Home / Full timeline / The U.S. Senate votes to begin impeachment proceedings against District Court Judge Alcee Hastings, the first Black person to be appointed to the federal bench in Florida.
The U.S. Senate votes to begin impeachment proceedings against District Court Judge Alcee Hastings, the first Black person to be appointed to the federal bench in Florida.
1989 (Mar 16)
The U.S. Senate voted to try U.S. District Court Judge Alcee Hastings, the first Black person to be appointed to the federal bench in Florida, on all seventeen articles of impeachment adopted by the U.S. House of Representatives. The senators voted 92-1 to try Hastings on fifteen articles, charging fraud, corruption, and perjury in a 1981 bribery conspiracy case for which he was acquitted in 1983. In voting against the articles, Senator Howard M. Metzenbaum from Ohio said that he felt they had placed Hastings in double jeopardy - the principle in American law that a person cannot be tried twice for the same offense because of the previous acquittal. But Metzenbaum joined fellow senators in a unanimous vote for an article alleging "a pattern of misconduct and its harmful effect on the judiciary." The senate also created a special twelve-member committee to hear testimony and collect evidence before it debated and voted on whether to convict Hastings.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.