Prosecutor Stacey Honowitz wants her arrest post removed

We received an email from an attorney requesting we remove a certain post from our website. The post concerned Broward Sex Crimes Prosecutor Stacey Honowitz’s arrest for shoplifting at a Publix Supermarket in 2018. The removal request appears below:

Good Day,

I hope this message finds you well in these trying times. I am writing on behalf of Stacey Honowitz to kindly request the removal of the article published to the above-copied link. The incident, a misunderstanding, is a most embarrassing blemish on Ms. Honowitz’s otherwise pristine record and career. The charge was readily nolle prossed (please see attached). As you can certainly appreciate, the continued publication has caused and continues to cause Ms. Honowitz great distress and damage to her reputation.

Please do not hesitate to reach out should you have any questions. We thank you in advance for your time dedicated to this sensitive matter.

Cordially Yours,

Vanessa McGill

Stacey Honowitz is a sex crimes prosecutor and an advocate for harsher sex offender restrictions. To quote Ms. Honowitz, “Tougher laws [are] needed to protect our kids from sex offenders.”

While we agree with Ms. Honowitz that sexual abuse needs to be prevented, we strongly disagree that tougher laws are needed to protect anyone from persons forced to register as “sex offenders”. The overwhelming majority (95%+) of people on the registry will not re-offend and are trying to live productive lives, yet the continued publication of their information on a public registry prevents them from obtaining employment, housing and other basic needs for themselves and their families.

For most registrants, their crime was a one-time offense and a complete aberration in an otherwise law abiding life. Surely most were guilty, but many were not. Some were wrongfully accused, baited and switched in a sting, or a misunderstanding for which they took a plea decades ago out of convenience and to avoid the risk of jail time without knowing what was to come as far as the registry. Arguably their incidents are also a “most embarrassing blemish” in an “otherwise pristine record” and “the continued publication” of their information on a sex offender registry “has caused and continues to cause” them “great distress and damage”.

So what to do about this request to remove the article? Since the letter came from an attorney who lists one of her areas of practice as defamation cases, the implication is that if we chose not to take down the article we might face a lawsuit. However, the Miami Herald’s story, Veteran Sex-Crimes Prosecutor Accused of Shoplifting is still up. So is the Sun-Sentinel’s coverage. The surveillance footage of her sticking the cosmetic items in her purse and leaving the store has not been taken down. So why should we remove our post?

We did update the story to state that the charges were nolle prossed, but do we need to take down the entire article? Even if the shoplifting incident was unintentional and she simply forgot to pay for the items or mindlessly put them in her purse without realizing, she prosecutes people who unknowingly or unintentionally violate a technical registration rule all the time and even if decades have passed without incident, her office still vigorously opposes petitions for removal from the registry.

It’s very possible that the arrest has given Ms. Honowitz a different perspective and greater empathy for people who “as [she] can certainly appreciate” are suffering great distress and damage from their continued publication on the registry. Or, it’s possible she could care less. We’d like to see where she stands in light of the fact that she’s “kindly requesting” we take down a post.

Frankly we’re impressed that our little forum would even concern her enough to retain an attorney to contact us. But, before we act on the request, we’d really like to hear the thoughts of our membership, so please feel free to share them in the comments below. We’d also love to hear from Ms.Honowitz herself, given the ironic nature of her request. If she would like to be a guest on a future member call, consider this a public invitation.

 


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181 thoughts on “Prosecutor Stacey Honowitz wants her arrest post removed

  • December 11, 2020

    The article should stay. Why should she get preferential treatment?

    Reply
  • December 11, 2020

    I would imagine that a simple correction to the article is all that is needed, otherwise a lawsuit would infringe on the 1st amendment right of public information.

    Reply
  • December 11, 2020

    It should stay up. I don’t care about her reputation – professional or personal. If she was arrested its public information, just the same as the rest of us, and no reason to pull it from the site. The truth is the defense for any suit. And that would mean more publicity; the last thing she would want.

    Reply
  • December 11, 2020

    HaHa! Do I detect a hint of elitist privilege here? Welcome to the club! Maybe we should start a Shoplifter’s Registry for people like this. Enjoy the limelight.

    Reply
  • December 11, 2020

    I think you should keep the post alive and promote it.

    I think the public has a right to know that she was lawfully accused of a crime. The fact that the prosecutor dismissed the charge does not mean she is innocent. It merely means that she had influence over the prosecutor. She should be required to prove her innocence (as she requires accused persons to prove their innocence) before the post is taken down. That is only fair to the public. The public needs to know that she was accused of a crime of moral turpitude so that the public can evaluate her credibility.

    As a former prosecutor, I think that it is appropriate for her to respect the public’s need to know about her misdeeds and prior bad acts.

    Reply
    • December 15, 2020

      I agree, 100%.

      Reply
  • December 11, 2020

    Just another hypocrite.
    She holds the power to ruin others lives…and uses it.
    Let her feel the shame the same way she would have others feel it.
    Do NOT take down the post.

    Reply
    • December 11, 2020

      CR you nailed it…hypocrite. She thought her privileged title/money/status would get her off if caught and it did to a degree. Don’t know her but maybe she is the type that likes “risk”, taking a chance. She obviously had the money to pay for the cosmetics. I imagine the only “sorrow” she is capable of is that she got caught. Let it stand…..she did it and can spend her life explaining “the misunderstanding”…..

      Reply

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