He will be out in all his ruffled finery, madder than a wet hen.
Baez competed with the karate, pistol and crime-scene team from FSU's chapter of Lambda Alpha Epsilon, a fraternity of criminology majors.
"We probably ranked first overall in every category in every national competition," said Ken Koehler, the fraternity's former sergeant-at-arms. "José was more or less the primary instructor.
Now we know where all Jose's special insight into the CSI comes from!!
Miami-Dade Circuit Court records show that Baez failed repeatedly to pay his $200-a-month child support after his 1993 divorce. The sum owed reached $12,000 by 2004. Asked recently about this, Baez said through his spokeswoman that he and his ex-wife have resolved their child-support issues. (Yeah, the child is grown and he is paying $550/mo worth of resolution.)
Baez leased a Mazda Miata in 1998,
Records show that a court in Miami docked $550 a month from his LexisNexis paycheck in 2004 to pay child support to his first wife.
To reach $12,000 by 2004 JAB would have had to ignore his $200/mo child support payment, almost from the start. Yet he was driving a leased Miata in '98. While no one raises a child on $200/mo who knows what this would have done to benefit his daughter while she was growing up. Parents who divorce their children when they leave their spouse are beyond my contempt. They are the lowest life form.
"this profile you are writing has nothing to do with Jose Baez's representation of Casey Anthony and appears to be a sensationalist persecution of a Hispanic lawyer who has been targeted by a newspaper lucky to find itself at the center of a national story."
The race card? Really? I think this expose` has everything to do with whoever he happens to be representing.
His overall behavior, they wrote, showed "a total lack of respect for the rights of others and a total lack of respect for the legal system, which is absolutely inconsistent with the character and fitness qualities required of those seeking to be afforded the highest position of trust and confidence recognized by our system of law.
Kind of like being too touchy feely with your incarcerated client, twice in the same week? Jose has always felt the laws were meant for other people, not him. The state board had his number the first time he applied. In fairness when he appeared to rehabilitate himself they gave him a chance, but he couldn't maintain the facade. We have been watching the real. J.A.B.