- Editorials
- Columnists
- Cartoons
-
Press Releases
- Sayfie Review
- FL Speaker of the House
- FL Agriculture Commissioner
- FL Senate President
- FL Governor
- US Senator Moody
- FL Attorney General
- US Senator Scott
- FL CFO
- Congressional Delegation ≻
- Jimmy Patronis
- Neal Dunn
- Kat Cammack
- Aaron Bean
- John Rutherford
- Randy Fine
- Cory Mills
- Mike Haridopolos
- Darren Soto
- Maxwell Frost
- Daniel Webster
- Gus Bilirakis
- Anna Paulina Luna
- Kathy Castor
- Laurel Lee
- Vern Buchanan
- Greg Steube
- Scott Franklin
- Byron Donalds
- Sheila Cherfilus McCormick
- Brian Mast
- Lois Frankel
- Jared Moskowitz
- Frederica Wilson
- Debbie Wasserman Schultz
- Mario Diaz-Balart
- Maria Elvira Salazar
- Carlos Gimenez
- Political Links
-
News Links
- Drudge Report
- NewsMax.com
- AP Florida News
- ABC News' The Note
- NBC News' First Read
- Florida Channel
- Florida TV Stations
- Florida Radio Stations
- Capitol Update
- Florida Trend
- South Florida Business Journal
- Tampa Bay Business Journal
- Orlando Business Journal
- Jacksonville Business Journal
- News Service of Florida
- Politico Playbook
- Washington Post The Daily 202
-
Research
- Florida Fiscal Portal
- Search Florida Laws
- Search House Bills
- Search Senate Bills
- Search County, City Laws
- Search County Clerks' Records
- Cabinet Agendas, Transcripts
- Search Executive Orders
- Search Atty. General Opinions
- Search Supreme Court Docket
- Florida Supreme Court Rulings
- Search Florida Corporations
- Search Administrative Rules
- Proposed Administrative Rules
- View Advertised Contracts
- Refdesk.com
- Government Services Guide
- Electoral Vote Map
-
Reference
- Florida House
- Florida Senate
- Find Your Congressman
- Find Your State Legislator
- Find Your Local Officials
- Find Government Phone #'s
- Florida Agencies
- Florida Cities
- Florida Counties
- Florida Universities
- County Tax Collectors
- County Property Appraisers
- County Clerks of Court
- County Elections Supervisors
- MyFlorida.com
- OPPAGA
- Advertise With Us
TB Times: When it comes to St. Pete's Trop site, plan before you build | Column
TB Times: Explain what I can bring into a Florida Publix | Column
TB Times: Halloween costumes that will offend absolutely no one | Column
TB Times: What would Erma Bombeck do? | Column
TB Times: Adults need to use their imaginations | Column
TB Times: Is this the Rapture? | Column
TB Times: New slogans for Tylenol | Column
TB Times: The Obama Main Library lends St. Pete a very good day | Column
TB Times: Florida's richest crab thrilled by shady Destin land purchase | Column
TB Times: It's false fall in Tampa Bay, and the delusion tastes great | Column
Justices side with Florida man in case of missing fish
In a case that drew a Dr. Seuss reference from one justice, a divided U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday overturned a conviction of a Florida commercial fisherman who ordered a crew member to toss undersized red snapper overboard after being nabbed by game officers. The court, in a 5-4 decision, reversed the conviction of John L. Yates, who had been charged under a federal law passed by Congress after cover-ups in the Enron financial scandal. A Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission officer boarded Yates' boat in the Gulf of Mexico in 2007 and found undersized red snapper. Four days later, the catch was examined again after the boat was docked in Cortez, and officers discovered that some fish were missing. A member of Yates' crew said he had been instructed to throw fish overboard. Yates was convicted under a law that, in part, bars destroying, concealing or covering up a "tangible object" with the intent to block an investigation, according to Wednesday's ruling. An opinion written by Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and joined by three other justices said the law should not apply to the Yates case. "A fish is no doubt an object that is tangible; fish can be seen, caught, and handled, and a catch, as this case illustrates, is vulnerable to destruction,'' she wrote. "But it would cut (the law) loose from its financial-fraud mooring to hold that it encompasses any and all objects, whatever their size or significance, destroyed with obstructive intent." Ginsburg was joined in the opinion by Chief Justice John Roberts and justices Stephen Breyer and Sonia Sotomayor. Justice Samuel Alito also backed Yates in a concurring opinion. But justices Elena Kagan, Antonin Scalia, Anthony Kennedy and Clarence Thomas dissented, with Kagan writing an opinion that cited the children's author Dr. Seuss. "A fish is, of course, a discrete thing that possesses physical form,'' Kagan wrote. "See generally Dr. Seuss, One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish (1960)." The dissenters said the Supreme Court needed to follow what they saw as clear language in the law. "All the words surrounding 'tangible object' show that Congress meant the term to have a wide range,'' Kagan wrote. "That fits with Congress' evident purpose in enacting (the law): to punish those who alter or destroy physical evidence --- any physical evidence --- with the intent of thwarting federal law enforcement."



