Florida widow wins $1.1M government lawsuit, but payout may wait.

A Florida widow who won a $1.1 million jury verdict against a sheriff’s office may spend years, even a decade, trying to collect the full amount.

Her case has become a flashpoint in a larger debate over how states limit payouts in lawsuits involving government agencies, and whether those caps leave victims stranded even after they win in court.

Pamela Martin’s husband, Michael Keen, left home in February 2021 for his part-time job as a courtesy driver at a Brandon GMC dealership.

Hours later, Martin learned his truck had been struck by a Hillsborough County Sheriff’s deputy travelling 97 mph in a 50 mph zone. Their lights and sirens weren’t activated, according to Florida Highway Patrol data retrieved from the patrol car’s black-box recorder. Keen never regained consciousness and died a week later.

“Not a day goes by that I don’t think about him,” Martin told WFTS-TV’s Tampa Bay 28 I-Team, which first reported the case (1).

Last month, a Hillsborough County jury found the deputy negligent and awarded Martin more than $1 million in damages, as well as compensation for pain and suffering. Her attorneys said the verdict provided a measure of validation: her husband’s death wasn’t inevitable.

But the courtroom victory reminded Martin of a harsh reality. Florida law sharply limits how much government agencies can pay out unless the Legislature approves additional money. Under Florida’s sovereign immunity statute, public entities cannot pay more than…

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