Philip C. Johnston grew up in New York City and Florida, but has
resided continuously in South Florida for the past twenty years. After
graduating from the prestigious Columbia University School of Law in New
York City in 2000, he spent two years clerking for a federal judge in
Miami in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida.
He then worked for the top tier Wall Street law firm of Skadden, Arps,
Slate, Meagher & Flom in Manhattan in their white-collar criminal
defense practice group. He is licensed to practice law in both Florida
and New York. Prior to becoming an attorney, Mr. Johnston worked as a
foreign correspondent for United Press International, where he covered
political affairs, including the Kremlin and the war in Chechnya. He
speaks fluent Russian.
Mr. Johnston started his own criminal defense practice in West Palm
Beach, Florida in 2018 and has had criminal cases dismissed against
doctors, lawyers, and hedge-fund managers.
Mr. Johnston recently had felony charges of Battery on a Law
Enforcement Officer dismissed against a young woman after a filing a
sworn Motion to Dismiss. The woman, who had been falsely arrested for
DUI, was brutally beaten by three corrections officers while in custody.
She was then charged with an offense carrying a mandatory felony
conviction in order to cover up the attack. All three officers were
eventually arrested and are currently being prosecuted for aggravated
battery. The story made national news when the officers became inmates
at the same Broward County jail where they had been working as
corrections officers at the time of the assault.
He prevailed upon the State to dismiss three felony charges wrongly
filed against a commercial real estate attorney, including burglary of a
dwelling, domestic battery by strangulation and child abuse. He also
succeeded in getting a sales tax fraud case dismissed against a Fort
Lauderdale businessman and won a case against the Department of Revenue
charging an alleged father with failing to pay child support.
Mr. Johnston successfully negotiated the resolution of a felony
prosecution in St. Lucie County, charging an 18-year-old college student
with 25 counts of possession of child pornography. The student, who had
no prior record, faced 125 years in Florida State Prison for viewing
photos of teenagers on his phone while he himself was a minor. After 18
months of negotiation, the settlement permitted the young man to avoid
jail time, a felony conviction, sex offender registration, and his
criminal record will eventually be eligible to be sealed. He further
persuaded the university to allow him to remain enrolled in college.
Mr. Johnston played a high-profile role as an attorney in the
controversy surrounding whether former President Donald Trump was
entitled to live at Mar-a-Lago under the terms of a 1993 Use Agreement
signed with the Town of Palm Beach.
He recently succeeded in getting felony burglary charges dropped in
Broward and Palm Beach against a man accused of stealing cooking oil
from fast food restaurants, which is re-sold to make biodiesel. He also
got charges dropped against a man accused of impersonating a police
officer in Hillsborough County.