Are you talking about today, when the bench warrant was rescinded, or yesterday, when it was issued? It may have been vacated by phone, but that would be unusual. I haven't seen any story with any details, so I'm not willing to jump to the conclusion that the court failed to notify either defense counsel or the prosecutor. Here's what the report from the local paper, the Miami Herald, says: "Broward County court records show a judge cancelled the warrant Thursday, two days after it was issued. Details weren't immediately available..." Oh, well, to paraphrase a well-known coach from up north, "On to the next court appearance."
Stuff like this happens more often than not. Any semi-reputable attorney would have shown up to court if they had to AND if their client had to be there they would have made sure he was, or they would have pushed back the date if he couldn't make it. The attorney's reputation is on the line when it comes to this stuff, they wouldn't just skip out on court. This story with Anderson missing court is NONSENSE, instead lets focus on how he got into this situation in the first place.
The court isn't going to make a statement, but the fact they overturned the warrant means it wans't Andersons fault. If it was his fault the warrant would still be there for missing a court date
exactly. anderson doens't even need to be involved right now anyway. his lawyer takes care of everything.