In 1986, Anderson became the subject of an impeachment drive after a three-judge panel on which he sat ordered retrials for several convicted murderers because, they ruled, pretrial publicity had unfairly tainted their trials. In 1999, Anderson penned a noted ruling in favor of the estate of
Martin Luther King Jr. in a copyright fight with
CBS over King's famous "
I Have a Dream" speech. In 2004, Anderson dissented when the 11th circuit refused to rehear a case. The majority had ruled in favor of a law banning LGBTQ couples from adopting children. The vote was 6-6, which warranted a denial of en banc. Anderson's dissent was joined by Judge Dubina. In 2008, Anderson described himself as a judicial "moderate," and added that he "would like to be thought of as a judge who had no particular agenda and who took each case on the facts and applied the law that the
Supreme Court laid down," regardless of his own personal view on it. "And I think that's what I attempt to do, and I think every judge on our court does." In February 2020, Anderson was a member of a 3-judge panel in
Jones et al. v. DeSantis, a 2020 voting rights case.
2018 Florida Amendment 4 permitted former felons to vote, however DeSantis signed a law that required former felons to pay all legal fees before being eligible to vote again, despite some of them not knowing how much they owed. District judge
Robert Hinkle struck down that law, and the panel kept the injunction against the law. However, the panel was reversed in a sharply divided en banc decision that September. ==See also==