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Jackson Says She Will Continue To Fight Freeman’s City Council Appointment

Brenda Priestly Jackson and Terrance Freeman.
Brenda Priestly Jackson's Facebook page and the Florida Times-Union
Brenda Priestly Jackson and Terrance Freeman.

Brenda Priestly Jackson, an attorney and a former Duval County School Board member, is vowing to continue her fight against City Councilman Terrance Freeman's appointment by Governor Rick Scott, despite a judge dismissing her lawsuit.

The lawsuit was dismissed Wednesday by a Duval County Circuit Judge.

Freeman was appointed by Scott in July to replace City Councilman Reginald Brown, who, along with Councilwoman Katrina Brown, was suspended after being indicted on federal fraud charges. Ju’Coby Pittman, who was also appointed by Gov. Scott, took over for Katrina Brown.

The lawsuit was filed by Jackson, one of many who applied to replace Reginald Brown. She alleged that Scott appointed Freeman before he officially became a resident of District 10, which he now represents.

She asked the judge to declare Freeman’s appointment unlawful and to remove him from office.

Freeman said that his family moved from his Mandarin home to District 10 in Northwest Jacksonville on July 10, the day that he was appointed by Scott. Freeman was sworn in on July 12.

Circuit Judge Waddell Wallace III wrote that the court had no jurisdiction to determine whether Freeman was qualified to be appointed by Gov. Scott. But Jackson disagrees, so she plans to file a motion for reconsideration.

"I have a great respect and admiration for Judge Wallace," Jackson said. "As a family law attorney I have had the opportunity to practice in front of him several times through the years. He does not believe that the court has jurisdiction to hear this matter, in terms of questioning the governor's appointment authority. I greatly disagree with that, with all due respect. If a citizen, which is who I am, a Joe Blow citizen of Duval County, is questioning the actions of a governor, who else but a court of competent jurisdiction from the state is in a position to evaluate the merits of the governor's action? Where else would I go? Who else would be able to decide it?"

If her motion for reconsideration isn't granted, she plans to bring the case before the City Council, where Judge Waddell said Freeman's eligibility should be decided.

And Jackson warns if that happens, Freeman's eligibility may be decided by some of the people who recommended his appointment in the first place.

More on this story from our Florida Times-Union news partner is available here.

Brendan Rivers can be reached at brivers@wjct.org, 904-358-6396 or on Twitter at @BrendanRivers.

Special Projects Producer Brendan Rivers joined WJCT News in August of 2018 after several years as a reporter and then News Director at Southern Stone Communications, which owns and operates several radio stations in the Daytona Beach area.