← Judge registry
Paul A. Damico
County JudgepublishedFIFTEENTH Judicial Circuit · Palm Beach County · County Criminal — Div. D/DR
Division procedures — 0 requirement card(s)
No procedure cards extracted yet for this judge. The division-procedure pipeline processes the monitored official pages circuit by circuit — cards land here with provenance as they are extracted.
Practice rules & preferences (3)
ported from the BenchPath card libraryJudge-specific practice cards — page limits, proposed-order formats, hearing mechanics — with the verification metadata exactly as recorded in that system (never upgraded here).
Defense Continuances Must Attach a Speedy-Trial Waiver — Division D/DR
Case ManagementD/DR — County Criminal Division D/DRhigh confidenceAttach a waiver of speedy trial to every defendant/defense motion for continuance in Division D/DR.
15th Jud. Cir. / PBC County Court, Division D/DR Divisional Instructionsofficial source ↗
Orders: Word-Only via OLS, ADA 12-Point Font, Subject-Matter Titles — Division D/DR
Judge PreferencesD/DR — County Criminal Division D/DRhigh confidenceSubmit all proposed orders directly through OLS in Word format only. Use "DONE and ORDERED in Palm Beach County, Florida," include all parties' names and addresses, put the subject matter in the title of every order or judgment, and format with at least 1-inch margins in 12-point ADA-accessible font.
15th Jud. Cir. / PBC County Court, Division D/DR Divisional Instructionsofficial source ↗
Agreed Orders Need a New Agreed Court Date — Blank Dates Get Rejected — Division D/DR
Proposed OrdersD/DR — County Criminal Division D/DRhigh confidenceEvery agreed order must reference the parties' agreement and include a new agreed court date. Do not leave the court date blank — the order will be rejected. Motions to Recall Capias set Monday/Tuesday/Thursday 9:30 a.m., defendant present unless stipulated.
15th Jud. Cir. / PBC County Court, Division D/DR Divisional Instructionsofficial source ↗
Procedures, not predictions: TrialVector reports what the division requires — never what a judge will decide.