| How to Disqualify a Florida                    Trial JudgeThe Florida                  Code of Judicial Conduct imposes certain constraints                on judges' behavior. Canon 3 warns the judge against                prejudice. However, judges assert immunity for their                errors and torts as components of judicial acts.  So                litigants can't do much more about judicial prejudice than                complaining to the Judicial Qualifications Commission,                legislature, bar, and news or social media to make a                record, and look for dirt on the judge through private                investigation, particularly of the judge's financial                affairs and general integrity outside of court, or                campaigning against the judge in the next election or                appointment opportunity.  But in the more immediate sense,                one can seek to disqualify the judge.  Florida makes                provisions for that in the law and rules.
 
 
                 Start by citing specific                    violations of Canon 3. "A Judge Shall Perform the Duties of                        Judicial Office Impartially and Diligently"
Study and cite this case opinion:                    Rogers v State 630 So. 2d 513Fl. Statute 38.10 http://www.flsenate.gov/Laws/Statutes/2013/38.10,                  Rules                      of Judicial Admin, Rule                      2.330I like this "Toca Technique":   The law and rule allow a litigant to force                    disqualification of only one judge.  File judicial                    notice of intent to file a motion for disqualification                    for prejudice.  This might motivate judge to recuse                    self to avoid embarrassment.  If judge does not recuse                    self, THEN file the motion to disqualify.  This                    preserves the right to disqualify for use on a                    subsequent judge if the current judge recuses self.
 
                                   Nowadays virtually every judge                      will declare that the motion to disqualify lacks                      legal sufficiency, and deny the motion.  I don't                      know of anything to beat this but motion for                      clarification (then correct and refile the motion),                      motion to reconsider, and interlocutory appeal.                 Example - The below effort did                    not fully work but shows the Toca Technique                    in action.  Jesse Toca did not carry it through to                    completion, but he might some day.
  http://www.doah.state.fl.us/ALJ/                  - Enter Case #:  10-009935RXJesse Toca vs. Florida Department of Revenue (filed                  10/29/2010)
 The docket offers trove of interesting documents.
 
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