THE CAPTAIN REPORTS:
SOMETHING VERY FISHY IS GOING ON HERE…
Let’s start with the backstory.
When a judge resigns in the State of Florida, the process for filling that vacancy is governed by the Florida Constitution, Article V (Judiciary), Section 11 (Vacancies), paragraph (c):
“The nominations shall be made within thirty days from the occurrence of a vacancy unless the period is extended by the governor for a time not to exceed thirty days. The governor shall make the appointment within sixty days after the nominations have been certified.”
In practice, the process begins when the Governor receives a judge’s resignation letter. The Governor then directs the local Judicial Nominating Commission (JNC) to accept applications, conduct interviews, and submit a list of three to six nominees. Once certified, the Governor has sixty days to make the appointment.
Now, here’s where things get unusual.
Sometime prior to August 2025, two Miami-Dade County Court judges resigned from the bench:
..... Judge Jason Reding Quinones, who left after being nominated as United States Attorney for the Southern District of Florida, and
..... Judge Yara Klukas, who resigned to become First Assistant United States Attorney under Reding Quinones.
Reding Quinones was sworn in as the U.S. Attorney on August 18, 2025. Klukas followed on September 26, 2025.
Yet—despite those resignations occurring at least eight months ago, and possibly earlier—neither vacancy was filled.
Your Captain Justice began asking questions.
In March, The Captain sent multiple emails to Ryan Newman, General Counsel to Governor DeSantis, and Eliot Pedrosa, Chair of the Eleventh Circuit JNC. I also checked the Governor’s Judicial Appointments website, where resignation letters are typically posted as a matter of public record.
Nothing.
No resignation letters for either judge.
In seven years of tracking Governor DeSantis’ judicial appointments, I have never seen anything like this. Whether this was a clerical oversight or something more remains unclear.
Then, suddenly—as if the Red Sea had parted—on March 29, 2026, the JNC issued an announcement.
The Commission is now accepting applications for vacancies “created by the resignations of Judges Yara Klukas and Jason Reding Quinones”. The announcement also includes vacancies resulting from the retirements of Circuit Court Judges Jose Rodriguez and Marcia Caballero. The application deadline is May 1, 2026.
Which raises the obvious question: what happened during the preceding eight months?
A QUICK REMINDER: THE “NAME GAME”
We previously wrote about Jason Reding Quinones in a December 19, 2023 post titled:
“THE NAME GAME: HERE WE GO AGAIN?!”
You can revisit it here:
We invite you to reread the post and the accompanying Comments.
In that post, we examined the troubling practice of candidates changing their names shortly before applying for judicial office:
Attorney Jason A. Reding—now Jason A. Reding Quinones, according to The Florida Bar—changed his name on December 1, 2023.
He had practiced for more than 15 years as “Jason Reding.” Reding also applied for an open County Court seat to the JNC during that same time. Not coincidentally, December 1, 2023 was also the deadline to apply for multiple open judicial seats in Miami-Dade County.
A NEW LAW ENTERS THE PICTURE
On April 1, 2026, Governor DeSantis signed CS/HB 91 – Candidate Qualification into law.
The statute now provides, in relevant part (F.S. 99.021(4)(c)):
A candidate with no party affiliation must certify that he or she has not legally changed his or her name pursuant to section 68.07 within the 365 days preceding the qualifying period.
Which leads to an interesting hypothetical:
Would the attorney formerly known as Jason Reding have been permitted to run for judicial office under the name “Jason Reding Quinones” under this new law—had he remained on the bench?
Still to come in another post later this week: JUDICIAL ELECTIONS 2026 - UPDATE. Lots of news to report.
Captain4Justice@gmail.com