The United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida (in case citations, S.D. Fla. or S.D. Fl.) is the federal United States district court with territorial jurisdiction over the southern part of the state of Florida.
United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida | |
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(S.D. Fla.) | |
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Location | Wilkie D. Ferguson, Jr. U.S. Courthouse (Miami) More locations
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Appeals to | Eleventh Circuit |
Established | February 23, 1847 |
Judges | 18 |
Chief Judge | Cecilia Altonaga |
Officers of the court | |
U.S. Attorney | Hayden P. O'Byrne (acting) |
U.S. Marshal | Gadyaces S. Serralta |
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Appeals from cases brought in the Southern District of Florida are to the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit (except for patent claims and claims against the U.S. government under the Tucker Act, which are appealed to the Federal Circuit).
History
On the same day that Florida was admitted as a state, March 3, 1845, Congress enacted legislation creating the United States District Court for the District of Florida, 5 Stat. 788. On February 23, 1847, this District was subdivided into Northern and Southern Districts, by 9 Stat. 131. The statute effecting this division set forth the boundaries of the Districts:
- [T]hat part of the State of Florida lying south of a line drawn due east and west from the northern point of Charlotte Harbor, including the islands, keys, reefs, shoals, harbors, bays and inlets, south of said line, shall be erected into a new judicial district, to be called the Southern District of Florida; a District Court shall be held in said Southern District, to consist of one judge, who shall reside at Key West, in said district...
On July 30, 1962, the Middle District was created from portions of these districts by 76 Stat. 247.
This federal district has the dubious distinction of having had more judges removed through impeachment than any other district, with a total of two, one fourth of all federal judges so removed.
Famous cases heard in the district include the prosecution of former Panamanian military leader Manuel Noriega, the Elián González case, notorious Ponzi schemer Scott Rothstein, a 2000 United States presidential election recount in Florida case, the prosecution of José Padilla, and one of the federal prosecutions of Donald Trump.
Jurisdiction
The court's jurisdiction comprises the nine counties of Broward, Highlands, Indian River, Martin, Miami-Dade, Monroe, Okeechobee, Palm Beach, and St. Lucie. The district includes the South Florida metropolitan area of Miami, Fort Lauderdale, and West Palm Beach. It comprises 15,197 square miles (39,360 km2) and approximately 6.3 million people. Courthouses, corresponding to the five divisions of the district, are located in Fort Lauderdale, Fort Pierce, Key West, Miami, and West Palm Beach. The court's offices are located in Miami.
United States attorney and marshal
The United States attorney for the Southern District of Florida represents the United States in civil and criminal litigation in the court. As of January 17, 2025[update], the acting United States attorney is Hayden P. O'Byrne.
The United States Attorney's office has a staff of approximately 233 assistant United States attorneys and 227 support personnel. The main office is located in Miami, Florida, with three staffed branch offices located in Fort Lauderdale, West Palm Beach and Fort Pierce and one unstaffed branch office located in Key West. There is also a High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area (HIDTA) office in West Miami-Dade and a Health Care Fraud Facility in Miramar.
On August 28, 2018, Gadyaces S. Serralta was confirmed by the United States Senate to be the United States marshal.
Organization of the court
The United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida is one of three federal judicial districts in Florida. The District has five divisions:
Fort Pierce Division comprises the following counties: Highlands, Okeechobee, Indian River, St. Lucie, and Martin.
West Palm Beach Division comprises Palm Beach County.
Fort Lauderdale Division comprises Broward County.
Miami Division comprises Miami-Dade County.
Key West Division comprises Monroe County.
Current judges
As of July 20, 2024[update]:
# | Title | Judge | Duty station | Born | Term of service | Appointed by | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Active | Chief | Senior | ||||||
58 | Chief Judge | Cecilia Altonaga | Miami | 1962 | 2003–present | 2021–present | — | G.W. Bush |
45 | District Judge | K. Michael Moore | Miami | 1951 | 1992–present | 2014–2021 | — | G.H.W. Bush |
50 | District Judge | Donald M. Middlebrooks | West Palm Beach | 1946 | 1997–present | — | — | Clinton |
52 | District Judge | William Dimitrouleas | Ft. Lauderdale | 1951 | 1998–present | — | — | Clinton |
57 | District Judge | Jose E. Martinez | Miami | 1941 | 2002–present | — | — | G.W. Bush |
61 | District Judge | Kathleen M. Williams | Miami | 1956 | 2011–present | — | — | Obama |
64 | District Judge | Darrin P. Gayles | Miami | 1966 | 2014–present | — | — | Obama |
65 | District Judge | Beth Bloom | Miami | 1962 | 2014–present | — | — | Obama |
66 | District Judge | Robin L. Rosenberg | West Palm Beach | 1962 | 2014–present | — | — | Obama |
67 | District Judge | Roy Altman | Miami | 1982 | 2019–present | — | — | Trump |
68 | District Judge | Rodolfo Ruiz | Miami | 1979 | 2019–present | — | — | Trump |
69 | District Judge | Rodney Smith | Ft. Lauderdale | 1974 | 2019–present | — | — | Trump |
70 | District Judge | Raag Singhal | Ft. Lauderdale | 1963 | 2019–present | — | — | Trump |
71 | District Judge | Aileen Cannon | Ft. Pierce | 1981 | 2020–present | — | — | Trump |
72 | District Judge | Jacqueline Becerra | Miami | 1970 | 2024–present | — | — | Biden |
73 | District Judge | David S. Leibowitz | Ft. Lauderdale | 1971 | 2024–present | — | — | Biden |
74 | District Judge | Melissa Damian | Ft. Lauderdale | 1968 | 2024–present | — | — | Biden |
75 | District Judge | vacant | — | — | — | — | — | — |
27 | Senior Judge | James Lawrence King | Miami | 1927 | 1970–1992 | 1984–1991 | 1992–present | Nixon |
31 | Senior Judge | Jose Alejandro Gonzalez Jr. | Ft. Lauderdale | 1931 | 1978–1996 | — | 1996–present | Carter |
40 | Senior Judge | William J. Zloch | Ft. Lauderdale | 1944 | 1985–2017 | 2000–2007 | 2017–present | Reagan |
42 | Senior Judge | Federico A. Moreno | Miami | 1952 | 1990–2020 | 2007–2014 | 2020–present | G.H.W. Bush |
43 | Senior Judge | Donald L. Graham | Miami | 1948 | 1991–2013 | — | 2013–present | G.H.W. Bush |
48 | Senior Judge | Daniel T. K. Hurley | West Palm Beach | 1943 | 1994–2009 | — | 2009–present | Clinton |
49 | Senior Judge | Joan A. Lenard | Miami | 1952 | 1995–2017 | — | 2017–present | Clinton |
51 | Senior Judge | Alan Stephen Gold | inactive | 1944 | 1997–2010 | — | 2010–present | Clinton |
53 | Senior Judge | Patricia A. Seitz | Miami | 1946 | 1998–2012 | — | 2012–present | Clinton |
55 | Senior Judge | Paul Huck | Miami | 1940 | 2000–2010 | — | 2010–present | Clinton |
56 | Senior Judge | Kenneth Marra | West Palm Beach | 1951 | 2002–2017 | — | 2017–present | G.W. Bush |
59 | Senior Judge | James I. Cohn | Ft. Lauderdale | 1948 | 2003–2016 | — | 2016–present | G.W. Bush |
62 | Senior Judge | Robert N. Scola Jr. | Miami | 1955 | 2011–2023 | — | 2023–present | Obama |
Vacancies and pending nominations
Seat | Prior judge's duty station | Seat last held by | Vacancy reason | Date of vacancy | Nominee | Date of nomination |
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8 | Miami | Robert N. Scola Jr. | Senior status | October 31, 2023 | — | — |
Former judges
# | Judge | State | Born–died | Active service | Chief Judge | Senior status | Appointed by | Reason for termination |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | William Marvin | FL | 1808–1902 | 1847–1863 | — | — | Polk | resignation |
2 | Thomas Jefferson Boynton | FL | 1838–1871 | 1863–1870 | — | — | Lincoln | resignation |
3 | John McKinney | FL | 1829–1871 | 1870–1871 | — | — | Grant | death |
4 | James William Locke | FL | 1837–1922 | 1872–1912 | — | — | Grant | retirement |
5 | John Moses Cheney | FL | 1859–1922 | 1912–1913 | — | — | Taft | not confirmed |
6 | Rhydon Mays Call | FL | 1858–1927 | 1913–1927 | — | — | Wilson | death |
7 | Lake Jones | FL | 1867–1930 | 1924–1930 | — | — | Coolidge | death |
8 | Alexander Akerman | FL | 1869–1948 | 1929–1939 | — | 1939–1948 | Coolidge | death |
9 | Halsted L. Ritter | FL | 1868–1951 | 1929–1936 | — | — | Coolidge | impeachment and conviction |
10 | Louie Willard Strum | FL | 1890–1954 | 1931–1950 | 1948–1950 | — | Hoover | elevation to 5th Cir. |
11 | John W. Holland | FL | 1883–1969 | 1936–1955 | 1950–1955 | 1955–1969 | F. Roosevelt | death |
12 | William J. Barker | FL | 1886–1968 | 1940–1959 | 1955–1959 | 1959–1968 | F. Roosevelt | death |
13 | Curtis L. Waller | FL | 1887–1950 | 1940–1943 | — | — | F. Roosevelt | elevation to 5th Cir. |
14 | Dozier A. DeVane | FL | 1883–1963 | 1943–1958 | — | 1958–1963 | F. Roosevelt | death |
15 | George William Whitehurst | FL | 1891–1974 | 1950–1961 | 1959–1961 | 1961–1974 | Truman | death |
16 | John Milton Bryan Simpson | FL | 1903–1987 | 1950–1962 | 1961–1962 | — | Truman | reassignment to M.D. Fla |
17 | Emett Clay Choate | FL | 1891–1974 | 1954–1965 | — | 1965–1974 | Eisenhower | death |
18 | Joseph Patrick Lieb | FL | 1901–1971 | 1955–1962 | — | — | Eisenhower | reassignment to M.D. Fla |
18 | William McRae | FL | 1909–1973 | 1961–1962 | — | — | Kennedy | reassignment to M.D. Fla |
19 | David W. Dyer | FL | 1910–1998 | 1961–1966 | 1962–1966 | — | Kennedy | elevation to 5th Cir. |
20 | George C. Young | FL | 1916–2015 | 1961–1966 | — | — | Kennedy | reassignment to M.D. Fla |
21 | Charles B. Fulton | FL | 1910–1996 | 1963–1978 | 1966–1977 | 1978–1996 | Kennedy | death |
22 | William O. Mehrtens | FL | 1905–1980 | 1965–1975 | — | 1975–1980 | L. Johnson | death |
23 | C. Clyde Atkins | FL | 1914–1999 | 1966–1982 | 1977–1982 | 1982–1999 | L. Johnson | death |
24 | Ted Cabot | FL | 1917–1971 | 1966–1971 | — | — | L. Johnson | death |
25 | Joe Oscar Eaton | FL | 1920–2008 | 1967–1985 | 1982–1984 | 1985–2008 | L. Johnson | death |
26 | Peter T. Fay | FL | 1929–2021 | 1970–1976 | — | — | Nixon | elevation to 5th Cir. |
28 | Norman Charles Roettger Jr. | FL | 1930–2003 | 1972–1997 | 1991–1997 | 1997–2003 | Nixon | death |
29 | Sidney Aronovitz | FL | 1920–1997 | 1976–1988 | — | 1988–1997 | Ford | death |
30 | William Hoeveler | FL | 1922–2017 | 1977–1991 | — | 1991–2017 | Carter | death |
32 | Edward B. Davis | FL | 1933–2010 | 1979–2000 | 1997–2000 | — | Carter | retirement |
33 | James W. Kehoe | FL | 1925–1998 | 1979–1992 | — | 1992–1998 | Carter | death |
34 | James Carriger Paine | FL | 1924–2010 | 1979–1992 | — | 1992–2010 | Carter | death |
35 | Eugene P. Spellman | FL | 1930–1991 | 1979–1991 | — | — | Carter | death |
36 | Alcee Hastings | FL | 1936–2021 | 1979–1989 | — | — | Carter | impeachment and conviction |
37 | Lenore Carrero Nesbitt | FL | 1932–2001 | 1983–1998 | — | 1998–2001 | Reagan | death |
38 | Stanley Marcus | FL | 1946–present | 1985–1997 | — | — | Reagan | elevation to 11th Cir. |
39 | Thomas Scott | FL | 1948–present | 1985–1990 | — | — | Reagan | resignation |
41 | Kenneth Ryskamp | FL | 1932–2017 | 1986–2000 | — | 2000–2017 | Reagan | death |
44 | Shelby Highsmith | FL | 1929–2015 | 1991–2002 | — | 2002–2015 | G.H.W. Bush | death |
46 | Ursula Mancusi Ungaro | FL | 1951–present | 1992–2021 | — | 2021 | G.H.W. Bush | retirement |
47 | Wilkie D. Ferguson | FL | 1938–2003 | 1993–2003 | — | — | Clinton | death |
54 | Adalberto Jordan | FL | 1961–present | 1999–2012 | — | — | Clinton | elevation to 11th Cir. |
60 | Marcia G. Cooke | FL | 1954–2023 | 2004–2022 | — | 2022–2023 | G.W. Bush | death |
63 | Robin S. Rosenbaum | FL | 1966–present | 2012–2014 | — | — | Obama | elevation to 11th Cir. |
- Recess appointment; formally nominated on January 5, 1864, confirmed by the United States Senate on January 20, 1864, and received commission the same day.
- Recess appointment; formally nominated on December 7, 1870, confirmed by the Senate on February 18, 1871, and received commission the same day.
- Recess appointment; the Senate did not confirm the appointment.
- Recess appointment; formally nominated on April 12, 1913, confirmed by the Senate on April 24, 1913, and received commission the same day.
- Jointly appointed to the Northern and Southern Districts of Florida.
- From 1943-1947, Judge DeVane was jointly appointed to the Northern and Southern Districts of Florida.
- Recess appointment; formally nominated on January 12, 1956, confirmed by the Senate on March 1, 1956, and received commission the same day.
- From 1961-1962, Judge Young was jointly appointed to the Northern and Southern Districts of Florida. From 1962-1966, Judge Young was jointly appointed to the Middle, Northern, and Southern Districts of Florida.
Chief judges
Chief judges have administrative responsibilities with respect to their district court. Unlike the Supreme Court, where one justice is specifically nominated to be chief, the office of chief judge rotates among the district court judges. To be chief, a judge must have been in active service on the court for at least one year, be under the age of 65, and have not previously served as chief judge.
A vacancy is filled by the judge highest in seniority among the group of qualified judges. The chief judge serves for a term of seven years, or until age 70, whichever occurs first. The age restrictions are waived if no members of the court would otherwise be qualified for the position.
When the office was created in 1948, the chief judge was the longest-serving judge who had not elected to retire, on what has since 1958 been known as senior status, or declined to serve as chief judge. After August 6, 1959, judges could not become or remain chief after turning 70 years old. The current rules have been in operation since October 1, 1982.
Succession of seats
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United States attorneys
List of U.S. attorneys since 1828
- William Allison McRea (1828–1829)
- John G. Stower (1829–1830)
- John K. Campbell (1830–1831)
- Edward Chandler (1831–1834)
- Adam Gordon (1834)
- Wylie P. Clark (1834–1839)
- Charles Walker (1839–1840)
- L. Windsor Smith (1840–1842)
- George W. McRae (1842–1847)
- L. Windsor Smith (1847–1850)
- William R. Hackley (1850–1858)
- John L. Tatum (1858–1861)
- Thomas J. Boynton (1861–1863)
- Homer G. Plantz (1863–1869)
- Claiborn R. Mobley (1869–1876)
- John Tyler Jr. (1876–1877)
- George B. Patterson (1877–1886)
- Livingstone W. Bethel (1886–1890)
- George B. Patterson (1890–1894)
- Owen J. H. Summers (1894)
- Frank Clark (1894–1897)
- Joseph N. Stripling (1897–1902)
- John Moses Cheney (1902–1912)
- Richard P. Marks (1912–1913)
- Herbert S. Phillips (1913–1921)
- William M. Gober (1921–1929)
- Wilburn P. Hughes (1929–1933)
- John W. Holland (1933–1936)
- Herbert S. Phillips (1936–1953)
- James L. Guilmartin (1953–1959)
- E. Coleman Madsen (1959–1961)
- Edward G. Boardman (1961–1963)
- William A. Meadows Jr. (1963–1969)
- Robert W. Rust (1969–1977)
- Vincent K. Antle (1977)
- Jacob V. Eskenazi (1977–1980)
- Atlee W. Wampler III (1980–1982)
- Stanley Marcus (1982–1985)
- Leon B. Kellner (1985–1988)
- Dexter Lehtinen (1988–1992)
- James McAdams (1992)
- Roberto Martinez (1992–1993)
- Kendall B. Coffey (1993–1996)
- William Keefer (1996–1997)
- Thomas Scott (1997–2000)
- Guy A. Lewis (2000–2002)
- Marcos Jiménez (2002–2005)
- Alexander Acosta (2005–2009)
- Jeffrey H. Sloman (2009–2010)
- Wifredo A. Ferrer (2010–2017)
- Benjamin G. Greenberg (2017–2018)
- Ariana Fajardo Orshan (2018–2021)
- Juan Antonio Gonzalez (2021–2023)
- Markenzy Lapointe (2023–2025)
See also
- Courts of Florida
- List of current United States district judges
- List of United States federal courthouses in Florida
- United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
- United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida
- United States District Court for the Northern District of Florida
References
- 28 U.S.C. § 89.
- Asbury Dickens, A Synoptical Index to the Laws and Treaties of the United States of America (1852), p. 393.
- U.S. District Courts of Florida, Legislative history, Federal Judicial Center.
- United States v. Noriega, no. 88-cr-00079 (S.D. Fla. 1988).
- Gonzalez ex rel. Gonzalez v. Reno, 86 F. Supp. 2d 1167 (S.D. Fla. 2000).
- United States v. Rothstein, no. 09-cr-60331 (S.D. Fla. 2009).
- Siegel v. LaPore, 120 F. Supp. 2d 1041 (S.D. Fla. 2000).
- United States v. Padilla, no. 04-cr-60001 (S.D. Fla. 2007).
- United States v. Trump, no. 9:23-cr-80101 (S.D. Fla. 2023).
- 28 U.S.C. § 89
- "Southern District Map" (PDF). www.flsd.uscourts.gov.
- "Bicn Celebration" (PDF). www.justice.gov. Retrieved February 19, 2024.
- "The Political Graveyard: U.S. District Attorneys in Florida".
External links
- United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida official website
- Southern District of Florida Blog – By attorney David Markus
Author: www.NiNa.Az
Publication date:
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The United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida in case citations S D Fla or S D Fl is the federal United States district court with territorial jurisdiction over the southern part of the state of Florida United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida S D Fla LocationWilkie D Ferguson Jr U S Courthouse Miami More locationsC Clyde Atkins U S Courthouse Miami James L King Federal Justice Building Miami Fort LauderdaleWest Palm BeachFort PierceSidney M Aronovitz United States Courthouse Key West Appeals toEleventh CircuitEstablishedFebruary 23 1847Judges18Chief JudgeCecilia AltonagaOfficers of the courtU S AttorneyHayden P O Byrne acting U S MarshalGadyaces S Serraltawww wbr flsd wbr uscourts wbr gov Wilkie D Ferguson Jr United States Courthouse in Miami in 2007 Appeals from cases brought in the Southern District of Florida are to the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit except for patent claims and claims against the U S government under the Tucker Act which are appealed to the Federal Circuit HistoryOn the same day that Florida was admitted as a state March 3 1845 Congress enacted legislation creating the United States District Court for the District of Florida 5 Stat 788 On February 23 1847 this District was subdivided into Northern and Southern Districts by 9 Stat 131 The statute effecting this division set forth the boundaries of the Districts T hat part of the State of Florida lying south of a line drawn due east and west from the northern point of Charlotte Harbor including the islands keys reefs shoals harbors bays and inlets south of said line shall be erected into a new judicial district to be called the Southern District of Florida a District Court shall be held in said Southern District to consist of one judge who shall reside at Key West in said district On July 30 1962 the Middle District was created from portions of these districts by 76 Stat 247 This federal district has the dubious distinction of having had more judges removed through impeachment than any other district with a total of two one fourth of all federal judges so removed Famous cases heard in the district include the prosecution of former Panamanian military leader Manuel Noriega the Elian Gonzalez case notorious Ponzi schemer Scott Rothstein a 2000 United States presidential election recount in Florida case the prosecution of Jose Padilla and one of the federal prosecutions of Donald Trump JurisdictionThe court s jurisdiction comprises the nine counties of Broward Highlands Indian River Martin Miami Dade Monroe Okeechobee Palm Beach and St Lucie The district includes the South Florida metropolitan area of Miami Fort Lauderdale and West Palm Beach It comprises 15 197 square miles 39 360 km2 and approximately 6 3 million people Courthouses corresponding to the five divisions of the district are located in Fort Lauderdale Fort Pierce Key West Miami and West Palm Beach The court s offices are located in Miami United States attorney and marshalThe United States attorney for the Southern District of Florida represents the United States in civil and criminal litigation in the court As of January 17 2025 update the acting United States attorney is Hayden P O Byrne The United States Attorney s office has a staff of approximately 233 assistant United States attorneys and 227 support personnel The main office is located in Miami Florida with three staffed branch offices located in Fort Lauderdale West Palm Beach and Fort Pierce and one unstaffed branch office located in Key West There is also a High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area HIDTA office in West Miami Dade and a Health Care Fraud Facility in Miramar On August 28 2018 Gadyaces S Serralta was confirmed by the United States Senate to be the United States marshal Organization of the courtThe United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida is one of three federal judicial districts in Florida The District has five divisions Fort Pierce Division comprises the following counties Highlands Okeechobee Indian River St Lucie and Martin West Palm Beach Division comprises Palm Beach County Fort Lauderdale Division comprises Broward County Miami Division comprises Miami Dade County Key West Division comprises Monroe County Current judgesAs of July 20 2024 update Title Judge Duty station Born Term of service Appointed by Active Chief Senior 58 Chief Judge Cecilia Altonaga Miami 1962 2003 present 2021 present G W Bush 45 District Judge K Michael Moore Miami 1951 1992 present 2014 2021 G H W Bush 50 District Judge Donald M Middlebrooks West Palm Beach 1946 1997 present Clinton 52 District Judge William Dimitrouleas Ft Lauderdale 1951 1998 present Clinton 57 District Judge Jose E Martinez Miami 1941 2002 present G W Bush 61 District Judge Kathleen M Williams Miami 1956 2011 present Obama 64 District Judge Darrin P Gayles Miami 1966 2014 present Obama 65 District Judge Beth Bloom Miami 1962 2014 present Obama 66 District Judge Robin L Rosenberg West Palm Beach 1962 2014 present Obama 67 District Judge Roy Altman Miami 1982 2019 present Trump 68 District Judge Rodolfo Ruiz Miami 1979 2019 present Trump 69 District Judge Rodney Smith Ft Lauderdale 1974 2019 present Trump 70 District Judge Raag Singhal Ft Lauderdale 1963 2019 present Trump 71 District Judge Aileen Cannon Ft Pierce 1981 2020 present Trump 72 District Judge Jacqueline Becerra Miami 1970 2024 present Biden 73 District Judge David S Leibowitz Ft Lauderdale 1971 2024 present Biden 74 District Judge Melissa Damian Ft Lauderdale 1968 2024 present Biden 75 District Judge vacant 27 Senior Judge James Lawrence King Miami 1927 1970 1992 1984 1991 1992 present Nixon 31 Senior Judge Jose Alejandro Gonzalez Jr Ft Lauderdale 1931 1978 1996 1996 present Carter 40 Senior Judge William J Zloch Ft Lauderdale 1944 1985 2017 2000 2007 2017 present Reagan 42 Senior Judge Federico A Moreno Miami 1952 1990 2020 2007 2014 2020 present G H W Bush 43 Senior Judge Donald L Graham Miami 1948 1991 2013 2013 present G H W Bush 48 Senior Judge Daniel T K Hurley West Palm Beach 1943 1994 2009 2009 present Clinton 49 Senior Judge Joan A Lenard Miami 1952 1995 2017 2017 present Clinton 51 Senior Judge Alan Stephen Gold inactive 1944 1997 2010 2010 present Clinton 53 Senior Judge Patricia A Seitz Miami 1946 1998 2012 2012 present Clinton 55 Senior Judge Paul Huck Miami 1940 2000 2010 2010 present Clinton 56 Senior Judge Kenneth Marra West Palm Beach 1951 2002 2017 2017 present G W Bush 59 Senior Judge James I Cohn Ft Lauderdale 1948 2003 2016 2016 present G W Bush 62 Senior Judge Robert N Scola Jr Miami 1955 2011 2023 2023 present ObamaVacancies and pending nominationsSeat Prior judge s duty station Seat last held by Vacancy reason Date of vacancy Nominee Date of nomination 8 Miami Robert N Scola Jr Senior status October 31 2023 Former judges Judge State Born died Active service Chief Judge Senior status Appointed by Reason for termination 1 William Marvin FL 1808 1902 1847 1863 Polk resignation 2 Thomas Jefferson Boynton FL 1838 1871 1863 1870 Lincoln resignation 3 John McKinney FL 1829 1871 1870 1871 Grant death 4 James William Locke FL 1837 1922 1872 1912 Grant retirement 5 John Moses Cheney FL 1859 1922 1912 1913 Taft not confirmed 6 Rhydon Mays Call FL 1858 1927 1913 1927 Wilson death 7 Lake Jones FL 1867 1930 1924 1930 Coolidge death 8 Alexander Akerman FL 1869 1948 1929 1939 1939 1948 Coolidge death 9 Halsted L Ritter FL 1868 1951 1929 1936 Coolidge impeachment and conviction 10 Louie Willard Strum FL 1890 1954 1931 1950 1948 1950 Hoover elevation to 5th Cir 11 John W Holland FL 1883 1969 1936 1955 1950 1955 1955 1969 F Roosevelt death 12 William J Barker FL 1886 1968 1940 1959 1955 1959 1959 1968 F Roosevelt death 13 Curtis L Waller FL 1887 1950 1940 1943 F Roosevelt elevation to 5th Cir 14 Dozier A DeVane FL 1883 1963 1943 1958 1958 1963 F Roosevelt death 15 George William Whitehurst FL 1891 1974 1950 1961 1959 1961 1961 1974 Truman death 16 John Milton Bryan Simpson FL 1903 1987 1950 1962 1961 1962 Truman reassignment to M D Fla 17 Emett Clay Choate FL 1891 1974 1954 1965 1965 1974 Eisenhower death 18 Joseph Patrick Lieb FL 1901 1971 1955 1962 Eisenhower reassignment to M D Fla 18 William McRae FL 1909 1973 1961 1962 Kennedy reassignment to M D Fla 19 David W Dyer FL 1910 1998 1961 1966 1962 1966 Kennedy elevation to 5th Cir 20 George C Young FL 1916 2015 1961 1966 Kennedy reassignment to M D Fla 21 Charles B Fulton FL 1910 1996 1963 1978 1966 1977 1978 1996 Kennedy death 22 William O Mehrtens FL 1905 1980 1965 1975 1975 1980 L Johnson death 23 C Clyde Atkins FL 1914 1999 1966 1982 1977 1982 1982 1999 L Johnson death 24 Ted Cabot FL 1917 1971 1966 1971 L Johnson death 25 Joe Oscar Eaton FL 1920 2008 1967 1985 1982 1984 1985 2008 L Johnson death 26 Peter T Fay FL 1929 2021 1970 1976 Nixon elevation to 5th Cir 28 Norman Charles Roettger Jr FL 1930 2003 1972 1997 1991 1997 1997 2003 Nixon death 29 Sidney Aronovitz FL 1920 1997 1976 1988 1988 1997 Ford death 30 William Hoeveler FL 1922 2017 1977 1991 1991 2017 Carter death 32 Edward B Davis FL 1933 2010 1979 2000 1997 2000 Carter retirement 33 James W Kehoe FL 1925 1998 1979 1992 1992 1998 Carter death 34 James Carriger Paine FL 1924 2010 1979 1992 1992 2010 Carter death 35 Eugene P Spellman FL 1930 1991 1979 1991 Carter death 36 Alcee Hastings FL 1936 2021 1979 1989 Carter impeachment and conviction 37 Lenore Carrero Nesbitt FL 1932 2001 1983 1998 1998 2001 Reagan death 38 Stanley Marcus FL 1946 present 1985 1997 Reagan elevation to 11th Cir 39 Thomas Scott FL 1948 present 1985 1990 Reagan resignation 41 Kenneth Ryskamp FL 1932 2017 1986 2000 2000 2017 Reagan death 44 Shelby Highsmith FL 1929 2015 1991 2002 2002 2015 G H W Bush death 46 Ursula Mancusi Ungaro FL 1951 present 1992 2021 2021 G H W Bush retirement 47 Wilkie D Ferguson FL 1938 2003 1993 2003 Clinton death 54 Adalberto Jordan FL 1961 present 1999 2012 Clinton elevation to 11th Cir 60 Marcia G Cooke FL 1954 2023 2004 2022 2022 2023 G W Bush death 63 Robin S Rosenbaum FL 1966 present 2012 2014 Obama elevation to 11th Cir Recess appointment formally nominated on January 5 1864 confirmed by the United States Senate on January 20 1864 and received commission the same day Recess appointment formally nominated on December 7 1870 confirmed by the Senate on February 18 1871 and received commission the same day Recess appointment the Senate did not confirm the appointment Recess appointment formally nominated on April 12 1913 confirmed by the Senate on April 24 1913 and received commission the same day Jointly appointed to the Northern and Southern Districts of Florida From 1943 1947 Judge DeVane was jointly appointed to the Northern and Southern Districts of Florida Recess appointment formally nominated on January 12 1956 confirmed by the Senate on March 1 1956 and received commission the same day From 1961 1962 Judge Young was jointly appointed to the Northern and Southern Districts of Florida From 1962 1966 Judge Young was jointly appointed to the Middle Northern and Southern Districts of Florida Chief judgesChief judges have administrative responsibilities with respect to their district court Unlike the Supreme Court where one justice is specifically nominated to be chief the office of chief judge rotates among the district court judges To be chief a judge must have been in active service on the court for at least one year be under the age of 65 and have not previously served as chief judge A vacancy is filled by the judge highest in seniority among the group of qualified judges The chief judge serves for a term of seven years or until age 70 whichever occurs first The age restrictions are waived if no members of the court would otherwise be qualified for the position When the office was created in 1948 the chief judge was the longest serving judge who had not elected to retire on what has since 1958 been known as senior status or declined to serve as chief judge After August 6 1959 judges could not become or remain chief after turning 70 years old The current rules have been in operation since October 1 1982 Succession of seatsSeat 1 Seat established on February 23 1847 by 9 Stat 131 Marvin 1847 1863 Boynton 1864 1870 McKinney 1870 1871 Locke 1872 1912 Cheney 1912 1913 Call 1913 1927 Ritter 1929 1936 Holland 1936 1955 Lieb 1955 1962 Seat reassigned to the Middle District of Florida on October 29 1962 by 76 Stat 247 Seat 2 Seat established on September 14 1922 by 42 Stat 837 temporary Jones 1924 1930 Seat abolished on June 7 1930 temporary judgeship expired Seat 3 Seat established on January 17 1929 by 45 Stat 1081 Akerman 1929 1939 Barker 1940 1959 McRae Jr 1961 1962 Seat reassigned to the Middle District of Florida on October 29 1962 by 76 Stat 247 Seat 4 Seat established on June 27 1930 by 46 Stat 820 Strum 1931 1950 Simpson 1950 1962 Seat reassigned to the Middle District of Florida on October 29 1962 by 76 Stat 247 Seat 5 Seat established on May 24 1940 by 54 Stat 219 temporary concurrent with Northern District Waller 1940 1943 DeVane 1943 1947 Seat reassigned solely to Northern District and made permanent on October 1 1947 pursuant to 54 Stat 219 Seat 6 Seat established on August 3 1949 by 63 Stat 493 concurrent with Northern District Whitehurst 1950 1961 Seat assigned concurrently to the Middle District on July 30 1962 pursuant to 76 Stat 247 Young 1961 1966 Seat reassigned solely to the Middle District on September 17 1966 pursuant to 80 Stat 75 Seat 7 Seat established on February 10 1954 by 68 Stat 8 Choate 1954 1965 Mehrtens 1965 1975 Aronovitz 1976 1988 Graham 1991 2013 Bloom 2014 present Seat 8 Seat established on May 19 1961 by 75 Stat 80 Dyer 1961 1966 Eaton 1967 1985 Ryskamp 1986 2000 Huck 2000 2010 Scola Jr 2011 2023 vacant 2023 present Seat 9 Seat established on May 19 1961 by 75 Stat 80 Fulton 1963 1978 Gonzalez Jr 1978 1996 Gold 1997 2011 Rosenbaum 2012 2014 Smith 2019 present Seat 10 Seat established on March 18 1966 by 80 Stat 75 Atkins 1966 1982 Nesbitt 1983 1998 Jordan 1999 2012 Rosenberg 2014 present Seat 11 Seat established on March 18 1966 by 80 Stat 75 Cabot 1966 1971 Roettger Jr 1972 1997 Dimitrouleas 1998 present Seat 12 Seat established on June 2 1970 by 84 Stat 294 Fay 1970 1976 Hoeveler 1977 1991 Ferguson Jr 1993 2003 Cooke 2004 2022 Becerra 2024 present Seat 13 Seat established on June 2 1970 by 84 Stat 294 King 1970 1992 Lenard 1995 2017 Altman 2019 present Seat 14 Seat established on October 20 1978 by 92 Stat 1629 Paine 1979 1992 Hurley 1994 2009 Williams 2011 present Seat 15 Seat established on October 20 1978 by 92 Stat 1629 Kehoe 1979 1992 Middlebrooks 1997 present Seat 16 Seat established on October 20 1978 by 92 Stat 1629 Spellman 1979 1991 Moore 1992 present Seat 17 Seat established on October 20 1978 by 92 Stat 1629 Davis 1979 2000 Martinez 2002 present Seat 18 Seat established on October 20 1978 by 92 Stat 1629 Hastings 1979 1989 Moreno 1990 2020 Leibowitz 2024 present Seat 19 Seat established on July 10 1984 by 98 Stat 333 Marcus 1985 1997 Seitz 1998 2012 Gayles 2014 present Seat 20 Seat established on July 10 1984 by 98 Stat 333 Scott Jr 1985 1990 Highsmith 1991 2002 Altonaga 2003 present Seat 21 Seat established on July 10 1984 by 98 Stat 333 Zloch 1985 2017 Ruiz 2019 present Seat 22 Seat established on December 1 1990 by 104 Stat 5089 Ungaro 1992 2021 Damian 2024 present Seat 23 Seat established on December 21 2000 by 114 Stat 2762 Marra 2002 2017 Cannon 2020 present Seat 24 Seat established on November 2 2002 by 116 Stat 1758 temporary Cohn 2003 2016 Seat made permanent on December 23 2024 by 138 Stat 2693 Singhal 2019 presentUnited States attorneysList of U S attorneys since 1828 William Allison McRea 1828 1829 John G Stower 1829 1830 John K Campbell 1830 1831 Edward Chandler 1831 1834 Adam Gordon 1834 Wylie P Clark 1834 1839 Charles Walker 1839 1840 L Windsor Smith 1840 1842 George W McRae 1842 1847 L Windsor Smith 1847 1850 William R Hackley 1850 1858 John L Tatum 1858 1861 Thomas J Boynton 1861 1863 Homer G Plantz 1863 1869 Claiborn R Mobley 1869 1876 John Tyler Jr 1876 1877 George B Patterson 1877 1886 Livingstone W Bethel 1886 1890 George B Patterson 1890 1894 Owen J H Summers 1894 Frank Clark 1894 1897 Joseph N Stripling 1897 1902 John Moses Cheney 1902 1912 Richard P Marks 1912 1913 Herbert S Phillips 1913 1921 William M Gober 1921 1929 Wilburn P Hughes 1929 1933 John W Holland 1933 1936 Herbert S Phillips 1936 1953 James L Guilmartin 1953 1959 E Coleman Madsen 1959 1961 Edward G Boardman 1961 1963 William A Meadows Jr 1963 1969 Robert W Rust 1969 1977 Vincent K Antle 1977 Jacob V Eskenazi 1977 1980 Atlee W Wampler III 1980 1982 Stanley Marcus 1982 1985 Leon B Kellner 1985 1988 Dexter Lehtinen 1988 1992 James McAdams 1992 Roberto Martinez 1992 1993 Kendall B Coffey 1993 1996 William Keefer 1996 1997 Thomas Scott 1997 2000 Guy A Lewis 2000 2002 Marcos Jimenez 2002 2005 Alexander Acosta 2005 2009 Jeffrey H Sloman 2009 2010 Wifredo A Ferrer 2010 2017 Benjamin G Greenberg 2017 2018 Ariana Fajardo Orshan 2018 2021 Juan Antonio Gonzalez 2021 2023 Markenzy Lapointe 2023 2025 See alsoCourts of Florida List of current United States district judges List of United States federal courthouses in Florida United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida United States District Court for the Northern District of FloridaReferences28 U S C 89 Asbury Dickens A Synoptical Index to the Laws and Treaties of the United States of America 1852 p 393 U S District Courts of Florida Legislative history Federal Judicial Center United States v Noriega no 88 cr 00079 S D Fla 1988 Gonzalez ex rel Gonzalez v Reno 86 F Supp 2d 1167 S D Fla 2000 United States v Rothstein no 09 cr 60331 S D Fla 2009 Siegel v LaPore 120 F Supp 2d 1041 S D Fla 2000 United States v Padilla no 04 cr 60001 S D Fla 2007 United States v Trump no 9 23 cr 80101 S D Fla 2023 28 U S C 89 Southern District Map PDF www flsd uscourts gov Bicn Celebration PDF www justice gov Retrieved February 19 2024 The Political Graveyard U S District Attorneys in Florida External linksUnited States District Court for the Southern District of Florida official website Southern District of Florida Blog By attorney David Markus 26 06 38 N 80 08 30 W 26 1106 N 80 1417 W 26 1106 80 1417