BenchPath
FloridaFourth Judicial CircuitDuval CountyFelony Division CR-EJudge Tatiana Salvador

Trial Set Within the 5th Month After Arrest — Division CR-E

High confidence· verified July 5, 2026Deadlines & Time Computation4th Jud. Cir., Criminal Div. CR-E Policies, Procedures & Expectations (eff. Jan. 1, 2023), ¶ 12–14

Summary

Judge Salvador sets the trial date at the FIRST pretrial conference (3–4 weeks after arraignment), targeting trial within the fifth month after arrest, with the FPT the Monday before Monday jury selection and no waiver of the defendant's FPT appearance.

Applies to

Florida > Fourth Judicial Circuit > Duval County > Felony Division CR-E (Judge Tatiana Salvador)

🔒 Members only

Verified requirements for Judge Tatiana Salvador — checklists, verbatim requirements, and deadlines — unlocks with a free account during early access. Founding members keep full access when billing begins.

Unlock free →
🔒 Members only

Verified the action checklist — checklists, verbatim requirements, and deadlines — unlocks with a free account during early access. Founding members keep full access when billing begins.

Unlock free →

Source of truth

"the Court shall set the matter for trial sometime within the 5th month after arrest, unless circumstances dictate otherwise." / "FPTs shall be held 1 week before jury selection, i.e. the Monday before the Monday jury selection." / "there shall be no waiver of Defendant's appearance at FPT"
Source health
Healthy · checked July 7, 2026
Effective date
Last verified
July 5, 2026Live fetch + sha256 of official PDF — 2026-07-05

Reviewer note: Verified against the live official PDF on 2026-07-05. 30-day recheck scheduled.

Related rules

Deadlines & Time ComputationStatewide

Summary Judgment Timing: 40 Days / 20 Days — Fla. R. Civ. P. 1.510

Florida follows the federal summary-judgment standard. The motion must be served at least 40 days before the hearing; the nonmovant's response is due no later than 20 days before the hearing.

Medium — verify before relyingFla. R. Civ. P. 1.510
Deadlines & Time ComputationStatewide

Computing Time — Fla. R. Gen. Prac. & Jud. Admin. 2.514

How Florida procedural deadlines are computed: exclude the trigger day; count every day for periods of 7 days or more; for periods under 7 days, skip intermediate weekends and legal holidays; roll forward when the last day is a weekend or holiday.

Medium — verify before relyingFla. R. Gen. Prac. & Jud. Admin. 2.514
Deadlines & Time ComputationPalm Beach County · Civil Division AG · Judge Caryn Siperstein

Set in 5 Days, Heard in 60 — or Deemed Abandoned — Division AG

Judge Siperstein requires every motion to be set within 5 days of filing and heard within 60 days, or it may be deemed abandoned.

High confidence· verified July 5, 202615th Jud. Cir., Civil Division AG Divisional Instructions
Deadlines & Time ComputationPalm Beach County · Criminal Division T/KK2 · Judge Donald W. Hafele

Continuance Requests at Least 5 Days Before Court — Division T/KK2

Judge Hafele requires continuance requests at least five days before the scheduled court date — and no remote appearance at first appearances or RPO hearings.

High confidence· verified July 5, 202615th Jud. Cir., Criminal Division T/KK2 Divisional Instructions