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State Attorney Aramis Ayala Lawyers Blast Rick Scott In Death Penalty Dispute

May 8, 2017 | FlaglerLive | 2 Comments

Lawyers for Central Florida State Attorney Aramis Ayala fired back Monday against Gov. Rick Scott for shifting 23 death-penalty case to another prosecutor, describing his actions as “baldly political.”


The brief, filed in the Florida Supreme Court, was part of a series of legal arguments filed by people on both sides of a dispute about whether Scott had the authority to strip Ayala’s office of death-penalty cases and shift them to Ocala-area State Attorney Brad King. Scott made the decision after Ayala said she would not seek the death penalty, including in the case of alleged Orlando cop killer Markeith Loyd.

Ayala, who was elected last year in the circuit made up of Orange and Osceola counties, challenged Scott in the Supreme Court, arguing she has broad legal discretion in decisions about issues such as whether to pursue death sentences. “Governor Rick Scott falsely claims that, as long as he has some reason for removing a state attorney from any case, he can do so at any time, whether or not the state attorney opposes removal,” the brief said. “Scott ignores the constitutional mandate that state attorneys `shall’ prosecute local cases.”

The brief also said, “Importantly, nowhere in his opposition does Scott argue that Ayala has somehow failed to do her job —and wisely so, because that charge would be unfounded. Ayala did not refuse to prosecute capital cases or pledge to seek lenient sentences for convicted killers. She was — and is — zealously prosecuting crimes in her judicial circuit. Nor has Ayala refused to listen to victims’ families as she decides how to prosecute cases. Ayala has honored all of her statutory obligations as state attorney, and will continue to do so.”–News Service of Florida

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Veteran says

    May 8, 2017 at 8:24 pm

    I’m with Scott. To take the death penalty away from some of these heinous murderers is ridiculous.

  2. brad says

    May 8, 2017 at 9:16 pm

    They should throw Ayala off the court for failing to represent victims rights. If someone killed a friend or family member i would demand their head on a stick. How dare this judge automatically take death penalty off the table. With judges like this we need to get back to street justice. This judge needs to go…

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