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FEMALE PRISONERS' DEATHS' QUESTIONED MONTICELLO, FL - During November '98 the FPLP staff received several letters from correspondents at Jefferson Correctional Institution (JCI), located in Monticello, FL, expressing concern about the circumstances surrounding the hanging "suicide" of a female prisoner in the confinement unit at the institution. Something wasn't right, the letters wamed. There was more to the death than prison officials wanted to be known, the letters informed. Rumors were flashing among the other prisoners, it may not have been a suicide or if it waS something forced it, and officials were trying to keep what really happened secret. It's hard to keep a secret in such a closed environment though, and this one proved impossible to keep as more letters were written and answers begin to be demanded. The full truth still is not known, but the details that did surface in late November were enough to spark outrage from many in Florida and lead to calls for a full-scale independent investigation of the Florida Department of Corrections (FDOC) lUld prisoner abuse and conditions of confinement in particular. The incident began routinely enough (for Florida prisons) when Florence Krell, an attractive 40-year-old female prisoner iN THiS lSSUE • found herself in solitary confinement at Jefferson CI after she had filed complaints with prison officials alleging brutality and harassment by prison guards. Thi.s was Florence Krell's first time in prison,' she had no significant prior record. She was on probation for burglary in early ]998 when her boyfriend reported her to police for failing to return his rental car. Krell, who lived in Hollywood, FL, was then convicted for grand theft and sentenced to 18-months in prison for the rental car incident. She became another of the many hundreds, if not thousands, of women sentenced to prison in Florida . for relatively minor non-violent offenses. Krell was sent to JCI in September of 1998. Almost from the start she was labeled a trouble-maker by prison staff. She apparently could not believe the world that she had been thrown into and what was allowed to go on in it. She mistakenly believed that it was okay to speak out about it, as anyone would who has no knowledge about how widespread it is becoming in the FDOC for prison staff and officials to use any means to suppress any complaints by prisoners under the "get tougher" policies. Krell apparently did not understand that many prison guards and officials believe that they can treat prisoners any way they desire now that prisoners have had their access to the courts almost totally cut off, and amid the retribution-not-rehabilitation "get tougher on prisoners" political demagoguery that encourages prisoner abuse. . Krell, the mother of two children and the daughter of a former police detective, perhaps thought she had some "right" to speak out. Sadly, she soon learned the truth the toughest way of all. In mid-October Florence Krell was found hanging dead in her prison cell. No one seems to know exactly what started Krell's problems. FDOC grievance records, document that she' had frantically and repeatedly filed grievances asking higher officials to stop guards from harassing her. All of those were denied. In a letter, that was later confiscated by prison officials, Krell wrote that she "lost it" on Sept. 17. She allegedly threw all her possession into the hallway and threatened to jump offher top bunk unless the guards quit harassing her. In response to this guards, pumped pepper spray into her cell until she al- FROM THE EDITOR NEW FDOC SECRETARY NAMED FL CORR. COMMISSION 1998 ANNUAL REPORT FDOC MAIL RULES AMENDMENTS RE·PROPOSED NOTABLE CASES AROUND THE NATION LITERATURE REVIEW 4 4 5 7 9 12 14 most could not breathe and her skin and eyes burned. Then guards entered the cell' and took her mattress and clothing. "I laid down naked on the metal, no blankets, nothing to cover up," she later wrote. "I laid in that room untH 'the next morning they gave me a blanket." After several days ofthese conditi.ons Krell asked a confinement officer to allow her to speak to a higher official. Little did she know that such a request often triggers retaliation. In Krell's case, two male guards accompanied by two female guards suddenly showed up at her cell door after the request. She had "contraband" they said, in the form of "toilet paper and a plastic cup." They demanded that she stand naked before them while they recovered the "contraband." "I said 'No,' because I was naked and the two male guards were present," Krell later wrote in one of her formal grievances filed with the FDOC. The guards claimed that 'she was on a "suicide watch," but records later obtained by the Tampa Tribune did not confirm this. But when Krell refused to stand up, "[t]he two males pulled me off the bed by my feet and legs. I tried to go under the bed ... and the female sergeant grabbed my ankle and twisted it, n her grievance continued. Overpowered, Krell tried to retain what little human dignity she had left. She apparently could not conceive that she would be forced to put herself on display nude before two male guards. That is when the $truggle begin. The incident ended predictably against such overwhelming odds; Krell was forced to the floor by all the officers, she was handcuffed behind her back, and left laying naked on the bare concrete floor of the cell. She later wrote that she was left that way for days-without water. FDOC officials refuse to say much about Krell's death. They refused all comment about it to FPLP staff. They reported Krell's death as a "suspected" suicide, but have refused to release an autopsy report. What is known is that ·the day before Krell died she ha4 written tormented, desperate letters to Broward Co. Judge Robert Carney, who had sentenced her to prison, and to her mother describing what had been done to her and expressing her F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 1 fear of further harm, while asking Judge Carney to please investigate and help her. Prison records document that before she could mail the letters, however, that they where "confiscated" by guards asserting that they had the right to seize thembecause she failed to write "legal mail" on the envelope to the judge. No explanation has been given why her letters to her mother were confiscated. Although JCI prison officials could not verify that Krell was under a suicide watch before her death, records verify that she had been assigned to a prison psychologist, as all prisoners in confinement are suppose to be. But further inquiry into that revealed some disturbing facts. Reporters from the Tampa Tribune, who worked closely with FPLP staff as this story unfolded, discovered that the prison psychologist assigned to Krell, David A. Schriemer, had no valid credentials to practice psychology. .Schriemer, it was discovered, had nothing but a mail-order doctorate, from a nonaccredited school. He, however, was listed not only as a psychologist at JCI, he was the "senior" psychologist at the institution. The FDOC claims that it had twice tried to dem()te Schriemer because of his lack of educational and professional credentials. Yet, each time, inexplicably, Schriemer was reinstated by the state Public Employees Relations Commission; decisions that records show the FDOC did not appeal. No one has explained how Schriemer was hired in the fll'st place with such bogus credentials. No one has been held accountable for his being hired or promoted to "senior" psychologist. Other disturbing facts continued to come to light in the investigation of Krell's death. Apparently Schriemer's situation was "overlooked" in October when the state Correctional Medical Authority (CMA), which is responsible for overseeing the FDOC's medical services, cited JCI for a' number of deficiencies. The CMA found several problems with JCl's . mental health care services, including prisoners being prescribed powerful, mood-altering, psychotropic drugs-without their consent. Without the autopsy report, it is not known if Krell was one of those prisoners or not. In early Dec., after it became known that the investigation was being contin- FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL PERSPECTIVES POBox 660-387 Chuluota, Florida 32766 Publishing Division of. PLOIlIIIA .RISOIlIIlS UGAL 4111 OIlOAHlZAnoll.llIC, A SOl(c}(3) Non Profit Organization (407) S68.()200 , Web: hllp:/Imembers.aol.comlfplp/fplp.html FPLAO DIRECTORS TERESA BURNS BOBPOS5V DARRYL McGLAMRY DAVID W. BAUER, Esq. FPLPSTAFF Publisher TERESA BURNS Editor BOB POSEY Layout Editor JOHN OAKS Research SHERRI JOHNSON Admin. Assls. USA FAULKNER TRACIE ROSE FPLP ADVISORY BOARD WILLIAM VAN POYCK PHILIP BAGLEY· SHARON SIMMONS TERRY VAUGHN· MICHAEL LAMBRIX ALAN J. COTION • JAMES QUIGL£Y JAMES TAYLOR - JUDIE HIGHTOWER CARL WEU.S - GLENN SMITH BRIAN MORRIS· EARN HOWARD LINDA GOTTLIEB - SAiLY WILCOX JANE PRATI • PAUL ADAMS KIMBERLY PEOPLES - PEiER BLANI'ON JAMES MAJOR - ENRIQUE DIAl SCOTIGRAY FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL PERSPECTIVES iJ pllbliWd iiim<llllllly by Florida Priscncn LosaJ Aid Orsanizalicn. 1m:. IS232 E ~ Dr,. 0rlancIc. FI 321128. Mailina Addrcu' fPLAO. P.O. Box 660-381. Chuluota, FL 32166 fPLP iJ • N"" Profit pllbIicaticll en the FIIlrida prilOll and crimilllli jul1ico I)'J1C1l11 wilh 1110 gOll or pnMdina • ~ ror IICWI, inl'crDlllicn and racun:cs aifocWls pr;.....,., lheir rutilies. fliendt and 1c¥Cd ones. oed the gcnml pullfic or FIcrido IIIId the U S Rcclucticn or crime and rcci4ivism, maim_ or WIlily lica. ciW rigltta, impnlvi.", condiIiclls cl CClIfIllCm<C1 oed oppcnunllia, Ff1Il1I'lIi"ll WIkd COIlII _ _ rer priscncn. and prcmcIicg ~ cl prisca ofli<iJb. arc oil is..... fPLP is cIeoignc4 co oddtat, TIl: inl'crmaIic.~ in F1'LP does ncr nccasarily rdIccI the OpiniOOI or the volunteer iliff, Pubficalicn or F1'LP is modo pcuiIllc by Ycu, the radc< and 1UfIPCI1.... IhfUlls'ullhsaiplicn and scnml donalions. Requested dC1lOlions rer. ON ~ whscriplica "'" SS-pitaaal. SIOom.. ciIimI, S25-instItuIicnJ rcc..sma or butincssa. F1'LP readcn and lUfIPCI1en 1ft "wiled CO CllfIlIillult onida. newt inl'crTIIIllicn, and IIIsgcSlions rer pcJSihIc puhficalicll Suhscriplica dcnIlicns will be adtncwtedged by the ..... Kriber'. receipt or Ille amenl iuuc or F1'LP FI'LP'• ..",. 0IICmC)' volun1eer 110fTWUlCI rupend Ie rcqllCSlS ror legal edYice IlIIc Ie """"'" or moil and iliff limiIalicns oil ccrrespcodmce COIlIlCl be rupended 10. bul Dll moll dna recei... individu&! IItenIica Permiulon it graotcd Ie reprint lNtaial in F1'LP pro\'idcd F1'LP Illd ony indicated &lIIhct &rC idallificd in the rcprinl NonCE The infonnation in this publication provides news and opinion from various sources and may not provide sufficient information to deal with a legal problem. Neither the p'ublisher. nor staff, WlImIIlts or rep.resents the suilllbility of the informalion in this publication for instituting any legal lICtion. An attorney or other knowleageable jlCfSOn in II dispuled area should be consulted for experience in legal~, Jltis pu!?lication should not be relied on as authoritative citation. Page 2 ) ued by mainstream media reporters, sev, eral officials were called on to comment on Krell's death. Howard Simon, executive director of the Miami Chapter of the ACLU, called for an independent investigation, stating, "I just don't think you can trust the system to investigate itself. If you allow the system to inveStigate itself, nobody should b'a surprised when,six months from no\\, the Department [of Corrections) comes back and says that, though it was a regre\1able ouicome, nobody from the Department of Corrections did anything wrong. 't Called upon to i~vestigate, Leon Co. State Attorney Willie Meggs said he will review Krell's death to see if criminal charges were warranted. Gov. Chiles said, through a spokesperson, that he would not start an independent investigation until the FDOC finished their investigation and issued a report. Gov.-elect Jeb Bush said that he "might" intervene in the state's inquiry into Krell's death. , State Sen. Ginny Brown-Waite, newly appointed chairwoman of the state Senate Criminal Justice Committee, commented that she would see'k further info on Krell's death from the FDOC. The Tampa Tribune first reported on Krell's death on Nov. 29th. This was followed by a report in the Dec. Ist Miami Herald. While the politicians formulated their comments as above, and the FDOC hurried to defend itself by claiming that this was the first female prisoner suicide ever in Florida, on Dec. 3rd '98, another female prisoner was found hanging in a Jefferson CI confinement cell. Stunned? So were the FPLP staff and others who had rallied for the disclosure of facts surrounding Krell's death. On Dec. 4th, as the Tampa Tribune went to press with more facts in Krell's situation, it was only able to ~eport that FDOC officials were reporting another female prisoner's attempted suicide, while not n~ming her pending family notification. The "attempt" was successful, the prisoner died on Dec. 5th in a Tallahassee hospital. Her name was Christine Elmore, a 25-year-old Polk County woman. Elmore's death did not create the stir that Krell's did but the circumstances of her death have not been fully explored yet. What is known is that she was in prison for murder and robbery with a life and a F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 1 fourteen year sentence that she had received in 1996. She also had a record from 1994, where she had served community supervision for other charges. The FQOC has not released much information about Elmore's death. Silence. seems to have been selected as the best cJefense; they state they. are still "investigatinp" her death. _FPLP staf,f contacted ,Christine Elmore's father,' who stated that he does not believe that she would have killed herself. He told, FPLP's publisher Teresa Bums that he had just talked to Christine on the phone a few days before she died and she did not seem depressed or upset about anything then. He considers her death suspicious. Following this second death, the Miami office of the ACLU, through its executive director, Howard Simon, wrote a belated letter to Gov. Chiles condemning these tragic events and again calling on Gov. Chiles to appoint ali independent panel to review conditions ofconfinement for female prisoners in Florida. Simon wrote, "While there is still considerable secrecy with regard to the death of Christine Elmore, facts already established with regard to the death of Florence Krell raise serious questions about the treatment of the 886 female inmates at that institution." Simon continued, "For a number of reasons, - we believe that the incidents at the Jefferson Correctional Institution may reflect systematic mistreatment of female prisoners at that facilitY and the three other state prisons for women." It is notable that the Florida ACLU had "reasons" to believe that female prisoners were being mistreated before Krell's and Elmore's deaths, but had did nothing about it. Simon ,stated in his letter to Gov. Chiles that both the Miami ACLU office and the national office have been receiving complaints by women prisoners in Florida alleging physical and emotional abuse, but to FPLP's knowledge this is the first letter or action taken by the Miami office to even admit there is a problem. The Miami ACLU, however, intends to pursue this matter. On Dec. ~4th Simon announced that the U.S. Justice Department had begun a preliminary inquiry into Krell's and Elmore's deaths. "It's at the preliminary stage. I have had a discussion with the people in the Civil Rights Division, and they are looking at it to see if an investigation is warranted, said Simon. Simon also repeated his call for an independent investigation into prison conditions for women. To Florida's new Inspector General, Marcia Cooke, he wrote noting the Justice Department's inquiry and that his office had received anonymous contact from prison staff reporting "practices which include sexual activity between inmates and correctional officers, significant sexual abuse and harassment, deliberate medical mistreatment, and unnecessary violent activity directed at women prisoners." But, he noted, the Miami ACLU had not confirmed these reports. The day before Simon's announcement of the Justice Department inquiry, it was not surprising when the Leon Co. State Attorney sanctioned an FDOC report finding that Krell's death was a suicide. Elmore's death continued to be "investigated" by the FDOC. During December, outgoing FDOC Secretary Harry Singletary rejected an offer by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement to assist the FDOC in the investigation ofthe two deaths. This situation has highlighted the need for an independent and impartial body with the power to investigate the operation of the FDOC. FPLP has been warning of sexual abuse and harassment and mistreatment of female prisoners in Florida for quite a while now. But, the problems are certainly more widespread. While conditions in the female prisons certainly need attention and correction, there is an apparent epidemic of abuse in our prisons, especially in the confinement units. FPLP staff has received recent information that a prisoner in confinement at Charlotte CI had his neck broken in a "use of force" by prison guards. This information comes only a few months after I0 prison guards at Charlotte CI were indicted by a federal grand jury for the torturous beatings ofan HIV+ prisoner with him being deliberately allowed to bleed to death, chained to a steel confinement bed, after slashing his wrists. In a letter to her mother, confiscated by JCI guards the day before she died, Florence Krell's words echo far beyond her death, martyring her in the struggle II Page 3 occurring in our prisons, and demanding more response than just words or posturing. "I will be 41 this Thursday.... rm not a little girl anymore and not all that grown yet, but ... in any fight I don't like to be down on the ground.... I will tell the people of Florida this until they find out what they are doing and have done to me." BOB POSEY. FROM THE EDITOR, ',' Over the past four years FPLP has grown from a hand-typed, photocopied flyer with less than 10 subscribers to a computer lay-out, professionally printed newsletter that is approaching 2500 subscribers, with perhaps three to four times that number of actual readers. Not bad! What is even better is that it has become more than just a newsletter, one of the initial goals was to fonn a network and that is being achieved. The importance of this, in this era of "I can get tougher than you" and "lock them up and throwaway the key" knee-jerk policies and. demagoguery, cannot be overstated. I would like to take this opportunity to personally and publicly thank those who I know have worked the hardest to make FPLP possible and help achieve the goals. :rHANK YOU, to Teresa Bums, my wonderful wife and the life-force in many aspects of FPLP, and to John Oaks, for his enduring loyalty and excellent layout work over the years. THANK YOU, to Lisa Faulkner, assistant non-pareH, and to Tracie Rose, Sherrie Johnson, Darryl (Spock) McGlamry and David Bauer, Esq., for all your work and faith. THANK YOU, to FPLis advisors, who have helped guide the way and set the goals, and to all those who have contributed to keep FPLP going strong. In December an important goal was realized. FPLP's parent organization, Florida Prisoners' Legal Aid Org., Inc., was granted 50I(c)(3) federal non-pro~t status. As FPLP is a project of the orgamzation, donations to either are now tax deductible with the IRS. This is also going to allow reduced postage co~ts ~nd other benefits to help the organIzatIon grow in the long run.. . . The directors are lookmg at modlfymg the by-laws to include membe':5h~p into the organization with, subscrIptIon to F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 1 FPLP. This, if adopted, would include more changes that are expected. Staff is voting rights in the direction the organiza- working now to increase the number of tion takes and in the projects taken on. pages in each issue of FPLP. This should Any input on this is welcome by the staff. occur in the next issue or so. We are The general consensus is that it will be also looking for someone interested in adopted s o o n . ' , operating the FPLP W~bsite. There are, Another change, that is ljasically un- currently two FPLP sit~s on the Internet, ~voidable as the paper and,organization but they only carry pasic infonnation. grows, beginning May 31, 1999, there will That is, because we do not have a Webbe a slight increase in subscription rates master with the time .to post info to the for FPLP. One year subscriptions for pris- site and ~ep it updated. Anyone interoners will change the least, from $5. to ested in serving as FPLP's Webmaster $6. Rates for non-prisoners, free citi- please contact me directly ar: ,Rr. 7, Box zens, will go from the current $~O to 376, Lake City FL 32055. It is very im$12, and business/institution rates WIll go portant that the news is distributed on this from $25 to $30 per year. Low-income valuable medium. family members or friends of Florida prisWell, that's about all for this issue. I oners who cannot afford the increased would asked that you enjoy this issue, rates can obtain a subscription for what- except for the fact that it contains some ever they can donate. very disturbing news. It will continue to Until May 31 st, you may still sub- get more disturbing unless we continue to scribe. to, or renew and extend your cur:- work together for change. Encourage rent subscription, to FPLP at the current others to subscribe and get involved and rates 'of $5, SIO, or S25, respectively. those changes will come. Prisoners, en:After May 31 st, however, any subscrip- courage your family members and friends tions received paying the "old" rates will to attend the Tallahassee Rally on March be pro-rated, with such subscribers receiv- 11th. Yours truly, BOB POSEY, Editor. ing 5 instead of 6 issues per year subscrip- ...-'""":'" -:-, tion. New U.S. postage stamps will still be NEWS BRIEF accepted after May 31 st for subscriptions in an amount at least equal to the new On September 28, ]998, the FDOC had a rates. total prison population of 66,861 and a During September and October '98 a total bed capacity of 71,580. The few FL prisons attempted to reject FPLP Florida Criminal Justice Estimating going to prisoners. The staff did not re- Conference detennined in a meeting held ceive any official notice of this attempt. September 28, 1998, that no new prison When prisoners wrote infonning the staff beds will be needed until 2002.• of the attempt, an immediate appeal was filed to the central office and the rejec- L ____ tions were subsequently overturned. All prisoners should have received Vol. 4, GET TOUGH' HARD-LINER Issues 4 and 5. Issue 6 was held up at some institutions in November and DeNAMED cember for almost two weeks as mailroom AS NEW FDOC SECRETARY stafT apparently waited to see if another by Teresa Bums institution would reject it before giving it TALLAHASSEE- On December 30th to subscribers. This practice needs to be challenged if it continues. It is immaterial Florida's new governor - Jeb Bush - named if another institution rejects, rejections Michael W. Moore to replace HlUTy K. Singlemust be based on the conditions of your tary as the head of the Florida Department of Corrections (FDOC). Moore will have to be particular institution and ~an only be ma~e confirmed by the state Senate before taking by your particular supermtendent or hIS! over the position, but with a Republican rna· her designee. Please infonn the staff.if you jority it is likely there will be n~ ~roble.m. If experience rejection or problem WIth re- confirmed, Moore, in many OpiniOnS, IS exceiving FPLP and use the appeal proce- actly what the FDOC does not need: an antidures to challenge any and all publication program, get tough conservat~ve. who has a controversial history in correctIons. rejections. Michael Moore, 50, has served since 1995 In the immediate future there are some Page 4 as the head of South Carolina's prison system. Shortly after taking over there he was credited with a riot involving 1,100 prisoners at the Broad River Correctional Institution behind new getlOugh-on-prisoners policies. As soon as Moore lOOk over in S.C. he began dismantling decadesold policies and programs, many of which benefited prisoners in helping them reintegrate into society upon release. Among the new S.C. policies, Moore forced prisoners to be clean shaven and wear short hair, regardless if it conflicted with religious practices or medical needs: He also abolished a college education program and prisoner workrelease program. As the S.C. director, he stopped prisoners from receiving packages from family members, banned personnel clothing. and increased mail and publication censorship. Criticized by. civil ~ghts groups ~d even moderate .~epubhcans ~n the S.C. legIslature, Moore onglnally a natIve of Houston, worked as a regional director of the Texas DOC before going to Soulh Carolina. An informed source within the FDOC claims that Moore's appointment by Jeb Bush is politically motivated and connected with Bush's brother being govem~r in Tex~: Bush chose M.oore over .several quahfied Flondlans who were Inlerested In the top FDOC position, yet who were more moderate. As soon as Bush named Moore to take over the FDOC the FPLP staff began receiving· email and faxes from S.C. advising strong opposi?on to. his confi~ation. Accordi~g 10 that informatIOn, famd~ members, friends and advocates of S.C. pnsoners were forced to organize to have Moore removed from the SC DOC position. They credit organized polilical iobbying and voting in a Democral governor during the last election with Moore's desire to find a new job iri Flori~a. He will ~e an ap~roximale $20,O~0 loss .In pay by coming to Flonda, but would stdl receIVe over $100,000 per year. Despite his known history. Moore's potential appointment drew weak or naive responses from some of Florida's supposed prison watchdog groups. The executive direclor of the Miami ACLU,. Howard Simon, cauliously conu,nented that Moore needs ~o re~~ber that pnsoners need to be productIve clllzens when released. John Fullef, executive director of Ihe Florida Corrections Commission, that was formed to oversee the FDOC, said that Moore should "feel right at home here." Whether this was a reference to Moore being good-ol-boy malerial was not acknowledged, but is suspected. "I don't know how you can gel much stricter. We're prelly tough down here already." Fuller continued. Obviously Fuller doesn't have a clue how far demagogues and knee-jerk ambitionists can or will go. Moore defended his actions in S.C. on Dec. 30th, explaining that the S.C. prison system "was aOOul30 years behind. and the inmales controlled it." During early January FPLP staff contacted Jeb Bush's office expressing opposition to F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 1 I / Moore's appointment. and disappointment that The bad news is that the programs Bush would start out by going backwards.• available to youthful offenders are severely underfunded. More than 86% of FL CORRECTIONS this population is on waiting lists for placeCOMMISSION 1998 ment in academic, vocational and substance abuse programs. The vast majority ANNUAL REPORT of this popUlation is released back into the The Florida Corrections Commission ~ommunity before they have had a chance r.eleased its annual report for 1998 on to participate in any programming. The Commission characterized the curNovember 1st. The Commission was created by the legislature to oversee the oper- rent youthful offender institutions as ation of the corrections system in "warehouses" and in its intensive coverage Florida and to make reports and recom- of this area concluded that it is essential mendations, independent of the Florida that the legislature address the lack of fundDepartment ofCorrections (FDOC), to the ing in this important area. Governor and Legislature on issues conceming the state prison system. The Com- HIV/AIDS in FL Prisons: The Commismission has been in existence now four sion reports that its findings in this area "are E h h C .. . years. ac year t e om~lsslon revIews disconcerting, jf not alarming." The several areas of the FDOCs management Commission found that in 1995 Florida and operation and issues a report on its ranked seventh nationally, in HIV/AIDS findings. In this latest report the Commis- cases as a percentage qftotal prison populasion reviewed nine separate areas. tion (3.4%). In that same year, Florida The areas reviewed by the Commis- ranked second in the number of confirmed . . 1998' I d . (I) E . M h slon. m mc u e. xecutl~n et- AIDS cases ofall state prison systems. Between 1989 and 1997, AIDS deaths ods Used by States; (2) InspectIOns and Investigations in FL Jails; (3) Condi- accounted for over half ofall inmate deaths tional Medical Release Program; (4) in Florida prisons. The Commission Youthful Offender Program; (5) HIVI emphasized that the HIVIAIDS diagnosed AIDS in Corrections; (6) Change of Pri- cases are not. accurate, and understated, . where all inmates are not tested and that vate Prison Company at Gadsden CI; 7) Special Risk Retirement for CPOs; (8) many inmates are believed to pass Comparison of Programs for Male and through the system undiagnosed. In 1997-98 there were a total of 2,274 Female Offenders; and (9) FDOC Legislative Budget and Substantive Requests: confirmed cases of HIV diagnosed inmates Fully summarizing this 268 page in the FDOC. During the same period there . • . rep~rt IS. not posslbl.e m the sp~ce 'were 745 confirmed cases of AIDS. The Commission found that costs for avaIlable In· FPLP. ThIS report contams much useful and interesting information, testing and treatment of HI VIA IDS have far however, so some of the most impor- exceeded the legislative appropriation furtant areas reviewed and findings of the nish~d for such. The FDOC is estimated to report will be covered here. spend over $21 million for HIV treatment alone during the 98-99 year, representing Youthful Offender Program: The Com- 7% of the total health care budget for the mission reports that it intensively re- entire prison population. Even this amount· viewed the FDOC's Youthful Offender was found not to provide for the financial Program and found both good and bad costs needed to address this serious probnews. The good news is that the FDOC lem. continues in large part to separate An approximate $14 million deficit youthful offenders, who are defined as age 25 and younger and serving their first will be experienced in the funding for treatfelony commitment, from adult prisoners; ment of HIVIAIDS in Florida prisons that the program is designed to offer reha- during the 1998-99 year. The Commisbilitation opportunities to youthful of- sion recommended that additional funds be fenders; and that the FDOC has several budgeted in this area by the legislature. good vocational programs available to this Conditional Medical Release Propopulation. Page 5 gram: This program allows terminally ill or permanently incapacitated inmates to be released from prison prior to completion of their sentence. The authority to grant or deny conditional medical release rests solely with the Florida Parole Commission. Since the inception of the program in 1992 through June 1998, 271 inmates were referred by the FDOC to the Parole Commission for conditional medical release. Of that number 106 inmates were granted medical release, 133 were denied, 29 died before the Parole Commission could vote on their case, and 3 cases received no action. The primary problem with this program, according to the Commission, is that neither the Parole Commission nor the FDOC has a policy and procedure directive that sets forth timeframes that must be followed consideration of an inmate for conditional medical release. This resulted in· the high number of inmates who died after being recommended but before the Parole Commission voted on their release. . The Commission recommended that current statutes be revised to provided that inmates serving a life sentence not be eligible for medical release, as deathsentenced inmates are not eligible now, and that the legislature amend current statutes to provide additional criteria that the Parole 'Commission must consider in medical release cases. i, Private Prison: Gadsden CI: The Commission noted that during April of 1998 privately operated prison Gadsden Correctional Institution (female) changed management. Gadsden had been operated by United States Corrections Corporation (USCe) but changed hands when Corrections Corporation of America purchased and merged with USCC. However, Corrections Corporation of America did not notify the FDOC of the change for over a month after the change became effective, and inmates at the institution were never notified ofthe change in management. The Commission recommended that future contracts with private companies to operate prisons include a clause concerning protocol in management changes. Program Comparison, Male/Female: The Commission found th'at female inmates have program opportunities eq- tice Ben Overton who will retire in January . uitable to male inmates,' but noted that 19~ Justice Peggy Quince is the first Black there continues to be a shortage of fulltime job assignments for all inmates who woman to be appointed to the state's highest are.capable of working. Relying on FDOC court. Quince, age 50, joins Barbara Pariente as statistics, the Commission found that over the second woman on the seven judge court. is a native of Norfolk, Va., and.has sat as 7000 inmates who could work do not She an appeal judge in the Second DCA since have a meaningful job assignment [these 1994. She graduated from Howard University figures are seriously fudged, FPLP staff in 1970 and earned her law degree from the estimates that over 50% of FL prisoners Catholic University of America in 1975. have no meaningful work to do-ed]. Quince worked for the state anomey general for As it has in the past, the Commis- 13 years under Jim Smith and Bob Buttersion recommended that the FDOC place worth, with 3 years exclusively defending emphasis on encouraging PIE programs death penalty prosecutions, before moving to that allow the FDOC under federal law to the court ofappeal. • contract with private companies to operate , businesses in the prison system. The Com- PENDING CHALLENGE TO mission also recommended, again, that FDOCRULE Jefferson CI, a female prison located in North Florida, be converted to a male In 1996, the FL legislature amended the institution and a South Florida male insti- Administrative Procedures Act (Ch. 120, tution be converted to house Jefferson CI .F.S. [1997]) which, in part, modified the inmates so that female prisoners from standards that authorize state agencies to South Florida can be closer to their home. make rules. Under the new Act, an agency The Commission also recom- may only adopt a rule that implements a mended that the FDOC design and pro- specific law (Sec. 120.52(8)(g) and vide long distance parenting programs for 120.536, F.S. [1997]). female prisoners and their children; design During March I~98, Capitol News Serprograms to assist with the identified vice and reporter Mike Vasilinda filed a needs of female prisoners' children; and, petition with the Division of Administraprovide domestic violence awareness and tive Hearings (DOAH) asserting that Rule education classes to all female prisoners. 33-15.002, F.A.C., disallowing the elecThe Florida Corrections Commis- tronic or mechanical recording of execusion's 1998 AMual Report is available on tions, is a invalid exercise of delegated the Internet at: www.dos.state.n.uslfgils/ legislative authority, as no specific statute agencies/fcc. The Commissions E-mail authorizes such rule. address is: fcorcom@mal1.dc.state.n.us. During the 1998 legislative session, And the Commission's address is listed the FL House of Representatives' Comon the back ofthis issue of FPLP.. mittee on Corrections filed HE 4819 that ...-_ _....:. --, would have adopted Rule 33-15.002, NEWS BRIEF F.A.C., as a law. That bill, however, died without passage when the session ended on The Florida Department of Corrections May I, 1998. • (FDOC) is divided into five regions, Even so, the DOAH dismissed the case has more than 29,000 employees, and brought by Capitol News Service without a received a budget in excess of $1.6 billion hearing. The plaintiffs petitioned for reinfor the 1998-99 fiscal year.l statement ofthe case, and again the DOAH denied a hearing. As of October I, 1998, FL SUPREME COURT the plaintiffs filed an appeal in the 1st New Justices DCA of the DOAH's action and a ruling on this issue is pending. On December 7, 1998, Governor Chiles The resolution of this case should be appointed Miami trial attorney R. Fred Lewis watched for. The FDOC's general ruleto the Florida Supreme Court. Lewis replaces making authority at Sec. 944.09(1)(r), F.S., retiring Justice Gerald Kogan. The following day, December 8, 1998, both Governor was repealed during the 1998 legislative Chiles and Govemor-elect Jeb Bush jointly session. Right now it appears that many of appointed Peggy A. Quince, a Second District the department's rules, that had been Court of Appeal (DCA) judge, to replace Jus- F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 1 Page 6 '. adopted under that former general authority, where no other specific statutory thority exists validifying them, are potentially invalid exercises of delegated legislative authority. In a couple of recent p,risoner. initiated challenges to rules without specific statutory authority the FDOC is attempting to maintain that the general and vague provisions of Sec. 944.09(i)(a) and (e), F.S., still gives them the authority to adopt any rule they wish or keep rules that were adopted under the former 944.09(1)(r). This does not appear to comply with the intent of the new section at I20.52(8)(g) or 120.536, F.S. If Capitol News Service is successful in their challenge, this may open the FDOC up to challenges to invalidate many of the current rules of the department. For a further understanding of the recent Sec. .120.52(8)(g) and 120:536, F.S., requirements see: The Florida Bar Journal, March 1997 issue, "Legislative Oversight," by Patrick Imhof and James Rhea, page 28-34. -ed • au- r--.-;..-------------.. CRIME RATES CONTINUE TO DROP A U.S. Department of Justice final report released November 22, 1998, shows that violent crime rates dropped in 1997 for the sixth consecutive year; Overall, the number of violent crimes, including murder, rape, robbery and aggravated assault, dropped 3.2% in 1997. Murder rates dropped to the lowest in 30 years. Nationwide, since 1991, murder rates have fallen almost 28%, rape is down 13%, and robberies have plunged 29%. In Florida, overall crime rates fell 3% and violent crime rates fell 2.6% in 1997. In preliminary statistics released by the FBI on December 13, 1998, figures show that violent crimes were down 7% and property crimes down 5% in the first six months of 1998 as compared to the first six months of 1997.• ---J L..- Web Page Address: http://members.aol.com/fplp/fplp.hlml E-mail Address:fplp@aol.com Telephone: (407) 568-0200 F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 1 . : Often prisoners no longer have an attorney and must depend on family members/ friends to obtain and send them legal documents such as transcripts, pleadings, In the last issue of FPLP it was re- discovery reports, from the courts. Or tbe ported that the FDOC had withdmwn its prisoner may have such materials stored at proposed rulemaking to make numerous home and need it to be sent to work on changes to the department'~ rules con- hislher case. The provisions of this new ceming routine, legal and privilege mail proposed rule amendments would appear that is sent to or mailed by FL prisoners. to prohibit that, unless it is less than 5 (See: VolA, Iss.5, "FDOC WITH- pages, or someone takes the time to send 5 DRAWS PROPOSED MAIL RULES.") pages per envelope of what may be a 500 That report was correct. However, in a page transcript. The' proposed amendrare occurrence Gust two days after the ments would make no exception to the last FPLP went to the printer) on Novem- 5 page additional material provision. ber25, 1998, the FDOC inexplicably reAnother apparent problem that has proposed amendments to the same rules. existed for years and that is not They restarted rulemaking to amend these addressed in the November 25th rulemakrules-again. ing proposal is the FDOC practice of imThese new proposed amendments are mediately returning mail to the sender notable in that they contain several sig- whenever it contains alleged inadmissinificant provisions than what the de- ble correspondence or other materialspartment initially proposed, and received before the prisoner or sender has an opmuch opposition about, earlier during portunity to appeal the censorship to a 1998. Most significant are the new pro- person other than the person making the posed changes to the routine mail rules. decision to return the mail. This historical This new proposal would allow prisoners' .practice that occurs at almost all FL pristo continue receiving postage stamps ons does not comport with the. required through routine mail. They also would constitutional procedural due process proal,low up to 10 'sheets of blank paper, tections established in Procunier v. Marenvelopes, or greeting cards to be included tinez, 94 S.Ct. 1800 (1974). In that in each item of mail. These proposed pro~ Supreme Court case three minimum due visions are good and create a needed stan- process procedural protections were esdard to guide mailroom personnel who'in tablished that must be' followed by the past have arbitrarily, in cases, refused ,prison officials whenever mail is cento allow the receipt of such material. sored. First, theinmate must be notified of Those are the positive proposals. the rejection of a letter sent to or written The negative new proposals are that by the inmate; second, the author of the routine mail would only be allowed to letter must be given reasonable opportucontain up to 5 pages (8Ya" x 11 It) of nity to protest the rejection decision; and additional' written/printed materials.. This third, that objections (appeals) ofthe deciwould included any other type material sion to censor the mail must be referred besides the actual correspo"dence in the to a perSon other than the original envelope and include newspaper clip- rejection decision maker. pings, etc. Also, only 5 photographs per When mail is immediately returned envelope would be allowed and counting both the prisoner and sender of the letter towards the 5 page additional material are prevented from any reasonable opporlimit. These proposed provisions are the tunity to have the rejection decision resame as propose4 in the initial rulemaking viewed by someone other then the original that was withdrawn. It is now being re- rejector, thus violating the third Martinez proposed. due process protection. The department's The main problem with the "5 "oversight" to address this in these new pages of additional material" proposed proposed amendments needs to be provision is that 'it wjll almost guarantee brought to" the department's attention in that prisoners will not be able to receive written comments and objections by prislegal materials or documents from family oners. Prisoners filing comments or objecmembers and friends through routine mail.. tions should review Rules 333.006(1)(a)4. and (7)(e), FAC, which .FDOC MAIL RULES AMENDMENTS RE-PROPOSES a Page 7 mailrooms are, not following when mail is immediately returned. A clear provision to hold such mail until grievances are ex- , hausted should be included in any proposed amendments to the routine mail rules. Concerning the proposed amendments to the legal mail rules, the FDOC is clearly determined to further curtail FL prisoners access to the courts and their attorneys. The department has again reo proposed the same amendment as before to require indigent prisoners to pay all legal mail postage costs or have a lien placed on their account for such costs and , reduce the account to zero if and when the indigent prisoner ever receives any money to satisfy the lien. This proposed provision must be vehe· mently objected to in written comments by , all prisoners. This is a clear attempted violation of Bounds v. Smith, 97 S.Ct. 1491, 1497 (1977) (it is indisputable that States must provide indigent inmates at State expense with some legal mail postage): and, Fla. Stat. Section 944.09(1)(0) (FDOC may not adopt r:ule requiring prisoners to pay any postage costs that the State is constitutionally reo quired to pay). . Or if the FDOC wishes to maintain that following Lewis v. Casey, 116 S.Ct. 2174 (1996), that the Bounds provision is no longer good law (by some twisted reading of Lewis) and that legal postage costs are no longer constitutionally required to be .paid by the State, then see Section 944.5 16( I)(g) (FDOC may establish a limit on inmate accounts and deduct money exceeding that Iiinit to pay for costs of mail postage that State is not constitutionaily required to pay, limiting' the FDOC's discretion in rulemaking concerning this subject.) This last requires a minimum amount of money received not to be taken for any mail postage costs not constitutionally required to be paid by the State. The department is ignoring all the above in these new proposed amendments. Looking at the privilege mail proposed amendments, this is mail sent to or received from legislators, government entities, news reporters or ~gencies, the department is' again re-proposing that such mail be' prohibited from containing anything except correspondence. This :1.999 ...AN"~~ STA.TE C~ITOL I:I.OT~.A..:R..A.LL~ A CALLTO ACTION FOR: PRISONERS' FAMILY MEMBERSIFRIENDSILOVED ONES AND ADVOCATES MARCH 11, 1999 7:00AM TO 7:00PM This past year, during April, approximately 100 family members, friends and advocates of Florida's prison population met in Tallahassee during the legislative session to attend a rally and demonstration project in the rotunda of the state capitol building. Organized by'Florida Prison Legal Perspecti\'es, and other groups affiliatcd with the Florida Prison Action Network (FPAN), that evcnt was a great success. There were displays and information booths set up that examples many of the problems and unaccountable policies of the Florida Department of Corrections.. Informational flyers and displays exposed how the families. friends and loved ones of Florida's prisoners have been and continue to be targeted by policies that have serious financial impact on what are largely low-income people, and that serve in cases to unnecessarily obstruct family and friend relationships. The range of topics covered family visitation to monopolization and gouging involved in the prison collect telephone situation. During March 1999 another such capitol rotunda event is going to be held-bigger, better, and more powerful! YOU are invited and needed to be there, or to support the effort. If you have a family member or loved one incarcerated in Florida, this is your chance to join with others to demonstrate to our elected officials in Tallahassee that our voice will be heard. If you are an advocate of the civil and human rights of the incarccrated, this is your opportunity to meet with and network with others on the front line in this crucial work. For prisoners. this is the time that you can stand up and be counted, by encouraging your family members and friends to attend this event and be your voice. and it is the time that your direct support is needed through donations. We can no longer be silent and hope it gets better. or wait for someone else to do something. Without opposition. there are those in pO\ver who intend to make it much worse. We all saw the political campaign ads this election based on "getting tougher on prisoners." It is time to make our voices heard above those who promote "get tough" prison policies for political gain orjob security platforms. It is time that accountability be demanded of a prison system concerned only with perpetuating itself at the expense of lost lives and opportunities to change. It is time to come together and speak out against abuse and corruption in the system; speak out against the disregard and arbitrary treatment that prisoners' family, friends and loved ones are increasingly subjected to; and time to speak out against the double-taxation. gouging and monopolization that the Department of Corrections is increasingly engaged in. Alone. not much can be done. That is why we call on YOU to join US to work together for ALL. Efforts are being taken to arrange car-pools and other transportation for those wishing to attend this upcoming Tallahassee event. Suggestions for displays and information ~ooths are invited from free citizens and prisoners alike. Those unable to attend can support this effort by donations, every little bit helps as all the groups involved are non profit and will .be depending on your support to make this event even more effective. Working together, change is possible. For more information, contact: Florida Prison Legal .' Perspectives P.O. Box 660-387 Chuluota FL 32766 407/568-0200 Email: fplp@aol.com Families with Loved ones In Prison 710 Flanders Ave. Daytona Bch. FL 32114 9041254·8453 Email:fiip@afn.org Florida Institutional Legal Services IIIO-C NW 8th Ave Gainesville, FL 32601 352/955-2260 Email: fils@afn.org (Continued on page J2) F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 1 Page 8 " NOTABLE CASES by SherrI Johnson and Brian Morris. FL Supreme Court Approves Sheley. Limits Review of Mandamus Denials Concerning Quasi-Judicial Agency Actions to Certiorari The. Florida Supreme'Court, prompted by the First District Coun of Appeal, has issued an opinion that significantly changes the remedies available to prisoners seeking judicial review of quasi-judicial actions taken by the Parole Commission and the Department ofCorrections. This change is important and should be understood by every law clerk and IlI2 se litigator in the system. In FPLP, VolA, Iss.3, a fairly extensive anicle entitled "En Ranc First DCA Limits Prisoners' Appeals" was run concerning a case out of the First DCA: Shelev v. Florida Parole Commission, 703 SO.2d 1202 (Fla. Ist DCA 1997). In that case the First DCA held that prisoners are not entitled to a full appeal to the DCA following the denial of a petition for writ of mandamus in the circuit coun that concerned a quasi-judicial decision of a state agency. Quasi-judicial agency decisions are those that are made by an agency, such as the Parole Commission or DOC, that are determined during or following a hearing in which due process is afforded. Examples in the prison context are parole hearings, disciplinary hearings, CM hearings, etc. For many years the normal judicial remedy sought by prisoners to challenge quasi-judicial actions of the Parole Commission or DOC has been by a petition for writ of mandamus in the circuit couns. Following a denial of such petition, histori·cally prisoners had been allowed to proceed with an appeal to the DCA of the mandamus denial. However, the First DCA in Shelev disa~ · proved prisoners being aliowed to proceed with what is termed a "plenary" or "full" appeal in the DCA. Essentially. the coun held that since the original hearing of the agency is like a trial and the petition for mandamus is like an "appeal" of that trial, then prisoners are not entitled to obtain a ·second appeal" in the DCA. The coun held that only certiorari review i~ available in the DCA in such a ease. And, ceniorari review is strictly limited to review of (I) whether the circuit coun failed to afford due process of law, or (2) whether the circuit coun failed to observe the essential requirements of law. The merits of the underlying cause that initiated the petition for mandamus often will not even be considered under the ceniorari review; only whether the circuit coun afforded due· process and complied .with the essential requirements oflaw in denying the petition for mandamus. The First DCA in ~ certified connict with another coun that had held that a full appeal should be allowed. This resulted in the Florida Supreme Coon accepting jurisdiction to resolve the connict, \\'bich it has now done, upholding and · approving the First DCA's decision. That Court stated. "[Wle hold that once an inmate has had a full review on the merits of a Parole Commission order in the circuit court, he or she is not entitled to a second plenary appeal of the order in the district court." See: Shelev y Florida Parole Commission k1!I, 23 FLW 5556 (Fla. 10/22/98). IComment: Do not be confused and believe that lliItt doa not apply to DOC qUlUi-judlcial proceedings just F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 1 because §IWa only concerned a parole hearing. FollowIng the above decision by the FL Supreme Court the Fint DCA .quickly mored to deny several appeals purluant to §hgkx that were n1ed' against the DOC. E.g.: Spencery. Singletary. DOC.lJ FLW 01403; Rgdgm v. Singletary, 23 FLW D2404; Hani:! y. S;ngletary.DOC, 23 FLW D2404. As noted in the above mentioned article In FPLP VoL4, Iss.3, It Is essential that the difference between seeking review of a quasi-judicial agency action and seeking to compel performance of a ministerial duty (that did not involve a quasi-judicial proceeding) be fully u!'dentood by all Florida prisoner litigants followIng §hgkx, It may be however, that the Fint DCA will refuse to reeognlze the distinction, and hold that onty certiorari Is allowed In the DCA even though there was no underlying qUlUi-judicial proceeding. Since it is felt that the true pUrJ10se of ~ was to reduce the prisoner case load of tbe Flnt DCA, then this may very well happen. Regardless, If federal constitutional issues are raised in every step of tbe state remedies sought, denial of a petition for certiorari revieW by the DCA will serve as final slllte exhaustion and allow the federal courts jurisdiction to again reach the merits of tbe cIlJlmlsl, -sjl, Error to Deny Writ Without Opportunity to serve Reply 'The Fifth District Coun of Appeal held. and the Parole Commission conceded, that prisoner Charles Minott should not have had his petition for writ of hall,eas corpus denied before he was given an opportumty to file a reply to the Commission's response. Citing Bard v Wolson, 687 So.2d 254 (Fla. 1st DCA 1996) (Where response does not contain mere denial but sets forth matters in the nature of affirmative defenses or avoidance's, appellant should lIave been allowed 20 days to serve a reply. If the response had contained mere denials. no reply would have been authorized. In that circumstance, the trial court .would have been required to hold hearing to resolve factual disputes.), the Coun vacated the order ofthe circuit court denying Minott's petition and remanded with instructions for the lower coun to allow Minott twenty days to liIe a reply to the Parole Commission's response. See: Mjnott y, State of Florida. et al.. 718 So.2d 381. 23 FLW D2290 (Fla 5th DCA 10/9/98). (Comment: This Is a common problem. Circuit courts often will deny habeas and mandamus petitions without allowing a reply to tbe respondent's response. Although not cited by the Minott court, Rule 9.100(k), F.R.App,P" concerning petitions for extraordinary relief of all types, provides that a petitioner has 20 days in which a reply, with l! supplemenllli appendix, may be filed following a -response (containing affirmative defenses or avoidance) toa sho,,: cause order hy the opposing party. -sjl Prison Release Re-orrender Act'Not Ex Post Facto Prisoner Joe Plain was released from prison after serving time .on a prior charge before the Prison Release Re-offender Act, section 775.082(8)(a), F.S. (1997), became effective on May 30, 1997. The Act provides for greater penalties for new offenses com: milled within three years of being released from a Florida correctional facility (Section 775.082(8)(a)I.). Plain picked up new charges on August 4, 1997, for burglary of a dwelling wlballery and aggravated battery and had the Act applied to his sentencing because. he had committed a felony within three years of his prior prison release. Plain appealed, arguing that 'the Act, as applied to him, because his prior sentence was completed before the Act became effective. was an unconstitutional ex post facto application ofthe law. The 4th DCA disagreed. The Court determined that the "Act increases the penalty for a crime committed after the Act, based on a conviction which occurred prior to the Act." And that "lilt is no different than a prisoner receiving a stiffer sentence under a habitual offender law for a crime committe~ ~fter t~e. passage of the law, where the underlying convictions glvmg the defendant habitual offender status occurred. prior to the passage ofthe law. (Cites omitted)." Plain's conviction and sentence was AFFIRMED. See: Plain v. State, _ SO.2d 23 FLW 02309 (Fla. 4th DCA 10/14/98). Mandamus Will Not Lie to Compel Private Attorney . to Furnish Court Documents Free of Charge Prisoner Greg Donahue filed a petition for writ of mandamus to try to get the coun to compel his former private attorney to furnish him, ~ ofcbarge, copies of legal documents that the attorney had compiled during the apparent course of representing Donahue on a criminal case. The circuit coun denied the petition and Donahue appealed. The DCA correctly noled that the the tiles of a private attorney, except for documents given to the attorney by the client to hold, are the pro~rty of the attorney. Pleadings, investigation repons, .subpoena copies, repons, and other case preparation documents are property of the attomey, not the client. Second, the DCA noted that even if Donahue's attorney had been appointed or a public defender that Donahue still would not have been entitled to the'documents free of charge citing Woodson v Durocher 588 SO.2d 644 (Fla. 5th DCA 1991), ~ 598 So.2d 79 (Fla. 1992). The only exception would be documents like trial transcripts that were paid for at public expense. .Third, the DCA, again correctly, noted that mandamus is not the proper remedy to compel a private citizen, like a private attorney, to perform a "ministerial duty· required by law. Only government officials have "ministerial duties· created by a law or rule. , Forth, the DCA correctly noted that even if Donahue could require the production of "records· without payment (as if from a public defender, or other government official), it would only be for plenary (direct) appeals, not for post-conviction proceedings. The DCA CIted numerous cases in support of its conclusion that Donahue's petition was properly denied. See: Donahue v. Vaughn,_So.2d---" 23 FLW D2369 (Fla. 5th DCA 10/23/98). (Comment: If Doaahue hid did even a minimal amouat of research Into this matter before IIdgadag It he would have known that not only was maadamus the tollllly IlDpnlper remedy, but that it is well-settled la Florida that you either pay for such cnples or you don't get them. What a wlste or time and energy. This Is a pt'rfect example of tbe need to thoroughly research each and every Issue and remedy sought BEFORE litigation. -sjl Transcripts of Collateral ProceedIngs Free to Indigent Defendants In this ease, Joseph Colonel successfully'argued that he has a constiiutional right to a free transcript of the .. evidentiary hearing cOnducted with respect to his Rule 3.850 motion and that, under the circumstances of this P age 9 p.1lticuJar c:ase, Miami.Dade County is responsible for paying the COIlS ofthose trunseriplS. The Third DCA found that ·mlle U.S. Supreme CClun,inQriffiny lJIingls,351 U.S. 12. 17·18(1956), lIeld that II State may nClt discrimiftllte alll1inst convicted defendllnlS because of their poverl)' by denying an indigenl mppellanl a free lranscript in lIis direcl IIJlpeol." The Third DCA also found thol. approxi. mutely ten years' later, the U.S. Supreme Court IIcld, "in Long y Districi Coun oflmm. 385 U.S. 192,193 (1966), that un indigentllppellunt was entitled to a free U'llIlSCript in II Stllte postconvielion proceeding.· Find· ing thot un indigent defendunt hu a constitutiClnul right to have court COlt, including COIlS of transtriplS paid fClr by the government. tile Third DCA held thot "Colonel is entitled to a free transcripl ofthe hearing on lIis 3.850' mGlion.· See: Colpnel y SUlII:, 23 FLW D2593 (FIll. 3d DCA, 11.25.98). COUDleI'. Reference to SlIItutory Mallmum Wltll. out Refel"ellce to Guidelines Undercuts Volunlllrl· neuofPlea After entering lIis plea lind being sentenced to II seventeen year prison lerm to be followed by II tllree year period of probation, Rodolfo Delacruz sougllt pClSlCOnviction relief under Floridll Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.850. Delacruz argued. among otllerthings, that his plea was nClt voluntarily entered because lIis trial attomey hlld misinformed him with regard to tile penalty he fllCed if he-proceeded to trial and WIIS found guilty. DelllCCUZ Clllimed that his lltlOmey told him he could receive a IWenty·nve to tIIirl)' year term of im· prisOnment if found guilty of both DUI munslaughter und ICIlving the scene of an accidenl involving sc:riClUS injury Clr deatll. II is lI'IIC tIIat for these two second degree fdonies, absent the sentencing guidelines, tile statulofy maximum penlIhy that Delacruz could have received is thirty years imprisClnment. However. "lICXOrding to the guidelines DelllCCUZ could receive no mare than nineteen years' imprisonment absent a valid depanure sentence.· Signincandy. in his Rule 3.850 mCllin. Delacruz demonstrated prejudice by claiming that he would nClI have entered the plea hlld his atlOmey properly lIdvised him witll respect to tile maximum potential penalty pursuuntto the guidelines. When tile trial court denied relief without altllching records to refute tIIis involunlalY plCll c111im, tile Second DCA expressly noted that "[a) reference by counsc:llo the Statulllry maximum witllout un explanation of tile guidelines painlS un unrealislic picture of the true exposure a defendunt confronlS.· REVERSED AND REMANDED. See: Delacrnu SIllte,23 FLW D2S11 (Fla. 2d DCA 11·13· 98) AEDPA One Year Filing L1mllallon Runs From Effective Date of Ad For Both 42 U,S.C, Sec. 2254 and 2255 FlClrida prisoner Jessie Wilcox filed a petition for writ of hllbeu corpus on June 24, 1996, .in the federal court challenging is~ ues that he hlld rtlised in a direct appeal in the Slate court and that became nnal when tile direcl appeal was denied und a mandate issued on July 2, 1992. The federol distriel coun dismissed Wilcox's 42 U.S.C. Sec. 2254 habeu petiliCln I1S time-barred under tile Anti-Terrorism and Effective DelltIt Penalty Ael of 1996 (AEDPA) one-year provision in 28 U.S.C. Sec. 2244(d). that became effCClive April 24, 1996. The distriel court reasoned that al· though Wilcox filed his petiliCln two mClnths after tile AEDPA's effective date, thot Wilcox's petition was time-barred under Sec. 2244(dXIXA) because it was not filed witllin one year of the slllle court of appeal denying his direCI appeal back in 1992. F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 1 Wilcox appealed to the II th Circuit Court of Appeal arguing thot the distriel court erred in reUOllClively applying the AEDPA one-year filing provision to his petitiCln, w1tere tile AEDPA was not enacted until mClre tIIan five YCllrs after his convielion became final in the stal~ coun. The 11th circuit reversed the district court's dismissal and held thot, I1S previClusly noted with approval in a similar case involving a federal prisoner's Sec. 2255 habeas petition. Goodman v US, 151 F.3d 1335 (II th Cir. 1998), thot the one-year filing limitation in the AEDPA "d(oes) not begin to run againsl uny state prisoner prior to the statute's date ofenaClmenl• The IIth circuit IIJlpeol court REVERSED and REMANDED Wilcox's case to tile distriel court for fur· ther proceedings. See: Wilcox y, FIB Depamnent of Cprreclipns F.3d __ , 12 FLW Fed. 029 (11th Cir. 10/29/98). Not Double Jeopardy to Subject Prisoner to Both CrimInal Charges And Disciplinary Action On October 29, 1998. tile federal 1It11 Circuit Coun of Appeal determined that it is not dCluble jeopardy when prisoners are subjected to both criminal cllarges and in·prison disciplinary action for tile some incident. During October 1995 there WIIS a riot at Federal Correctional Institution (FCI) Talilldega, AL. Between 200 and 300 prisoners participated in the riot. The resulling damage was eslimated at 53 million. Follow· ing tile riot and an investigatiGn, severtll prisoners were charged witll in·prison discipliftllry vioilltions of the rules and regulations during the riot. They were subjeCled to disciplinary transfers, confinement, loss of good time. temporary loss of privileges und visitation after being found guilty in prison discipliftllry proceed· ings. Following the disciplinary action. the prisoners also were 'charged in criminal indiClments returned by a grand jury. The prisoners pled nClt guilty, and moved to dismiss tile criminal charges on double jeopardy grounds as tIIey hlld a1relldy been subjeCled 10 in-prison disciplinary action for tile same conduct. The distriel coun, accepting tile magistrate's recommenda· tion that the mCltiCln to dismiss be denied, ovemlled tile double jeopardy objCClions and denied the motion to dismiss. The criminal cases went to trial, where the prisoners were shackled in the courtroom after tile district coun found that they had histories of violent behavior and in·prison discipliftllry problems. At tile trial held in 1996 the prisoners were found guilty on a variety of charges and sentencing followed. The prisoners appealed on several grounds, of wllich tile II til Circuit Court of Appeals only considered two: the double jeopardy c111im und whetller tile pris~)fters were denied a fair trial as a resull of being sllackled in the courtroom. In a lengtlly opinion, tile 11th Circuit deter· mined, essentially, that in-prisCln disciplinary sanc· tions are "civil" in nature and do not constitute criminal punisllment for double jeopardy purposes. Therefore, the Court "decline(d) to c1usil)' tile regulations [disciplinary) as 'criminal." The Court affirmed the district court's denial of the mCltion to dismiss on the dCluble jeopardy grounds. Next the Court examined and determined tIIat the district court did not abuse its discretion in requiring tile prisoners to be shackled in tile courtroom, and thot eve'! if discretion hlld been abused thai lhe prisoners .hlld failed to sllow uny prejudice as a result. The Court noted that the district coun look care thot tile jury never saw the shackles. See: United States of America v Mayes Harris, et ai, __ F.3d __ , 12 FLW Fed. C231 (11th Cir. 10/29/98). PLRA Provision RequIres Admlnlstrollve ElbaUl- lion of Remedies Even If Futfie or Inadequate Michsel Alexunder, a federal prisoner housed in Floricb, med suit against prison officiIJIs claiming thol tIIeir enforcement of the Ensign Amendment that prohibilS federal prisoners from receiving sexually explicit materials violated lIis First Amendment rights. AleXl1llder sought an injunetiCln. declaratory relief, und monetary damages. He did not exhaust the Bureau of Prisons' (BOP) griCVl\llce process claiming tile same relief before proceeding to federal court. The Middle Distriel Court ofFlorida dismissed A1exandCl's action for failure to exhaust lldministrati\'C remedies as required by the Prison Litigation Reform Act of 1995 (PLRA), 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1997e(a). AleXl1llder appealed the district court's dismissal of his aeliCln to tile II th Circuil Coun of Appeals raising two issues: (I) tllat section 1997e(a) only applies III stale prisoners because it addressed only section 1983 llclions involving state action; and, (2) tIIlll the BOP administrative remedies are futile und inlldequate because tile BOP has no authority to award monetary damllges or declare tile Ensign Amendment unconstitu· lional. Addressing AleXl1llder's nrst issue. the \I til Cir· cuit determined tIIat sCClion 1997e(a) expressly provides that its exhaustion requirement applies to actions brought "under section 1983 . . . or any otller Federal hiw," and I1S such section 1997e(a) applies to federal prisoners' !fum1actions (Ille federal prisoner equivalent to state prisoners' seeliGn 1983 actiClns). The Coun also found thllt legislative hislofy "makes clear that Congress intended PLRA section '997e(a) to apply to both federal und state prisoners." Turning to Alexander's second issue on appeal, lhat exhausting BOP administrative remedies would have been futile and inadequate in his c:ase, tile Court held, in effect, thllt WIIS immaterial. Examining priClr case law, the Court noted that before the PLRA WlIS adopted it had been established in some instllllees that where administrative exhaustion of remedies would be futile or inadequate that such was not necessary in eitller section 1983 or Bivens llctions, especially where tile only remedy sought WIIS monClaty damages. But, tile Coun noted that in ~ I:I!lM. 40 F.3d 347 (I I til Cir. 1994), und ~ Sandoval y Honsted, 35 F.3d 521 (IItII Cir. 1994), where botll monelalY damages and injunctive relief were sought, then lldminislJ1ltive exhaustiCln WIIS required. . The Coun then went on to note and claril)' thot uny pre·PLRA ·judicially recognized futility and inlldequacy exceptions do not survive tile new mundatory exhaustion requiremenlS ofthe PLRA." , The Court delermined tIIat the only remaining exception allowing non-exhausliCln of administrative remedies is where Ihere arc no adminislnllive remedies availllble 10 exhaust (apparenlly some states do not have grievance procedures). Wllere there is un adminis· tralive remedy system in place, ho\vever, tile Court held tIIat those remedies must be exhausled. even if futile and inadequate or ·even if the relief offered bY thot program does not appear to be 'plain, speedy. and effCClive,'" it still must be exhausted. The II th Circuit agreed witll the district coon, und essentially held tIIat even ifadministrative remedies do nOI provide monelalY or injunctive relief or declllflllOry relief, still, under tile PLRA. it is necesSaIy tlI8l' such claims be presented adminisuatively before those claims con be raised in federal coun. The dismissal of Alexander's complaint for failure to exhaust admin· istrative remedies was AFfIRMED. See: Alexander v Hm. 12 FLW Fed. C235 (11th Cir. IIISJ98), 159 F.3d 1321. (Commmr: 1bJI case is IMPORTANT and needs to be read and undfntaod by tvf/)' prisco Iidplllr• .,jll Page 10 Piccirillo & Son, Inc.· Providing Expert Witness and Criminal Justice Consultant Services With Over 25 Years o/Experience in Post-Sentencing, Post-Conviction Relief.. and Corrections Related Matters Post Office Box 10062, Tallahassee, Florida 32302 FREE INITIAL CONSULTATION Inmates May Call Collect or Write to Arrange for a, Legal Phone Call New Tallahassee, Florida Executive Office Number: (850) 402-0002 Executive Clemency - Work Release - Institutional Transfers Gain Time Correction and Restoration - Disciplinary and Disciplinary Appeals Parole and Parole Revocation - Resolution of Detainers - Interstate Compact Services Provided Through Referral to Associated Counsel Direct Criminal Appeals -. Belated Appeals .~ Post-Conviction Relief Proceedings State and Federal Habeas Corpus Proceedings . ABOUT GARY "AL" PICCIRILLO Gary "AI" Piccirillo has served over 14 years in such state prisons as Sing Sing and Raiford. While incarcerated•. he became a popular jail house lawyer successfully advocating the rights of his fellow prisoners. See Department of Corrections v. Piccirillo, 474 So.2d 199 (Fla. lSI DCA 1985); Department of Corrections v. Adams & Piccirillo. 458 So.2d 354 (Fla. lSI DCA 1984); Piccirillo v. Wainwright, 382 So.2d 743 (Fla. 1st DCA 1980), and 1h Adams & Piccirillo v. James,784 F.2d 1077(11 Cir. 1985)., . . Following ·his release, from the Florida State prison system in 1983 and after years of education ·and hard work. his criminal lifestyle has changed. He is now the President of Piccirillo & Son, Inc., the Editor and Publisher of The Florida Post-Conviction Relief Update, Co-Author of Florida Post-Sentencing. Practice and Procedure, Capital Legal Publishing (1995) and Florida Department of Corrections Law Clerk Training Manual (1996). He has writtenarticles relating to access to courts and post-conviction relief in such legal publications as the Florida. Defender and the Informant. He has lectured in Keiser College on the subjects of post-conviction relief and the history of guideline sentencing in Florida. He has served as an expert witness and consultant for the Florida Department of Corrections in matters relating to access to courts and post-conviction relief, and has served as a Qualified Representative before the Department of .. Administration, Division of Administrative Hearings successfully representing prisoners in administrative hearings. He has served as an Executive Director for a residential transitional inmate release programs with grants awarded by the Governor's Office of Criminal Justice Services for Ohio, and the United States Department of . Justice. He has over 25 years of experience in post-conviction relief, criminal appeals, and corrections related matters. He has testified before the United States District Court, Middle District of Florida as an expert on access to the courts and such related matters as post-:conviction relief in the civil rights case of Hooks v. Singletary, 175. F.2d 1433 (11 th • ~ir: 1985). . ': While \\lith the law firm of Daley & Associates, he coordinated the litigation in such cases as State 1I. LeroWe.689 So.2d 235 (Fla. 1996); Maddry v. State, 702 So.2d .1314 (Fla. 1997), and Guisasola v. State, 667 So.2d 248 (Fla. DCA 1995). r' Mr. Piccirillo has been recently retained to work with the law firms of Mark Lane out of Washington, D.C., and . William Sheppard, out of Jacksonville, Florida to provide services as' a expert consultant in matters .relating to post-conviction relief in Florida. ' F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 1 Page 11 (Continuedfrom page 8) would mean, if adopted, that a govern-I ment office or official would have their privilege mail returned to them if it contained a booklet, or fonn, or other written! printed material. The same would be true for news reporters' or organizations; their privilege correspondence would be returned to them (rejected) if it contained clippings they wished to discuss with the prisoner, or drafts of potential articles the reporter or journalist might be considering that are confidential. This proposed rule amendment has no purpose except to further cut FL prisoners off from the outside world and should be objected to in written comments to this proposal. The November 25th notice was a Rule Development notice, the first stage in the rulemaking process. The department will be required to post a (final) Rulemaking Notice on these proposed amendments before adoption. That second notice can be expected to be posied during January or so. At that point FL prisoners will have a 2 I day opportunity to submit comments and objections to the FDOC central office concerning these proposed mail rule amendments. All prisoners are encouraged to do so, and have your family and friends on the outside send comments and objections, or if you have an attor- . ney, ask them to file objections. As many FL prisoners filed comments and objections the first time around on some of these same proposed amendments, and forced the FDOC to reconsider same and make changes, it needs to be done again. Encourage and assist others in filing comments and objections. While some of these new. proposals are good; some are not and will seriously affect FL prisoners and their correspondents if not challenged and defeated or modified-again. . The FPLP staff will be filing objections to the proposed provisions noted in this art;cle and working to organize outside opposition. Hope~lIy, it will be .possible for our staff to request and attend a public hearing in opposition to these proposed provisions, It is time that we all must work together again, so get those pens warmed up. The name and address at the central office of who to address your comments and objec~ions to is: Perri Dale, Attorney, Dept. of Carr., 260/ Blair Stone Rd, Tallahassee FL 323992500,. POLICY RESCINDED In November '98 the FPLP staff was notified that Sumter CI had· implemented a new policy prohibiting prisoners on Close Management (CM) status· from receiving postage stamps through the mail. The staff contacted Florida Institution Legal Service's Executive Director, Glen M. Boecher, Esq., about this, who in tum contacted Sumter CI officials. It was subsequently determined that the policy exceeded Chapter 33 rules and the policy was rescinded. Prisoners on CM status have the same. mail privileges as open population and can receive postage stamps from family and friends for correspondence purposes per Chapter 33 rules. The staff thanks those who informed us about the "policy," and Mr. Boecher who assisted in correcti~g the problem, • NEWS BRIEF In 1998 both Kentucky and Tennessee enacted legislation that allows prisoners in those states who are sentenced to death to elect lethal injection over electrocution, and provides that lethal injection will be the sole means of execution for crimes committed after specified dates. Legislative bills fi'led in the FL legislature to enact a similar measure died without being passed. This leaves Florida, Georgia, Alabama', and Nebraska as the only states with electrocution as the sole method ofexecution.• AROUND THE NATION Alabama- On Aug. 10 '98 a federal district court in AL held that prison officials in that state' had violated prisoners' constitutional rights prohibiting cruel and unusual punishment by chaining them to a ~'hitching post" for refusing to work or punishment. The court found that prison officials had left prisoners chained to th'e rail all day-in cases with their hands above their heads, had refused to provide them water, refused to allow them tQ use the restroom, and had chained prisoners with valid medical problems to the rail because they were unable to work. The court found the prison officials' use of the hit~hing rails to be malicious and sadis- F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE1 . tic. See: Austin y. Hopner, 15 F.Supp. \2\0 (M.D.Ala 1998). Arizona- During Nov. '98, Maricopa Co. Sheriff Joe Arpaio opened the nation's first tent jail for juveniles. Prisoners as young as 14 and sentenced as adults for up to one year in the countyjail will be housed in the tents and fed spoilt sandwich meats, according to Arpaio. The U.S. Justice Dept sued Arpaio in 1997 over excessive use of force in his county jail. That case was settled when Arpaio agreed to stop having prisoners hog-tied. Prisoners have had to file over 800 lawsuits against Arpaio. -During June '98, an unidentified transsexual prisoner filed charges against Maricopa Co. jail guard George' Back, alleging that Back had forced him to perform oral sex.in a cell. Back resigned after the allegation, with the jail claiming the sex was consensual. -On July 2 '98, the federal 9th Cir. Court of Appeals, ruling on a case out of Maricopa Co., AZ, held that the county prison's regulations banning sexually explicit materials/publications that depict "frontal nudity" were over·broad and unconstitutional. See: Mauro v. AmaiQ. 147 F.3d 1137 (9th Cir. 1998), California- In July '98 Ronnie Hawkins was ordered shocked by a 50,000 volt stun belt by Long Beach Municipal Judge Joan Camparet-Cassani for interrupting her during a court hearing. Several attorneys filed complaints about the incident and an investigation was started by the CA Judicial Commission. Hawkins, represented by an attorney, has filed suit over the incident. -The Los Angeles Times reported in early Oct. '98 that CNs prisons system is the only system in the U.S. that uses deadly force to break up fights between prisoners. Since late '94, 12 prisoners have been shot and killed and 32 wounded by prison guards armed with assault rines. Lawsuits over the deaths have so far cost CA $6 million, -Dn Sept. I '98, the CA DOC banned smoking and tobacco possession at 12 prison reception centers. Gov. Pete Wilson ordered the ban as the first step in totally banning smoking in CA prisons. The ban will reduce prison health care costs and arson, claims Wilson. Dist. of Columbla- On Sept. IS '98. the federal appeal court for the Dist. of Columbia overturned a district court ruling that had held that the "Ensign Amendment" that had banned federal prisoners' from receiving publications like Playboy and Penthouse was unconstitutional. The appeal court held that the lower court should have focused on whether the ban had a rational goal, not on whether it' violated the First Amendment. The appeal court 'noted that the restrictions only extended to pictorial materials. The prisoner and publisher plaintiffs have failed to be discouraged by the appeal court reversal and are proceeding with a separate challenge arguing the law is vague. That challenge will go back to the lower court. Until the issue ,is decided, the Bureau of Prisons has said it will not enforce the ban, See: Amatel v. Reno, 156 F.3d 192 (D.C, Cir. 1998), overturning 975 F.Supp. 365 (DC D.C, (997). Florida. A couple formerly from Pinellas-Pas~o Counties in FL, Mindy and Joe Meager, filed suit Page 12 ,n 0« '91 BgaiIlSl former 01. In\"CSllpl.Or of those countIes' Slate Anome) Office, Aluanda Murphy, U)lR& to negotJalc. light srnltn« In exchange (Of "11h lhe \11ft The couple ...as arrested on druB dI-JCS In 1996 for p,cscnpllon pIIln·loallm; and sub{Of $a $C.Qllmll) offcmi. "dell" b) MUI'phy, "00 1qKlf\' ally had powcTful mflucnec "'lUi the Stale Allomc), If Mmd) Meagher ,,"'Culd consent 10 SC:Il instead of corum!mg. the couple $d Murph) up In a motel room, "'1m 1M husband busting In WIth a Video C:tmrnl alkr Murph) was stripped 10 his undCr\\'ClU , lind lryinglo lnlo~icalc the wife \\'llh alcohol. Murphy allegedly threatened 10 kill the husband ~bolll lhe \Idco tape. bUI It "Ils taken 10 aUlhOlities by thc ) couple's aulImC) Murph) was chugcd "111'1 laking unl.... ful compensatIon and 1M ""'I) '98 pled no con· I lest and ....lIS sentenced to 110.'0 )'Un proballon The couple. ,,1'10 110\\ 1I,'c out of stile. elaim In thell l....."ull thll l:\al though tht)- I'll'" onl) gJ\en their ~ phone nllmm to aulhonlll:S, and keep changing the unlined number, Ihq 110\'0 arc receiving nlghtl) h.anrss:lng phone calls aboul the: lncldall rrom an unllXnllfied pason -lbc Banr:ml Women's Clement)' Proj~t shut dovon Ike Jist ror lack or rundlng. lc:a\1ng nC':art) 100 clcmmC} ~ unrC'$Ol~cd, offiCials said ThC' projn:t w:Ili designed to help get reduced sentences or IcleflSC' rrom prison (or women \\110 had killed men \\00 had Ibustd them Btrore clOSing down, Ihe plOJcct aUlsted 17 women prisoners tn betng lelellSetl Loulsilna- A senlcmel1t was reBehed m Sept '98 that \Ioill end the (ederal coull'S o\erslght o( the stale penllCnll8r) at Angoll The agreemenl is sdIeduied to be: srlfiCd In Feb '98 and \IoIU end Img31ion gom8 back 10 1911 -A U.S JustiCC' DC'p.utmenl Itpon rdcascd In July '91 provIded details o( inhumane li"m! CQIldl110m and ph)TleaJ abuSC' b) pnson guards IpUlSI JlI\'C'llllcs III !he prl\-.tel)-optBtcd TlllIulab COlfeetiOlUl Faclllt) (or YOIlth m Tullulah. lA The: m\·dll· ptlOfi round that the rood being (cd Ihe JU\'emlcs \lollS not adeqllate to momtom health, that thelt WIIS nOI enough clothes 01 shoes pro\ldcd, that educallOfial PfOIIImS were \'CI) poor, and that C"\en though mOft than one-forth ohhc JU\'cmlC5 welc documented lIS menially ill or rC'1arded, there WlIS almost no ps)'chiollie ClUe being provided. Additionally, the in\·CStlgllion round that physical beatmgs b) piison gulUds were IOUllne. \Iolth almost C"\'el)' Ju\'emle lit Ihc raeilit) haVing pcrrotated C':udrums rlOm seHre beatings. Follo\loIn. the JlI\ent1c Jw.tiee ProJCet o(L.A filing a laWSUit Jbout!he condl1lOlls and the: JlI~llce Dept. in\dup, tlOll. !he SWC' tool.: conl1Ol or !he racdlt) (10m the pm~ tomp3ll). In Dcccmba II was announced that Aorldl bued Correcllonal Servlees COrponlllOn (CSC) \10'111 w:e o\a the racillt) CSC promlscs 10 ckacase the \·ioIatce, add eduaot)oo.al programs, and lInpfO"C' the mental and medical c:arc at 1M (<\CIIII) Ntw 'limpshlrt_ .\ Judge (ound t\lo'O st;;ue laws that boned pnsooers (rom voting 10 be unconslllulional The ACLU ltllgated the C4$C ror NH prisonel David Fischer, woo ....lIS allo\loed to vOle In the Nove:mber c1wiOlls by absentee ballot [Only fi\'e states allow prisoners to vote, the)' ale' ME, MI\, NH, Ul', and VT -cd] NtM Jrru)· On Jul) 21, '9&, I (ederal distnel coun In NJ rulrd that I lcglslamrl) tTeatrd state ban F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 1 aplllS! sexuall) c-1[phell mal.al.als sent 10 Impnsoned sex offenders was a uolation o((nx spcC'Ch nghts The court lhoroughl) cxarmnrd the dl(_ ference !hat IS OVocd pnson officnl1s. but oommncd ,n thiS case that the did not erute: tl'le ban. the IC'JlSI.tul"C did. and C"\ldencc: showed that such matenall$ used m cases to tltot sex offenders. The court Issued a permanent IIIJunellOll .g'lnst the ban and the state llItome)' hIlS appeBled Sec Walerman y. Vel!Cra. 12 FSupp 2d J64 and 31& (0 NJ 199&) ocx: Nt" ,\Inieo- A rederal Judge 10 NM dctcrmll1ed on Jul) 2, '98, \1\01 a COtl"Ccuonal offiecr. Dann) TOftel'. "ho "or~cd ror pn..tepIlSon cornpan) Coneetrons Corporahon or AmCllea. was a "nate attar" bUI not a stale emplo)'tt Immune ([om eompensalOl') Md pumtl\e damages In a e"ll nghts SUit filed b) N'\' remale pnsona Tan)'ll GllOn Gtroll alleges th~ Torret C'nte:red hcr cell on Ma) 26. '94. 1lI the NM Women's Coneeuonal Faelhl) m Grants, NM, and rotcibl) raped her Tomz' has admitted the tapC' 1I0wc\a. Ihe court also hrld that neither CCA not the: warden orw rllCihl) \lotTe liable m the sun and dlsmtssed them (rom the case 1:\1denee tn the cllSe sho.... ed numerous mCldents or sexual Impropriet) had oceurred at the same prison be:t"eC'n male gUlllds and (emale prisoners both before and aller Tan)lI Gllon was raped See Grron y. CCA, 1'1 F SUPI' 2d 1245 and 1252 (DNM 1999) OhIo- During mid-Dee '98, parole: offiCials .grccd to re-releasc American Indian and pilson aeU\lSl Tlmoth) "Lutle Roek w Reed after he had been lC'1wned to aU rrom N~1 Reed..... 1Io IS hal( La1:ota SIottt. an4 \10110 stnC'd 10 )TS. In all prisons. Oed ~ole In OH In I99J \Iohcn he: dllmcd that 011 offICials thrulmcd to pUI him boek tn prison rOf Speal.lOg out about pnson abuKS Reed WllS especll\lIy critlcBl orthc: AmCIIcan COfreCllon:tl AsSQCuitlOn and !he role: It play'S m "sclltng aetredltalJon" to statc pilson S)'Stc:ms Rccd \lollS Inested III NM in 1996, bUI the NM stnte courts rerused to turn him over to OIl ror l:xtmdilion. Thc U.S Suprtrnc COllrt o\'efrulcd the NM eouns and Reed had been returned to Oli on Dee 2nd. No\lo thai 011 has relellSCd R~d. he SB)S he \10111 rdumc pursuing deglccs in Amer Indian ISSUes and tumlnal JUStice: 10 CinCinnati lind feturn to NM I ) an lndlall ad\OCIte OUlhom.. - Dunng No\ '9g (arml) mcmbcn and rnends or OK pnsontn e1almed th:t1 a IIC\O OK b311 on plCUcc:s to pnsoocrs and high c:oll~1 telephone rllteS arc designed to souge rnonq out or those \10110 ha\'C' I kJ\'ed one 10 ocx: pn~ l'tnns)lvllnil- The redCTIII Jrd CU'CUlt COUll of Appeals ruled on Aug 25. '98, thaI PA prison offieials muSt Slap readlOg the legal mall or eondemnedjournBll1l Mumio ,\bu-Jamal and thaI they cannot enforce a rule prohibitmg him (rom writing proressionally 01 conducting a bUSiness by sueh "Titing while on death row Abu-Jamal iJ on the PA duth row ror the alleged killing o( II PA pollee: officer In 19&1 The: court llOIcd thlt Abu-Jamal is a prollfie "flla \10110 has had 1r1l- e1es appear 10 suclt noted pubhcauOl1$ IS the: Yak lAw JOll.mDl and 1M /1'0110/1 Sec Abu-Jamal ). Prjce el a1. 154 F.3d \28 (Jrd Cir OnOet 29. '9&, the PA S Ct upheld Abu-Jamal's 19B2 199', eOO\'IC1>On ..nth hiS altornc) pnmilSlO& 10 appeal 10 the (ederal courts -Famtl) members orPA P"SOOe:tS Ire ealltng (ot llIl orgllr1lzcd bo)'eon o( all 1.277 prISoner tdepllOnes III PA's H pmons (or the enllle month or May '99. The boycott IS being called to plOtts! the exccsswe tdephone ratC5 o( PA prisons In 1997 alone, the PA DOC gouged o\'er 56 million in kiekhaeks rrom liS telephone contraet with AT&T rrom ptlsoncrs ramlltes and fnendii. More mro r 0 Bo~ 4N.lhlJTlS\llle PA 16038 . Tuu· AlIOIne) General Dan Morales, "110 IS leaymg that offite aller 8 )ears, slaled the stile's clement} program muSt be: made more open to the public and lIlal officials na:d to SWd) TllCial bw In dca1It Sl:ntmteS 10 TX. W,!h 446 pcvple on the TX dC'al1t lOW. J2% art \Iohlle, romp:md 10 6r/. or the Slate population, 46% arc black., 12% o( the state's POPUlation, IIId 20% lUe UlSplllle, 26% o( the stale population Utllh- On Aplll 29. '98. !he UT txlC stilled a e1ass lIellon laWSUit broughl by UT plisoners agamst a policy banmng prisonelS rrom ~ordenng. reec:lving. 01 possess 109" [lIl)' \IoTlIten 01 printC'd maltflals thai eontaln nudity or plUdal nudlt) The UT IXlC agrced to "Ithdra.... the poUe) and pny the prisonen' IIUornc)', IJrlall IJornard, 515,000 10 anomey (CCS This is an unpubllshed case I'crry)' MeCpI!Cl. US OC Ulah, Case No 97-eV-0475C Virginil- Duling mld·Dec. '98, SenIOr Warden Paui LeIgh orthe Fluvanna COfTCCIlonaJ Centcr, the IIlf&C'SI women's pnson 10 VA. re(used 10 en(om: a VA maseanr and other eosmetIcs. Wankn Leigh swed. "IJust don't ~ a sc:eunl) issue" I 010 YOU KNOW? Currtntl)', more than 1.8 mHiion indhidwlis lire ineurec:rnted in adult com:elional rueilities in the United Silltes and lit lettst 100,000 juveniles nre inCltfeemted, According 10 recent U.S. Dcpal1mC'llI or Juslicc statistics. natIonwide, more than 70% o( people entering State correctional racilities have nOI completed high school, lUld -t6'r. ha\'C' had no high sehool edueation at all. ,\ 1997 stud) b) the COIteI' on Crime, Communities lind Culture (ound that or the estimaled 9~. or oITml!crs .... 00 IfC C'\"Cnluall)' l"Cle.lSC'd back inlo the communit)'. those who receive an education \Iohile incarcerated hlwe a significanl1) bC'ltC'f mle or emp10)mml-bd.wc~n60 and 75%thlUl those who do no! panicipate in edue1ltion programs. The stud) also reponed that inmates with at lettst {\\o )'ears or po5t-secondlll)' education have a 10% fe-arresl mte, comp:1rCd 10 a nlltionalre-arrcSI rale of approximately 6O'Y..I EDUCATION IS THE KEY TO FREEDOM Get II AnywBy You Can Page 13 LITERATURE REVIEW ramify. Friends, Loved Olles OUTSlDERS LOOKING IN: I-Iow To Krep From Going Craz)' When Someone You Love Goes To Jail by Toni D. Weymouth, Ed.D.• and Mllria Telesco. R.N., B.A. OllNC Publishing (Pub.) (1998) 351 pg. Paperback Where can you tum to when a family member or loved one is accused or convicted of a crime? Why is il thaI family members. friends, and loved ones. who have commined no crime, often become Ihe forgonen, invisible victims of Ihe criminal justice system? How can you deal with a system that you know nothing about. where can you gel answers, how can you deal with the stress and problems, and what can you do to help? OUTSIDERS LOOKING IN answers those questions and many more. If there is a primer for addressing the cares, concerns and questions of Ihe increasing numbers of family members, friends and loved ones of the criminally accused and conviCled-it is this new book. An excerpt from the introduction reads: The perplexity of Ihe Calm process, along wilh reporu ofperils lurking ill overcrowded imtitutiotJ$, SCi the stage for confusion and fellr. TlIis cripples the family system, and makes il difficult to develop slrategies for Ihe fuwre of the family rmit. Children II'ho.se parCII/ or parents arc in prison experil.!IIt·c proiongcli inSlability alld wlcerloillty. and are Ihree times marc likely Ihan their COlmlerparls to rrm afoul ofthe law as Ihey grol\' older. Those who Clller the COllrI ami prison systems go through periods of anxiel)', Irauma. shame. guilt and lerror. These feelings can cause ph)'sical and menial illness and severely impdr their ability 10 function effectively. Demystificatioll of the proceu prepares the family and Ihe ac· cwed 10 cope during the Irial and afterwards. Learning aboul rules, regulations. social aspects and day 10 day prison life will help families conquer their fears and regam control oftheir lives. Inmales, ex-convicts. family members, altorm!ys. correctional staff (md others who work in, ar /ttn·c /tad contact with Ihe F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5. ISSUE 1 criminal prosecution alld delentiall syslem h(1\'e contributed to this II'ork. alld lYe are gratefill 10 them all for their assistance and input. They relate their feelings and experiences, talk aOOm lile emotionai impaCI of incarceration. alld offer praclical advice and lips an dealing with lh/! s)'slem. An invaluable source of infonnation, OUTSIDERS LOOKING IN seeks to empower those who love someone who is in prison or jail. The insights are powerful and accurate. \\hile the tips and advice are practical and obviously from olhers who ha\e "been Ihere and done Ihat," In one source. this book lakes Ihe reader through the arrest. coun and scntencing process in non-technical. everyday language. explaining Ihings both the accused and family needs to know. How 10 deal with the stress. lawyers. couns. prison rules and officials. are all cov· ered within Ihe 351 pages of this well wrinen book. Available from: OLiNC Publishing, P.O. Box 6012, Fresno CA 93703-6012. Price: $11.95 (SI9.95 + 52.00 S&H, California residenls add sales lax).• NEW ADMISSIBLE READING MATERIAL RULES On 10120/98 lhe FDOC adoptcd new nIles at 33·3.012(5)(c) and (6)(b), F.A.C.. that provide lhal if II prisoner receives notice of a publication/reading material rejeclion and imends to appeal thc rejection, thcn in order for the material to be held while Ihe appeal process is exhausted the prisoner, in addilion to filing an appeal, must also send the superinlendem of the institution a notice of intent to appeal the rejection. This notice of inlem is to be submiued on a DG3-005 Request Fonn within 15 days of the dllte of the notice of rejection. Another rule that was amended on 10120198. at 33-3.012(11), F.A.C.• provides thai "books. periodicals or other publications" can now be received from "wholesnle or mail order distributors or bookstores." This changed the former rules Ihnl had only allowed books and publications 10 come from the publisher. This amendmem also removed Ihe fonner prohibilion that prevemed Fl prisoners from receiving books from book clubs.• r----------------.., Secret Toolsfor pos,.com·;clion R~/i~/. by Joe Allan Bounds. 1998 Edition. 314 pages, 13 page Table of Contellt with over 440 quick reference lopies wilh favorable supponing federal case law. "The Research Reference Book for Lawyers and PostConviction Litigants for Prevailing 011 Inef· feclive Assislallce of Counsel Claims, and Methods of ESlablishing 'Cause' fot Procedural Default.· Topics: Preparing for Post-Conviction Relief; Ineffective Assis· tnnce of Counsel; Connict of Interest; Cause Procedural Default; Actual Innocence; Fundamenlal Miscarriage of Justice; The "Ends of Justice"; Novelty Issues of Law; Intervening Change in Law; Retroactive Application of the Law; and much more! 1999 Edition will be released in March, 1999. Please specify which edition beginning 3/1(98. Regulnr pricc $69.95 plus $6.00 shipping lind hnndling (inmate discoumed price $49.95 plus 56.00 shipping and handling). Texas residents please add 7.75% sales tax. Send check or money order to: Zone DT Publishing. P. O. Box 1944, Dept. FPLP, Vernon, Texas 76384. l'OSTCONVICflO:·.. Il.ElH: .... I'... ROlE. CI••:M.:NC\' &: ",0.11.001" Callihe t.'l:pcriencc:d expcns at the Law Office or Bernard F. Daley. Jt. David Collins. or Counsel. ··'and Troy Drowning. our paroJegal specializing in clemency. pardons. and restorotion of civil rights. Contact Bernie Daley. David W. Collins, Atlorneys atla..... or Troy Bro.....ning. at (850) 224-5823 Web Site I\ddress: Ww\\.noridaclemency.com ,. ''1'\00: ...... or. '-..,... Q.. ~ .aa- _ sloould _ be baled Ddy ape. ..e..'CfUIaaalU- Brion: ,.. dtadc, ak1be t.-ya 10 oaod)"'l he ~ IIbouI"QlDbf ~- Page 14 PRISON LEGAL NEWS "Perhaps the most detailed joumal describing the development of prison law is Prison Legal News." -- Marti Hiken. Director Prison Law Project of the National Lawyers Guild. ! PLN is a 24 page. monthly magazine. published since 1990. edited by Washington state prisoners Paul Wright and Dan Pens. Each issue is packed wilh summaries and analysis of recenl court rulings dealing wilh prison rights. written from a prisoner perspective. Also included in each issue are news articles dealing with prison-relaled slruggle and aclivism from the U.S. and around Ihe world. Annual subscription rates are SIS for prisoners. If you can't afford to send SIS at once. send at least S1.50 and we will pro-rale your subscriplion al S1.2S per issue. Please send no less Ihan $7.50 per donation. New (Unused) U.S. poslage stamps may be used as payment. For non-incarcerated individuals. the subscription rate is $2Slyr. Inslitulional subscriplions (for allorneys. libraries. government agencies, non-governmental organizalions. elc.) are S60/yr. Sample copies are available for $1. Contact Prison Legal News THOMAS E. SMOLKA ATIORNEY-AT-LAW 3126 W. CARY STREET, SUITE 122 RICHMOND, VIRGINIA .23221-3504 TELEPHONE (804) 644-4468 E-MAIL tesmolka@worldnet.att.net ANNOUNCEMENT Thomas E. Smolka is proud to announce the establishment of his law practice in Richmond, Virginia. His practice areas will be Criminal Defense and Post-Com.1ction Remedies. Additionally, Thomas E. Smolka And Associates, 909 East Park Avenue, Tallahassee, Florida 32301-2646, Telephone (850) 222-6400; Telefax (850) 222-6484 will continue to pro\ide consulting seNces to inmates on administratiw. clemency and parole matters. 2400 N.W. 80th St.. Sic 148 Seanle WA 98117 ADVERTlStNG NOTICE ATTENTION FLORIDA INMATES Get your Internet Rap Sheet now!! Contains your FL history with your 3 114" x 4" color picture (usually most recent DOC photo-not your reception center photo). Picture is great for . family or friends. Send $2.50 M/O-CHK+SASE or ten $.32 stamps + SASE to: D. Ridgeway, 925 W. Monona, Phoenix, AZ 85027. Order now!!!!! ATTENTION FLORIDA INMATES Work Release Services of Florida Eight y~ars experience with DOC. Very reasonable rates. Work Release, Drug Treatment Transfers Plus much more. For More info, call Mary Grace Crosby at (850) 668-2599 (no collect calls please) F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 1 U 8 ~ ~ II I 8 E ~ 10 0 ~eem for our n:oden. 1M H'U' staff lUes every effon 10 ensun: dw N'/.}' admlUcn ore n:putahlc 0lId quJllIltd for Ihe savices being offered. We ClIMOI penonoJly meet every od~niser. ·!lowever. lIlen:fore ruden ore advised to oIWIYS penona1ly eonlatl odvatiJcn for funha infomullion on Ihm qualifications and experience befon: makina 0 decision 10 hile 011 nnomey or olher "rofelSionalservice "roYider. Renders JIIouid ne~r send legal docwnenJs 10 odwcnilCn before conllClins \hem and receiYing directions 10 SCIId IUeh llIIlCrials. For 1It0se wishinalo odvenise in FPLP. "lease write for rate information 01 1M listed nddreu. AlID: Ad>cnising. or contact l!Ie puhlilhu II: PH: 407lS611-0200 Email: H'U'@acl.eom Wellpage: mernben.otll.comlFPI.l'IH'U' or rnemberuripod.coml· ./01'1.1' SUBMISSION OF MATERIAL TO FPLP Because of lite Inrge 'lIlume ofmnil beilIg received by fl'LP. financinl consideralions. and lIle inlbility 10 proYide individual I.gal ossistanec. leadm should lIOl 5CrtlI copies of legal dOCumertlS of pending or polCIIliaI casn 10 FPLP wilhoul Iinl hoving conlocled Ihe Sllff llOd receimg directions 10 send same. Neilller 1'1'/./'. or ilS S1llff. ore rnponsihle for lilly linsolieiled T matII!'" ial stnl. A k~lII!.rs ore n:quested 10 continue 10 send news inrOnnalion including newspaper c1i""ings (pleose include name of paper ond dale~ mClnornndums. photocopies of filW decisions in un""blished casn. and polenhal anieles for ""blicalion. Ple.se send only cOllies of such mOleri.llh.1 do nOl h8\~ 10 be IClumtd. H'LI' depends on YOU. its n:oders lIIIll supportCl'l to keep informtd. so IItOI n-eryOM ClllI be informed. Thank you ror your cOClpenlion nnd ...nicipation in hel"inglo gel the news OUI. Your efTonsllf~ Ill.ally appreciated. o o Page 15 Florida Department of Corrections 2601 Blair Stone Rd. Tallahassee FL 32399-2500 (850) 488-5021 Web Site: www.dc.state.flus Hany K. Singletary, Secretary 488-7480 (Personal Sea'etary, Suzanne Powell) Information : 488-0420 (Info Director, Keny Flack) Correspondence CentroL 488-7052 Inspector General. Fred Schuknecht... 488-9265 Interstate Compacts 487-oS58 Health Services ; 922-664S (Charles Manhews, MD. Asst. Sec.) Assistant Seaetary for Sccurityllnst. Management Stan Czemiak 488-8181 Inmate Classification 488-9859 Sentence Structure 413-9337 Victim Assistance 488-9166 Populnlion Mgt. 488-9166 Regional Offices Region 1 : (850)482-9533 Region II : (352)955-2035 Region III (407)24S-0840 Region IV (9S4)202-3800 Region V (813)744-85;5 Florida Corrections Commission 2601 Blair Stone Rd. Tallahassee. FL 32399-2500 (850)413-9330 Fax (850)413-9141 PL OS The Capitol Tallahassee FL 32399-000 I (850) 488-2272 EMail: fcorcom@mail.dc.state.f1.us Chief Inspector GeneraL 922-4637 Web Site: www.dos.statc.f1.uslfgilslagcncicslfcc Citizen's Assistance Admin 488-7146 The Florida Corrections Commission is r;omposed of Commission/Govemment Accountability eight citizens appointed by the governor to oversee the to the Pcoplc : 922-6907 Florida Department of Corrections, advise the goverOffice of Executive Clemency nor and legislature on correctional issues. and promote 2601 Blair Stone Rd public education 300Ut the correctional system in Bldg. C. Room 229 Rorida. The Commission holds regular meetings around Tallahassee FL 32399.2450 the state which the public may attend to provide (850)488-2952 input on. issues. llItd p~blems afT~ing the CO~iOMl Coordinator: Janet Keels system In Ao.nda. PnsonCtS faJmhes lUld fnends are encoumgcd to contact the Commission to ndvise them Rorida ParoleIProbation Conunission of problem areas. The Commission is independent of 2601 Blair Stone Rd., Bldg C the FOOC and is interested in public participation and Tallahassee FL 32399-2450 comments concerning the oversiBf\t of the FDOC. Commission Members: (8S0) 488-1655 Edgmo M. Dunn.• Jr.• Esq.-ChAir Katie C. Ni~s-Vice Chair Hon. Willilml Evers-Mayor of Brndenton D3vid F. lfJuvey. Sheriff. WDkuIla Caunly Alma B. Litt.la. MD Guy Revell. Jr.-Fonner Parole: Commissioner Ray SlmSom, Ok:doosa Caunry Commissionu Edwnrd Nod.vse, !\C.F.E. SUBSCRIPTION EXPIRATION?? Please check your mailing label for the date that your subscription to FPLP will expire.. On the top line will be reOected it date such as ***Nov 99***. That date indicates the-last month of your current subscription to FPLP. When you receive the FPLP issue for that month, please renew your subscription immediately so that you do not miss os issue of FPLP. Your suppart through subscription donations makes publication possible and is greatly appreciated. Please take the time' to complete the enclosed subscription .rorm to subscribe to or renew your subscription to FPLP. If the subscription form is missing, you may write directly, enclose the requested donation, to subscribe. Moving? Transferred? Please complete the enclosed Address Change Notite so that the mailing list enn be updated. IlIjustlce turywlrere Is a thretll toJustice everywhere. - Martin Luther King, F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 1 Office of the Governor Deparbnent of Law Enforcement P.O. Box 1489 Tallahassee FL 32302 (850)488-7880 Web Site: www.fdl~.state.f1.uc; FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL PERSPECTIVES P.o. BOX 660-387 CHULUOTA, FL 32766 Florida Resource Organizations Florida Institutional Legal Services (Florida Prison Action Network) 111O-C NW 8th Ave. Gainesville FL 32601 (352)955-2260 Fax: (3 S2)95.5-2189 EMail: fils@afn.org Web Site: www.afn.orglfils/ Families with Loved ones In· Prison 710 Flanders Ave. Daytona Bch FL 32114 (904)254-8453 EMail: flip@afh.org Web Site: www.afn.orgfflip Restorative Justice MinistIy Network .P.O. Box 819 Ocala. FL 34478 (352) 369-5055 Web: www.rjmn.net Email: Bemie@rjmn.net BULK RATE U.S. POSTAGE PAID OVIEDO,FL PERMIT NO. 6S Page 16