One South Florida man took on city hall over disability access. He lost in court but also won.

Ironically, it was his weakening condition that would launch Karantsalis on what would prove a Herculean task — a one-man battle against his own city to improve disability access. He lost the legal battle but also won the bigger war, if at a cost….

But there were obstacles to getting to the pool. It was difficult to navigate the sidewalk and curb in front of his house, which fronts a busy street that leads to Miami Springs Senior High School. He noticed the absence of handicap parking spaces at the pool complex, a city tennis facility and other public places, as well as on the main street in front of city hall, the public works department and a police substation….

Undeterred, Karantsalis reached out to a longtime friend, ADA advocate Matthew Dietz, a professor at the disability law clinic at the Nova Southeastern University College of Law. Thanks to Dietz, his ADA lawsuit regained traction in 2021 when a federal appeals court found that the statute of limitations had not yet expired in the case. It was set for trial in Miami federal court.

For more, go to the herald database at the Sherman Library or in  the Miami Herald

The hunt for Alejandro Suarez: A Miami man decided to move out. A massive uproar ensued.

BY CAROL MARBIN MILLER AND OMAR RODRÍGUEZ ORTIZ – OCTOBER 06, 2022

On July 4, Independence Day, Alejandro Suarez packed his laptop, camera and some clothes into a book bag. He placed a handwritten note in the glove box of his blue Honda Civic and left the car in the parking lot of a Kendall church. He then hopped a Greyhound bus to Chicago to begin a new life. “I refuse to be helpless,” he wrote. “Be assured I am safe.” Odalys Heredia, the 20-year-old’s mother, wanted him back. She filed a report with Miami-Dade police saying Suarez was missing and endangered. She told news reporters Suarez functions at the level of a small child due to a diagnosis of autism in his childhood. And that he was friendless, and largely helpless. To authorities, she and her sister, Suarez’s aunt, offered a more outlandish sounding theory: that he may have been abducted by a dangerous band of transgender individuals seeking to harvest and sell his body organs.

For more, go to this article on Lexis or in the Miami Herald

 

 

 

Daily Business Review – From Park Avenue Penthouse to Puppy Pit: Miami Lawyer Matthew Dietz Won’t Stop Advocating

Rachel Lean – Sept. 13 2019

Miami civil rights attorney Matthew W. Dietz has spent 20 years stepping on toes by pushing the envelope on Florida’s Americans with Disabilities policies.

But it wasn’t the path his parents had expected him to follow.

Dietz grew up in a penthouse apartment on Park Avenue in New York City, attending the same private school that now-disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein later bought and converted into a mansion. Dietz was seemingly destined to continue the family insurance adjusting business.

But there was one problem: He couldn’t stand it.

Family politics and business were a difficult mix, in Dietz‘s veiw. And he’d met Deborah, his future wife, at Boston university.

“As the baby of three children, my parents were not that excited that I had a serious girlfriend that moved back to New York with me, and even less happy when I got engaged,” he said.

Dietz left the family business to elope with Deborah and attend law school, unfortunately sparking a rift between him and his parents that lasted years.

Enter Brooklyn Law School, which Dietz says transformed him from a “hardcore conservative to a hardcore liberal.” He volunteered for the Center for Constitutional Rights and became secretary of the Fourth Amendment committee of the American Civil Liberties Union.

Dietz had assumed knowing criminal procedure mattered most, until one ACLU leader explained their long and honored tradition of disagreeing with the U.S. Supreme Court.

“I thought that was so damn cool, that you could say we could disagree and we could make change, not withstanding what the law says,” Dietz said. “And that stuck with me. To say, ‘OK, the law says this, but I could change it.'”

ADA law wasn’t on the curriculum in the 1990s, so Dietz hadn’t heard of it until he joined a Florida insurance defense firm. In a rare plaintiffs case, he represented a woman who had gotten her arm trapped in a Carnival Cruise Line elevator door while using a walker.

Cruise ships weren’t compliant with the ADA in 1998, when Dietz met quadriplegic attorney Edward Resnick, founder of Access Now Inc.

And Resnick had an idea.

“He was like, ‘Why don’t you sue Carnival to make all their ships accessible?’ I was so incredibly stupid, I thought it was a great idea,” Dietz said. “I was a masochist for thinking I could go against the biggest cruise line in the world.”

Dietz brought a groundbreaking class action lawsuit against Carnival, which settled in 2001.

‘Truth is I never really made a profit’

Dietz fell ill in 2000 with acute pancreatitis, but an epiphany came from his three-month hospital stay: he’d create a law firm for people with disabilities.

“I went out to the Center for Independent Living, and I wanted to meet people in the community and see what their issues were,” Dietz said. “The problems were a lot of their bread-and-butter issues: going to see a doctor, getting transportation, getting accessible housing.”

Dietz soon found that more than 50% of Fair Housing cases were disability-related and took on a case for the HOPE Fair Housing Center  involving families blocked from living at a development because they had more than one child per room. He sought an injunction and now represents all Fair-Housing organizations in Florida.

Attitude is the biggest roadblock to accommodations, Dietz says, as people resist change.

“If it doesn’t harm anybody else, what’s the big deal? And if you really can’t think of a big deal, then it’s usually not,” Dietz said.

Dietz‘s  firm merged with his nonprofit organization Disability Independence Group in 2014.

“People always ask me, why do I want to be a nonprofit? And the truth is, I never really made a profit beforehand,” Dietz quipped.

President and CEO of HOPE in Miami and Broward Keenya Robertson described Dietz as fierce and focused-the only attorney she’s worked with who has injected himself everywhere the Fair Housing movement went.

“[Dietz] walked away from certain privileges and advantages that he may have had, given his family ties and wealth, to pursue something that he truly believes in,” Robertson said. “He’s that attorney that will go to the mat for you.”

Stephen Hunter Johnson served as opposing counsel in one housing-discrimination case in which Dietz‘s approach to resolving the suit was “unyielding,” but never unreasonable, geared at educating, instead of penalizing defendants.

“Matt’s the type of lawyer that will make you on other side care about the issues and the things he’s advocating for,” Johnson said.

‘He has a name’
black man lying in the street with his hands up while a man is sitting next to him with a toy truck

Dietz represented someone whom the media often described as “the autistic man with his caretaker Charles Kinsey,” who was shot in 2016 by Miami-Dade police, despite being unarmed.

“The first thing I said is, ‘He has a name. His name is Arnaldo Eliud Rios-Soto,'” Dietz said. “Because the first thing they do is they dehumanize persons with disabilities. They’re invisible, and that’s what allows the state to put them into nursing homes, or put them into other places and shut them away like potted plants.”

Dietz holds a monthly supper social for young adults with developmental disabilities. He hopes to get more people with disabilities into law, believing stigma won’t end until everyone has a seat at the table.

His office is dotted with photos of his son Max, who’s in law school and “much smarter” than him, according to the attorney. Max, who’s autistic, majored in psychology and is conducting a rare study analyzing how autistic people respond to moral dilemma questions.

“There’s always been this misconception that people with autism have a lack of empathy, and he said that’s not so,” Dietz said.

A self-professed “bar junkie,” Dietz negotiated a confidential settlement in March with the Florida Bar Board of Examiners over claims its admissions process was unfair to applicants with a history of mental health or substance abuse problems. Now the board’s changed its rules, Dietz plans to challenge other bar rules he believes create a second class for lawyers with disabilities.

Miles A. McGrane III, former president of the Florida Bar and member of the Florida Board of Bar Examiners, said Dietz has “more exuberance than I’ve ever seen in any lawyer.”

“He worked with the board to improve it, worked against the board when he thought we were wrong,” McGrane said. “But he always did it in a way that you were never offended, even when he was on the other side.”

Dietz‘s desk is furnished with dog treats, as he brings his dog Lucy to work with him. He says he gets at least two calls a week about emotional support animals.

“If it makes life a little bit better, and life is so hard, why not?” he said.

Dietz is also chair of the bar’s animal law section-a position he refused to accept unless he could get a puppy pit, designed to help bar convention attendees relax.

“That was phenomenal,” Dietz said. “I had everybody there hugging dogs, holding dogs. My opposing counsel that had never smiled before at me would smile when I put a dog in her arms. It’s amazing what a puppy could do.”

Dietz introduced goat yoga to the 2019 convention and is pushing for it to qualify for continuing legal education credits.

Win or lose, Dietz said there’s no case he wouldn’t take again.

“They are very few professions where you really do have power,” he said. “And what I view my power as is to give people the power. I give people that believe they are absolutely powerless as much power as the state government. It’s an honor that I’m able to do that.”

NSU Newsroom – Professor Takes the Offense in Defense of Those with Disabilities

If you’re looking for a crusader for justice when it comes to disability and accessibility, NSU Professor Matthew Dietz has the credentials. Since 2022, Dietz has been the clinical director of the Disability Inclusion and Advocacy Law Clinic in NSU’s Shepard Broad College of Law. His commitment to defending those with disabilities runs deep.

Throughout his life, Dietz has struggled with his own disability: a stutter.

“Because of my stutter, I was relentlessly teased, even by family,” he said. “I was embarrassed and tried to hide it as best I could. I carried over my own feelings about myself and my own disability to how I felt and how I treated others.”

Dietz defied opinion when he was told he couldn’t do certain things because of his speech impediment. He used the words of naysayers to motivate him to become a trial lawyer.

While he was studying at Brooklyn Law School, Dietz said, he was told there was no way he could ever become a trial attorney. Undeterred, Dietz was eventually selected for the school’s moot court team.

“It was one of my proudest achievements,” he said. “At that time, my wife Debbie bought me a framed poster with a dog seated at a table, eating a fancy dinner with a glass of red wine.  The caption reads, ‘Every dog has his day.’ It hangs in my office at the clinic today.”

Norman Rockwell print with the text "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you" with peoples of all different colors, religions, and nationalities.
The Norman Rockwell that hangs in his office

Another inspirational piece of artwork that hangs in his office Norman Rockwell’s “Golden Rule.” The print depicts people from various cultures, religions and ethnicities who infuse the golden rule in their beliefs. “Do Unto Others as You Would Have Them Do Unto You,” it reads.

Dietz arrived at NSU in summer 2022, after two friends working at the clinic invited him to visit. Since coming to the campus and working with students here, Dietz says the opportunity has been so enjoyable he doesn’t mind his long drive from his home in Miami. He works with a legal clinic’s contingent of 10 students, but he is hoping to grow that number in the future.

Among their activities, he and his students work on discrimination cases, work with families on guardian advocacy matters and form collaborations with other colleges and divisions within NSU.

“My overarching goal of the clinic is to ensure that the college produces students who are competent to practice on day one,” he said. “My hope is that the connection between pure lecture classes and practice with actual clients ‘click’ and students can apply the law to real-life facts.”

Dietz began his career in the 1990s as an insurance defense lawyer, where he received his first exposure to inaccessibility claims and disability law, which was in its infancy as a law practice area. While handling a case, Dietz was referred to noted Miami attorney Edward Resnick. Resnick, a quadriplegic who contracted polio in 1954, grew frustrated with a lifetime of barriers to everyday access and forced businesses to adhere to the Americans with Disabilities Act when it became enforceable in the 1990s.

Prof. DIetz in a brown jacket and blue shirt being interviewed with a cameraman and a reporter who is wearing glasses and a black suit.
NBC 6 investigative reporter Tony Pipitone interviews Professor Dietz for a story on medically fragile children.

“Resnick opened my eyes to how others see a world that is inequitable by design and how disability rights laws were developed to create equity,” Dietz said. “When I went out on my own in 2001, I became more involved in the disability community in South Florida and discovered for myself the wide range of issues and inequity that people with disabilities deal with daily.”

In 2001, Dietz immersed himself in the Florida Bar’s efforts for diversity and inclusion and pressed to include disability into the definition of diversity. Eventually, he and his wife formed Disability Independence Group, a non-profit dedicated to advocating for increased opportunities for people with disabilities, primarily in the legal system.

Over the past 25 years, Dietz has handled hundreds of cases and been involved in more than 350 decisions. During that time, his disdain for civil rights indignities has grown.

“Most civil rights cases involving persons with disabilities are the result of carelessness, ignorance, indifference or thoughtlessness,” he said. “Once you see the inequity, you can’t ‘unsee it.’  I can’t go into a bathroom and not look at the grab bars in the accessible toilet stall or the fixtures on the sink. I scoff when I go to a large presentation and there is not a closed captioning on a screen.”

two men speaking with each other with a microphone on the table.
WPLG 10 investigative reporter Jeff Weinsier interviews Professor Dietz on a story involving a person illegally selling handicapped car tags.

Among Dietz’s most notable cases:

  • From 2012 to 2016, he represented several families and children who were medically fragile and were in nursing homes or at risk of being placed in nursing homes. The U.S. Department of Justice filed suit against the state of Florida, and in 2023 received a judgment requiring the state to provide adequate services to medically fragile children.
  • About 20 years ago, he forged an agreement in which all of Carnival Corporation’s vessels had to become physically accessible to persons with disabilities.
  • In a series of cases, he represented Deaf patients against hospitals that denied ASL interpreters to develop the standard of “effective communication” in which is required for medical personnel to provide to Deaf patients.

Dietz notes that in addition to working with “eager and smart students,” the biggest benefit of coming to NSU is the opportunity to be in a college of law that is part of a larger university that provides interdisciplinary opportunities.

“Being a lawyer is not an end unto itself, it is a means to an end,” he said. “We live in a society where those who serve people with disabilities need to have an understanding of the law and the remedies that ensure jobs, housing, education or other benefits. Lawyers play a crucial role of facilitating that understanding and ensuring that these benefits are carried out.”

Help me Howard – Condo won’t accommodate renovation of elevator for resident in wheelchair (until the DIAL Clinic intervened)

picture of 8 perople on a couch and a person using a wheelchair in the middle
Winter 2023 DIAL students and professors with our client, Alejandro Lutin
WSVN News Help Me Howard segment came to the DIAL clinic when it could not assist Mr. Lutin, who is a paraplegic and uses a wheelchair for mobility, when his condominium association was going to turn off the elevator for several weeks. This would have trapped Mr. Lutin in his home. The DIAL clinic snatched loitering VLC student Alexander Lumley and he and Professor Talhia Rangel drafted a complaint and preliminary injunction to file in federal court. The proposed complaint and injunction were sent to the association’s lawyers, and they agreed to delay any modification until the end of Mr. Lutin’s lease.   The story was on the Help Me Howard segment on March 17, 2023.

NSU Newsroom – Reporter Follows Up with Law Professor after Federal Ruling

Prof. Dietz being interviewed with a reporter and a cameraman and a tv camera.
TV reporter Tony Pipitone interviews NSU Professor Matthew Dietz at the Shepard Broad College of Law.

Investigative reporter Tony Pipitone has been following the story on lawsuits against the state that claimed it illegally kept children with complex medical needs in nursing homes.

The state was first sued over this issue in 2012 by a group of attorneys, including Matthew Dietz, the director of the Disability Inclusion and Advocacy Law Clinic at NSU’s Shepard Broad College of Law. Dietz was interviewed by Pipitone during his earlier coverage of this story and was interviewed again by Pipitone after a recent ruling by a federal judge said the state did break the law and has ordered changes. The interview was aired Wednesday on NBC Channel 6 South Florida.

See the full story.

NSU Newsroom – Law Clinic Works with Media to Expose Disabled Parking Fraud

Professor Dietz in a tan checkered suit and red tie, being interviewed by a white man in a checkered shirt with a microphone on the table
Professor Dietz and WPLG Investigative reporter Jeff Weinsier

Matthew Dietz, the clinical director for the Disability Inclusion and Advocacy Law Clinic in Nova Southeastern University’s Shepard Broad College of Law, was recently featured on a WPLG Channel 10 investigative piece because of the work of him and his students to expose a man who was selling forged disabled parking permits online without any required doctor authorization.

Investigative reporter Jeff Weinsier tracked down the culprit in an exclusive story.

GET THE FULL STORY.

NSU Newsroom – NSU Disability Advocate Addresses Sidewalk-Utility Pole Issue

Professor Dietz in a Blue Blazer and red tie
Matthew Dietz, the clinical director for the NSU Disability Inclusion and Advocacy Law Clinic

Matthew Dietz, the clinical director of the Disability Inclusion and Advocacy Law Clinic in NSU’s Shepard Broad College of Law, recently weighed in on a Local 10 story about a power pole in Miami that was put in the middle of a sidewalk. The pole created an accessibility issue.

See the full story here.

NSU Newsroom – Professor Comes to the Support of Children Denied Dental Care

Professor Dietz in a blue checkered blazer and red tie
Prof. Matthew Dietz, NSU Disability Inclusion and Advocacy Law Clinic

A Hillsborough County mother turned to the local television station after her children with special needs were denied dental treatment. Attorney Matthew Dietz, the clinical director of the Disability Inclusion and Advocacy Law Clinic at Shepard Broad College of Law at Nova Southeastern University, weighed in on the matter.

READ THE FULL STORY.