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Justices Pull The Plug On Baker Act Videoconferences

Florida justices ruled against the use of courtroom videoconferencing in Baker Act cases, saying mentally ill defendants deserve special consideration.
Florida justices ruled against the use of courtroom videoconferencing in Baker Act cases, saying mentally ill defendants deserve special consideration.

Florida judges can’t use videoconferencing to involuntarily commit the mentally ill, the Florida Supreme Court ruled Thursday.

Florida justices ruled against the use of courtroom videoconferencing in Baker Act cases, saying mentally ill defendants deserve special consideration.
Florida justices ruled against the use of courtroom videoconferencing in Baker Act cases, saying mentally ill defendants deserve special consideration.

Justices ruled unanimously that lower courts can’t use videoconferencing when presiding over so-called “Baker Act” cases. Public defenders were challenging a move by Lee County to use teleconferences as a way to save time and money.

But Justice Barbara Pariente wrote defendants in Baker Act cases are the state’s most vulnerable citizens and deserve heightened consideration.

During oral arguments, an angry Justice Fed Lewis predicted judges would soon be holding hearings from the comfort of their backyard swimming pools.

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Jim Ash is a reporter at WFSU-FM. A Miami native, he is an award-winning journalist with more than 20 years of experience, most of it in print. He has been a member of the Florida Capital Press Corps since 1992.