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REPORT REVIEW Maill/aillillg Family COli/act Wlrell A Family Member Goes to Prisoll All Examillatioll ofState Policies 011 Mail, Visitillg, alld Teleplrolle Access (A Report By Tire) Florida House ofRepreselltatives, Justice Coullcil, Committee 011 Correctiolls Review by Teresa Burtis Dllrlng the last ha/fa! /998 and Ihe first months of /999 there ha\'l~ been lIuml'TOUS meetings held II'l1h the Florida Corrections Commission, Legis/alll'i! Co"eClions Committees, Dnd mT· iaw mdMdual legislalOn by members and staff of tire groups thai make up the Florida Prison Action Network (FrAN). One of the outcomes of those meetings 11aJ' a first of iu kind random $UTl'c..,' bemg conducted oj 286 vUiling family members of Florida prisoners, and 6/ Florida Department of Corrections cor- rectional officers. by the House Commitlee Otl Corrections. The aho\'f! litf/! \l'DS gil'en to the final repor/. Slale Repre,fenIOlive Allen T'Ql'iIlion, Chairman of Ihe Hallse Correctiolls Commine/!, II'ho I personally met with in February, W(JS ;lIstrumelllal in directing the Commillee staff 10 conduct the survey and report back wilh Ihe findings, for lI'hich he is deeply thanked by our slajJ Theprimaryfocus oflhe sun'ey was 10 examme policies of the Florida Dcparlment ofCorrections (FDOC) and determine IIhat Impaci lhose policies hID'e INTHSISSlE • on prisoners' family members in the State of Florida. The result of the survey was a 94 page report cOI'ermg FDOC policies on moil 10 and from prisoners'family members, l'isiting and visiting conditions, and telephone access and telephone access problems, While it is not possible 10 print the emire report here, the filldmgs alld recommendatioJU of this report are I'ery Important, and felt to be worth covermg, The introduction, findings, recommendalions, and canc/usion.r of the report will be primed here 11/ Iheir entire/)', Througholll this i.rslle of FPLP, Olher facls and figures from Ihe reporl will be presemed. This reporl comoills a weollh Df informalion Ihal el'cry' family member Dr ID\'ed DIIC Df a FIDridtl prisoller /leeds 10 knoll', Vnfarlllllalely, il is jWt /lOt possible 10 print the ell/ire reporl in the limited numher of pages of FPLP. Personally, I feel that e\'ery' prisoner and every' family member 01' 10l'ed one ofa Florida pruoner needs 10 read this rf!pDrl. The Internet addres.r where any- one willi access 10 a computf!T can read or download Ihe complete report is:h II p:/IW\\ II'.d05.Sla I e. n. uslfgilslfccJ reporWfamily/famconl.hlmL Inlroduclion: In the lasllen yean, the number of people incarccrllled in Florida has aImOSI doubled, rising from 33.681 in 1988, 10 64,713 in 1997. As corrcclional populations increase, 50 do the number of people, adults and children alikc, who are undergoing the experience of having a family member in prison. Thousands of families across Florida are traveling 10 visit their loved ones in prison, sending them money for lhe inmate to purchase leiter writing matcrials, accepting collecr phone calls and sending and receiving mail. This report examines the government policies which impact these families and the government services received by these family memben as they seek 10 maintain conUlcl with their child, sibling or partnt \\ho is incarcerated. According 10 lhe depanmt'nl, al F-ROM THE EDITOR.... AROUND THE NATION NOlAB CA-SES I"LP SOli OFF F DOC DI IPLINARY PR\lCEEDtNGS PAST A B S ERE P R TED BY PRISONERS ~ 0 rUl.: E C S-e 5 7 9 13 1 21 22 least 95% of Florida's prison population Slate leaders in both the executive and wilt at some point return to the commu- legislative branch of government by illuminity. In recognition of this reality, the state implements programs which prepare the offender for ,1 successful release such as substance abuse treatment, educational programs or job training. Although substance abuse treatment, education and job skills may enhance the offender's likelihood of a successful release, probably most important is for released oncnders to have someone who will give them guidance and support when they are released. For this reason, fhmilics ·can be a valuable community resource for assisting in an offcnder's successful reentry into the fTee world. In fact. research has shown that having a f.1mily to refurn to is one of the mOSt important factors in a released inmate's success, Although family and community contacts can playa very important role in helping released offenders avoid returning 10 prison, this report will show that the state has neglected lhis val\lable resource and has in the last few years erected lllallY impediments for f<unilies who strive to maintain meaningful contact. In addition. this report will show that there is a remarkable absence from the rehabilitation programs being offered of any large scale programs aimed at family services, improving visitor services or assisting the oncnder to understand and maimain positive family relationships. In contrast to the absellce of visitor services or programs in Florida, this report will inventory the diverse and innovative programs operating in other states. Finally, this report will document the hurdens borne by family members with loved ones in prison and the extent to which families substantially subsidize the correctional system through their indirect contributions to the inmate welfare trust fund. In addition to having to adjust for the lost income from the inmate, families also mllst take on additional expenses just to keep in touch with the inmate. Families must supply the inmate with writing materials, accept collect phone calls a high rates, and travel all over the state to visit. Hopefully, the findings and recommendations in this report will be of use to F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 4 nating the complex and emotionally·laden corrections and family issues presented here. At best this research will serve as the impetus for the state to provide real customer service improventents to families and to "think outside the box" as it attempts to remove some traditional and bureaucratic constraints to family reunification and to reduce recidivism. FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL PERSPECTIVES POBox 660-387 Chuluota, Florida 32766 Publishing Division of: 'LOR'''' PRlSOSEItS UCA.. AID O.CASI1"TIO~. 1'1:, A 501(c)(3) Non Profit Orgallizalioll (407) 568-0200 Wcb: hltp:flmembers.aol.colll/fplpJfplp.html Ft'LAO D1UECTOUS TERESA BURNS Findings: F1: Empirical research suggests that encouraging fhmilies to remain intact may help lower recidivism. F2: Security measures imposed by the depanment present barriers to maintaining family contact. F3: The lise of approved calling lists and phone call time limits. although important security features, make il more difficult for families to communicate by phone. F4: It can be very expensive to accept phone calls frolll a family member in prison. Under the currenl ra!e caps provided by the Public Service Commission, a ten minute phone call may cost anywhere from $2.45 to $7. Surveyed f.lmily members estimated spending an average of 569.19 a month accepting telephone call from the inmate. Additionally, some telephone service providers have a history of overcharging inmate families. F5: Families and friends of the inmate arc the primary source of income for the Inmate Welfare Trust Fund, which collected almost $49 million in revenues in FY 1997-98. F6: Most of the Inmate Welfare Trust Fund is not spent in a way that directly benefits families. In FY 1997-98: .578.550, or less than 1%, was spenl on visiting pavilions; and • S28.605,777, or 59%, was spent on operating expenditures, including more· than $5 million for employee salaries and 521 million for restocking the cameens. F7: Other states with larger correctional populations, sueh as New York and California, are using revenue from inmate telephone commissions to provide direct services for inm:ue families, such as visitor centers and transportation to remote prisons. F8: [n a survey of families visiting Florida BOB POSEY DARRYL McGLAMRY DAVID W. BAUER, Erq. 1'1'1.1' STAFF Publisher TERESA IlURNS Editor BOil POSEY layout Editor JOI IN OAKS Research SHERRI JOHNSON Admin. Anis. USA FAUI.KNER TRACI ROSE F1'I.P AI)VISOny 1I0ARIl WilLIAM VAN I'OYCK Pllll,lPDAGLEY, SHARON SIMMONS TERRY VAUGtlN _MlellAEL LAMDRIX ALAN J. COTION, JAMES QUtGLEY JAMf,s TA VLOR - JUDIE lilGllTQWER CARL WELLS, GLENN SMrnl llRIAN MORRIS· EARN HOWARD LINDA GOnt..tEB· SUSANNE M. MANNING JANE PRATT· PAUL ADAMS KIMBERLY PEOPLES, PETER nI.ANTON JAMES MAJOR, ENRiQUE DIAl SCOTT GRAY FI.OIlillA PRISON I.EGAl rERSPbM"IVgS " pub!>>Otd 1>0. """"III~ by FlcK"'-' I.q,,1 Aoil Organon'lOII. I"". ISln pn...,.,. E Colo'.... Dr. Orlll'l<!o., FI Hili. 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",w, lnfor""'"", "'" ...gs for po.oil>It put>!alion Sub""!,,,,,,, doNI''''.. "ill be "' I<d!ed by 'I....... la'iW. ,oMp' 01 III< "''''"'' of FPI,P FPI.P, non"DIu........urrea"",,, ,<>pOll<! 10 for tepI 011,.... i,,,,, ' ' ' ll<Y "'l"'''' I"'" 10 ,""'me of"".1 'M ...If I""""ion, all ""'"~''''' e&MOl be .........,.s..J ,no all ",.d dn<. ,,<<<h. inco,-ocIw.l IlI""oon Prnni..ion " IVan,." In "I',ino mat<JlIJ in rnp FPI.P";'" .oy"",,,."d or, id.""foal in ,he "","" bul ,.,100< P''''_ "'OTIC.~ The Information In lhis publlcalion srOVld('.s news and opinIon ffl}m various 5OUICC5 an may nOI pm. vide suffiCIent infOlmation 10 deal wl1h a legal pmblem. Neilher lhe publishel. nOl Slalr. ",rrMIS or represents the sUllabillty of lhe informalion In this publieallon fOl inSlitullnG an)" legal aClIen. An allomcy or other knowledgeable person In a dis· pUled area Should be consulted fOl e.~periel1Ce In Ieg~1 are~s_ This publicatIon Should nOl be relied lin as aUlhorllalive cnalion. Page 2 correctional institutions, 23 respondents independenlly asked that the package permit policy bc reinstated, stating lhal it was meaningful for families to be able to send "care packages" with religious materials, books, newspaper anicles and family photos, especially on birthdays and holidays. F9: The maj6rity of state prisons are in remote locations, usually without convenient public transportation services. For example, the most remote prison, Cemury from ·C.1. is approximately 700 miles Millmi. Furthemlore, proximity to family members is not lhe primary factor in assigning an inmate to a prison. According to surveyed family members, the travel distance required to visit was the greatest burden experienced as a result of having a family member in prisc;m. FlO: Although described as a meaningful experience for families, there has been a statewide trend to prohibit inmale families from attending chapel with the inmate. Sixteen institutions currently provide such services. Sixty-one percent of correctional officers surveyed feel such services create a serious security threat. However, this may be related to the fuct that many institutions do not provide security staff for chapel services. FII: Typically, institutions rely on the inmate to provide family members wilh infonnation abut visiting. Both visilors and correctional officers expressed frustralion that institutions do nOI provide visitors with ijdvllnce infonnation aboul visiting rules and procedures, or about other policies of the department. F12: According to the survey, visiting policies, such as the dress code, are not unifonn among institutions. Furthermore, both officers and fllmily members reported lhat policies are often applied ineonsislently or in a biased manner. F13: Outdated processes and equipment and lack of staff cause frequent delays in processing visitors. Visitors often express lTustmtion at Ihe slO\.Vlless of the check-in process typically complaining that the y had to, stand in long lines outside Ihe inslilulion exposed to inclement weather. F14: Both officers and visitors expressed mutual concem over the level of cOllrteousness in the visiting area. F15: According to the survey, the avcrage visitor is a fifty-year-old mother visiting her son. F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 4 F16: Although an important and necessary security measure, the pal down search can be a degrading and humiliating exper;~ ence. Ninety percent of the visitors surveyed said they undergo a pat down search every time they visit. F17: Most visiting areas have nothing for children 10 do during visiting. Only five institutions provide anything for children. All five have either toys or books or both available for children inside lhe visiling area. One of these five, a private facility, also has a small outside playground area. Fl B: When visiting areas are not modified to accommodate children, the visiting experience can be difficult for everyone involved - the child, the parents, and the correclional officcrs - as small children are expccted- to sil quietly for lip to six hours. Fifty-two percent of the officers surveyed think that it is inappropriate to even bring children [0 visit a family memofficers ber in prison. However, 17 independently suggested that if childrcn are allowed, the institution should provide some sort of activity for them, such as a VCR, toys or a playground. F19: According to the survey, visiting area vending machines can be costly, contain unhealthy food, and are often empty beThe fore the visiting period is over. correctional officers surveyed repea(edly reported that difficulties associated with vending machines arc a major problem in the visiting area. F20: According to the survey, correctional officers perceive lhc lack of assigned staff to be the biggest problem in the visiting area. Seventy-two percent of correctional officers surveyed believe [hal the visiting area is understaffed. (Note: No determination was made as to whether this was a result of insufficient full time employ· ees or inappropriate post assignments.) F2 I: Onc out of every four visiting areas does not have enough sellting to accommodate the maximum capacity of visitors. F22: Ninety-three percent of correctional offiecrs surveyed view the property res[ric[ions in the visiling area as effective. Although these restrictions have reportedly made controlling contrabllnd less burdcnsome for correctional officers, they have also had all impact on families who complain they can no longer bring family meals or toys or coloring books for children. Recommendations RI: The Legislature should amend §945.215 [Florida Statutes) to require thai a percentage of the inmate welfare trust funds be spent on improving family contacts. R2: The Legislature should prioritize inmate welfare tnlst fund appropriations to insure visitors arc not forced [0 be in inclement wealher. RJ: The Legislature should amend §20.3 I5, F.S., to create an Office of Fami1y Services with [he Department of Corrections. The mission of the newly created office will be, at a minimum, to advocatc and facililatc policies and programs which encourage family contact and frequent family visits. The office will also be required to develop and disseminate information on visiting regulations and processes to approved visitors, provide specializcd lraining for officers who are regularly assigned 10 the visiting area, periodically audit and review instilutional visiting. mail, and (elephone procedures and identify visiting area physical plant deficiencies which may directly impact family members, serve as a centralized communication point to receive and respond to questions from family members, and develop and opemte a formal family grievance process for family members. R4: The Legislature should require the department to study and report back 10 Ihe Legislature on the feasibility of thc following: • Creating and disseminuling an informal guidebook to assist families in understanding the rules and policies of the department; • Rcturning to a poliC)' of allowing families 10 send a limited number of packages to inmales or creating a sySlem for standardized care packages; • Piloting an alternative method of institutional telephone service which can shift the burden of paying from lhe family to the inmate or allow the paying party 10 chose the service provider, while maintaining the commission and not compromising security; • Providing activities for children, especially activities that offer inmates the opportunity to interact with their own children; • Consulting with correctional omcers to consider ways to deal with children in Ihe visiting area while still encouraging children to bond wilh parcnts; Page 3 • Addressing the staffing needs of concem of the depanment, it need not be the visiting area and consider implement- to the extent of all other considerations. ing civilinn positions or using tempornry Security measures that arc overzealously applied, result in only a small improvenssignments; • Examining the current food service ment in institutional safety and which extmct a huge toll in disenfranchising famimethods in visiting areas; • Using lhe Internet to provide visit- lies, must be revisited and evaluated. For example, many institutions have elimiing infonnation; • Providing specialized training for nated joint chapel services, in spite of the imponance to families, because of officers working in the visiting area; and, • Any other propositions that may "problems with contraband." However, benefit the family without jeopardizing several institutions have demonstrated that total elimination ofa problenllllic program security. is not always the only option available. By adapting the necds of the family Conclusions: to the needs of the institution, comproThe department, by statute, is mises and balances can be achieved. charged with rehabilitating offenders FunhernlOre, while allowing families to through work, programs, and services. Beperiodically mail pnckages may have cre· cause research has shown that family conin the past, such ated security problems an imponanl role in the tacts can play inmate's rehabilitation, it is a logical con· packages were a very imponant method of elusion that the depanment should make continuing to act like a family and proevcry attempt to utilize this resourcc and vided a personlll connection thm was vllldo \\hat it can to encourage family con- ued by families. Ralher than complctely U1ct, panicularly when such contact pro- abolishing the program, the depanment duce$ an additional benefit of a si7.nble should considcr alternative means of allowing such packnges while still account· revenue for the state. ing for security. The agency's strategic plan for 1998in other Correctionlll systems 2003 recognizes that more than 95% of states have demonstrated that total elimi· the offenders will be at some point renation of the package system is not the leased to the community, lind that proby only answer to the contraband problem, grams must be provided to insure allowing families to send care-packages public safety. Currently these rellllbilitarion-oriellled programs targer containing pre·lIpproved items. If fmnily substance abuse, education deficiencies, contacts are to be encouraged, rules must job skills and life skills. There is little be developed in a manner that considers mCllIion of using the family to assist in the impact on families and lessens rehnbililation. or the imponance of in- government intrusion. Accepting phone calls from the inmates having family contaclS. mate. ahhough imponaru in maintaining In its cvcry day opemlions, the decontact, can be exceedingly expensive. panment plays a very imponant role in Not only arc the calls billed at the already detcnnining Ihe nature and quality of can· higher than average collect rate, but the tact thnl families of inmates arc able to pany is unable to chose Ihe lowest paying mnintain. The plndng of inmates, Ihe cost service provider, because all calls siting of prisons, the development of from an institlllion arc divened to a single programs, and lhe promulgation of rules telephone company under contact with the arc just a few of the responsibilities of depanment. the depanment that, while primarily The provision of telephone services inl~nded to accomplish other purposes can have a profound effect on families. 10 the inmate population is so lucrative Although the depanment recognized in its that telephone service providers arc able rules Ihat maintaining home and commu- to offer the depanment up to 55% of their nity contacts can lead to a reduction in profits as a commission. Finally, because recidivism, many barriers and burdens ex- inmates may only make collect calls, inist that prevent or lessen the value of such mates bear no responsibility in budgeting and planning for the costs of such calls. contacts. When renegotiating contracts with tele· is the primary Although security phone service providers, the depanment F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 4 should consider the expenses borne by inmate families, in addition to security features and commissions. The depanment should also consider alternative menns of providing access to telephones. Through telephone commissions, food purchases while visiting, and deposits in the inmate's account. families and friends arc lhe principal contributors to the Inmate Welfare Tmst Fund. Vet, while almost $49 million in revenues was collected in FY 1997-98, less than $100.000 was senl on programs that directly- benefited such families. Other states with largc correclional populations, such as New York and Califomia. are using revenue derived from telephone commissions to provide direct services to inmate families, like visitor hospitality centers, toys and games for children who visit andincarceTnted parent, nnd trans· ponation to remote prisons. Because IllOSt institutions rely on the inmate to infoml family members about the policies and procedures associated with visiting, many family members remain uninformed. not only arc family members unaware of many of the rules. but they also do not understand the security justifications behind the rules. The department should develop II handuook, providing families with information about the depanment and its institutions. and discussing peninem rules and why they are important. At a minimum, institutions should be required to develop a visitor infonnlltion sheet using a uni· form format, to be mailed to all prospective visitors by the institution. Visiting presents many challenges for families. Many prisons arc located in remote pans of the state, requiring long drives at very early hours. Upon arrival at the institution, visitors must stand in long lines with no shelter from inclement weather. Visitors often arrive uninformed about the rules of the visiting park, and their lack of infomlation is compounded by the often inconsistent application of the rules. Once inside, vending machines are often broken or even empty. Children, although a consistent presence. are generally allowed nothing to keep them occu· pied for the six-hour visiting period. Such visiting conditions strain both the \'isitors and the correctional officers working the visiting area, crenting hostile Page 4 llnd negative relations in some cascs. For the above reasons, Ihc Legislature should designate an office of family serviees within the depanment. Such office would be respo,nsible for insuring that visitation is provided in a manner tlml encouraged family contact and development, espccially for the inmate's children, without compromising valid security concerns. The office could develop means of infanning families about the rules and policies of the department in a manner that not only prepares them for future interaction, bUI educates them as to the purpose of such requirements. The office could also develop informlltion and training to assist officers 10 be beller prepllred for the requirements of the post and provide better customer scrvice to visitors. If the Legislature chooses to create an office of family services, then this will be the final ana necessary step of:! collaborative three-prong pannership with victims of crimes, communities of faith, and inmate flllllilies. The first partnership began about a decade ago when the LegisllllUre began to address the needs of victims of crime. Through extensive legislation. \'ictims have gained rights in the criminlll justice system and access to special programs alld services Furthermore. the department's Victim Services Office serves as a focal point {or victims who need services and infomilltion. The second partnership was iniliated just two years ago when the Legislature squarely addressed the importance of inmates accepting personal responsibility for their crimes. In §944.803, F.S., the Legislature required the depanment to develop pannerships with faith-based institutions in the community in order to assist inmates in recognizing their accountflbility. After addressing the needs of the offender's victim. and the irnponance of the offender's acceptance of personal responsibility while incarcerated, the final step is to address the importance of the offender's situlltion upon release. Now is the time for the third component to be put into place. While overall conclusions and recommendations of this report suggest that significant improvements are needed, such changes will not come about unless agency leadership embraces pro-family policies. Families are. by their very nature, a relatively powerless constituency. F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 4 And, the Legislature has traditionally delegated to the executive branch these types of prison mlll1agement decisions. Even if the Legislature seeks to micro manage the prison system and impose certain pro-family services through mllndate, it will most likely curtail its policy interference when it is wamed that such change may threaten prison security, increase legal liability, or remove vilal funding from mainstremn rehabilitation programs. For these reasons, the bulk of the recQlllmendations listcd in this repon arc direcled to the corrections professionals who are first and foremost charged with the protection of public safety and the best equipped to balllncc the needs of security with the needs of family unification. The challenge for corrections professionals prompted by this repon will be to become a panner to families and view them not as a burden but as a new constituency. While the promise to our citizens is to be tough on criminals and rnuintain tight custody and control of inmates during their incarceration, the citizens are also demanding a decrease in crime and relief from its impact. By restoring fundamental family relationships which arc consistent with lawful living. the inmate may be less likely to return to society with the clear illlent to commit another crime. This vision has the potential to save millions of dollars through reduced recidivism and may also spare some of our communities and families from the hardships of crimc. • IMl<IW3 mr TWl'OOHt: CDM\'SIO~ II...... II...... 11.II..... ..... ..... II...... II..... """" •.." 91-92 92·9J 91-9' 94-9S 9S-!:6 96-97 97·\IIl """"'" {SM:r:rooc~itpn) From the Editor... Recently 1 watched as Ihe final touches were placed on a Close Management Unit (CM) that fomlerly had been an open population two-man cell donnilOry. Even though the prison, Columbia C.l., already had a specially built "T-Building" CM Confinement Unit that holds 250-plus, the powers Ihat be had decided Ihat the tWO open population housing units that have cells would also be ·converted to CM units. This will result in approximately 800 people at this prison alone eventually being in solitary, sensory-depriving confinement for years at a time in many cases. What really astonished me however w:as the final touch on one of these converted confinement units. On the outside of the windows were placed boxes constructed out of brightly polished gulvanized comlgmed roofing lin. ostensibly so that the prisoners inside the cells cannot see outside the small highsecurity type windows that fnce the open compound of the prison. The tops and bottoms of the boxes were len open to provide some measure of ventilation, but the sides were enclosed with the tin to prevent "sideviews" out the windows. At first the ramifications of these boxes did not regisler on me, having seen similar boxes constructed out of fiberglass comlgated panels on almost all Close Managemen! Confinement Units around the state; its pan of the "program" to deprive as much sensory input as possible in these confinement units. Yel later that day the West-facing side of the unit was baked by the full aftemoon sun. The temperature was an early-summer 90 degrees. The corrugaled roofing tin over the windows of lhe CM Unit began renecling like giant spot.lights so blinding you could not look directly at them, there was no doubt the metal was radiating a tremendous amount of heat. I had been in one of Ihose cells when they were open population. I knew that in the summer months the small amount of air that was drawn in through the louver-type vem on the window was barely adequate to ventilate the cell as it was. I had suffered days and nights in the sweltering summer heat of these cells. Any air drawn in the window was hot air. BUI I knew that I had never experienced anything like the CM prisoners in these cells are going 10 experience with the metal boxes fastened over Page 5 fhe window, bllking lind superheating any air that might make it in the window vent. Nor was [ the only one who realized the seriousness ofwhnf is going 10 happen. That evening, as open population pris· oilers walk pnst the confinement unit going to supper, nil eyes were onthc llletal boxes installed thal day over the windows. From hardened prisoners, lllan)' of whom havc themsehes been in confinement at one point or nnother. I heard gasps of disbe· [ief. comments on how any prisoner in one of those cells was going to "fry" this summer, how .the boxes will act like giant "mdiators" cooking and suffocating the cell inhnbilams. A modem foml of the "hOI 00:';" from Florida's past a la "Cool Hand Luke," history repeating itself. Imagine, if yOll can. being confirled in a 8' x [0' cell. The only fixtures being a metal bunk, metal sink and toilet comb ina· tion. a florescent light. The door is sleel with a Ihick Plexiglas window Ihat you wil! be punished for looking alit of. There is 110 television. no radio, no diversions. Any reading material is slrictly regulated. You nevcr leave the cell except for five mintlleS three limes a week for a shower. or for one two·hour ollidoor exercise pe. riod a week in a small chail11ink wire "DOG run" type cage buill onto the can· finement unit. You never speak to another person unless your keeper speaks to you firs!. In fhe cdllhere is a window wilh a built·in louver venl for ventilation, but on the outside of the window has been placed a IIlCIIlI box so that nothing can be seen out thc windo\\' and the incoming air is super· healed in the summer so that yOIl conslaml)' sweat. Now imagine, being in that cell for years III a time. Imagine your altitude to· wards your kcepers, towurds OIlier people. Imagine the depression, the loneliness. the alienation, Ihe mcntal gymnastics that you will go through. Imagine a hale that builds and builds: towards your keep· ers. lowards a socicly thlll allows this to happen. towards yourself. and finally in Illany cases. towards anything that moves or thlll is alive. Regardless if the rage is rational or nOI. it's almoSI inevitable. But you mUSlnot show the anger. if your keep. ers see it your stay will be extended. Now, imagine keeping all this inside. unable to express it. Imagine what might happen when )OU are finally released. The citizens of Florida will increasingly be F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 4 nble to experience what lhe above type confinement does to people as the Florida Department of Corrections (FDOC) continues to increase its use of sensory depriving confinement on thousands of state prisoners. Even though the FDOC knows that 95 percent of prisoners will be released back into the com· munity one day as sentences arc served, the depanment is in lhe midst of crealing confinement conditions so harsh thm many of those released will be walking time bombs. In [995 Ihe FDOC began the construe· tion of 45 T-building type CM Units, each holding approximalely 250 prisoners in 24 hours a day lockdown conditions. Those units are complete now, hOllsing potentially [1,250 prisoners. Now the FDOC is convening existing population units to confinement units. Besides Columbia c.i., in the past couple of months conversion of the open population cell·type housing units at Libeny and Taylor C.l.s to confinement units has been verified. Many of the prisons in the Somhern pan of the stale arc convening their open population units to confinement units. 11 is clear that the FDOC is prepar· ing to lock down a large percentage of Florida's prisoners. In coming issues of FPLP readers will find more coverage on the effects and conditions of confinement that Florida prisoners are being subjected to. I personnlly, and many of the slaff, feci that CM confinement. as practiced by the FDOC and its employees, hilS the potential 10 be the most serious threat to public safety and the mental health of prisoners lhat the FDOC has ever engaged in. In order to adequately and fully ad· dr~ss this situation, prisoners who have experienced CM and who have been reo leased, or those currently on CM status, arc encouraged to write FPLP about the experience. We need factual testimonies of prisoners of the conditions! abuses in this confinement and how it has affected them and others. We are especially imcrested in the psychological and physical effects this type long lenn soli· tary confinement has had on people. Ifany documentation is sent, do not send origi· nnls thm have to bc returned. Encourage Olhers 10 participate in this project. spread the news to other CM prisoners. We in· tend 10 compile this information for a report to nmionol and inlemmional human and civil rights groups. In May, Florida prisoners were noti· fied that the case challenging the FDOC's personal property restrictions, Tungate, et al. 1'. FDOC. had been lost in the state couns, and the injunction prohibiting the FDOC from forcing prisoners to dispose of personal property had been dissolved. Actually thai injunction had been dissolved in October, 1998, when summary judgment was granted the FDOC, bUI allempts at rehearings and an appeal stretched the case out until Mny. Cenification of that case as a class aClion saved the FOOC from thou· sands of individual chl1l1enges all across the stme, in every circuit coun and, conse· quently, from potentially adverse deci· sions. The new FDOC Secretary, Michael Moore, has detennined that Florida prisons will now have "wardens" instead of "superintendents." Sounds "tough" to me. FPLP has also been infonned, but not yet verified, thnl Moore intends changes to the regional director positions, something that has been needed for years. FPLP continues to grow with the sup· pon of its readers. Everyone is asked to continue encouraging olhers to gel in· vo[ved by subscribing and supportir!g FPLP. Prisoners are asked to share their issues with Olhers and 10 encourage their families and friends to subscribe, the out· side network is crucial to FPLP's continued effectiveness. Thank you, to nil those faith· ful supponers who have made extra donations or got others to subscribe. Between now and the next [egislative session Ihere is II lot of work that must be donc, we can do it if we all just keep working together. BOB POSEY, Editor.• UPDATES • In Ihe Gomez v. Singletary case (substitution of coni raJ release for stmutory overcrowding programs ex posto f.'1CIO vio· lalion), on May 20, 1999. (after the last issue of FPLP had been sent 10 the printer) the Florida Supreme Court denied thc states motion for rehearing, bUl issued a revised opinion in Ihe case. See: Gomez v. Singletary, 24 FL W S254 (May 20, (999). The revised opinion provides chans of how the early release credits that were illegally withhhcld would be distributed if the deci· Page 6 sion stands. The coun also issued a stay until June 21. 1999.10 allow the state time to decide nhether to seek ceniorari review but the U.S. Supreme Coun. Governor Jeb Bush publicly stated that they would Inke the case to the U.S. S. Ct. For Ihe currenl SlalUS of this case. speak with an infonned law clerk. • In Volume 5, Issue J. of FPLP, in Ihe "AROUND THE NATION" seclion. il was reponed that a class action lawsuit brought by Utah prisoners against a ban on receiving wrilten or printed materials that contain nudity or panial nudity had been seuled with the UT DOC withdraw· ing the policy and paying the prisoners' attorney. Brian Barnard of the Utah Legal Clinic. S15.0OO in anomey fees. Unpublished Case: Perry v..\fcColter. USDC Ulah 97·C...·0475C. On October 28, 1998. another class action lawsuit represemed by Mr. Barnard was sell led against the Davis COUnlY Jail in Utah that chal· lenged similar censorship rules at that jail. rules lhat purponed to ban not only mate· rials depicling any type nudil)', but also books and newspaper clippings. The one hundred named jail prisoner plaintiffs in the suit split S11.682, or SI dollar for each day that the ban was in effect against them \~hile in jail. Attorney Brian Bamard recei\'ed 5 57.000 in attorney fees and costs in the senlemenl. This is another unpublished seulement case and not a decision on the merits. Ayala \'. Davis Co. Utah, USDC Utah. Case No: 1:96·CV00030C. [Source: Prison Legol News. 5/99) • In Volume 5, Issue I, of FPLP in the "AROUND THE NATION" seclion it was reponed that on July 2, 1998. the federal 9th Circuit Coun of Appeals. ruling on a case out of Maricopa Co., AZ. had struck down a county prison's regulations banning sexually explicit materiA als/publications depicting "frontal nudityM as overbroad and unconstitutional. See: Mauro V. Arpalo, 147 F.3d 1137 (9th Cir. 1998). However, on December 2, 1998, thaI decision was withdrawn for an en bane rehearing by the full coun of the 9th Circuil. See: Mauro I'. Arpaio. 162 Web I'age ,\ddreu: hI! p:llmembns.lIo!.eomlfplplfplp. h Iml E·mllil Address: fplpgllol.eom Telephone; (407) 568-0200 F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 4 F.3d 547 (9th Cir. 1998). • PERSONAL PACKAGiS 10 PIlISON1!RS from 1983 1IlItI1 1995 FkridI pri$cIrIen' lImilits and friends could 5ef\d lhem pactagts penulaJ UIlU like ahots. lIlIdtA'ear. .• ml.lerisls. rame.. W.lcheS.1n 1995 !lie es aJlo~ing fsmilits and friends 10 5ef\d ckages Wtn rqlCalnI u Ihe FOOC reali~ed ! milllcN of doUsn ~m: being lpall on by fUllilin and fritnds lb.! !he wu llCl receiYtq all)' pat! of. Now . pi$l:Ilm muJ\ pnhase all)' peracn.l , m d'roup lbe PDOC...hid! ((IlIndJ widi allIick ... r:ndtr for .bolesak lriees and infla1e5 lbe c05lIo priaoJIen SO and uen 1Of ~. I!lt _ ) ' 10 ~ sucli iIIll are mostI)' poor quaJily so iII.lltIe)' lW be repI.Ictd ~)' • C'OlIIeJ from uniIies and friend1. Man)' pisone{s families Ite IlllJbte or llllWilllna lD send mOfle)' CO nIlI • ue !he shoddy &rxds at !he ~ 'CCI, which forcu prisorIen CO obtain shou, ear. belts. lIOl:b. CIC., from !he awe.•1 Srpl.)'eI'" e~. II is estim.ted lbll tupI)'mI are paying mllIion.1 of doUus mare in shoes and IIIlder clolhing far pri.scJners Ihlll befare 1995 when packages wm: .llowed. Oul of !he Iwelve &tiles wilh ihc IIlllCJ! • popilllions, Tuu and Florida are lbe )' two dw do lKlI han some J)'I%em where the executive director poslllOn al FILS since August of 1993. FILS is a non·profit law finn located in Gainesville, Florida. "ith the mission of pro\ iding legal assistance 10 people incarcerated in Florida's state prisons, county jails and mental health facilities. Over the last few }ears Glen as· sisted FPI.P in several areas. He became good friends wilh some of our stalT and worked hard 10 keep FILS elTeclive for prisoners in these limes of cuts in legal assistance for all disenfntnchised groups. Glen \\as always available 10 advise FFLP staff as "e pursued our goals and took the time to attend most of lhe rallies, meetings and events that have been organized by FPLP and the Florida Prison Action Network (FPAA, of groups. We will miss Glen at FILS. All of the FPLP staff wishes him the best in future pursuits and thanks him deeply for all his help and his care, concern :Ind honest compassion for others.• AROUND THE NAnON by Mark Shenl'ood funi1ieJ and friends (In direed)' ~ and purd.s.K lhenuth'u personaJ iltm far ibU funD)' memba in pilon. Feu of dlaie rwelve IWrS still .no. p.ckaees 10 be &em directl)' from, !be f..'niIy III !be Jrisoaer- SiJ: of ltae awes allow flJ'lliliellll ~ue: lZ'NPl""'n1 ilmu from • dr::siJll.llcd 'ender awo""n1 by dcpanmenl. and !hen !he 'ender mails !he me ...... .... ..., item 1O!he' r. -- ""'- Tezu•..._._•.•No C.lifami yes New yorlt..._yes PDidL--...No Ohio. _ _ ..NO- __ No · _._· No ....Yes MichiJ&l'-...NO-._.. ~ ..__ Yc:s 1Jlimi· Yc:s..--_ _· _Y:,::===;;, PtnrIJ)'l,ania..No YCI Nri CaroIina......-No Yes V'qfiia---...Jl'o !ofwauri No Yea Yea (Sour1:e: FL Hwse: Com-clions Committee telephone Illn"e)' cOfl6.Icted between Jul)' and mba 1998.1 MOVING ON During the laller part of May, 1999. Glen M. Boecher. Esq .. announced that he was leaving Florida Institutional Legal Services (FILS). Glen Boecher held Arkansas- A 5300 million class action suit has been filed on behalf of victims \\ho received tainled blood from the Arkansas DOC. Arkansas state prison board awarded a heft)' contraCl to a Lil1le Rock company called I-Iealth Management Associates (liMA). The company received 53 million a year 10 furnish medical services to prisoners within Arkansas prison systcm. In addition to the heallh care services, HMA initiated a "blood mining" venture in \~hich prisoners were alTered S7 a pim for thcir blood. This fee is approximlllely half the fee paid to skid row donors. The company then- sold the blood on the imemational markel for S50 a pint. half the profits going to Arkansas DOC. This practice continued until American drug companies stopped buy· ing prisoner's blood because HMA failed to screen the blood for viruses such as hepatitis and IlIV. The company then sold Ihe prisoners blood 011 the international markel. selling 10 companies in llaly. Spain. Canada. A Canadian finn. Conlinental Pharma Cl')'osan LId.. was Ihe prime buyer of blood from (!'IMA) lind- is now named by the recipienls of "tainted blood" in the S300 million suil as Ihe Page 7 defendant_ HMA is also being sued by prisoners because of unsafe praclices in dra.....ing blood, often drawing blood !'rom muhiple patients wilh the same needle. causing the transmission of Ihe AIDS virus and Olher communicable diseases. Severn I limes throughout Ihe years HMA came under al1llek for contract violalions and allegations of negligent prisoner plllient carc, however, during President Clinton's entire administration as Governor of Arkansas, the company was allowed to operate unimpeded. It is suspected fhat these suits are only the tip of rhe iceburg in whar appears 10 be a major heaJrh scam promoled by Arkansas payers money. The Arizona Supreme Coun issued a report recentl)" that estimates the new program saved over 52.5 million in its firsl fiscal Ye<l.r ending in June of 1998, and looks likely to reap greater savings in the fUlure. The Arizona S.Ct. repon said it cost 516.06 a day for intense supervision under the new progrnm as opposed to 550 a day 10 keep an inmate in prison. Of the 2,622 people on the program, the report said 77.5 percenl tested drug free. Judge Gerber, an AZjurist for over 25 yenrs said: "Many of us clime to the conclusion that we were parading Ihem through the couns and prisons without solving the root problem." DOC. • Law suits filed by Bobby Franklin Simmons and Rid,1' Lee Marshall, rwo paraplegic Arkansas state prisoners, alleging that Arkansas DOC officials placed them in solita!)' confine· ment wilhom adequate fncilities to allow them to eat meals or usc toilet facililies, were successful. After n bench trilll Ihe eoun entered a judgment against Ihe guards and assistant worden, awarding plaintiffs IWO thousttnd dollars (S2,OOO) each. The defendants appealed. howe\er, the findings and award of the lo\\er coun were upheld by the Eighlh Circui!. See: SimmollS \'. Cook. 154 F.3d 805 (8th Cir. 1998) • Arkansas Law to Pennil Life Sentences for Youths. Arkansas youngsters convicted of murder can now be selllenced to life in prison pursuant to a measure that was signed illlo law by Gov. Mike Huckabee. Stllte law previously prevented children under the age of 14 from facing adult punishment. The Governor was moved to institute the measure after two boys. Mitchell Johnson, age IJ and Andrew Golden, age II, were found guilty of shooting and killing four studelllS and a leacher in March of 1998. ~Iowe\·er. because of the laws protecling children under the age of 14. the youths \~ere sentenced to a juvenile detention home where they will be re· leased \\hen they tum 21. California- The Prison Litigation Refoml Act of 1996. WlIS held to not apply rttroactively by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals inSwann\' Bunks, 160F.3d 1258 (9thCir. 1998). Swan filed suit in 1994, claiming that a guard had announced over a loud speaker that unless other prisoners "did something" to Swan, they would not receive a fan. No injury was apparent as required by 42 U.S.C. section 1997e (e), and the district coun dismissed the suit. However, the Ninth Circuit's holding overturned Ihat finding, stating that PLRA cannot be applied rttroaclhely. • Michael Wayne Riggs, age 47. is serving a 25 year tenn in the Califomia Depanmen! of Corrections after being convicted of slealing II bottle of vitamins from a grocery store. Because Michacl had prior felony otTenses, the theft, that is normally a misdemeanor in California, was enhanced to a felony because of his prior record. This conviction in lurn made Michael eligible for California's "three strikes" law which was approved in 1994. • Francisco "Paco" Gavaldon, a CAprison guard. was arrested on charges of conspiracy and solicitation of murder. Gavaldon was video taped by authorities while arranging to pay another man S I,000 and a car to murder his estranged wi~. Prison sources identified Gavaldon as a violent guard \~ho frequently assaulted prisoners, and who was brought before the legislature in 1998 where he refused 10 answer questions about his role in a 1995 beating of II CA prisoner. A week after his arrest Gavaldon WlIS still employed liS a guard, said prison officials, yet was on lenve while awaiting trial in Tulare CounlY Jail on 51 million bail. Arizona- Arizona, the first state to begin lreating nil ilS nOllviolent dmg offenders rather than locking them up, says its new policy of diverting addicts from prison into treatment has already Sll\ed the tax- F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 4 Colorado- The CO DOC banned smoking in all of its facililies on March I. 1999. Tobacco sales were stopped in December of 1998. Connecticut- The legislnture has taken measures 10 Ireat non-violent drug offenders rather than imprisoning them. A bill passed by the legislature drastically cuts prison time for non--violent drug offenders on the condition that they undergo frequent testing for drug use. Housing a prisoner in Connecticut costs approximalely S25,OOO/yr., while the drug testing program is estimated to cost just over S3,OOOIyr. One legislator said: "Our old policy has been a huge failure. We need 10 measure its effectiveness rather than ils sexiness at election lime." • Fonner state probation officer. Richard Straub, 63 who thrcatened to scnd young male parolees back to prison unless they had sex with him, was sentenced to J 5 years in prison. Hc was convicted of sexually assauhing young mcn from 1986 to 1996. Delaware- Superior <:.'bun Judge Susan DelPesco has proposed allowing female prisoners to keep Iheir newborns wilh Ihem in jail. She said the United States is among Ihe few countries .....ho seperate women who are jailed from Iheir babies. Woman who are housed in prison seem to be more likely 10 find succcss if Ihey etlrl care for their infants,· she said. Florida.- A service known as VINE Victim Information Notification Everyday· has recently been crented in Palm Beach County, and has been opemting in five other Florida coumies. Victims of crimes, or anyone interested in a criminal being released, can rtgister wilh VINE 10 be called when a. specific inmate is released, however, viclims of crime will automatically be informed by the system "'hen an inmate is rtleased that was involved in their specific crime. There is also a toll-free number for roundthe-clock updUlCS on inmates status. VINE was developed in 1993, lifter the slaying of Mnry Byron in JeITerson County. Ky. She didn't know a man who had sexually assttulled her was released (Con/lnlltd 0#1 po~ 11) Page 8 NOTABLE CASES by Sheni Johnson and Brian Moms Fourth DCA Finds B.F.O. Sentence Illegal Glen Donald Frnhmllll eollalernlly chili· Imged his habllual offender sentences, In doing so, Freshman succcssfull) argued that his II FO Kntcncet failed to ronform \luh (crulln requllements or,he II 1',0. stalule In effect on Ihe dale hIS offenses \lelt commillcd freshman's \'lttor) dId Il()( oomc: easy. lmually, lhe: Honorable Ilona M Ilohne$. Judge ofw Circuli Court, In and (or Bro....wd Count). Flonda, dOlled rchc( Fresh· man appealed. On appeal. cllmg SImI! " Mon. C/IlO. 114 So_ld 429 (FILI99.). and Hopping ", Smc. 708 So 2d 263 (Fla.I998). for lhe proPOSitIon t/lIl ". sentmce thai fall! 10 comport "Ith the sllllUI0r> or l;OnSlltutrOnaJ Iimll.:1lI0ns 1$ by ddimtlon '1Ikgal,'" Ihe Fourth DCA rc\'cnc:d Ilrld remanded "Jlh dm:cllons In reaching lIS decision in lhis ellSc. Ihe DCA m;ognl7.cd lhal !lIthe umt Judge Holmes denied Flcshmlltl's molion, suitt Interpretations of the dccuion entered In "Ckn'u " S/Ol~, 661 So.2d 1193 (FII 1995), (amncwsl)I appealed 10 IImil the ddinltloo of an 'Illegal sentence' to one Ih:l1 (.'(eeeds rhe swulOC) muamum for the cnmt at Inue" From the decISions entered In Monemo aNi Hoppmg, ho....e\a. rhe OCA concluded that the: Aoru1a Supreme Coun h:u tc:Jectcd the SUlle's SUItt. rwrov.. and enoncous interpretallon of the 01\ IS Court's deeision In thiS case. the Founh DC,\ found Ihat Freshman's offenses "'ere comml\1cd bet....een Ot1Obf1 I. 1989, and May 2, 1991. l1IId that. in order to qualify for 1I FO. llealment dUling thaI ume frtlme. the H F.O, Slalllle required the defendant to ho\'e "previousl)' becn eonvietcd of 1.... 0 or more felonltS ill this state." ~ 775.084(I)(a)1. flOrida SlalUttS (Supp 1988) (emphllSls allded); see also. Haxttr \'. Siolt, 616 So2d47 (Fla.I993). POfruh \' S101t.511 So2d 91 (Fla 1st DCA 1990) ("1988 habnual offendel Slatute IICCCSSIWCS l1II Imlla! findlllg thll the: Ikfcndl1lll hIlS pKVlously been convIcted of t,,"'O or more fdonlcs m thIS suuc -I, The Fowth OCA liso fOllnd I!w "(IJhe orda deellllng freshman a hltlltual offender s!'lo.... s thlt Freshman's ptc:di. CIte offenses ....-en: out-of-state connC1lO1'1s." Ulllmalel)'. the Founh OCA found FreshmM's lifO sCIltences "Illegal" because the "record affinnatllel) sho....-s a failure to compon .... Ith the SlatutOf)' tcqultc:menl$ of the habitual offender Slall/le "See Frohnwn r Swre. _ S02d - ' N FLW 0107 (Fla. 4th DCA, 3-17-99). 1Comment; Although not mentioned Ibo\"(. the Fnurth IlCA allo nOIrl.! that. In S/u/e I', Johnson. 616 So.2d I (Fla.199J). Ihe Floridl Supreme Court found that the 1989 amend. menllto the habitual oITC'nder statutC' "iolated the sinGle subjecl requirement of the ~lorida Consrllution, Ralher than fOC'u~ing on rhe uneOIlUltulionl1 single subject ,iolation, suf- F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 4 fiee it to lay that the 1988 o·tniDn of tbe habllual offender uatult, ~ hleh became crftetio'e OetobC'r I. 19811, and rtmalnet! In effect unlil ,\h)' 2, 1991. did nOI authorize II.EO. trealmenl based 011 oOI·of·SIMte eOI1 ..lellons, lIeclluse Fruhman's ofrrnlu were eommllted durin!: the rtlevant II Indow period and lhe Srale relled on out-ofSrlle tono'ictionltn IIUallfr him IS an II.F.O.. the ''-ourlh DCA found that the II,F,O. stnlfneQ failed 10 C'omporl .... i1h the requlrel1leru.I of the II,F.O. statute and thatthr lentelleQ are. Ibert· fort, "iIll'lal." Ho....·tl(r. in Spdght 1'. Start, 711 So.2d 167 It·la. lsI DCA 1998). r~l"itw ptnding IFia. S.CL CaR No. 93,207). rd)ing 011 the uriel narrow definition of an "1IIq;11 sentenct" Ihat follo.. td the drtisioll tntercd in Daris. tht Finl DC\ held thai "relilllce on In impropc:r predi· Ult orrmse dotS nOI render the Irntenet 'ilICCII' for purposes of determining IIhtthC'r the error 111M) be mind for Ihe firsr tlmr 011 appeal." S/H'igh/J. al 169: Jtt also. 80l'tr I', State. 24 t'LW mOJJ (FIR, Jd DCA. 4-28-99) (Idjudlcation of defendlnt I I an hahllual offender II 1I0t e0l:nlz_ ahle under mOlion 10 corfUI IlIeg.1 Sfnlfnee). Unfortunately. lhe 1I0nr Court's rtce", anal)'sil could nr} tuil) innuence the lIa)' the tlorida SUllfeme Courl'S handlu Sptighlt.-bml '·I.F.O. Adjudic:lIion Cnnnol Be Challenged Under Rule 3.800(a) Pursuanl 10 Rule 3 80ll(1). lola R Crim P.. Jesus Bo,er IfIUcd thai he was enllllcd to tc:hef because the prC'dieale offenses ml10dueed at his II F.O sentcncmg hearing failed to sausfy Ihe statutOI"') sequential conviction requirement. Roben M Pmeho. Judge of the Circuit Court. in and fm Dade County, Florida, denied the mollon and So\Cr lip' pealed On appeal, Ihe Issue addressed by the Third DCA \1'0$ 'whether 1\ defendlllll lIlay usc Flurlda Rule of Crimmal l'mcedule 3.800(1) to challenge [anI hablluIII offender adJudlClilrOn" In Icsolvmg the Issue. the Court's ilIIal)'lol5 found thllt Halmuoll:ltflOll U a twOoSIC'P /NOCC'S.I in 1M firSI SIC'P, 1M dC'/endonl IS adjlldlrtllCd /0 lw a habltuol offiNhr Once- thaI II dOM, 1M trwi C'OUt1l.:na>rs whO/tM permISSible iC'goi ....unmum ma), ~ In tht ucond slep. lhe C'OWllmposu unlCIICC'. FOT Rult J 800(0) purpORs, 1M dljfC'nnCl bttMun the fll,'0 Sltps lS Imporlant. Rule 3.8oo(a) U by IU urlfU confi~d to (/llJliengmg on ~I/ltgar sen/lIlU. ImpDSlllfJlr 0/ sen/enu O(tUrs In Iht suond sup 0/ thC' habuual,:ulion procns nit d''flndllnl's rtal lOrge/lit IhlS cose IS nOI the sec· oml slep bUI Ihe firsl' lhe adjudlcolioll o/Ihe defendonl as on habl/uni offelldrr. The Court not~ thm uhhough "the viability of pndlCale oITenses used for hllbltua!iulion 1:Sf1 ftc:quentl) be delennllled from the face of the record; eircullUtances do e;cisili .... here an evidentulry heating would be ntcc:sllll)', Ultlmatcl)'. the lll11d DCA concluded lhal "an lllack on the habItual offender adjudication ii OIIe .... hich mll51 be brought undel Rule 3 850 and lIl.I) noc be brought unda Rule 3.800(a): In reaehlllg its deeision 111 Ih,S ClIK, Ihe COlIn certified dlleet connlet ....1th the deCisions en· tered in Judge v. Slme. S96 So.2d 73 (Fla 2d DCA 1991) (cn bone): Ff..shmarl \" Slatt. 24 F!.W 0101 (Fla. 4th OCA, J-11·99). Bell v Stale, 693 So 2d 100 (Flo, 2d DCA 1991); and, Bottlho v StalC', 691 So 2d 648 (Fla. 2d OCA 199n. The ThIrd OCA affirmed the olda den)'mg Bove(s Rule 3 800{a) motion See: Burt' r SUlfe. 24 FLW 01033 (Fla 3d OCA.4-28-99). What Happened To DiscTelionary Jurisdiction? William GIlr)' 1IllO'IId filed a IITII pdlllon seding 10 Ino'oke the diseretlOllll) JUftsdlellon of the FlOrida Supreme Courl lIuvlld. 5ubmlllmg nu· merous factual allegalions III support of his clarm, alleged that the I'lXlC lIleoneetl> asSIgned him 10 Close Managemenl Status, The 1'10 S.CI, notmg, among other thinp, that llli aClion "should not be consl/ued lIS an adjudicatIOn 01 t:OITIment on Ihe menlS of the petillon: dcclllled to exercise Its dlsclelionDl) JurisdIction and I/'IIISfClTcd the case to the: NmelCC'nth Judicial CirCUlI COlIn Significantly. the Fla SCI. IUlnounced that /I/n lhe fumrt...·t "',11 Itk-... ~ tkdllli! JlIrwlellon andlrons/tr OT dlS/fl/SS wnr pcll/lOlU "'lid/. Itu 1M pffunt~, ralSe Ill/Ulanllol usuu o/focl OT present tndn'lduolt:td ISSlIlS lhal do nOi nqllin ImmC'dlillt ,C'soluIIO/I b)' thlSCOW'. OTun nor thC' I)pt' 0/ cas,.' m "'hlCh an oPinIOn /,om IhiJ. Court lliQuld prtJ\'Ide Important gIlldtng prl!fClplu lor I~ ~r roUfU a/ Ih,s Slat.., Aller the majorit)· of the COIlr1 finished .... Ith Its feeble allempt al Jusllfylllg lIS aCllons. the Ilonorahle Ben I' Ovellon, Senior JUitice. di~· sC'nted With \\hat appe:l.ls to be a cold hald fael of l'IoridaJUSl1ee, That IS. Justice O\'erlon notes thut "the rnaJont)' hu 5ubstanually redueC'd the aeeess to thle1 COUll for habeu pc"l1011eIS. tt has. by 1llliloplnlOl'l. re\lnllcn amele V. !Cetion (3)(b)(9). Florida ConsUtu· 1I0l"l " Justice: (hCftCJn applmltl) remembcnd hIS oath to prOte<:1 the righlli of the eltlZtrl$ of thIS Stlle Sec lIummf v Slalt. 24 FLW sl09 (Fla.. S-6-99j Court Record Encompasses Jail Record In 1990. PUI1UDllIIO a plea of no conttStto t.... o counts of aggmvlted ballCI)', Ihe Eleventh Judlellil Cueun Coun. m and for Dade County. Florida, placed Manucl Hidalgo on probal1on, Subsequently. III 1993, Hidalgo vioilited that probahon Ilnd was SC'nlenecd to a four.and-one-half)'Car prison term. The eoun. how. e..er. in sentencing upon the re\'ocauon of the ptoba· lion. OIIly granted eredn for the tIme thaillida!go hid SC'l'\'ed lmmedialely prior to the rC\'OCIllCJn or his plobation. In other ..'Ol"1k. the c:oun f..led 10 grant lIidalgo any crc:dll for the lime he SC\"'I'ed Incareented pnor to actually being placed 01\ protwlOll Page 9 In 199&. Hldalgo, .... ho IS .neateenltd u Ma)o COfTtellOllal InslIIuuOII, filed a pro se motion seck· InS. ImOlIg ocher thmp, eredll for lhc: lime he seried lnearectaled POOf 10 beIng pllCed on proba· 1l0fl The Hooonble Ellen 1.cdfield, Judge of lhc: C,rculi Coun. 6cn.ed !he rnDCtnrI and Hu;1llgo Ipo pealed On IIppeal, the llmd OCA trellted Hidalgo's rnotl(lll as a moltnrl filed punuantlll F10llda Rule of Crlmmlll"rocc:dure 3 llOO(a), In SIDlt \', MD~lnO, the Florida Supreme: COOrl held that "credit tIme ISSUes arc coglllzable In I rule 3 800 mOlion when it is affirmatillely alleged that Ihe COUlt records demonSlrote on their face an enll· tltrnem 10 rdier" 714 So,2d 429,lIt433 (11]1I1998) In this ClISC, the Third OCA, noting Ihll "It)he ManCinO dcl:islon makes 1I strong polu::y stlliemeni that 1I defmdant should be grllnlcd credit for all time srned," 11111\1) reJecled the Slates request for "a nlUTOW reading of the Manclna dCl:tsion." The Thud DCA found tIw "In some p1rU of HOfub.the JillI record ofa dcfendml's incarCCflllOl'\ IS ph)'S.caIl) IIlt:orporlllcd Into lhc: court file, .... hIle In other pms of lhc Stale It IS not" 1l1c court. ho..C\er, concluded thlll "enlltltment to [jail] credll should not depend on the ugalles of !he Ita! reCOfd'''tcplng S)'Slem" Uilimalel)', the Illda/go CClUrl announced Ihal "a defendanl'$ JIll cald [retltehng In and out dales of Incarcerationl sllould 1M: treated as II courl record, .. hethel or nOl lhe jail card has ph)'Slcally been incorporated into the court file" Sce fIId/llgo 1'. SWlj', _ So.2d _ 24 FLW D776 (Fla. 3d DCA, 3·24·99) FL Supreme Court Restricts 115 Habeas Corpus Jurisdiclion For Pro Se Prisoners On Ma) 6, 1999. the Flonda Supreme Coortwucd a SIX to one decision informing Flonda pl1sonrn that no longer \I Illlhat Court entcnaJn plO SoC Ind.gent pnwncrs' pelIUOIlS for ClI:u.ordl/llr) thai conlaln sulmlntlallS$ues offlet. presenl Indl\lduahzcd l$sues that do nOi requin: immedlale r(1,QlutlOn, or arc rIOl the t)'PC of cues In I\hleh an opmnm of that Court WQuld provide imporllll1l guidlOll pllnclplcs for O\hel stale tourts In O\her \I'Ol'ds, the Suprcme Courl has spceilically announced Ihal It "til no looger accept dlsereuoollf) JurisdiellOn in habeas corpus pelltlOOS that do not lequile ·,mntcdllllc resolulion" by that Coun; if llII(lthel kmn COlIn. appellale or CirCUli, can hCU" the case, the FLS Ct .... 111 not. Thil de'C1SJOn .... as rrndcrcd In a casc .... here FlonJa pllsonef Wilhllnt IhuVlrd filed an -Emergent) PeulIOfI fOf Writ of Habeas CorpusdllCcd) to the FL S Ct tf),"g to challenge hiS placement on Close Mllligement at MlUlin CI The penuon SI:l OUI numerous factual a1lcptions The Coun notcd Ihallfanard alleged to hale ClI:hamled all wmlnisl1ll1i\e remedlCS before filing Ihe p:hhon. .... Iuch If he had rIOl the Coun would ha\'e simply dismissed the petition for fllilurc to exhaust Ilul, Illn'ard had nol e\en allcmpted to liIc the petitIOn m the ClfCUlt COllrt whclc hc \I'M incarcerated before tiling \11th lhe Suprcmc Coun. 'fhis,the Coun found unac,"eplilble The Supreme Coun noted that in the last )ear alone o\er SOO petlUonS fot CX\l'aOldln~ tchef ha\·e been filed IIllh that Coun. With the o\crv.hclmmg maJorlly of those cascs being from prisoners secking to In\-ote!he Court"s discn:uOllllr) ""1S F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 4 JUllsdlCIlOO M3JI) of those cases. l'lOwe\er, "GUld require fact·findlns. \lhleh the Supreme Court IS not 10 a poslltnrl 10 handle Such cases should be Iwt· died b) the CIrcUIt COUrl .... hieh IS '" the besl poslllOll 10 resohe flCl·findlng lSSUC:S, staled the S Ct One jusuce. Ch crton. filed a dlsscot to the majority decis1Or1 Juslll:e (h.'ertoo' s main cntItem .....IIS thaI the ~t)"S declSIOll ....111 be to deny habeas corpus junsdlctlon to mdw.dulll petitioners .... 110 file such petlllDnS .....llnoul the help of a laW)'t'r. "Ill' thiS opmlOn. lhe majorIty has substantially n:dueed lhe aeccn to this Coun for habeas corpus peUllonefS It appears to me lhlll from now on the only hllbcas corpus pctitions lhis Courl will consider WIll be those riled by attorneys for Ihell clientS. It Will hale the effcel ofden)rng access lO this COUrl: Chcrton slllied In his dlSKnt The l/U.JOIl1)- transrnml Han-.rd's petillon to the circUli coun (or Martin Counly_ Further, and Slgtufiamll)', the Cowt noted tlW upon the circuit COta1 rcccI\"ing the CIISC, "If it IS determined lhat a filing (ee is appheable 10 this petItion, and .f 1JIt petlllOl'lCl' "'1shcs 10 procttd In f0fT\\3 pauprns In the transferee COIln. an affida\lt of IOdigent)- and 1(. cornpllrl)'mg documenlillon shall be tiled by Ihe petilioner '" the tram(erce court" That clelUly \las an rnstlllClIOO to the ellCUII COIIll thaI the pellllon liled by Han'ard prnbabl) should nOI be lIcaled as one for habeas tOlpuS, but for mandlUrllls, In lhol HaT\'llId was onl) seekinS relcase from a mole re· strictive I)'pe continement, Md nllt flOm prison itself Sec: HDn'Ord \' Smg/tll/')', _ _So.2d _ _. 24FLWS209(Fla S/6I99) FL Supreme Court Extends Self Defense Nonrttrtat Privilege On March II, 1999, the Flonda Suprerne Court ltalI"iled thl! lhc I..... I1oc:s not Impose a dut) on people 10 rClrcal from their home before resornng 10 dcadly force rn sel(-defense agalnsl a c€KM:cupanl of the home Of inVitee into the home, if that force is nteess&r)'to p.e\·ent dealh (lr great bodll) harm Thc court dceided Ihal Ihele IS onl) a limited dUly 10 rellC/lI I\lIhlO the reSldenee to the utent reasonabl)' pOSSible, but only lhlll fllt belore rcsonmgln deadl)' forcc lO Plolect aprn~t death Of &,e;1I bodtl) hillm That deCISIOn was 0 It'Sull of II ClISe broughl by II .....o man. Kathlccn WeIand, \1110 had bcc:n convlCled of killing her hUiband "'00 she bad elalmed had llbused her. Weiand hid bcc:n released (rom pusan aller being grunted e.'l:ceull\e clement)' liom the gO\emor on December 23, 199&, before her appcal came before the hIgh eoun. bl:t the Supreme: Coun relllned JurisdlClIOn o\el !he case 10 decide .... helhn the JUI) in her casc: should halc bcc:.n read mSll1lC1I01lS presenting the nonletrc.ll pmilege as Silted abo\'e ",hich had nol been done The COUll dedded aftel much dlscusslOO of CUlTtlll unde:rslancling of bllllered women s (or spouse, or co-habllMts) syn· dlome thaI such rnsuucliom should be offered (or lhe jUl)' 10 consider \lhen self·de(ense IS raised Claiming ajuSlifiobte usc of fOlce In so ruling. Ihc Supreme Coun rcccded from 'IS prC'·lous holding III SlUle v. BobblT!, 415 So 2\1 724 (Fla. 1982), thlll had held that no sueh IOSlruCllon must be gl\en 10 a jill) The COlIn lllso plUllall) n:lKaled from Htdgu II SIDIi", I n So 2d 124 (Fb. 1965), on the same: issue The COIIIl. ho.... • n·n, !pcclficaJly hcld Ihal thl5 ne..... ruling will onl)' appl) lO fUMe cases and cases pendIng dllecl rev,ev. on the dale of IlS decision and that It .... ,11 not appl) rcuD:leulcI) lO Ca$cs that ha\e already become final That pan o( thIS clwlgc In the I 111 lca\·e many, and mosll) female, pnsonrn lInoul benefil from thIS deciSion..... h;ch IS lI1ICOOsetonable. See. II'~Ulnd \' Statt, _So.2d _ , 24 FLWS124 (Aa. ]/11199) Application of § 57.085, F.S., Requiring Indigent Prisoner 10 Meet Cerlnin ItequiremclIls NOI Ex POSI Facio Vio/alion OIlS Mack VlClt:son, 1lOI0llOUS for dC\·c1oping outrageous lI!Id fllllolous legal theones that he lries and gets otner prisoncn to try, author of the lOfamous "did" aq;UmcrJI thaI has resulted 10 numer· ous prisoners balling theit cases procedurally =mi. .....as sllipped by \he Aonda Supmnc Coun for .....JS!109 their lime wllh llIIOther bogus ItgaI Ihcor) In this casc, V.cbon filed a pditlon fOf ....111 of man· dlUrlus In the FlorIda Supreme Court agamst HlIf)' Slnglcl:uy. former FDOC SterCllll} Vltlson did nOI send the reqUITed fihng ftc for the filing The court orden:d him 10 nIe an nffidallll of Indlgenc) ..... hlch Vickson did On Ie· Vjell of thc IImdn~il, howcI'Cf, It was nOlcd lh~t Vlcl.:son had (lliled to comply with § 57 08S(7). FS, .. hich requires a prisoner seeking to prOCC'td 1$ an mdigent and \lho hll.'l been adjudicated indigenl t.... ice In thc past Ihrce )~tlIS to liS! and attach a COP) of all Judicial proceedings Ihnl commence or dispose QflcgalactJQn filed b)' the prisoner In lhc: pl$tli\e )UlS The COIln ordered Vltbon to comply .... Ilh lhal n:quu~menl, SlIIa: he has filed numelous pro se Indigcnl I(lIons In the IUS! three)ezI'S Vidcson filed an objection to that order, claIming that § S70gS{71\ ioIltes the Ex Post Facto Clause because hIS enm: .....1 $ cornmmed before Ihe enllCUT\CTlI oflhllt SlalUle. The SUPIeme: COUrt 00led thaI claim was WIthout 3JIy merit. !he Statute does not in llny manner directly increllSC a pTl$Oner's erimmal senlence, nor does.t constltutc punishmcol The court, pllllenlly, explnlll$ thAt the pur· pose of that statute .. as to reduce rmolous, e.~ccs· Sl\e lawsullS by pTlsoncrs such as Vlckson In a Footnote Ihe coun hsts at least 20 Icgal aClIons Ibat Viekson has liled In the Flondll Supremc Coun alone in the pllSt fi\'e )Ct1n Withholdrng more $CI"IOUS santtiOllS I! thiS tln\C, the courl detemllned that Vlekson from this pomt for· .....a rd mllst either sUlttl) compl) With §S7 O&S(1). or pay the reqUIred fihng fer: (or any furthel actlOllS thai he nIes '" any COUrl If Vicbon docs nOl. comply, an) actions he files will be lrnmcdllldy dlsmiS5Cd, Sec "/Chon II Smgltlary, _ _ So_2d - - - - J 24 FLW S175 (HI.. 4/6199). New Enlry for Appeal Allowed Where Prisoner Claimed Confinement Situation Delnyed Notice of Appcnl Filing FlorIda ptlsoner Leo 1I0Ihngs"'"Drth had his lIppeal of an order denymg a petitIon for wril of mandamus dlsmlucd fOC' bemg untunely filed but reech·ed dlrt:CllOnS from the appeal tourt in how he Page 10 ffill!tl be lIble 10 obUIm 11 new opportumt) to file a dismissed "'lthOUI SWlIlg O'llannl.han an opponunotite ofappcal m hIS parlleular cucvmst.antes. nil)' 10 amend. If he could and sallsfy thllt requlre:llolhngNuth had • peuuon fOl' • \lnl of ment And enn though O'Hanrahan apparent!) did IlIIndamus denle:d b) the: clInut coun on Deeembn not appeal on the: dismlual of the Eighlh Amc::ndment ). 199& lie dId not file I notle:e: of appeal unlll e1l1lms. ...·hlth woold nOi require: such Slale JanlW) II. 1999, SC\rnll da)1 O\'er lhe: )0 da) mand.aled PfesUII requirements. the appeal court de· limn.allon penod for filing a nOIlc:e of appeal The Icmuned thalthosl: claims ma) stili be vllIble:.... h,le appeal toon ordc~d lh:n he: sho\\ tallSe: \\h) lhc notlllilhe: "c:onfllSinJ naturc" ofO'Hanrahan'S plead· appeal should nOI be dismissed II unlunel)' filed and ings The appeal coun f11l11) reJCC'ted the challen~ of Ilolhnpwonh responde:d Ihal lht nOllte of appeal Ihe COllSlllUtionalily ofllle: prcsull stalute to mtafCn"'"1J nOI handed o\'er [0 prison omtutls unlll January IIled. pro se. prisoners 7th. but Ihat his mablhty 10 Ilmel) mall Ihe: nOlite The appeal court AFFIRMED in part. anti "'11I due 10 being In eonfinement "he \111I unable 10 REVERSED and REMANDlll> m part. 10 allow olHlln nC:Ce:SSllI)' posl.lIge to mall the notice ofappcal O'ilanrahlln a chance 10 amend hiS "peluion" if he despllc his fepealed efforts 10 do so.' tan Sec O'lfllllrohtlll ,. Moorr. el a/ So 2d The appeal coun decided thai Il Ixked the _.24 FLW D9S4 (4th DCA 4114199) autool'lt) 10 grant a bela[ed appeal betause "the proc«dlngs. belo... W(l'e cI'11 In naturt," BUI the [CtlnmmI"'" asc: II I>CII ,ncluded III NoI.ble C..c:s ~ause coun sUJ&CSIed thlll Hollings...uth could sull file a of III pKCc:dcttiaI \alut. _ btc_ 11"'10 affect lit}' Ilpllf.. I 540. F R CI\ p. relie:f from Judg.rnc:nl mouon m c:anI fWIIlbn of pruoaom Thli II indudc:d III bapcs !hal: f10nda pn~ ..."" may conIcmplaf~ a IW~ Iol;t_ fOf Ihe CI!CUII C:OUrl explalnmg hIS mcullWanees. and If mtdocaI maIpfactJc~ ..11 be ...... ~ of tbc ~ prCllllf lha! COUll \lIClIIe:d llle: order of IIClual and e:nlered II .cqoaarc:mmll dw e:USI If dq- ~ produa a 'mflCd. fIC\O ordet of denial then a I\c:\\ enlt) would be t;OITobonun& -.!M:aI e,peru op&..- 10 "'PPOfI tbcIr com...,0 be fbsmIsscd And tbcy roukl aelUd ... hen' Hoillngswonh could file a lLmel) pIauII. Ibm lbe _ petJUon fOf tenlonn. rather than appeal. pursU&1lI10 pouibly be UDCbOIICd f(lf lihllJ • &1,~ 1.1"'1'/11•• eQCt'ol' a ~It}· v FlorIda Parole CommWlon. 720 S.2d 216 DR.1IIIlI h3,~ 10 do f_ 1Il1;Oll/'.- and :Il.Ift"n lou of pili (Fla 1998) Se:e: Hollingsworth v. S:t:=tCI1lD. ume fOf WIle: In most cases pnSOllof1I ''III no4 be Ible to .'I1a wc:h 1/1 open llpII\IOfI bd(lfe fihnllUll' "hlch IS "hen MOOfe, _ S 2d _ N FLW 01011 (lSI OCA II hal 1lI be obwnc:d. un.lIl') FIXX.' Ib:IOfI"'~ I>CII ll'1Il1 10 ~l2o,.W) . PfO\'dc: P"\C apl/lJr onc ofrllClf 0"''' lk ....Ule of. rncarch. and cllII\ply w,lh.1I lepl rfilUlltl1lCnls bcfOf~ film, JUlIS no....adayl. III )-011 lJ\/IY Ita,·c 10 surrn KlIOIII cool<'llU'Cflf:e....'1 Medical Mnlpr3ctitc J~rcsuit I1e\Oo RClluirements 01 Wni\'cd for . Prisoners Florida prISOner Kn In O'llanrahan found oul IiIl~mJ medltal malpmellte J.U1l$ III swe: coun IS not a sImple: proc:c:dure:. and th;1l In most mnana:s. because of cefUIO presulI ItqUlrntlenlS 10 Flonda la\l. IS Impossible O'Il:I.nrahan filed something called a "PeullOll fOf Profc:s.slonal Malpfllu:llee of a Medll:lIl Nature S«l.lIlg Relief fOf Damages et d, and Proftslilonal Ne:gllgence." (such IIlcompelenl draftIng Immcdlalel) phl.ced lhe coul1 on nmice: thaI O'lIl1mahan had absolu[dy no Idell "hal he WllS dOlllg}. ag.1mst scvernl FIXX' employees. m;l.Inly mcdtcal slaff Despile the litle of hIS "pcliuon," O'ilaurahan also c:lmimed m addlltOO 10 malprncliee Ihal hiS Eighth Arncndmem ri&llts werc \';olll1ed In an anempl to salisfy Ihe Slllle prC:SUII Ie:qulfemenl of§ 766 202(S). F.S. "hlch re:qulles a \'cnfied, COfTOborlhng medIcal expert 0funlOfl thaI medIcal nalpfaCllCC' has occurred 10 aecomp:lll) :III) action fOf rrI2IpractlCC' in orda to substanllalc: me(hc:al malprltu« c:lallJu. O'Uanrahan filed an un\tt1fied Ieller ...mlen b) a former dOC1Of \lho no longer pratlleed medICIne: The CirCUIt eoun d,smlsscd tlle "petUlon" \\Ilh prejudice based on the fallurcc to campi) \11th the: presull requlrcmcnl O'Il;ulfahan appealed. tl"mmg thai noI onl) \1M II error fOf Ihe: cirCUli coun [0 dIsmiSS the: CtlSc: on lhe prc:sull requIrement Issue. bUI Ihe dismiS5111 ... llh preJudice: \I"lIS error. and lhat Ch~pler 766. F.S.. as apphed to hIm. lUI Intll.ltClllled. pro St c:1aimanl \111.I unconshtutionalns den)·mg access to Ihe courl The appeal eOUr1 affirmed the dismissal as con· ccmed thc: flulure 10 suusf) tht presull requirement of produclnll a \'mficd. corroboralmg medical experTs opinIon as 10 1hc: \ "blht) of Ihe: actIon. bUI held thll lhc ae:t1Ol'l should not hne bttn the: Jurd \la) thai F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 4 Deprivation of Visitation With Minor Child Action Not 1\100t, Action May Be Amended 10 Slatc § t983 Claim Ronda pnsollCf Rand} Spc:1lCC'f filed a pelllion fOf deelamlOl) judgment pUfsuanllo Chaplet 86, F S. against a FOOC thWlfitSlton offiea fOf un· I/I\\full) de:pnvmg him of hiS \ISUlIUon \llIh hIS children b) a misapphcatlon of Ihe mlllOf child \"I,Sltalion fCSlflCliollS adopted mto law dunng 1996 Ihal only applies to Ihose: p,isonc:rs \lho hlI\e been con~lclcd of II KX Clime on a child under 16 )'ell.l1 old Spcnctr's detlarlllOry JudlllllCnt pClitlOn named tlnsslfiea\lon OmCef 0, Gonlll!n, 1I5 haVinG "rongfull) llpplied Ihal law 10 him 10 Jul) of 1996 and fcSlnelcd hIS \iSII/lIlOl1 l\llh his childfen for aimOSI the: n!:Xt 1'1'0 )e:4rS Spencer Im\lall) soughl • declaratIOn for lhe: cnculI eoun thaI Gonzalez III IllS offielll tapllCl\)' had ""OIlgfully applied the lal\ 10 him and sought IIlJunCII\e ,elief enJoimng Gonl.llc:z from such wltll'lgful action On Mardi 2S. 1997. hovoC\a. Spencer sooght to amend his petitlOfl to allege the depmallOl'l of fedelal tomlllunonal IIghll undel ~2 USC §198J and requesl c:ompenuIOf)' damages from Gonulez III hiS mdl\ Idual capatlly Spenter fikd a mOllon to amend \I Ilh I tOP) of hIS proposed amende:d pelillon anached The: CirCUlI coun did not lalte any aClion for alrnOSl1i )eltr. unhl Gonzale:c filed n motion to dISmISS III Ma) of 1998 claiming the sUSpenSIOn of visit/lllon p'lvllelltS had finnlly hecn IiRcd and GOnla!c:z had becn transfe:rred 10 /lnOlher inslitution. thllS mooting the action The circuit cOUrl Ihen mD\e:d on Gonzalez's motIon and dlsmlsscd the atliOU 1lli mOOI findmJ thllt the,e was no 10ngCf II bona fide. aelual. or prCKnt nced fOI deelaratOf) relief and 110 longef a bona fide dispute bc:t\l'tt1l the: partieS (these: elements musl (.'tisl 10 sc:ck declara· lory Judgment). Spencef appealed the: CI'CUI! COIIn's diSmIssal alkg.lllg that lhc ClfCUI! c:oun ened III illS' mInIng the pelttlon ""thout hl\-Ing provided Spenter lea\"( to amend the: petlUon lO add the: f 198) c1111m. The: appeal coun llOIed Ih;1l Spc:ncn had properly apphed fOf lhe leale: 10 arnCfld. thaI he had no! abuKd Ihe pnvllege to amend. :md Ihat. "rf. lIS Mr. Spenter alleges. Mf GonUIC'"L dcpmed him of visilallon wilh his children for o\e:r a )elr under color of SllIle law m Violation of fe:deral tonStllUIional rights. Ihc question of entilltmenllo compensatory damagcs under U U.S.C § 1983 IS nm mool" The: lIppeal eoun REVERSED and REMANDED the casc: with directions tll:u on lemand Speneef be allo....ed 10 ame:nd hiS petition 10 raIse: lhe: § 1983 tlVilllghlS vlolll1ion chum. Sec S~nar I' Con:alt:. __ So 2d - - ' 24 FLW DlooS (lSi OC'A ~1I6199) [e-m. II d ~&C$hIIlf 10_ a F1lInda IIf1ICl"CI" C'Of1T'Ctl) USC' lhc: 'U) oKNl and oftm O\alookcd or Ipnd pSIaaI ,chICle: of decbrarory Judce:mm The adnaul"l of ~ tClly Judpac:allol;t-. ""'" .mc1~.rehef p t I _ .-c mormous. II" a propnl)' dialled pcwan III ca...phallC~ "nil Cha;>ln 16. F S. d filnl And. pI:lI'SI,OIIIlllllhc dc:cbnlrClly Jud~l 5UI~Itl. 1\1\) utraOfdl/1M)" rellCf may lull be s.nupt In lhe: samt Iol;tIOl\ ,f • ra,onble decbrluOf\ IJ ~ 111M<!. Spencer also ~" !hal t 19U _ _ 1M)' be fikd In Jlal~ COWU, ... hlch prO\1dcl many ad''''''lBltJ '" nWl) inl.llnC~5. bul ...·h"h IIlOII prllOOt'll S«1n 10 bt loflllly ~~"'"alC of h IS also reflcshllli 10 ItC IOfIlt('JllC 10 al Ihc)e cl/lUlfiClllioo offieerl .. /10 11l1\~ bcota .sppf"n& lhe eMd ,unahon rnmellOO fO many prlIOIlCtIlO "h.om.1 doc:Il>CII apply. Eu:r llIICe t/uolla...·.19U 09(1)(n). F_S .... ~ adnpfed II hu CIllIc:d lIUfbm& buI problems and ~ The ml~pphtllllOl\l arc I1Uf 1lIfP""IlJ. 1I0\"e-n. as IDOII as . . 1.1.... "''CUIlnIO ell'"" lhe FDOC mhcr !han maJ,;.",&. casc-b). QS<' IlICj",dual dna11llnllf_ "hc1bcr Ibc ta" appbcd to a pnIOIXf sanpl)' appI.ocd Mto all prtIODnll lmd 01 SCJI~ offcmc IIIIlIleft 1aIIClt .-nUlCd or O\~ cbSS>flClllOl\ olfocCQ 10 If)" 10 IOl1 M OUI PafIIp5 follo\o-.. lhol ICtIOU:I dWlcn&c: by Randy S9c:Dccr!be ClIIISCqI:ICIlC of!be IIICOIIIPC1I:1U IwIdhn& of l/1II 'uy IlIlpCmIIII ~ to - , . pnIOlIC'fl ...,11 cause II'IOI'c Clrtful fe-1C.... aod appIlQllOIl of t!lIS law thar is: QllClflOf\/lbic IllCir·lj! ",1:1I.,. Fl.A PRISONERS WITH CHILDREN • • • am.nREN wrrn PARENTS INCARCERATED IN fLORIDA PRISO~S Page 11 (CQll/mwdjrQm fNJ~ 8) from custody; he filially shot her. The VINE sySlem is operating in 31 states and in Monroe. Collier. Dade. Hillsborough and Du\'al counties in Florida. On April IS. 1999. the Florida • Supreme Coun accepled jurisdiclion in the legal challenge to Constitulional Amendment No 2. titled npRESERVATlON OF THE DEATH PENALTYn. \\hich passed into law in last November's eleclion. Allegations were Ihat Amendment 2 WtlS merely a plo) by FL lawmakers to block the S.Ct.'s cffons to do away with FL eleclric chair. deeming it crucl and unusunl punishment and appointing lelhlll injections as Ihe proper mcthod. The Amend· ment changcd Ihe langullge of the FL ConstiHUional definition of cruel or un· uSllal punishment to be in accord with Ihe US Supreme Court's jurisprudence. Thus. ensur;ng thaI an)' fulure finding of\~hat is cruel and unusual punishment must be detennined in accordance with the US S,C!, The Amendment enshrined not only capitol punishment. but the electric chair as the method of administering it in FL. Georgia- Fulton County Jail authorities \\ere told 10 provide adc-qullte lreatment for its inmales \\ho ha\e tested positive with IIiV. a federal judge ruled on April 16. 1999. Fulton County Jllil is presently withom any fonn of system to stock andlIdminister drugs lind treatment to I-II V positivc inmates. U.S District Court Judge f\lan'in Shoob. also cOlllmented during his ruling. Ihat he Ihought the suit filed by eight IlIV-positive inmllles who claim to ha\'e received substandnrd care· should be expanded to include all health care issues lit Ihe crowded COUlll) lock- "po • A Baldwin County inmate \\ho \\lIS on suicide \~mch apparent I) hung himself about fhe minules after <I dcputy checked on him. authorilies S3id. Kel1) Shinell. 33. of Dahlonega. was found dead Authorities said Shinen used a gllrbllge bag atlilched to a sprinkler outlel to hang himsc:lf from the ceiling of his cell. ShiOett \\1lS arrested last month for allegedly stealing 5260.000 worth of equipment from the county wllter department. The Georgia Bureau of Invcstigations is now qucstioning other inmates F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 4 about Shiflett's death. lIIinois- The Illinois I-louse Judiciary Committee has Iaken steps to discover \\h)', since 1977, Illinois has executed II prisoners \~hile another 1:2 \~ere remo\ed from dealh ro~\ after Ihey were found to be innocent. The Judiciary Com· millee has voted for a measure halting executions for one year to sludy Ihe problem. Moratoriums also have been dis· cussed in Indiana and Pennsylvania. • The Illinois legislature's package which included a law requiring murder· ers to serve full sentences and sctect violent offenders to serve 85% of their sentences. was slruck down by the Illinois Supreme Court. The so called "Truth in Selltencing" legislation was found to be violative of the constitution because it mixed unrelated subjects. The Supreme Coun's ruling freed the first 18 of 2.570 people sentenced under Ihe overturned law \~ho \~ere eligible for "good time" credits. which reduced their sentences. louisiana Slate prison officials at Angola were found by Legislative Auditor Dan Kyle 10 hll\'c tapped an inmale fund for 541.559 in food and household items. Some of the money was used 10 pay for bllnquets and barbeques for 28 evellls. Among the e\,ents were a Chamber of Commerce gnthering and meetings of prison executives. New York- Peter Farace. 25. died of an nsthnlll nuack in February 1986. at the Auburn CorrectiOllll1 Facility. Farace hnd requested a refill of an asthma inhaler. however. prison guards en· sured his request never reached prison mediclli Stlln: While locked in his cell Farace had an asthma allack and slowly died while his lung filled with Ouid and his blood \cssels ruptured. On No..ember 23. 1998, a 'e\~ York coun of claims judge. Nicholas Midley Jr.; awarded the family of Farace 5350.000 in damages for Faraces denth and 550.000 in interest. Norlh Carolina- Johnston County Sheriff Steve Bine! wnnts to chllrgc inmates S5 a night to stay in his jllil. Bine! said thllt a 34 )'car old state stlliute permits counties to charge inmates 55 a night. "The way I look at it ;s it's cheap rent for lodging. three meals and a gunrd to look at," Biuel said. Oklahoma- On March 15, 1999 inmates· and employees of the Okla· homa Slate Penitenliary had 10 snuff out Iheir cigarettes for good. Prisoners were given two weeks to rid Ihemselves of lobacco products before prison officials deemed it contraband. The prison holds approximately 1.500 nervous inmates. Tennessee- "It doesn't pay to do wrong". reads the sign above the door to the Morgan County Jail. a brick fonress painted bauleship gray. Sewilge dripped from the ceilings, inmllles were not allowed to shower for days, and some nights the guards just locked the door and len. The U.S. Juslice Department took action in 1997 after a female inmate, Shelly Massey, hanged herself with a sheet and her mother demanded lin investigation A lenglhy inspeclion was perfomled by the Justice Depanment in \\hich deplorable conditions were found. including unsanitary food preparalion, bug infestalion. lind a lack of lraining for guards teft in conlrol of prisoners. Under the new Sheriff. Bob Gibson. the conditions in the jail promise 10 greally impro\e. along with the supervision of the Justice Depanment. Texas- On December 19, 1998. II femalc gUllrd working lit the French Robertson unit. Texas DOC, was raped by lin inmate while conducling II bed cheek at 2:40am in one of the mllximum security sections of tile prison. Jessie Trevino Cortez, 22.n convicted rapist. opened his cell door. grabbed the guard and held her hostage for 2 hours. prison officials snid. Twenty-four hours after Ihe incident 80 state prisons were locked down during a Slate-wide "shake down". Prison officials snid the lock doy,n was not related to the assaullllithe French Robertson unit_ Iron· ically. the unit \\115 awarded lhe n ~prestigious prison accreditation of the American Correclional Association on December I, 1998. just two \~eeks prior to the aSSllult. • Texas Department of Criminal Juslice (TDCJ), has put plans into aClion for the (CQrr/mlNd orr pa~ 16) Page 12 Dear FI'lP, My bunky hns let me read Ihe last couple of issues and I find mysc1fanxiously wailing on her to fimsh the lalesl. So, llIlll$t hlne my o\\n copy. Imn very impressed with y'Ollr efforts to help us, and extremely :tpprecilltive of the results! Thnnk you! B K lFC Dear FlllP, You will find 19 stllmps with this nOle to renew my order. Sorry I can't send more. You arc all doing a fine job bringing the truth 10 the forgotten in DOC. Your Leglll Perspectives has helped myself and mllny others in ways only a re:tder could understand. from court to confinemcnt to the free \\orld, the trulh is out 311 anyone has to do is read FPLP. E\ef) library in FOC should order and every family \\ho would like to understand the truth about DOC should read FPlP.1 for one hll\e no income and I ha\'e to sa\c up stamps each year just to reorder FPlP. but there llre many people \\ho can send 56 and don't. Th~ If) 10 get other inmales copies. \\hen if they \\ould jusl give up a few cups of coffee or coo"ies they \\ould be helping us all and Ihemselves. Be a part of Ihe famil) thai brings the truth to all. Wilh OUI FPlP \\e inmales would still be in chains and the free \\orld pwple \\ould be in the dark ages. So I ask 111110 open up your heart and send your book of stamps or 56. And thank you FPlP for ttllihe help you have given me. Gary Bishop SRCI Dear StttfT: What I want to SOllnd off ttbout is the food service within the DOC and at Chnrlone CI. When I Cllme into thc system in 1980, Ihe DOC master menus provided :tnd the inmates were served lhree subSlnntial, nutritious, wholesome meals per day. We could select clean food tmys from lhe diny ones lind sec Ihe food items being put on our tmys. S0111e of tile ilems were self·served. Food service back then WIlS not rellily an issue as evidenced by the majority of the elass nction lawsuits filed by Floridll prisoners over lhe past 19 years BUI now although it's slill not lm issue, the food service at many of the prisons within the DOC is, in my opinion, bad if not sickening. At just about every instilution thllt contracts wilh II food catering company, there is a problem with the food service. Either the portions a~ small the preparations arc poor, or the food items served are oflhe poorest quality. The rolling door1 are sown on many of the sen'ing lines, and this pre\'ents the observation of unsanilary food service that someone else may not recognize and complain about. t\1 some prisons, inmates arc no longer allowed to seicci their own food trays, and at Charlotte, I have received many meals served on defectl\ e. stained. or dirty food trays. To better the food service conditions at CCI. I have filed many grievances al lhe instilUlional and Central Office le...el. ho\\e\er, 10 no a\'tIil. I have filed so many legitimate grievances. \\hich were denied. until I ha\e SlOPped complaining. Out of all the grievances Ihat I have filed. lhe only one I recall being approved was lhe grievance I filed about the usc of food trays \\ ilh sharp jagged edges. I ha...e filed aboutlhe preparalion and cooking of foods by inmales \...ho don't know how to coo~, the poor qual iI)' of the foods served. Ihe insufficienl ponions sen'ed, lhe dirty food trays, and lllany other food scrvice problems that present a hazard 10 an inmate's health: ho\\ever, to no :tvail. On one occasion I filed and was told Ihatl was not al McDonalds. Ho\\c\er, although I am not JI ''''IcDonalds where you "have il YOllr way", I nm not even gelling it lhe way it is supposed to be. For the heallh of all the prisoners incarcerntcd. I hope lhe new Secrctary of DOC puts a boot in lhe companies that cnler food service to the DOC, kick them 0111 of Ihe door, and employ certified chefs and dieticians lIt every major prison. For the Slime reason, I hope the Inspeclor General discovcrs the other problem.s menlioned above and tllkes corrective action. Unlillhen, the food service at many prisons is going to Sla)' thc same-bad. OS CCI Dear Sirs. I have read y'our ne\\sletter for many years and hlwe decided 10 gel my 0\\11 subscription so as to kl )'OU kno\\ that your price increase will not erode your reader base and that you have thousands more reader.; than what y'our actual subscription list shows. Keep up the good work and consider m)'selfto be one of)'our ardent fans and supporters. BVL GCI Dear FPlP, I ha\'e been a subscriber no\... for 4 years and I must admilthat your newslelter is the best one I have e\er come across for Floridll Inmates. I would like to tell you aboui some of the things that are going on here at eCI. The conditions here are very bad, especially in the Clo~ ~Ianagement unils. Being on C.M. here is like doing time in a Nazi concentralion cnmp. They allow us 10 dean our rooms once a week (nnd hlllfthe times they don't do 11 at all) A lot of guys here arc being assulted and chemically maced for no other reason but talking on lhe door. The use ofgrievanees is nothing but a red fing to the officers 10 retaliate on you by writing false D.R.s lind verbal and physical abuse upon you. Right now this Inslitlllion has 2 dorms holding 400 inmmes on C.M.they also nrc convening anolher donn for C.M. (another 224 beds for liSe for C.M.) and they are building an 800 man annex for nothing but C.M. inmates. Slowly but surely' the FDOC is locking down the system so thlltlhey will have more control and be able to do what they want to us. Inmates need to ~'Uke up and see that we lire heading for some really hard limes unless we help SlOp it. I urge all inmales to unile and stop being sheep and slllrttrying to help. There :tre many non violent ways help. From boycolling Ihe canteen to nOI using the telephone system 10 filing f.411lt/ltn r<,rtll<'d ('Unnot M prtnltd MCOUU ofSfNlU ITSlrt~/lQrIS. U,wgMd Itf/us "III not M prmltd Of" Inltrs lho/ OIIl/OUII) Qrt n(Jl ,mtnt/ttlfOf" pI/hI'N>/Ion PltaM IM/Crllt m lour Ittltrs Ifrou do not lOanllt mltd. a/hierwlM FPI.P rtMn<ts I~ rl hllO ml 011 Idlers rUt/wd and to ..allltlltn fM It" Ih. grie\'ilnces 10 having our lovcd ones get involved. If we don'l slap Ihis soon it will become another inslance of horror and tonure in our hislory. When ),ou treat a man like and animal he will become an tlnimal over lime. Stop the 1Il1ldness before ils to hue. Thllnk you for all thm you tire doing for us in here. Keep safe, stay strong and always be in the light! RW eel Dear FPLP, This is jusl a lillie hello and a book of stamps enclosed to rene\~ my subscription. I see no problem with the subscription rate increase, iI's money well spenl. 1will sa) in closing that some of the officers here also find )'our publicalion enlightening infonmlli\e and it does add a drop of insighI into their struggle with professionalism in a world of madness. That's refreshing. BP Dear FPLP. I've been gelling FPLP for the PllSt couple of years. And I can't believe it could happen, but each issue gets beller. The FPLP has done so much to keep the prisoners informed and aware in the past and also it's finally making the public Rware, I'm sure thRt lour aware oflhe purposed rules change for Close fl.lanagenlent. Another move by Ihe FDOC to add funher punishment 10 ii's prisoners. They purpose 10 CUI our canteen items to 5 no food items monthly. If)'ou order 1\\0 pens. that's two of your ilems gone. They want you 10 ha\e nOlhing in Ihe FDOC. No self respect, no spirit, oh \~ell, I wish there were more like Ihe FPLP stafT in Florida. Thanl.. you for ~\haI your trying to accomplish. PY VCI FPLP is great! It has helped me with my case, and it hIlS also helped me to help olher's with their cases. I am a Law clerk trainee waiting to go to the FDOC lcg31 research clllSS 31 Orlando (CFRC). FPLP has 3150 "opened up my e)ef' to \~hat is really going on at some of Ihese "concentralion camps" in this stllte. I have just tmnsferred farlher smuh from one of those "camps". Keep up the good work! Thnnk you for helping "us". SK APCI De3/" FPLP, As 111311)' other institutions h3\'e their secrets in their operating methods. We here at Lawtey have experienced some frivolous times. Example: When work squads leave for work on weekday mornings, some inmates arc pulled out of line and searched: leaving them standing in nOlhing but boxers and T-shins. We (inmates) are told Ihal we are carrying controlled subsll1nces (namely marijuana) in our boxers. It becomes even more hettie when the lemperalure e:(ceeds belo\\ 32 d~es ouuide. As in 19,22, and 28 degrees in temperature. Grievances are wrilten bUI mAny arc returned within a day or two stating that Ihese mtllters will be looked into but nothing stops the searches. We have a female officer ~~ho consistently pushes issues that in tum arouses Ihe sergeant of the shift and then later the inmllte is locked·up in confinement. Things til this camp are changing daily bUI never for the belief. It almosl seems impossible considering I'm only one individUAl bectluse othcrs here nrc 100 scared to challenge any discrepancies of theirs. The lOP (chapler 33) iSlotalty overlooked to suit the inslilulions need. I'm very sorry to here about the deaths oflwo female inmates at JefTerson C it goes to show Ihal more (inmates) need 10 quil hiding and make (help) make changes before il gets worse. I want to thank and 10 encourage all of)'ou to keep pressing on \~ith what is obvious a positive outcome (newsletter). Thank you for )our time 10 listen. M.N. LCI Dear FPLP: Being an FPLP subscriber I'm greatl)' impressed with all the time and work put into this newsleuer by Ms. Bums and the stafT. fl.ly hat's ofT to )'31 I need to cry OUI 10 all Ihe folks \\'ho read FPLP, espetially those who might be considering applying for clemency wilh the use of counselor a paralegal. Ronald Rhue (of the Rhue Group, a parnfegalllSsociation, last known address, 1096 Fay Ave.• Largo, FL 33771, PH. 727-524-2859) took my \~ife's money over a year 3g0 and has not RS of yel showed my wife or myself (I11Ylhing lownrds prepaTntiol1 for my clemency pnckRgc. RhLle will not accepl my phone calls or tlnswer my letters. None of his promises have been rcalized. My wife contncted the governor's clemency office and the allome)' generalo.nd was informed thallhcre have been Oilier eompillints against Rhue. fl.1)' wife is currelltly working with the attorney general and Ihc Floridn Bar in an allemptto at lellsl have Rhue relum all the paperwork Ihat I had sent him, and hopefully our money. I personalty believe that Ron Rhue, an e,'(-con himself, slill has some -con in his life. ,\11 persons who have or Illa)' be considering a business rel3!ionship with /I.·lf. Rhue should be wary and look elsewhere for like services from a qualified and teputablc provider. C.H. "1\.Ionty- Montgomery, Col CI M (,HI fl'/tus r'l'ct'/\Y'd camral hi' prmud NrnIUI' a/spat:r ,,'SIr/cllfJllS U"s/gMd ffl/us "111 "01 M prm/I'd or Il'IItrs I1ml ob\'iousl,' ort nal/n/trWl'd/or PUb/leu/l0fl. PItas.' INitro/tln l'OU' Itl/trs If '();I do nOI M·tml/I rln/td. o/!Jtn, lit FPI.P '?s.''''Y'S /ht fI hI fa Iml allltliUS rtCtI\Y'd and 10 td" IlI/tn for It" Ih F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 4 Page 15 building of segregation units in Texas prisons. These units are said to be used only to house violent prisoners, and will include cells \\ ith shoner and loile[ facilities. These facilities enable prisons to keep a prisoner closed in II single cell for long periods wilh minimum man power use. A computer prompts the guards to tum on showers [0 the cells for 5 minutes each day, and Ihe food is slid through a slot in the door. Prisoners are kept in lotal isola[ion with minimal movement depri\'ing them of any QUiltl from Ihe oppressive environment. A.A PRlSOt~RS WITH CHILDREN _.. • • • OaLDllEN W!TH P~'TS lNCARCERATID IN noRmA PRISOSS 1=1 Virginitl- Virginia's first super-maximum prison, Red Onion State Prison, has become (he focus of tile 1·luman Rights Watch, after repons that inmates at Ihe unit have been fired upon with shotguns, shocked with electronic stun devices, and locked in cells for 20 hours II day. Since its opening in August of 1998, staff members at the Red Onion unit have fired shotguns at least 63 times and hil inmates III least 10 limes with so-called "stinger rounds that consist of rubber pellets. Most of the injuries have been slight. however. one inmate had to be brought to the hospilal with pellets imbedded in his face. The extrnordinarily h"nrsh and restrictive conditions at the unit were designed for extremely violent inmates, however, unable to find enough "worst of the \IOrst", Ihe Virginia DOC is R F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 4 simply sending mcn to the prison who do nOI fit the criteria and could be safely confined e1se\\here. INFORMATIO NEEDED FROM WOMEN PRISONERS Bonnie Kemess. of Ihe American Friends Service Comminee (AFSq, is seeking testimonials from women prisoners relating experiences with extended isolation and/or Ihe lise oftonure devices. The lestimonies will be used in repons to imemational organizations that monitor U.S. human rights violations. The receipt of testimonies will be acknowledge. If you wish to provide such information, please contact: Bonnie Kemess, AFSC, 972 Broad Sl.. Nc\\ark, J 07102.• FDOC DISCII'L1NARY PROCEEDINGS: SYSTEMATIC DENIAL OF LIVE WITNESS TESTI.10NY The Supreme Court, in Wolff v. McDonnell, addressed the constitutionally required due process protections that should be afforded to prisoners who arc subject 10 in-prison disciplinary proceedings that may result in the los5 of gain time that has been aUlhorized by state statutes or regulations. I Besides establishing several other minimal due process requirements that prison officials must afford prisoners in such proceedings, the Court also staled: W~ lI1l: alw of Ih~ oplnlon lhal the mmalt IKlng dlselplln:u) plOen:dlng.> shoutd be .110... u1 10 ~all"'ltnesSCli and present d!xUlTl(Tllary nukncc In his !kfenil: ... 1Ien pc:nnl!\lng him (() do so will not be undut) hazafdous 10 1!1SlllullQnal safel) or c:om:CllOll31 glWs I The right 10 call witnesses to appear in person at a disciplinary hearing. ho"e\er, is not absolule. and is subject to certain qualifications. As noted above, witnesses do not have to be allowed if it would "be unduly hazardous to institutional safety or correctional goals." The Court also identified a couple of other silUations where prison officials may properly refuse to allow wit- nesses to testify at a disciplinary hearing: Ordmllllly. the rlghl 10 prtSl:nt e"'ldencc IS 10 II fall heanng; bUllhc unttSltlet~d right to all ... 111lCSSC$ from the prison populallon carnes ob\IOUS poIenllal for dtsrupllon and for Interf~re~c "'Ith the s"'lfI pUnlshment thai In IndiVidual ~ascs may be e$S(nua! 10 canying QUI the c:oneellOtlal program of the Instllulion IWlc must balance the InmllIC'S Inl~resl In '\'Oldmg lhr: loss of plOd ume agallnsl lhe needs of the pnson.1JIlI $On'Ie amount of flulblhl) and leeommcdlluOtI IS IcqUlled Pruon offienlls mUSI hll\'~ the n=sl\I} dlsrn:1101l 10 J.eep thc h~lllln& "'Ilhm I~asonabtc limits and Lo I~fuil: 10 call \\llnt.Sscs Ihal may CI~alC a m~ of rcpusal Of undermulC :Iulholll) ,'!though"c do not prescnile It. II would be useful fOl the Idlsclphnaryj Commillee 10 Slale Its reason for rcfusmg 10 call I ... lloess.... hClhcr it ile for IITclcVM«. lacJ. of llCCCSSII). or the h~ards prt.Scnlcd In Indl"'ldual cases' b;uI~ Thus, the Court identified that the authorized reasons for refusing to call witnesses to testify in person at the hearing are: (I) an individualized ha7..nrd to institutional safety or correctional goals: (2) irrelevant (e.g.• a nonmaterial witnesses); or, (3) lack of necessity (e.g., witness Icstimony repetitious of other witnesses. testimony that will obviously not contribute to the defense, elc.). But the Wolff Coun only "suggested" that prison officials should have to state their reason for refusing to allow a witness to lestify at the disciplinary hearing. Approximately ten }ears later. in 1985. the Supreme Court expounded on its holding in Wolff in POIllI! 1', Rl!u/~ and held (as had not been specifically done in Wolf!) thaI federal due process docs require prison omcillis to slate one or more of the authorized rellsons whenever a request to call a witness to testify at the hearing is denied by prison officials. In this context. the Ponte Court held that: (Plmon oO'ielals may be rcqlJlrcd 10 c~plaln. In a limned maonc:r.the reason I'lh) "'1Incssc:s "Cle flO( altol'lcd to Itsllf). butlhc) ma) do so euller b)" m»;lI1g thc nplanallon pan of lhr: -admIl1ISU'1lI\e m:D,d- In thc dlil:lphnar} prOCttdIl1&, Of by prc:scru· 111& tdllmon)' 111 toun If Ihe deprlvltlon of I -hbert) - mlerest IS challenged bee,uil: of the ctalmed defectllOollOCSS dcnulli In olhct 1Oo1Xt!s, the prison offiCials ml)' chose 10 C'(f1I1110 the" tkclSIOII 110 refuse 10 call the: 1'l11llCSSI atlhc hunng. Of lhe) rna) dlo~ 10 e~f1laln II -taler - E.,ptafnrn& the decISIon at Lh= heartng I'llll or COUISc: not Irnmunlle offieials from a subsequent coun ehallenge 10 Lhell decision, hUI as long as thc rcllSOlls arc toglcall)' rclaled 10 plc\enung undue hllWds 10 "mS\lluIlOnal SIIrely 01 conecttonal goals,- thc c.,planallOll should meet Ih~ dm: process requm:lIll:lllS IS oullined m l Wolff. Page 16 Thus, while prison officials have fairly broad discretion, within the authorized reasons, for refusing to call a requested witness to testify at the disciplinary hearing, they do not have unlimited discretion to refuse to allow such witnesses. The reasons outlined by the Wolff and Ponte decisions arc the only valid and authorized reasons for refusing to allow wilnesses to testify in person. If other reasons arc used for denial of live witness testimony. then arguably. federal due process (and possibly the prison officials' own rules) is violated. Also, as stated in Wolff, the reasons must be applied in an individualized manner, In other words. prison officials must determine that each individual witness requested either presents an undue hazard to institutional safety or correctional goals if allowed to testify, or is irrelevant, or is unnecessary for the defense. And their decision is judicially reviewable for ,Ibuse of discretion according to the above quote from the Fonte decision, Lin Wilness Testimony in FDOC [n response to the decision in Wulff v. McDullnell (that prisoners facing disciplinary proceedings "should" be allowed to "call" wilnesses to testify m the hearing unless cenain conditions exist) the F[orida Departmenl of Corrections (FDOC) adopted administrative rules that incorpormed and complied with Wolff. In 1977, three years after Wolff was decided, the depanment's rules stated in peninent pan: [33-22.08( 13) (i)J (il The irlmate or the Disciplinary Temn rna)' request n131erial Ilimesses. The chamnan Ilill clIII those II Itne~ses (stun- or IIlIll<ltes) \Iho arc ;\v<lilable and \Ihu arc determined to be ncces~ar)' [OJ an appreciation oflhe elrCllmstantts Repelill\c \Iimesses will not be called Unavailablc \\ illiesst5 may submit \Iritten stnlCrncnts Witnesses will not be called if doing ~o would create a t1Sk of reptlSal or would undemline aulhorll} The inlH<lte witnes, mliSl be \lilling tu testify. An ,nmate witness ma)'c1ect to oller an orat Of wrltlen Statement to the Ul~eSligahng ollicer 111 lieu or a personal appeamnee belorc the Disetplmmy Team The chnlllnan should nOle III the reflOlI Ihe reasons ror dedUling to call reqllest"d \lllneSses," That rule f.1irly complied with WoIIT. The rolLline procedure was to call requesled witnesses before the hearing team, if available, to testify in person, if their testimony F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 4 was relevant, not repetitious, and would not create a risk of reprisal or undermine authority. There was also a provision that if any requested witness was not called before the disciplinary team to teslify in person (whether because of an authorized reason for exclusion existed or because the prisoner witness "elected" to submit a wrillen statement instead of appearing in person) then the team chainnan was required to note in the report the reasons for nol calling the witness to the hearing to lestify in person. During 1979, in a Florida case, where prison omcials failed to nole one or morc of the authorized reasons for not calling a requested witness to appear at a disciplinary hearing to testify. the First District Court of Appeals held that prison officials must provide such r'eason(s). The prisoner had been charged with refusing to work. He claimed that he was not refusing, he was medically unable to work, which could be verified by medical slaff. He requesled one of lhe prison 5 medical slaff 10 be a witness. The disciplinary team determined the witness was "not necessary." because the only issue was whether the prisoner had worked or not. The circuit coun upheld the prison officials, bill the appeal coun disagreed. The appeal coun held that under lhe circumstances the prison officials' claim that the witness was "not necessary" was an insumcient reason for nOl allowing the witness to testify at lhe hearing.' .FIlOC Witness null'S Evolve In 1987 a Florida prisdner brought a challenge in slate coun against lhe FDOC claiming, in pan, that he was denied constitulionally required due process where he was nOl allowed to call witnesses at several disciplinary hearings, and that a "blanket ban" on calling wilnesses al FDOC disciplinary hearings e."isted generally. The First District Court of Appeal determined that if the prisoner's allegations were true they "would constitute violaliolls of Wolff and Ponte." The Court direcled thai an evidemiary hearing be held in the circuil court to dClermine the truth of the prisoner's claims. I Following that case, in January of 1988 the FDOC changed its rules regarding the cal[ing of requested witnesses to appear in person at disciplinary hellrings. But the rule changes slil! (,'lirty complied with the decisions in Wolff and Ponte. Those changed rules provided in penincnt pan, that: [33-22.07(1)(a) and (b) I. and 5.1 ('I) The Hemlllg Officcr or the Cb<lirnmn of tbe Disciplinary Team Illay call inmme 01 ernplo)'ee \lllnesses. SUhject to the provision, ofparngraph (b) helow, an) \1;lne~s whose teslimuny is nccessary for 11 proper evalualion or the circullIstances. or II hose' leSllmOn)' is requested by the inmate. shall be called to leslify at the hearing. (b) I. No witness shall be called ifil i~ clear that his teslimony lluuld be irrelev<lnt, immaleria! or repctili~e, 5. The Ik<lrmg Officer or the Chamnan of the [)isciplillary Team ma) delcrnllne lhat certall1 'Ill· n..sscs shuuld not be called or thm cerlilin mrorrnalion ~!ml1 nUl be disclosed beeause to do so I\ould create :I risk uf reprisal. undermine IluthOlily. or othcrwisc present a thrcnl to the secoril)' or Older of lhe inslitution The reason for any rcmictioo shall he frlly e~pl:lined III the record of lhe hearing. but infOfmmion-llmt should 1101 be disclosed shall be withheld from the inmate.' Those rules properly provided that requested witnesses will appear 10 tcstify in person at lhe hearing. if requested by the Hearing Omcer, Chairman of tile Disciplinary Tealll, or the charged prisoner The rules set out thc Wolff authorized reasons for refusing to call a requested witness 10 testify in person, and provided Ihat the reasons for any restrictions on calling requested witnesses must be explained in the record of the hearing. except when there was a valid securily risk reason for not doing so. The Florida First Dislrict Court of Appeals had a chance to re.view those rulcs when a prisoner judicially challenged the failure of a disciplinary team to include in its repon of the hearing any reason(s) for 1I0t calling an eyewitness to testify at his disciplinary hearing. III The appeal COllrt delcnllincd that such failure to state authorized reasons for nOl calling the witness was a violation of the de parlment's own rules. The Courl also found lhat there were no valid reasons apparent in the record for not complying with the inSlructions set fonh in Wolff v. McDonnell - i.e., that willlcsses should be called to appear at hearings abselll hazmdr. to security. corrcctional goals, irrelevancy, 11 ctC. Page 17 Further Evolution Within three mOlllhs oflhe above decision by the District Court of Appeals, the FDOC again changed its rules regarding witnesses appearing at disciplinary hearings. Those changes were significant, and were the first step the FOOC took to have ilS rules make live witness testimony the exception rather than the routine. During April of 1988 the FOOC rules were changed to prO\'ide different witness provisions for "minor" and "major" disciplinary proceedings, and to add provisions for written Slalements 10 be used instead of live appearances at disciplinary hearings. The changed rules read in pertinent pan: [33-12.005(4) (b» (h) (II) nnmes of wi messes me given, the investigating officer shall then interview both inmate and starr ,\itnesscs and. appropriate, ha.'e the Witness Statement Fonn [)4·S56 completed. (Minor proceedings) \33-22.006(1) (h)[ (h) (11) the inmate pleads "nol guilty: evidence is 10 be presented, induding statements from appropriate inmate and starr witnesses. (Major proceedings) [33-22.006(2) (g)] (gl /lIf the inmate pleads "not guilty: evidence to he presented, mc1uding appropriate lI\1nate and sIllO·wimess. IS (All proceedings) [33-22.007(2)(b)-(e)] (b) The inmate, Hearing Officer or Disciplinary Team may request malerial witnesses, Witnesses. staff or mmale, found to be necessal)' to the proceedings shall be called or their ,nillen stlllements provided. (cl Witnesses shall not be called or certain infornmtion disclosed if doing so would create a risk of reprisal. undermine authority or otherwise present a threat to the security or order of the inslitUlion. The inmate witnesses must be willing to testify but may aller an om! or wrinen statement to the invesdgating officer in lieu of a personal appearance, Notations shall be made in the report with reasons for declining to eall \\itnesses Of for restricting any informalion. (d] No witness shall be called if it is clear that his tcstimon)' WQuld be irrelevant. immaterial or repet· itil'C. (el if a witness is unavailable to testify at the hearing, his signed wrinen slatemerlf may be aceepted as evidence. Signed statements used as evidence shall be read to tile inmate defendant e~eept as provided in ll paragmphs (a) and (c) ahol'C. In the above rules it is notable that the F.P_L.P_ VOLUME 5, ISSUE 4 FDOC changed its rules to provide that before the disciplinary hearing is held, lhe investigating officer would inler, view requested witnesses, and if stlte feels it is "appropriate," then Wilness Stalement Fonns will be completed. In lhe case of "minor" disciplinary proceedings (that still could have resulted in the loss of gain time), if the charged prisoner pled "not guilty." then those wrinen "statements from appropriate inmate and staff wilnesses," would be presented as evidence. In the case of "major" disciplinary proceedings, however, if the charged prisoner pled "not guilty," then "appropriate inmate and stafTwitnesses" would be presented. However, although the changes to the rules appeared 10 distinguish between "minor" and "major" disciplinary proceedings, the rules also stated that in all cases: "lw]itnesses, slaff or inmate, found to be necessary to the proceedings shall be called or their written statemenl provided." That rule crealed the appearance thaI live witness testimony and written witness statements were the same and interchangeable in all situations. And that was lhe way it was interpreted by disciplinary teams after that rule was adopted, i.e. written witness statements could take the place of live witness testim.ony as long as the "investigating officer" detCn11ined that statements, inSlead of live appearances, were "appropriate." Systematic Denial of Live Witness Testimony During 1992 lhe rDOC was again challenged in state court by a prisoner claiming that he had been denied the opponunity to have his requested wilnesses give live testimony at a disciplinary hearing. The circuit court in that case found that the prisoner had not submitted any evidence to suppon his claim and "remanded" the case to allow the prisoner 30 days to funtish such evidence. The rDOC requested a clarification of that order to which the circuit court responded that the order was to give the prisoner "the opportunity to present evidence, by affidavil or other documentary presentation to eSlablish that he in fact requesled that witnesses appear live and give testimony al any of lhe disciplinary hearings." The prisoner, however, failed to provide such evidence within the time allowed by lhe coun and his challenge was denied. The prisoner appealed and the appeal court affirmed the denial of relief without prejudice to the filing of a new petition in the circuil court to plead specific facts that had not been in IJ the first petition. The following year, in 1993, another prisoner challenged lhe FOOC in state court claiming that the reasons given for refusing to call his requested witness 10 a disciplinary hearing were not valid reasons under the departmenl's own rules. The reasons for refusing to call the witness to appear at the hearing were because "it would do no good" and "the witness' wriuen slatement was read during the hearing." The circuit court found these were not valid reasons according 10 lhe depanment's own rules and gTartled the prisoner relief The rooc appealed. On appeal the FDOC argued that its rules allowed wrinen witness slatements to take the place of live witness teslimony at disciplinary hearings. The appeal coun disagreed, and found that neither of the reasons for refusing to allow lhe witnesses to testify at the hearing were authorized reasons for witness denial under the department's own rules, The appeal court also noled that even though in Ponte v. Real il had been held that prison officials do nol have to sate their reasons for not allowing a witness to testify at the hearing al the time of the hearing, FOOC rules required the reasons to be documenled in the record of the disciplinary hearing. The appeal coun held lhat the prisoner had a clear legal right to call his witness to appear at the hearing, barring a legitimate reason why the witness could or should not have been ealled.l~ On October I, 1995, the rODC again changed its rules concerning witnesses testifying in disciplinary proceedings (among numerous other changes to all the disciplinary proceeding rules). Those changed rules remain in effect today. They deleled the difference between "minor" and "major" disciplinary hearings concerning, whether wilnesses could make a live appearance or submit a written statement, In fact, the current Page 18 rules make wrilten witness statements lhe routine and live appearances at disciplinary hearings the exlreme excep~ion in all cases. The current rules provide: [33-22.006(1) (g)] (g) (1lflhe IIllnale pleads "nol guilty.' evidence IS 10 be presem~d, including wiln~s5 Sl:uemen! forms oblamed from .... ;Incsses. 133-22.006(2) (dl] (2) The heMlII1l olTieer or chairman oflhe disci- plin:uy leam has Ihe aUlhorily 10 require the following acllons (d) TMI an)' ""Itness(es) appcM allhe hearing. [33-22.006(3)] (3) The mmale 010)' reql.le51 lhot wilnesses ap, pear al lhe hC:lrlllg, bUI inmate I,itnesses shall nOl be roullllcly called before' lhe disciplinOl)' learn or hellrInll officer 10 plOvide liI'e lestimony fOI Ihe following rC3SOllS· (Ill Muiliple hearings Me routlllel)' scheduled al one lime and lhe presence of willlcsscs during lhesc hearings presenls a polenlial risk for lhc futility and the safet)' ofslllffand inmoles as well as a di\'ersion of addilional sC:CUrlly stalTfrom asSigned poSlS. (b) The rOUllne presence of IIImale wllnesses dUring hearlllg$ "culd eause a dislUpllOn in Ihe 01dell~ opcra\1on of lhe facilily, as il remo\'es inmales from rCUline work asSlgnmenlS :lnd plOgroms. (c) The tCSllmOn)' of witness rcquested by Ihe charged inmale shall be prcstnled tlnough '\'finen Wllness Slalement. Form OC-l·80-1e, unless lhe in- ~" I HIlS compleled and Signed lhe "ltndS request form durlllg Ihe lII\eSliglltion: 2. Makes a requesl al Ihe healing for a wilness 10 uppear 10 prol'lde live tCSlimony~ and 3. The dlsciphnal)' learn or hearlllS officer deler· mmes lhallhe lellSOn plO\'ided by Ihe charged inmate fOf rcquCSllng hl'e ICSllmonyOl ercomes thc burden on IlI$tllulional stalT caused by Ihc relr;evalllnd escort of 1I,e "itncsscs tIS "ell;lS lhe di\'ersion orseeuril)' slaIT flO111 asSIgned ]lOSIS due to the potenlial securily ri~k lh~t rna)' result from lhe appearance of live inmate \Illnesses and the disruption 10 lhe asSlgnrnents and aCIlI Illes of mmate 'Illnesscs. Hdl and (c) omntedl (f) In no CDSe shall a wilness be called live or by wl;lIen smlcmenl ifhis testimony would be irrelevanl, Immaterial or repelilil'e. (g)WlIIIC'$SCS Shall not be called or certain infor· mauon disclosed if domg so would crCUle l\ risk of repllSal, undemnne author;l) or olherwl~e prescnl l\ lhreat 10 the SeCUIlI) or order of lhe IIISlltullon The mmate \\'III\e5SCS I1IU5t be willing 10 leslify by means of 111I ami or 'Irmcn Slalemenl plovided 10 lhe in,'eSli· pln\t officer, healing onieef, or lhe disciplinal)' '~m (h) IWlherc a WIlI1CSS statement is nOI read or F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 4 lhe inmate witness does nOl appear at lhe hearing DS requesled, lhe lellSon shull be recorded in the wilness disposilion form (i) The ehilrged mmate \\111 nOI be: permilled 10 queslion or cross enmme wilnesses dming lhe hearing. (Emphasis added 10 abo\'e rulesl The result of the above curren I rules is system-wide denial of all requests for live witness testimony during disciplinary proceedings. The disciplinary learns or hearing officers are never detcnnining thaI the reason provided by the charged prisoner for live wil1less teslimony overcomes "the burden on institutional stafT caused by the retrival and escon of live witnesses as well as the diversion of security stafT from assigned posts due to the potenlial security risk tlml may resuh from the appearance of live inmate witnesses and the disruplion 10 the assignments and aClivities of inmate witnesses.,,15 If there is any doubt of the department's intention thlll absolutely no Wilnesses will be allowed to present live testimony at disciplinary hearings, it is dispelled by simply reading the back of the Disciplinary Repon that is delivered to charged prisoners, II clearly stales: "The testimony of witnesses shall be presented by written statementS, See Rule 33-22.006(3) for complete informlltion regarding witnesses.,,16 Systematic/Categorical Denial or Live Witness Testimony Violntes Due Process Following the adoption of the above rules, in 1996, another Florida prisoner lOok the FOOC to task in state court for failing to stttlC valid reasons for refusing 10 altow his requested witness to give live testimony at a disci· plinary hearing. Apparently the disciplinary hearing had been hcld before October I, 1995, before lhc above rules went into effect, as the prisoner claimed lhal the FDDC was required to note in the report of the hearing the reasons for rcfusing to allow his witness to nppenr nl lhc hearing. The circuil coun denied lhe prisoncr's petition for relief and he appenled. The appeal coun noted that there was nothing in the record to indicate "the prison official's reasons for denying [the prisoner's) request to pro- duce {the witness] in person." The appenl coun also noted, "[there is no transcripl of the hearing or notation in the record documenting the reason for relying on the witness's Iwritten f statement alone. However, rnther than simply ovenurn the circuit coun's denial oflhe prisoner's pelition, the appeal coun remanded the case for lhe FDOC to either expunge the disciplinary repon or hold another hearing. 11 At least six federal circuit couns have interpreled Wolff v. McDonnell to require a case-by-case detemlinntion by prison officials in the correctness of denying a prisoner's request for witness. Those courts have found that blanket policies that categorically prevent witnesses from actually appearing at disciplinary hearings violate the Wolff due ll process principles. In the most recem federal case the Sevelllh Circuit Coun of Appeals, in Whitlock v, Johnson, 19 struck down as unconstitutional Illinois DOC rules that provided that inslead of actually bringing requested witness 10 teslify ill disciplinal)' hearings, officials simply interviewed Ihe proposed witnesses and presenled the disciplinary committee with a unsworn repon summarizing the wimesses testimony, That Coun, as have several others, held thaI detenninlltions to exclude live witness testimony must be made on a case-by case basis, or due process is violated. In a sitlll\tion very similar to the one currently exisling in the FDOC, in 1996 lhe Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals struck down as unconstitutional a jail pol icy that was used to prevent all requested witnesses from giving live testimony at discilll plinary hearings. Challenging F'I>OC's Policy Whenever a Florida prisoner is charged with a disciplinary infraction and there are witnesses thaI s1he can request, the witnesses should be lisled with the investigator. The invesligator is also required to allow the charged prisoner to make a wrilten stalemem al thai time, That written stalemenl should include (or only state) that ALL wimesses arc requested to appear in person before the disciplinary team to present live testimony, Addition· ally, when lhe invesligator intervicws the requesled witnesses Ihey should documenl (Conlmlltd on JIflgt 21) Page 19 The Ce/Iiug of America: Au Imide Look 61 tbe U.s. I'nsoft Industry by Daniel Buncn Rose, Dan Pens and Paul Wright. Common Courage Press. 1998. Paper Back. 264 Pages. $19.95 The C8/1ing of America 15 the critically acclaimed Prison Legal News anthology Ihat IS already in Its second printing. In eight chaplers this book presents an inside look at the wor1<ings 01 the American criminal justice system loday. The book examines the death penally, control Units, the politiCS 01 prisoner-bashing, the role 01 the media in the current anti'prisoner climate, prisoner struggles. prison slave labor, racism, brutality, and corruption among prison employees, the rore clthe gun lobby and the guards unions In formulating criminal justico policy, Ihe downward spiral 01 prison conditions, private prisons and much, much moro. The perfactlntroduetion into the reality and politics of modem American jUslice, at alilevais. OUI'SlDERS LOOKING IN: How to Keep litxn Going Quy When Somcooe You Love Goes to Jail. by Toni Weymouth, Ed.D., and Maria Telesco. R.N.. B.A.. DLiNe Publishing, 1998. Paperback, 351 Pages. $19.95 Whon someone is accused or convicted of a crime, the inVIsible and forgotten vldims are his or her family, friends, and loved ones. While the famlty members 01 the accused have committed no crIme themselves. they are often shunned by relalives, ostracized by neighbors, fired from their Jobs, even "dlsfellowshipped- from their churches. Many have no where to tum. A few have become suicidal. Outsiders Looking In IS an aid 10 lhose who love someone in Jailor prison. and a caution to those who thoughl II could never happen 10 them. It's everything you never wanled 10 know aboulthe Big House, but didn'l now who or whal 10 ask: alTom. lawyers, court, sentencing. prison rules and regulations, pilfalls and how 10 avoid them, death row, stress and stress reduction techniques, support groups and organizations. An invaluable resource. To Order, mail payment and order form to: Florida Prison Legal Perspectives Attn: Book Order 171E CEIlING OF AMElUCA...... $ 19.95 each, _ OlnSlDERS LOOKINGIN.....$I 9.95 each, _ P.O.Box 660-387 Chuluota. Florida 32766 Shipping & Handling (For any sit.e order) SEND TO: Name: lnstfCompany: Address: City: -,=...""'iffi...-.,...."State (PLEASE pRINT ClEARLV"l--- Zip $ 3,00 TOTAlPAnENT ENCLOSED >.$_ _ '--- Please llllow 4 to 6 weelt.5 fOf delivery. All orders musl be pre.paid. F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 4 Page 20 (Commuted/rom page /9) on their witness sttltement forms thtlt they have additional testimony that Ihey wish to present in person at the disciplinary hearing (this is orten very true as only about four inches is available on the wimess statement famlS for the witness to write in). It is imponant that the charged prisoner repctlt his request for the wilnesses to 11 appear in person at the hearing. Since Florida prison disciplinary hearings are not recorded. to avoid disciplinary team members laler "not being able to remember" that you requested the witnesses to appear live. it would be the best practice to present the hearing learn wilh a wriuen slatement (keep a copy for )·ourself, of course) of your own, setting out your defense in numbered paragmphs and restating that you request thai the" ilnesses appear in person. If the disciplinary team fails to document a valid reason (as sel out in wolO' v. McDonnell and Ponte v. Real) why witnesses were not allowed to testify al the hearing in person, or simply documenls that "witness statements read," as mOSI often is done, and Ihat ftlils 10 explain how an individualized determination was made on each requested \\ ilness to justify excluding them from giving live testimony, Ihen ),ou will have an excellent issue for appeal and for any subsequent judiciol review.l.J You. of course, would need to raise Ihis issue on all of your administrative appeals 10 fully exhaust the adminislrofive remedies 4 before seeking review by a coun.: Failure 10 exhaust each alleged violation through the administrative appeals process will prevent IIny unexhaustcd claims from being raised later in COllrt for the first time. It is imponant to realize thllt violations of federal due process and mandntory adrninislmtive rules may be separated into two claims. You may clnim in such II case thaI your due process rights under federal Illw was violated and thaI the department failed 10 follow its own rules. This anicle is not intended to be all inclusive. It is intended to stimulate further research and pressure on the FDQC 10 com· ply with the law. Prisoners who are interesled in this subject should actually read the cases cited in this article and in the end notes. -Bob Posey End Notes I Wolff ... McDonnell. 9-l S Ct 2963 also. Slll1dm .... Conncr. 115 SCI 2293 (1995) (rcaffirming Wolff, but cstablishmg a ncw method of determming ~hethel a state-ereated 1lba1) interesl c.'I(ist) 2 WollT.td. at 2979. 3 WollT. td, at 2979 (emphasis added) .. Pomte I Reat, 105SCI2192(19SS). 5. td, at 2196 (emphasiS added) 6 Rule 33-22.08 (I3)(i). FA C. (1979), Sec also~ Roberts v BneTUln. 368 So 2d 117. 11 S (Fla. 1st DCA 1979) (quotmg that ,ute), and Plcclilio v Waln~Tigllt. 382 So 2 I 7U.746, n I (Fll 1st DCA t980) (quotmg that rule) 7 Robens Bnenon Id. 8 Adams W:lln~right. 512 So2d 1077 (Fill lsi OCA t987) ("permnlmSlll1 Inmate the limned nght to eall wnnesses IS a mlll1dalOry prison official dUI) unda the United Swes COIUhtu· lion ") 9, Rute 33-2207(1)(1),(b)1. Ind 5. FA C. (1988) (emphasis added) Sec: SlnlS .... Dulla. 519 Sold 1080, 1082 (FIll. 1st DCA 1988) (quoting rule). 10 Suns I Dugger.ld stating In record thaI •.... itnc:ss SlluemenlS rclld~ IS 1101 a valid reason fOI refusing to call ~l1nesses 10 testify In person athearlnsl 24 A pnsoncr allcgll'lS thaI hIS right to hal·e Wl1nesses appear at I diseiplinDl)· hearing was ... iolllted undel I "bhtnkcI bllll" on hl·e witncu !CSllmon). 01 that lhe lell$OflS gll·en b) pnson offiCIals lhe exclusion of the witnesses ~ae nat a vllid Ua$OlIS aecording to Wolff lll1d Ponte, or no( valid under the dcpMtment's o....-n rules. must 5tt out ·dcllllcd fac· tual allegations· In the JlChtlon or compllllnttMt IS filed WIth the court T1Iost ·detilled fKtull II1legatlons" must Include (t) that the pnsoncl reql>C$kd to call ~Ilne:nc:s bUI was denied. (2) Ihat the ~Il' ncucs ~~Ie mllen:tl as evidenced b) :t hst of speCIfic Wllnesses reqlJCSted and I bod Ullemau of ~hal their tesllmony ....UIIld have been. and (3) thll cuher the department made no notation in the rceard i'l'lng \·Ihd reasons for nor calling the Wll.11tSSCS to the hearing or that the reasons gil= wen: invilld (per WalIT and Ponte andlor the dtpanment's a,,'lI rules) See. 1I0lcomb \' IXX:. 609 So 2d 7SI, II 755 ror (Fla 1st OCA 1992).1 11 hi 12 Rules 33-22005(4)(b). 33·22 006( I)(hl and (2)(gt 33·1HI07(lXbHe). FA C (err ApI 1988) (emphllSlS added) Sedlolcomb \ IXX:. 609 So2d 751. 755 (AI 1st DCA 1992) (quotmg these rules tn patti 13 Holcomb .... IXX:. Id 14 IXlC ..._ M8IShall. 6t8 So2d 777 (Fla lSI DCA 1993) t S. Rule 33-22.006(3)(e)3 . F.AC. (199S) 16 DC~·80-l. DIsciphnM} RcpDf1 Form, (eff 101·95) Some mSlltullons Ire beSmninlto usc computer-generated DISl:lpllnlUY RepM FolTllS. e\·enluall) III m~lltullons IliIl lIowelel. those computer-gencratcd DR fOlms Ibo stale Ihat "Thc lestlmony of~ ilnesses shall be p,cscRled by wnllen statement" 17. Williams .... Jamcs. 684 Sold 869 (Fla lnd DCA 1996). 18, Eg, Whitiocl.: v Johnson, (5) FJd 380, 385-389 (7th ell 1998), Forbes v, Tli8i- 976 ':2d 308, 317 Plh Cir, 1992); Ramer .... Kilby, 936 F,2d. 1102, 1105 (10th Cir t991): G,andi· son I. Cu)lcl. 774 F.2d 598.604 (3d ell 1985): Klllg I' Wcll~, 760 F.2d 1t9. 93 (6th Cn 1985): Dalton V Huno. 71) F 2d 75,78(4th e,r 1(83), Bartholomc~ ... WlItson. 665 F2d 915,918 (9th Clr. 1982). But Sec: Ml:Gulnl1c5$ V Dupois.75 F 3d 794 (hI ell 1996) (Due process not ...iol:tted by not calling requested \Illnesses from general prison papulallon Ilhen dbclpllnary hellf' inp held in confinement unlL Reasons for uelu$Ion Included legitImate seeurny coneerns and prisoner's claim that witnesses would only have been able 10 -c.'I(pllm~ ~hat they saw much bet· tel~ than in theil ~Tlllen statements ) 19 Whitlock v Johnson,ld 20 Mitchell I Dupoilt;. 75 F.3d 517.525·26 (9th Cll 1996) 21 Rule 33-22.006(3Xe)2 , FAC. (cIT 10-1·95) 22 Rule 33-22006(IXJ). FA.C (efT 10-1·95) ("The Inmate msy mtU:e any elosing statement, ~TlIlen or verbal. conterTling the mfraellOll for consideration b) the hearing omcn 01 dIsci· phnlll)' team.-) 23. Sa: v Manh:l1l, 618 So 777, 778-79 (Fla lSI DCA 1993) (FOCX: offieiab SImply PAST ABUSE REPORTED BY PRJSONERS According to a new report from lhe U.S. Juslice Department released during April, more Ihan a third of the women in state prisons and jails say that Ihey \\-ere sexually or physically abused as children That is more than twice the reponed rate of child abuse for women generally. Male prisoners who claim to have suffered abuse as children was much smaller, with aboul 14 percent of male prisoners saying they were abused as children, but Ihat figure is still twice lhe nalional rale of 5to 8 percent for men generally. The survey of prisoners in bOlh state prisons and jails was conducted in 1996·97. The Justice Depanment repon documents Ihat more than 36 percent of women prisoners say they had been sexu· ally or physically abused al age 17 or younger. Not surprising, the survey also found alcohol and drug abuse higher among prisoner who reponed suffering child abuse, with 80 percent of abused female prisoners and 76 percent of abused male prisoners saying they had used illegal drugs regularly as compared to 65 percent of female and 68 percent of male prisoners who reponed regular drug use and who had not been abused. The survey found thai a third of women in stale prisons and a quarter of ocx: (197~) Sec F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 4 Page 21 [hose in jails reponed having been raped before incarceration. Almost half of all women prisoners surveyed said they had been physically or sexually abused at some age before their incarccnllion. Among state prisoners. Ihose reponing child abuse were more likely to be incarcerated for a violent crime than Ihose reponing not 10 have been abused. The repon's findings show that prisoners who grew up al least panilllly in fosler care. or if their parenls were heavy alcohol or drug users themselves or if a family member had been imprisoned. reponed higher levels of prior abuse.• (Another Notable Case) Close Management Exercise Suspension List Constitutional The U.S. II th Circuit Court of Appeals has detennined that Florida prisoners who are in Close Management confinement slatus have a state-created libeny interest in outdoor exercise and that Ihe deprivation of same requires due process protections. bOl lhat two Florida prisoners al Florida Stale prison had received allihe process Ih.1I they were due prior to having their access to outdoor exercise suspended and thai the minimal and post-deprivation procedures used for implementing the deprivation comply with the Due Process Clause. The coun also found Ihal a complete denial of outdoor exercise in Ihis particular case did nOI amount to cruel and unusual punishmelll violative of Ihe Eighth Amendment, nor was the Equal Protection Clause violated where prisoners on death row receive four hours per week ollldoor e,'(ercise bUI those prisoners placed on a "yard suspension list" receive no olltdoor exercise. This case was filed by Florida prisoners Frank Bass .:lnd Leonard Bean, who arc bOlh incarcernt~d at Florida State Prison (FSP). for mOSl, if not all. of their stay at FSP bOlh these guys have becn on Close Mnnagcment confinement. Prisoncrs on Close Manllgement nomllllly receive 'only two hours of outdoor exercise each week. However. according 10 Floridll Departmcnt of Corrections (FOOe) rules "if clear and compelling facts can document fthat) such exercise periods should rIO/ be gn'lnred" F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 4 then a prisoner may be placed on what is called a "yard suspension list (YSL)," and his outdoor exercise is suspended for an indefinite period. Both Bass and Bean had been placed on such a suspension lisl several limes for various rellsons. lllOse reasons included attempting 10 escape together from FSP during a previous outdoor exercise period by scaling a fence, pulling a guard out of a dump lruck at knife point, and anempting to ram the dump truck through a fence. Other charges included being in possession of weapons and escape contraband and having stabbed another prisoner in Bass's case. and having murdered a correctional officer and having escape contraband in Bean's case. Because of Ihe outdoor exercise deprivation, however, they filed a § 1983 action challenging the outdoor exercise policies and procedures used to implement such deprivation. They claimed thllt the deprivation of outdoor exercise for prolonged periods is both cruel and unusual punishrnem, a discriminlltory violation of equal protection where even prisoners on death row receive outdoor exercise, and that the procedures used to deprive the outdoor exercise docs not prvide due process protection. The federal district court granted summary judgment for the prison officials and Bass and Bean appealed. [n a fairly concise opinion, Ihe 11th Circuit Coun of Appeals affimled the summary judgment. Firsl, the 11th Circuit coun discussed lhe Eighth Amendment claim. In a brief history lesson. the coun noted that when the first "modern" prison opened in [790, prisoners convicted of serious offenses wer,c kept in solitary confinement and never allowed out of their cells. Those conditions (according to a single cited source) were not considered cruel and unusual punishmeni. But the coun admiued that conlemporary standards of decency should bc considered in whether punishment is cruel and unusual, with the standard of review in the context of II prisoner 5 conditions of confinelllent after incarceration being "the unnecessary and wanton infliction of pain." (Cite omitled). While no outdoor exercise would qualify as involving "infliction of pain," the coun explained, in this case and with the violent history of Bass and Bean, such pain was not inflicted without penological justification." Nor was the placement on the YSL wanton. as the record before the coun was "filled with evidence indicating prison officials were very concerned about the potentia[ IUlnn to inmates from placement on the YSL, and took ... steps to ensure thai Ihe plnintiffs were not hllnned," including daily sickcall opponunities, weekly psychologica[ evaluations, and booklets on how to exercise inside the (very small) cells. Thus, the coun concluded that the outdoor exercise deprivation suffered by Bass and Bean did not violale the Eighth Amendment. Second, the coun considered the denial of conslitutional due process claim. Due process under the U.S. Constitlllion is only required where a life. libeny or property interest exists. The coun noted lhftt life or propeny was not an issue in this case, therefore it must detennine if a liberty interest existed giving rise to due process requirements. The coun discussed that after Sandin v. Conner, 115 S.Ct. 2293 (1995), only two circumstances give rise to a [ibeny interest in the prison context, (I) when a change in conditions of confinement are so severe that it exceeds the sentence imposed by a coun, or (2) when Ihe stale creates by law a benefit and the deprivation of same amounts to an "atypical and significant hardship in relation to the ordinary incidents of prison [ife." (Citing Sandin). The coun found the second circumstance to exist in this casco Citing FDOC rules, the coun held Ihat a state-created protected libeny interest exists in outdoor exercise for Close Management prisoners, thus requiring some measure of due process. The coun opined that the minimum requirements of due process for prisoners facing disciplinary action (involving the deprivation of II libeny interest) (in this elise placement on the YSL) are: (I) advance written notice of the charges; (2) II wrinen statement of the reasons for the disciplinary action Iaken; and (3) an opponunity to call witnesses and present evidence, when consistent with insti[utional safety and correctional goals. (ColllOlwecl 011 page].l) Page 22 THOMAS E. SMOLKA ATTORNEY-AT-LAW 3126 W. CARY STREET, SillTE 122 RICHMOND, VIRGINIA 23221-3504 TELEPHONE (804) 6444468 E-MAIL lesmolka@..l..orldDet..tt..nd TELEFAX (804) 644-4463 ANNOUNCEMENT Thomas E. Smolka is proud to announce the establishment of his law practice in Richmond. His practice areas include: Criminal Defense Law, Appellate Criminal Law, Post-Conviction Relief, Major Civil Litigation, Inmate Administrative Law and • Proceedings involving the Department of Corrections, Probation and Parole, Executive Clemency, Interstate Compact and Institutional Transfers, Immigration Law and Detainer Actions. Additionally, Thomas E. Smolka and Associates located at 909 East Park Avenue Tal/qhassee Floridq 32301-2646. Telephone Ca5Q) 222-6400. Tel~lax C85Q) 222- 6484. will continue toprQyjde a full ranee Q/Consll/tjn~Services to Inmates on Administratiye Executive Clemen<;y and Parole Related Mauers. Subsequent to his 1975 graduation from America's oldest law school at the College of William & Mary, Thomas E. Smolka was admitted to the Virginia State Bar and became a member of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers. Tom's legal experience includes service as an Assistant City Attorney of Norfolk., Virginia followed by many years in private law practice. Most importantly, Tom Smolka's direct understanding of the American judiciary came when he confronted the criminal justice system, won his direct appeal and was exonerated. See Smolka v. State. 662 So.2d 1255 (Fla. 5'" DCA 1995), rev. denied, State v. Smalka, 668 So.2d 603 (Fla. 1996). F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 4 . Page 23 (Citing Young v. JOlles. 37 F.3d 1457.1459-60 (11Ih Cir. 1994). But having sct out those minimum requirements, the coun then embarked on justifying why none of them were required in this casco Bass and Bean were given written notice of the intent to place them on the YLS after they were placed on same. The court held. however that the failure to provide advance notice was irrelevant. Citing to a prior 11th Circuit case, McKinney v. POle. 20 F.3d 1550 (11th Cir. 1994), that had held that, essentially. where a laler procedural remedy is available to cure any prior procedural defect then the prior pro· cedural deprivation is immaterial. Bass and Bean, the coun noted. where able to and did file several grievances after being placed on the YSL. sO strict compliance with the "advance notice requirement" was not necessary. plinary action be provided. was provided. the eoun decided. when Bass and Bean received the responses to their (post· deprivation) grievances. TIlUs, they received written reasons, the court held. On the third due process requirement, i.e., the qualified right to call wit· nesses and present evidencc, the court cited two reasons why this was unneces· sary in this case. The first reason the coun said was the threat that Bass and Bean had historically been to Ihe safety of Ihe prison, thus prison officials had UIC discrction to limit those rights. The second rea· sons given by the coun was thai there was no need for Bass or Bean to present any evidence because, under the circumstances, the facts underlying the misbe· havior whieh eaused the placement on the YSL (i.e., the attempted escape, escape require· contraband, assaults, murder, etc.) "were not in dispute." (In other words, the coun menl, i.e., that wrincn reasons for the disci- implied that they had already been found The second due process SUBSCRIPTION EXPIRATION?? Plea3e check your mailing label for the dale that your subscription to FPLP will expire. On the top line will be reflected a due such a.s U. ov 99· .... That dale indicates the hut month of your current subscription to FPLP. When you recein the FPLP usue for that month, please renew your 3ubsc,ription immediately 30 that you do not miss IS issue of FPLP. Your support through subscription donations makes publication possible and is greatly appreciated. Please take the time 10 complete the enclosed subscription form 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 Addreu Change Notice so thOlt the mailing list can be updated. Injustice anywhue is a tlrreaJ to justice ~·t!rywhere. - Martin Luther King, F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 4 guilty of those charges. or at least had not challenged that they had occurred). Therefore, the minimal due process that Bass and Bean received after counsel. basically because the outcome would have been the same anyway. ee: Bass v. Perrin. 170 F.3d 1312, 12 FLW Fed. C634 (11th Cir. 4/1/99). placemem on the YSL was sufficient to satisfy the Due Process Clause. accord· ing to the coun. Next, on the Equal Protection claim, the coun briefly determined that even though death row prisoners may receive four hours per week of outdoor exercise and the prisoners on the YSL none. Ihat there was a rational basis for any discrimination. "Death row prisoners have not necessarily shown themselves a lhreat to the internal operations of the prison, while persons on the YSL have." stated the coun. Thus. the coun rejecled that elaim also. The cou" also detennined that the district COU" did not abuse its discre- TIlE NEW SClUTI10N In 1966, there were zr,CXIO people in California's mental hospi1als and 27.000 in the state's prisons and jails. Today. there are just 4,500 mental hospital beds in CaJifornia., and the number of people in the S1ale's prisons has exploded to 160.000. {Sow"ce: Ment.1I7 N.tion4J w)_ AW......cc ror .... tion in denying Bass and Beans motions for appointment of an expen witness or FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL PERSPECTIVES P.O. BOX 660-387 CHULUOTA, FL 32766 ON-PROFIT U.. POSTAGE PAID OVIEDO, FL PERMIT NO. 65 Page 24