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Lawson Retiring from Florida Supreme Court

A man in a long black robe stands smiling in front of a bookcase flanked by two flags.
Florida Supreme Court
/
floridasupremecourt.org
Florida Supreme Court Justice Alan Lawson is set to retire on Aug. 31, 2022 after serving since 2016.

TALLAHASSEE — Florida Supreme Court Justice Alan Lawson announced Friday he will retire Aug. 31, a move that will allow Gov. Ron DeSantis to continue placing his imprint on the state’s highest court.

Lawson, who was appointed as a justice in 2016 by former Gov. Rick Scott, will end a 21-year judicial career that also included serving as an Orlando-area circuit judge and a member of the 5th District Court of Appeal.

“One of the greatest joys of my 35-year legal career has been and continues to be the ability to work alongside a bench and bar filled with extraordinary individuals who work tirelessly to assure that the citizens we serve are well-served by our system of justice.” Lawson, 60, wrote in a retirement letter to DeSantis. “That system is often criticized yet still endures as the best system of justice that the world has ever seen.”

Lawson has been part of a major conservative shift on the Supreme Court during the past three years. That shift was prompted by the retirement in early 2019 of longtime Justices Barbara Pariente, R. Fred Lewis and Peggy Quince, who had helped make up a relatively liberal majority.

Three DeSantis appointees — Justices Carlos Muniz, John Couriel and Jamie Grosshans — have joined Lawson, Chief Justice Charles Canady and Justice Ricky Polston to form a solid conservative majority on the seven-member court. Justice Jorge Labarga, who joined Pariente, Lewis and Quince on many major issues, is now often a lone dissenter.

DeSantis will appoint a successor to Lawson, after a judicial nominating commission interviews candidates and submits recommendations.

“I have every hope that you will further strengthen Florida’s justice system as you attentively and thoughtfully appoint my replacement,” Lawson wrote in the letter to DeSantis. “Godspeed as you initiate that process.”

An announcement from the Supreme Court did not detail Lawson’s future plans, though it described his involvement in charity work, including in such things as medical efforts in Central America.

“Julie and I plan to enjoy retirement, prioritizing family, health and fitness, spiritual growth and development, friends, the outdoor sports that we enjoy, and charitable work in the United States and abroad,” Lawson said in a prepared statement, referring to his wife, Julie.

In the announcement, Lawson called serving on the Supreme Court the “highest honor I have enjoyed in my career.”

“I once again express my gratitude to Rick Scott for the trust he placed in me by granting me this opportunity,” Lawson, who went to law school at Florida State University, said. “I also want to thank each justice who I have had the privilege of serving alongside: I value and respect each of you. To those who I serve with now, I can only say that leaving you, this great institution and our court family is the most emotionally difficult decision of my life, although I know that this is the right decision and the right time.”

Jim Saunders - News Service of Florida