CONNECT WITH:

Florida Bulldog
Matt Gaetz

By Noreen Marcus, FloridaBulldog.org

The Florida Bar downplayed a congressional finding that Matt Gaetz, President Trump’s first choice for U.S. Attorney General, committed statutory rape before it abandoned his prosecution.

Within the space of two months last year, a Bar grievance committee took preliminary steps toward investigating Gaetz, then used an unorthodox excuse to avoid following through, his Bar file shows. The file, which under Bar rules will disappear from public view within months, was released last week at Florida Bulldog’s request.

“It’s an embarrassment to the legal profession and I think the Florida Bar should be embarrassed because for the system to be respected, it has to be applied evenhandedly,” said Lisa Lerman, professor of law emerita at The Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C. Lerman agreed to review the Gaetz Bar file for Florida Bulldog.

Roughly the top half of the 70-page file is a report by a bipartisan U.S. House Ethics Committee that concludes the now-former Republican congressman took illegal drugs and paid women, at least one who was underage, for sex for more than three years. The report recaps the committee’s investigation that derailed Gaetz’s wild ride that let him off short of becoming U.S. Attorney General.

The committee report cites “substantial evidence” that Gaetz committed statutory rape under Florida law by having sex with a 17-year-old girl (“Victim A” in the report) in July 2017, when he was 35. “Representative Gaetz denied the allegation but refused to testify under oath. He has publicly stated that Victim A ‘doesn’t exist,’” the report says.

Still, a Florida Bar grievance committee tasked with examining Gaetz’s actions apparently took a quick look and found no reason to confront the former congressman from Niceville in the Panhandle.

matt gaetz
Fort Walton Beach attorney Casey Pless Waterhouse

The committee’s May 12 decision to close the Gaetz case without actually opening it “was not based upon a determination that the [House] report’s findings were not accurate,” grievance committee chair Casey Pless Waterhouse wrote to Gaetz on Aug. 15. Waterhouse is a family lawyer in Fort Walton Beach, a city in Gaetz’s Panhandle-area congressional district.

And yet the committee chose to focus on a comment that clarifies a rule about lawyer misconduct. The comment “draws a distinction between offenses of personal morality or alleged crimes which do not have a connection to fitness for the practice of law or otherwise indicate characteristics relevant to law practice,” Waterhouse wrote.

In other words, the committee decided an allegation of statutory rape wasn’t reason enough for the Bar to take on Gaetz because statutory rape has nothing to do with being a lawyer. This defense had been pitched by Gaetz’s lawyer Warren Lindsey, according to the Bar file.

ETHICS EXPERTS DISCREDIT DEFENSE

New York University law professor Stephen Gillers, an expert on legal ethics, told Florida Bulldog thathe’s never seen a disciplinary opinion about statutory rape. “Nonetheless, if proved, that conduct could and would justify some sanction depending on the facts,” he wrote in response to emailed questions.

Asked whether “this doesn’t relate to the practice of law” usually works as a defense, Gillers responded, “No.”

“Lawyers are often sanctioned for conduct having nothing to do with law practice: e.g., failure to pay child support, hit and run, felony-level drug possession, convictions of tax crimes or drunk driving, violence against partners or spouses, dishonesty in business, etc.,” he wrote.

D.C. law professor Lerman, who has studied legal ethics for 40 years, said misconduct doesn’t have to be established in court to be actionable. “Ethics regulators have imposed discipline for allegations of criminality that have not been charged or adjudicated,” she said.

Lerman said lawyers, especially those in government service, should be held to a high standard. “The lawyer disciplinary authorities expect members of the Bar to be law-abiding citizens, so transgressions can lead to discipline even if the alleged conduct has not led to criminal charges or convictions,” she said.

One would never know all that from the Bar grievance committee’s Aug. 15 “letter of advice” to Gaetz, which reads like the gentle guidance of an indulgent parent. The letter assures him the letter itself “does not constitute a disciplinary record against you for any purpose” while appealing to his better angels.

“You are urged, in the strongest terms, to reflect on your responsibilities as an officer of the court. The committee hopes as a result of this letter that you are reminded of the required ethical obligations and that you make a renewed commitment to the core principles in the Oath of Attorney and Creed of Professionalism,” the letter says.

“Never forget that ‘a lawyer is a lawyer is a lawyer’ and you do not take that hat off regardless of what other roles you may fulfill,” says the letter signed by committee chair Waterhouse. She did not respond to Florida Bulldog’s emailed questions.

matt gaetz
Winter Park attorney Warren Lindsey

The Supreme Court of Florida created The Florida Bar as its investigating arm to enforce the standards of ethical conduct of lawyers. If discipline is found to be warranted, it can range from an admonishment to suspension from the practice of law to disbarment.

MATT GAETZ HAS ZERO CONVICTIONS

Now Gaetz works as an anchor for the Trump-and-MAGA-boosting One America News Network. He and his Bar defense lawyer Lindsey, of Winter Park, did not respond to a Florida Bulldog request for comment.

Gaetz hasn’t been convicted of or charged with any crime. The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) investigated him for sex trafficking along with his associate Joel Greenberg, a former Seminole County tax collector. Eventually Greenberg pleaded guilty to sex trafficking and the DOJ ended its Gaetz probe.

The House Ethics Committee’s inquiry didn’t result in charges, either. But commentators agree it cost Gaetz the Attorney General post because of the breadth and specificity of the committee’s work and report.

Notably, the report contains precise details about the encounter between Gaetz and “Victim A,” the unidentified 17-year-old girl at the center of the statutory rape claim, at a party in a private home in Heathrow, near Orlando, on July 15, 2017—six months after his election to Congress. Gaetz resigned from Congress in 2024 shortly after Trump said he planned to nominate him to be U.S. Attorney General.

The committee wrote that evidence showed Gaetz had sex at the party with multiple women, including the 17-year-old girl, and paid all of them. The teenager testified she took ecstasy and Gaetz used cocaine.

Matt Gaetz categorically denied that he paid women for sex or used illegal drugs. He refused to discuss Victim A with the committee but questioned her existence in forums where he couldn’t perjure himself. In public statements Gaetz continually disparaged the investigation and accused committee members of playing politics.

“You ask, in part, whether I’ve had sex with a list of adult women over the past seven years. The lawful, consensual, sexual activities of adults are not the business of Congress,” Gaetz told the committee.

GAETZ IS A-OK IN FLORIDA

Compared to his battle royale with the House committee, Gaetz’s dealings with the Florida Bar were a walk in the Everglades.

Santa Rosa Beach attorney Aaron White

The Florida Supreme Court has adopted rules that shield government officials from Bar scrutiny as long as they hold office. So state ethics regulators couldn’t touch Gaetz until he resigned from Congress and lost his chance to become the nation’s chief law enforcement officer.

Then popular demand back home ignited the Gaetz disciplinary process. The Florida Bar received “numerous inquiries and expressions of concern” about Matt Gaetz “as a legislator, and by extension, as an attorney,” the Aug. 15 grievance committee letter says.

Gaetz’s Bar file contains no evidence the committee investigated him. Attorney Aaron White of Santa Rosa Beach was tapped as “investigating member,” but the file suggests he did nothing beyond agreeing to meet with Gaetz’s new lawyer Lindsey.

That was in late March. Yet by May 12, mere weeks after White and Lindsey discussed meeting, committee members had decided they knew enough about Gaetz to remove him from their agenda.

Florida Bulldog tried to find out what happened, but White and others in a position to know didn’t respond to requests for information.

Former Florida Bar president Henry “Hank” Coxe, a Jacksonville lawyer who, early on, arranged with the Bar for Matt Gaetz to have more time to find a lawyer, told Florida Bulldog, “no comment.”

The written record of Gaetz’s brief brush with the Florida Bar will disappear from the public domain later this year. After a case is closed without producing charges, the Bar preserves the case file for one year, then destroys it. When an investigation results in charges, the Bar opens the case file to the public and it’s retained.

If Gaetz were to resume practicing law in Florida, potential clients could be directed to his public-facing Florida Bar listing. It says that Matthew Louis Gaetz II is an attorney in good standing with a clean 10-year disciplinary history.

Support Florida Bulldog

If you believe in the value of watchdog journalism, please make your tax-deductible contribution today.

We are a 501(c)(3) organization. All donations are tax deductible.

Join Our Email List

Email
*

First Name

Last Name

Florida Bulldog delivers fact-based watchdog reporting as a public service that’s essential to a free and democratic society. We are nonprofit, independent, nonpartisan, experienced. No fake news here.


Comments

14 responses to “Florida Bar lets Matt Gaetz off the hook by agreeing statutory rape has nothing to do with practicing law”

  1. We have surely earned the name “FloriDUH.” Our State government, from the top down, takes care of its own. The rest of us have no say. No expanded Medicaid for the neediest among us. No projected path for correcting the disaster that is the FloriDUH homeowners’ insurance system. No action taken when a $10 mil reimbursement for medicare overcharges was diverted to the governor’s fight against amendments 3 and 4 in the 2024 election. No standards required for the “public” charter schools, many run by relatives of elected FloriDUH officials. All proposals for new laws, (as well as many, many old ones), protect the pocketbooks of law enforcement personnel, to hell with regular citizens, even Fire Department employees. Matt Gaetz is a true FloriDUH Man. Unaffected by his misdeeds, he continues to wander the state with his perpetual adolescent activities. Daddy is always close by, eliminating the consequences that his behavior deserves. Voters, please, KNOW the candidates who have earned your vote, and then cast your vote for those folks.

  2. OK, great, another piece railing against a Republican, this time Matt Gaetz, who, in truth, probably deserves it.

    But when are you going to report with the same intensity on the unethical, corrupt, and in some cases criminal behavior within the Democratic Party? Everyone knows it exists. The problem isn’t ignorance, it’s that their supporters don’t care, and much of the media has chosen activism over journalism.

  3. Soviet Communist doctrinal “whataboutism” just above. The “unnamed they” go unpunished as a “balance” against the Florida Bar’s contemptible malfeasance where Gaetz is concerned? Really? “Communist methods” are bad until they’re useful? The State Supreme Court’s policy can also be called “encouraging lawyer criminals to run for office.” It worked for our governor and his then AG respecting insurrection involvement, and now its working for Gaetz. This state bar is useless. “Law is for thee, but not for me.” The small fry get its blanket parties, while the noxious “luminaries” get a pass. So much for setting an example. It’s just another species of true, factual corruption. It isn’t forgivable. This bar needs to be completely dismantled and reconstructed. It needs to be separated entirely from our Florida Supreme Court of empty, noisome dessicated husks hanging on a ossuary wall, all grateful tools of a criminal executive. If it’s going to be an essentially criminal organization, then be candid with the public it constantly trumpets its “duty” to, and call it a criminal organization. If it’s going to be run like a mob lawyers’ operation, then just call it a mob lawyer operation. It’s demoralizing enough to be in Florida anymore, and watch its social, legal disintegration in all quarters. With every outrage like this one, it only grows more demoralizing.

  4. Thank you, Dewey. You more than balanced out for the lack of common sense from the preceding commenter. The idea that we cannot investigate or even speak truth to power is so unbalanced and unAmerican that it might have as well be written by Aleksandr Dugin.

  5. Little wonder that the Florida Bar has joined Texas in seceding from bar oversight by the American Bar Association. Disgusting!

  6. Note that the ABA accreditation comes from a different organization than the ABA.

  7. The Florida Bar is essentially a mafia organization. I filed a complaint regarding death threats (with multiple pieces of evidence) made by a Polk County attorney, who I even successfully had a court-ordered injunction for protection against. This attorney already had previous restraining orders from others who he had also threatened to kill and was/is considered a laughingstock among the local legal community. I humiliated him in court during the order for protection hearing, during which the judge openly berated him and told him he didn’t believe a single word he said. Still, the Florida Bar protected him and swept the entire issue under the rug.

  8. […] Florida Bar lets Matt Gaetz off the hook by agreeing statutory rape has nothing to do with practicin… The Florida Bar downplayed a congressional finding that Matt Gaetz, President Trump’s first choice for U.S. Attorney General, committed statutory rape before it abandoned his prosecution. […]

  9. So anyone who is arrested for statutory rape should hire Gaetz to represent them because if it’s acceptable for him to rape underage girls I guess it’s ok for anyone to do it. Disgusting!

  10. Let’s look at the REAL problem here! It’s NOT about being a Democrat or Republican, it’s about yet another Florida Lawyer being PROTECTED by the so-called “disciplinary” branch of the Florida Bar! Any non-lawyer citizen who has ever filed a valid Bar Complaint against an errant Florida lawyer, with full supporting evidence included, only to have their Complaint SUMMARILY DISMISSED, knows EXACTLY what I’m talking about! The State Bar is the most CORRUPT, SELF-SERVING organization ever to DISGRACE the Florida legal industry! The Florida JQC runs a close second! There’s a reason WHY Florida is known as the FRAUD AND CORRUPTION CAPITAL OF THE UNITED STATES…and the Florida Bar is a quintessential example!

  11. Some excellent comments, but, I fear the root of the problem is folks voting along Party lines, rather than for the most competent candidate in the race. Until our voters get sick of the same old-same old, nothing will change. Look at the people in power in Florida. If that doesn’t scare you, you’re not ready for a change.

  12. […] In a letter dated August 15, 2025, Casey Pless Waterhouse, chair of the grievance committee, stated that the decision to close the case was “not based upon a determination that the [House] report’s findings were not accurate.” Instead, the committee emphasized a distinction between personal moral offenses and those that impact one’s professional capabilities. Waterhouse noted that the committee “draws a distinction between offenses of personal morality or alleged crimes which do not have a connection to fitness for the practice of law or otherwise indicate characteristics relevant to law practice.” ([floridabulldog.org](https://www.floridabulldog.org/2026/01/florida-bar-lets-matt-gaetz-off-hook-says-statutory-rape-has-…)) […]

  13. William Pincus Avatar

    As part of The Florida Bar’s requirements for admission, there is an extensive background check of one’s “character.” Whether breaking the law in numerous ways (statutory rape, drug use) reflects on “the practice of law” it certainly reflects on one’s character. And for those who will be quick to respond that Gaetz hasn’t been convicted of those offenses, the mere charging of a felony is sufficient to permit the Bar to suspend your license to practice. Clearly Gaetz received “special” treatment.
    He is a stain on the Florida Bar. Shame on everyone who is complicit in allowing him to keep his license.

  14. Big mystery about the alleged ‘Victim A’ who has never filed a complaint or to anyone’s knowledge even exists. This was a hard take down of one of Florida’s biggest political stars, Matt Gaetz. Since these bogus charges have been dismissed it would only be fair to have Mr. Gaetz get back in the business of representing Florida.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *