Kissimmee Attorney and
Lawyer, providing
experienced Criminal Defense
and Family Law legal
services in Kissimmee,
Orlando, and the Central
Florida area.
For
the first time in 20 years,
Lawson Lamar has a challenger.
Does she have a prayer?
I can see how Lawson Lamar
has developed this God-like
complex,” says Kissimmee
defense attorney Mercedes
Leon. “He’s almighty,
powerful.”
From an electoral
perspective, he certainly
is. For the last 20 years
Lamar, the Orange-Osceola
County state attorney and a
former Orange County
sheriff, has waltzed into
office unopposed. Leon says
that has made him
unaccountable. “He’s lost
perspective on his job
duties,” she says. “And it’s
clear that he’s full of
bogus prosecutions – and I
call them persecutions,
because that’s what it is.”
So Leon, a 45-year-old
Republican, is running
against him. She faces long
odds. Lamar is a
well-entrenched opponent
with widespread name
recognition who has led a
series of high-profile, yet
largely unsuccessful,
prosecutions over the last
couple of years – against
such local luminaries and
institutions as state Sen.
Gary Siplin, talk-show host
Doug Guetzloe, the
Orlando-Orange County
Expressway Authority and
this very newspaper. Lamar,
in fact, has shown little
sign that he takes this
challenge seriously. As of
this writing, he has
declined to participate in
any candidate forums with
Leon.
Indeed, Lamar’s
grandstanding has made
enemies, and Leon says that
she’s gaining traction both
inside and outside her
party. But she’s also
running as the anti-Lamar –
and it’s not entirely clear
that a vote of no confidence
will be enough to propel
Leon into office.
Leon charted a decidedly
different course on her path
to the November ballot.
Ironically enough, as a
young intern in 1996 she
interned for the state
attorney’s office, but says
she left after one month
because of what she calls a
lack of “enthusiasm” or
“passion” under Lamar’s
watch. But Leon’s
hardscrabble biography is
perhaps her best selling
point.
Born with a genetic
disorder, neurofibromatosis,
Leon struggled through her
early years to get around.
The disorder meant that she
was born with virtually
useless feet and had to
undergo 16 surgeries to
restore them, not to mention
withstanding the scrutiny of
her childhood peers.
At 16,
Leon, her brother and her
mother left Cuba to seek the
American dream. She took
housekeeping and waitressing
jobs at the bottom of
Central Florida’s tourist
economy and taught herself
to speak English. By the
time she was 28 (and the
single mother of an
8-year-old), she realized
that, due to her physical
condition, the service jobs
were in fact killing her.
“Our immigrant perspective
is different,” she says.
“The way out is an
education. I said, ‘You’ve
got to get an education.’ I
was a single mom. I never
even got child support. I
went to my side station at
Disney and I told my friends
and they said, ‘Are you
crazy?’?”
That decision set off “seven
and a half years of pure,
enormous sacrifice.” Leon
started school at Valencia
Community College, then went
to the University of Tampa
and finally Stetson Law
School on a $90,000
scholarship. All the while,
she kept her jobs, raised
her kid and “never had a day
off.”
“The only way I was not
becoming a lawyer was if I
died,” she says. “The bottom
line is that I maintained. I
think I knew that
perspective – simple, basic,
elemental perspective – you
don’t have to complicate
things. Always look for the
simplicity.”
Following her brief, failed
foray with Lamar’s office
(to whom she was never
introduced, she says), Leon
took a position at
then-public defender Joe
DuRocher’s office. She
worked under DuRocher for
three years and found his
leadership skills to be
inspirational. “That is the
way it should be,” she says.
“People get passionate about
it. Because then you can
bear 16-hour days and you
don’t care. You do it for
the principle of it. You do
it for the justice of it.”
(She also worked for the
current public defender, Bob
Wesley. He is not supporting
her state attorney bid.)
That passion for justice is
exactly what Lamar is
missing, she says. To
illustrate, she brings up a
recent ruling by a state
appellate court that ripped
Lamar for spending over a
decade trying to seize land
and property under a
racketeering statute because
that property had been
utilized for bingo. “We are
intrigued by the state’s
zealousness in this
prosecution,” the court
said, before strongly
pointing out a section of
the American Bar Association
handbook that reads, “The
duty of the prosecutor is to
seek justice, not merely to
convict.”
Leon suggests that that
particular fumble is just
part of the pattern for
Lamar. “Lawson Lamar
prosecuted Gary Siplin for
the wrongdoing of an
employee that Siplin had no
knowledge of,” she says.
“Knowledge is a very simple,
basic element. You must know
about an illegal activity to
be subject to prosecution,
but if you have no
knowledge, it’s insane.”
Meanwhile, Leon speculates
that all might not be so
well in Lamar’s own house,
questioning his claims of
“diversification” when just
one female bureau chief
carries an unfair workload
of two divisions. More
recently, this January Lamar
showed some gall in
requesting an additional
$5.4 million from the state
to aid in his office’s
workload – this after
he took $514,927 in benefits
from his 2001 retirement
under the state’s Deferred
Retirement Option Program.
In so many words, Lamar is
double-dipping at the public
trough.
“Think about it. This man is
collecting about $20,000 a
month between retirement and
salary,” Leon says. “And yet
he cuts his employees – the
ones in the trenches. These
are people who really need
their paychecks.”
Asked what she would do
differently, Leon stresses
uniformity in plea
bargaining – she considers
the current process of who
gets plea bargains and who
doesn’t haphazard – and more
lenience for first-time
offenders.
“Isn’t the goal to really
make people accountable for
their actions?” she says.
“Not ruin them so they can’t
get jobs later on? Employers
will not hire people that
have a criminal background.
… It’s just a travesty. I’m
so upset, outraged. Maybe
because I come from
communism and I know when
the government can come in
and take over and you have
no recourse. I think that’s
why I feel so strongly about
the issue. I did become an
attorney to help, not to get
rich. I come from everyday.”
The question, though, is how
effective that populism will
be come Nov. 4. Leon’s made
a strong showing at the
(hardly predictive) local
hobnobs, and she’s kept pace
with Lamar financially,
raising $30,000 to his
$40,000. In fact, Lamar has
gone back on his
campaign-finance stance and
launched his own
electioneering communication
organization to get around
donor limits. Lamar’s
excuse? He told the
Sentinel that it was a
move designed to “level the
playing field,” citing
specifically that among
Leon’s contributing
supporters is none other
than Doug Guetzloe, the Ax
the Tax gadfly who was
charged with 14 misdemeanors
over his involvement in the
2006 Winter Park mayoral
campaign. All but one of
those charges were thrown
out.
Leon downplays Guetzloe’s
influence on her campaign.
“Maybe I’m way too simple
for most people,” she says.
“I accept people’s help. I
cannot make it alone. … If
someone has an issue with
Doug Guetzloe, that’s their
issue, not mine.”
Kissimmee Attorney and
Lawyer, providing
experienced Criminal Defense
and Family Law legal
services in Kissimmee,
Orlando, and the Central
Florida area.
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