After Hussain declined to display her campaign sign, Schwartz allegedly got into an argument with him in which she used profanity and threatened to take legal action against him.[8]

Schwartz accepted responsibility for her conduct in February 2015 and agreed to write Hussain an apology letter and receive a formal reprimand in order to settle the misconduct charges.[9] On April 29, 2015, the Florida Supreme Court rejected the settlement, stating that Schwartz should be suspended without pay for 30 days and fined $10,000 in addition to writing the apology and receiving the reprimand.[10] The court approved a new settlement, which included the apology, reprimand, suspension, and fine, in September 2015.[11]

Apology for election night comments

Schwartz defeated opponent Frank C. Bocanegra in the general election on November 4, 2014, to win re-election to the Miami-Dade County Court. Following her victory, Schwartz communicated to the Miami Herald via her campaign manager that voters seemed to have "gone past the days when any nondescript Hispanic could go on the ballot and defeat any Anglo sitting judge."[12]

Schwartz subsequently apologized to the board of the Cuban American Bar Association for her comments and issued an apology letter to the group on November 15, 2014. "I fully understand my comments could readily [be] seen as offensive to the community, something I never intended and that pains me greatly," she wrote. "I should have never issued the post-election statement that has, understandably, caused [so] much concern. I retract the statement completely."[12]

Recent news

The link below is to the most recent stories in a Google news search for the terms Jacqueline Schwartz Florida judge. These results are automatically generated from Google. Ballotpedia does not curate or endorse these articles.

See also

External links

Footnotes