
Ron DeSantis suspended Monique Worrell from office and it served the public well. He suspended her for all the wrong reasons, and he was found to have violated the Constitution, yet again, but the suspension of Worrell was indeed necessary because she is corrupt.
For starters, Worrell ran an ineffective “Conviction Integrity Unit” that didn’t see a single case processed. Her unit was aware of how judge Alicia L. Latimore, her sorority sister, was falsifying documents and did absolutely nothing about it.
Second, Worrell allowed the State Attorney’s Office to be used corruptly by prosecutor Richard I. Wallsh. She allowed Wallsh to prosecute enemies of his friends for personal gain, and did not take any action until the issue was taken to the Eleventh Circuit.

When Julie Frey became upset that a property dispute wasn’t going her way, she tapped her friend Richard Wallsh to prosecute her enemies. Monique Worrell participated in this, and the issue eventually made its way all the way to the Supreme Court.
After a Florida Bar complaint was filed by Moe against Worrell and Wallsh about the corruption, she decided to take him off of the case. It represented a Constitutional crisis so the prosecution ended up getting split into proceedings in federal court and state court. At the federal level, she appointed Brian Stokes before appointing Elliot Kula as special counsel in a very late attempt to avoid the appearance of impropriety.
But what was perhaps the most disqualifying manner in which Worrell handled that prosecution was the usurpation of the case by a stranger named Andrew Edwards. Edwards was a fake prosecutor who tried to salvage the case once it was exposed that Richard Wallsh had weaponized the state attorney’s office for Julie Frey. All prosecutors are required to receive an appointment and take an oath of office.
It was discovered that, not only was Edwards never appointed, he never took the oath of office. The Florida Secretary of State confirmed this multiple times, including by email. This email from the Secretary confirmed that the State of Florida had no records of Edwards being a prosecutor other than when he worked for Katherine Fernandez-Rundle in 2002-2017. That was in Miami, not Orlando.

This debacle with the fake prosecutor Edwards is what led to the resignation of Tarlika Navarro from the judiciary, because the JQC complaint against her implicated her in this conspiracy. Navarro resigned in time to avoid an investigation, but was still sued in federal court.
Take a look at how Edwards (Black attorney with legs crossed) obstructed a deposition of an Orlando police officer who got caught falsifying affidavits and lying about probable cause by Moe. Also, keep in mind that Monique Worrell still tried to pursue this case even after knowing that the cop was a liar and a fraud. The officer is Rabih Tabbara and he is accompanied by an attorney from the City of Orlando who represents police officers exposed to civil liability.
This use of fake prosecutors, lying cops, conflicts of interest, judicial impropriety and even a fake warrant presented an issue to the Supreme Court of the United States that could have an impact on the Jack Smith prosecutions against Donald Trump and others: are convictions secured by fake prosecutors void?
In order to help Donald Trump while he was experiencing the exact same scenario, Moe composed cert petition 2024-1216, Dimanche v. United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida and it was docketed with SCOTUS for the 2023 term. It put Monique Worrell’s use of fake prosecutors squarely before SCOTUS to protect Americans from fake prosecutors.
Fake prosecutors are extremely dangerous because they break all of the rules. They aren’t bound by an Oath of Office, so they flout the law. While Trump no longer needs the help, his co-defendants may benefit from the higher courts forming an Opinion on the matter, especially as Clarence Thomas wrote separately to address this exact issue in the Trump immunity ruling.
What also makes Monique Worrell a danger to the public is the fact that a Motion to Disqualify corrupt judge Luis F. Calderon was filed in the Ninth Judicial Circuit asserting that Calderon had a relative of Monique Worrell linked to his Venmo account. Worrell never denied the allegations, and neither did Calderon, despite this financial interest raising the issue of potential bribes between the state attorney and a judge assigning himself to criminal cases (when he wasn’t allowed to do that).
On the face of Worrell’s feud with Ron DeSantis, it looked like a battle between a corrupt governor and a social justice-minded elected official. But the truth is that they are both equally corrupt. Moe filed an amicus brief in Worrell’s Florida Supreme Court case against DeSantis to better inform the public who sympathized with her fight against DeSantis, that she was corrupt and incompetent. The brief was stricken without an explanation, probably because the Florida Supreme Court would have to confront their own failures in keeping fake prosecutors, corrupt judges and sneaky lawyers out of the system.
Worrell will be suspended from office on Day 1 of Moe’s Administration, but this time, for her willful participation in a corrupt conspiracy.

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