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SB0006 • 2026

Relief of L.E. by the Department of Children and Families

Relief of L.E. by the Department of Children and Families

Children
Passed Legislature

This bill passed both chambers and reached final enrollment, even if later executive action is not shown here.

Sponsor
Calatayud
Last action
2026-03-05
Official status
Senate - Laid on Table, refer to HB 6507 -SJ 582
Effective date
Upon becom

Plain English Breakdown

The official source material does not provide specific details about how future payments will be made beyond the initial payment and total compensation amount.

Relief for L.E. by the Department of Children and Families

This bill provides financial compensation to L.E., a child who suffered severe injuries due to negligence by the Department of Children and Families, and sets limits on further payments.

What This Bill Does

  • Provides $3,800,000 for compensating L.E. for injuries caused by the Department's negligence.
  • Limits future compensation and attorney fees as part of a settlement agreement.

Who It Names or Affects

  • L.E., who suffered injuries due to negligence by the Department of Children and Families.
  • The Department of Children and Families, which is required to pay compensation.

Terms To Know

Sovereign Immunity
A legal principle that protects government agencies from being sued without their consent.
Settlement Agreement
An agreement between parties to resolve a dispute outside of court.

Limits and Unknowns

  • The bill does not specify how the remaining $3,800,000 will be paid out beyond the initial $200,000.
  • It is unclear if this compensation will fully cover L.E.'s ongoing medical and therapeutic needs.

Bill History

  1. 2026-03-05 Senate

    • Read 2nd time -SJ 582 • Substituted HB 6507 -SJ 582 • Laid on Table, refer to HB 6507 -SJ 582

  2. 2026-03-03 Senate

    • Placed on Calendar, on 2nd reading • Placed on Special Order Calendar, 03/05/26

  3. 2026-03-02 Senate

    • Favorable by- Appropriations; YEAS 17 NAYS 0

  4. 2026-02-25 Senate

    • On Committee agenda-- Appropriations, 03/02/26, 12:00 pm, 110 Senate Building

  5. 2026-02-13 Senate

    • Now in Appropriations

  6. 2026-02-12 Senate

    • Favorable by Appropriations Committee on Health and Human Services; YEAS 9 NAYS 0

  7. 2026-02-09 Senate

    • On Committee agenda-- Appropriations Committee on Health and Human Services, 02/12/26, 2:30 pm, 412 Knott Building

  8. 2026-02-03 Senate

    • Favorable by Judiciary; YEAS 11 NAYS 0 • Now in Appropriations Committee on Health and Human Services

  9. 2026-01-29 Senate

    • Recommendation: Favorable by Special Master on Claim Bills • Now in Judiciary • On Committee agenda-- Judiciary, 02/03/26, 1:00 pm, 110 Senate Building

  10. 2026-01-13 Senate

    • Introduced

  11. 2025-10-06 Senate

    • Referred to Special Master on Claim Bills; Judiciary; Appropriations Committee on Health and Human Services; Appropriations

  12. 2025-08-01 Senate

    • Filed

Official Summary Text

Relief of L.E. by the Department of Children and Families; Providing for the relief of L.E. by the Department of Children and Families; providing an appropriation to compensate L.E. for injuries and damages sustained as a result of the negligence of the department; providing a limitation on compensation and the payment of attorney fees, etc.

CLAIM WITH APPROPRIATION:
$3,800,000

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
Florida Senate
-
2026

(NP) SB 6

By
Senator Calatayud

38-00037-26 20266__
1 A bill to be entitled
2 An act for the relief of L.E. by the Department of
3 Children and Families; providing an appropriation to
4 compensate L.E. for injuries and damages sustained as
5 a result of the negligence of the department;
6 providing a limitation on compensation and the payment
7 of attorney fees; providing an effective date.
8
9 WHEREAS, L.E. was born on July 29, 2019, and, at birth,
10 tested positive for amphetamines, and
11 WHEREAS, L.E.’s biological mother tested positive for
12 amphetamines after the delivery of L.E., and
13 WHEREAS, while at the hospital, L.E.’s biological mother
14 and father engaged in a violent altercation with each other, and
15 WHEREAS, shortly after L.E.’s birth, the Department of
16 Children and Families received two child abuse hotline reports,
17 one alleging intrafamily violence threatening L.E. and the other
18 alleging drug exposure of newborn L.E., and
19 WHEREAS, under s. 39.001, Florida Statutes, the department
20 is charged with the duty of conducting child protective
21 investigations to ensure child safety and prevent further harm
22 to children and owed L.E. a duty to ensure her safety and
23 prevent further harm, and
24 WHEREAS, the department sent a child protective
25 investigator to the hospital to initiate an investigation of the
26 reported abuse, and
27 WHEREAS, the department discovered that L.E.’s mother had a
28 history of substance abuse, untreated mental health issues, and
29 a criminal history involving violence, and
30 WHEREAS, the department discovered that both L.E.’s mother
31 and father had an extensive history of involvement with the
32 department, including, collectively, at least 20 prior child
33 abuse hotline reports, and
34 WHEREAS, one of those prior reports involved egregious
35 abuse of L.E.’s biological father’s other daughter when she was
36 not yet 6 months old, resulting in long-bone fractures, and
37 WHEREAS, the department removed that daughter from the
38 father’s care, and
39 WHEREAS, L.E.’s mother’s other two biological children had
40 previously been removed from her care due to verified child
41 abuse, and
42 WHEREAS, as L.E.’s mother placed her third child for
43 adoption, she was also planning to place L.E. for adoption and
44 made such arrangements before L.E.’s birth, and
45 WHEREAS, shortly after L.E. was born, L.E.’s mother
46 abandoned L.E. at the hospital and, against medical advice, left
47 the hospital with L.E.’s father, and
48 WHEREAS, an adoption specialist arrived at the hospital to
49 visit L.E., and
50 WHEREAS, while L.E. was still in the hospital following her
51 birth, the department determined that L.E. was in “present
52 danger” if left in the care of her parents and that immediate
53 action was necessary to protect L.E. from further abuse or
54 neglect, and
55 WHEREAS, the department contracted with a child welfare
56 agency and, instead of removing L.E. from her parents’ care
57 through a judicial process, the department and its subcontractor
58 developed an out-of-home safety plan to place L.E. with a friend
59 of L.E.’s mother, and
60 WHEREAS, within 3 weeks after that placement, the friend
61 realized that she could no longer care for L.E. and informed the
62 department of this, and
63 WHEREAS, despite a reassessment that established that there
64 was still a “present danger” to L.E. if left in the care of her
65 parents, the department relied upon information from its
66 subcontracted agency, and the joint decision was made to place
67 L.E. into her parents’ care, and
68 WHEREAS, on August 21, 2019, L.E. was placed into her
69 parents’ home, and
70 WHEREAS, on or about September 17, 2019, less than 4 weeks
71 later, the department determined that it would be closing its
72 investigation, despite acknowledging that L.E.’s home situation
73 was volatile and unstable and that L.E.’s mother remained
74 violent and impulsive, and
75 WHEREAS, the subcontractor planned to decrease its
76 monitoring of L.E. and the home upon the department closing its
77 investigation, and
78 WHEREAS, on September 18, 2019, the subcontractor
79 transitioned its services from safety management to nonjudicial
80 in-home services, which inherently decreased monitoring of L.E.
81 by child welfare professionals, and
82 WHEREAS, on September 24, 2019, the department closed its
83 investigation, despite having no evidence of change or progress
84 with L.E.’s parents, and
85 WHEREAS, despite the subcontractor’s claims that it had
86 provided services to the parents, the department expressly
87 acknowledged in its own investigative summary that, at the time
88 of closing its case, “[t]he home environment continues to be
89 volatile and unstable on a normal basis. The fighting in the
90 home will stabilize for a period of time but will always return
91 to a chaotic and aggressive environment... [violent and
92 impulsive behaviors] are clearly evident and severe... there
93 [have] been no clear changes made to their behaviors and the
94 patterns continue... [and] all of the children [including L.E.]
95 are vulnerable,” and
96 WHEREAS, the very next day, on September 25, 2019, L.E. was
97 brought to Rockledge Regional Hospital in distress and
98 experiencing seizures, and
99 WHEREAS, medical staff at Rockledge Regional Hospital found
100 makeup covering obvious bruising across her forehead, and
101 WHEREAS, doctors determined that L.E. had suffered
102 catastrophic injuries from child abuse which had occurred over a
103 period of time, including a parietal calvarial skull fracture; a
104 left frontal parietal subdural hematoma with bilateral frontal,
105 temporal, and parietal cortical edema and encephalomalacia;
106 healing fractures of the left sixth and seventh ribs; a healing
107 fracture of the right eighth rib; acute fractures to the right
108 tenth and eleventh ribs; a pelvic fracture–left acetabular
109 cortical avulsion fracture; cortical buckling of the right
110 proximal tibial medial metaphysis; and multiple ecchymotic
111 lesions to the forehead, and
112 WHEREAS, L.E. was immediately transferred to Nemours
113 Children’s Hospital in Orlando and admitted in critical
114 condition, due to severe organ system injury and dysfunction,
115 and was diagnosed as being at risk for hypoxia, hypercarbia,
116 hypotension, sepsis, shock, cardiorespiratory arrest,
117 intracranial hypertension, cerebral edema, stroke, and death,
118 and
119 WHEREAS, L.E. was diagnosed with shaken baby syndrome
120 causing traumatic brain injury, seizures, and cerebral palsy, as
121 well as malnourishment, and
122 WHEREAS, between August 21, 2019, and September 25, 2019,
123 L.E. was subjected to repeated and severe child abuse and
124 neglect while in the care of her parents, and
125 WHEREAS, L.E.’s parents were arrested, charged, and
126 convicted of aggravated child abuse, based upon their abuse of
127 L.E. while she was in their home between August 21, 2019, and
128 September 25, 2019, and
129 WHEREAS, L.E. was subsequently adopted by her maternal
130 grandmother and relocated to Chicago, where she is followed by a
131 medical team at Lurie Children’s Hospital, and
132 WHEREAS, L.E. has received, and will continue to receive,
133 therapeutic services across a host of disciplines, including
134 occupational, physical, speech, nutritional, vision, and
135 cognitive therapy, and
136 WHEREAS, L.E., who just turned 6 years old, is currently
137 under an individual educational plan at school for her
138 disability, which has been formally classified as traumatic
139 brain injury, and
140 WHEREAS, L.E. requires and will continue to require
141 constant care, monitoring, supervision, various therapies,
142 multiple specialist services, and supportive care throughout the
143 remainder of her life, which may include admission to a skilled
144 residential home if her adoptive parent is no longer able to
145 care for her, and
146 WHEREAS, the department, charged with the responsibility
147 for operating Florida’s child welfare system, failed in its
148 duties to ensure L.E.’s safety and protect her from harm, and
149 WHEREAS, the department’s negligence, in combination with
150 the failures of its subcontracted agency, resulted in
151 catastrophic brain injury that will have a significant impact on
152 L.E. for the remainder of her life, and
153 WHEREAS, the department agreed to resolve L.E.’s claims
154 against the department through a negotiated settlement in the
155 Circuit Court for the 18th Judicial Circuit in and for Brevard
156 County, under case number 05-2022-CA-033685, in the total amount
157 of $4 million, and
158 WHEREAS, the settlement agreement required that the
159 department make an initial payment of $200,000, which is the
160 maximum amount allowed under the sovereign immunity limitations
161 imposed under s. 768.28, Florida Statutes; and that the
162 remaining $3.8 million be paid contingent upon the passage and
163 funding of this claim bill, which the department has expressly
164 agreed it does not and will not oppose, and
165 WHEREAS, on July 9, 2024, the settlement agreement was
166 approved by the circuit court, and, with the department’s
167 agreement and consent, a final judgment was entered against the
168 department in the amount of $4 million pursuant to the
169 negotiated settlement, and
170 WHEREAS, L.E.’s civil claims against the subcontracted
171 child welfare agency remain pending, NOW, THEREFORE,
172
173 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
174
175 Section 1.
The facts stated in the preamble to this act are

176
found and declared to be true.

177 Section 2.
The sum of
$
3.8 million
is appropriated from the

178
General Revenue Fund
to the
Department of Children and Families

179
for the relief of
L.E.
for injuries and damages sustained

as a

180
result of the negligence of the department
.

181 Section 3.
The Chief Financial Officer is directed to draw

182
a warrant in favor of
L.E., payable to the
irrevocable trust

183
which has already been
created for the exclusive use and benefit

184
of
L
.
E.
, in the sum of $
3.8 million
upon funds of the Department

185
of Children and Families in the State Treasury and to pay the

186
same out of such funds in the State Treasury
.

187 Section 4.
The amount paid by the Department of Children

188
and Families pursuant to s. 768.28, Florida Statutes, and the

189
amount awarded under this a
ct are intended to provide the sole

190
compensation for all present and future claims
against the

191
department arising
out of the factual situation described in

192
this act which resulted in injuries a
nd damages to L.E.
The

193
total amount paid for attorney fees relating to this claim

194
against the department
may not exceed 25 percent of the total

195
amount awarded under this act.

196 Section 5. This act shall take effect upon becoming a law.