State and local cases near the Florida Supreme Court during the 2000 presidential election vote dispute In 1999, a dissenting opinion by Justice
Leander J. Shaw Jr. sparked a worldwide debate over the use of
Old Sparky, Florida's
electric chair, which helped lead to events that caused the
Florida Legislature to adopt
lethal injection as the state's method of execution only a few months later. In 2004, the Court struck down another piece of legislation from the Florida Legislature that was designed to reverse a lower court decision in the
Terri Schiavo case. In 2006, the Court struck down a law passed by the
Florida Legislature that had created the first statewide
education voucher program in the United States. That same year in Engle v. Liggett Group, it also ordered decertification of a class action lawsuit against big tobacco companies that effectively reversed the largest punitive damage jury award, $145 billion, in U.S. history. In 2013, Governor
Rick Scott signed the
Timely Justice Act (HB 7101) which overhauled the processes for
capital punishment. The
United States Supreme Court struck down part of this law in January 2016 in
Hurst v. Florida, declaring that a judge determining the aggravating facts to be used in considering a death sentence with only a non-binding recommendation from the jury based on a majority vote was insufficient and violated the
Sixth Amendment guarantee of a jury trial. The
Florida Legislature passed a new statute to comply with the judgement in March 2016, changing the sentencing method to require a 10-juror
supermajority for a sentence of death with a life sentence as the alternative. This new sentencing scheme was struck down by the Florida Supreme Court in a ruling 5–2 in October 2016, which held that a death sentence must be issued by a unanimous jury. The United States Supreme Court later left this decision undisturbed. Governor Scott in early 2017 signed a new law requiring a unanimous jury.
2000 presidential election In the
2000 presidential election controversy, the
Supreme Court of the United States overturned the Florida Supreme Court after it had ordered a statewide recount. Notably, arguments before the Florida Supreme Court in the 2000 presidential election cases were the first appellate court proceedings in history broadcast live in their entirety on major television networks in the United States and throughout the world. An estimated one-quarter of the entire fleet of satellite trucks used by broadcasters in North America was present in Tallahassee at the height of the controversy. These events later were dramatized in the 2008 HBO movie
Recount. Former chief justice
Charles T. Wells, who presided over the two historic cases argued at the state highest court, wrote a first person account of the controversy,
Inside Bush v. Gore, published in 2013. ==Library==