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FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL ers ectives VOLUME 8, ISSUE 4 JULY/AUG 2002 ISSN# 1091-8094 campaign accounts for the 2000 election,· including· Bush for President. . With such credentials, it cannot be disputed that Aramark, with a 176.5 million dollar net by Oscar Hanson and . Sheni Johnson . income for fiscal year 2001~ is. a leader in food service vending. Aramark Corporation, a While Aramark lias many satisfied leading player in the "outsourcing" customers, something is ~iss with one of its major customers:· florida business, manages food service facilities throughout the nation for prisons. such .companies as Boeing. Los . In 2001, Aramark contracted with the Florida' Deparonent of Angeles Convention Center, Duke Corrections to provide food. service University, Oriole Park at Camden Yards, and in II state prison operations in 126 kitchens within the systems. Florida is among the II DOC. The five-year 58 million dollar deal is projeCted to cut the prison systems. Florida contracts with Aramark to provide food state's prison food costs from 80.2 service for approximately· 63,000 million in 2000 - 2001 to 72.2 million in the 2001 - 2002 fiscal prisoners. . year. Aramark provides meals at a It is notable to recognize that Aramark ranks No. I in.the cost of $2.32 per inmate each day. How is Aramark managing to save outsourcing category of F~rtune . Magazine's 2002 list of "America's the state miilions while earning the same? The answer will not surprise Most Admired Companies:' most Florida prisoners, but .may Aramark provided food service· for the 2000 Republican National shock the conscience of those Convention, and its top executives . beyond the prison fence.. gave thousands to Republican ARAMARK MISSESTHE· MARK R,ecently the St. Petersburg . Times exposed unscrupulous acts of the Aramark Corporation. At Madison CorreCtional Institute, Corrections Captain Hugh Poppell noticed the featured entree of sloppy joes was particularly soupy. Further . investigation revealed that Aramark staff had diluted the entree several .times, adding ketchup and tomato paste to make it stretch among the 700-plus inmates still lined up .to be fed. The Warden was summoned { and his investigation revealed that \. the recipe had been shorted by 70 \ pounds of ground beef and turkey. . " The other ingredients such as onions, celery and green peppers were . completely absent in the entree. This is just one of many food episodes revealed by the St. Petersburg Times. Other scenes from the Aramark kitchen include: In. Marion County, inmate kitchen workers, on orders. from an Aramarksupervisor, soaked spoiled chicken in vinegar and water to take away the smell before cooking. Corrections officers I FAMlUESADVOCAlES PRISONERS ~ ~ . UNrrED FOR. PRISON REFORM Jury, Not Judge, Death DeCIsions ........•....•......••...•........•...•...•.. 4 Exonerated by Science ;..........•. ~ Around the System , Notable Cases ' : The Florida Parole Game, Part One Harsher Imprisonment for Sex Offenders Okay 6 ~ ~ :... ... 9 ~ """,j 14 W;:1 19' . 22 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL Perspectives - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - u FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL PERSPECTIVES P.O. Box 660-387 C"uluota, Florida 32766 Publishing Division of: FLORIDA PRISONERS' LEGAL AID ORG., INC A 501(0)(3) Non ProfttOrganizatlon Fax (401) S68.()200 , Email: fplp@aol.coni Website: www.fplao.org FPLAO DIRECTORS' TeresitA. Burns-Posey Bob G. Posey. CPL Damll E. Blackwelder, CPL David W. Bauer. Esq. Loren D. Rhoton, Esq. Oscar Hanson, CPL Linda Hanson FPLPSTAFF Publisher Editor Co-cdltor Racan:h Administrative Assistant TcrcsaA. Bums-Posey DobO.Posey Oscar Hanson Shari Johnson Darrell E. Blackwelder FPLP ADVISORY BOARD William Van Poyck Philip Bagley-Terry Vaughn Miclulcl Lambrix-1amcs Quigley Linda Oottlicb-S'!S8D Manning Enrique Diaz-Gcnc Salicr Michael PaImcr-Mark Sherwood , TrishMills found out and ordered 500 pieces of chicken thrown out. In Brevard' County, inspectors found maggots on serving trays and kitchen floors. In Indian River County~ inmate workers struggled one morning to cook pancakes while an Aramark supervisor was fo~d sleeping at his computer terminal. In Putnam' County, corrections officers disc.overed, pans of refrigerated food, with altered dates, a serious infraction that sparked a major investigation. Officials suspected Aramark was subverting the prison system~s strict rules on using leftovers - rules 'intended to prevent' mass inmate sickness. , . In Hernando County~ officers discovered that Aramark prepared a spaghetti dinner using old chili con carne from the previous week and creamed beef from the day The c~ sauce was before. washed'offand the beef reused. At an Avon Park work camp~ inmates complained when the pork ,roast servings were the size of ·,saltines. In Sumter County~ Aramark' , .habitually deviated from the master men~ preparing food in a manner not consistent with the required method, . constant food shortages resulting in long delays~ and unauthorized food substitutes. Though Aramark bOasts that it has saved' money for Flori~ its methods,' have raised a new set of concerns for frontline corrections officials. Dirty kitchens that in one county produced maggots, frequent cooking delays that throw off prison schedules. food quality that often fatl beneath expectations and a chronic inability to follow state rules and regulations are among the concerns raised by corrections officials. As a result of Aramark's actions, the state has assessed Stt0,000 in fines against the corporation. FDOC inspection reports disclosed by the St. Petersburg , Times describe Ara'mark kitchens as "filthy" and in one case~ "horrendous." Other reports reveal that Aramark employees were constantly late for work and iIi some cases didn't show up at all~ leaving corrections officers to start preparing meats. Shortly before signing with Aramark, Florida_ prison officials were made aware of, similar problems at an Aramark-run prison food service in Ohio. There, an inspection team found "inexcusable" sanitation problems and "observed a near riot during breakfast as a result of Aramark~s strict compliance with portion' sizes." So vigilant is Aramark~s cost-cutting that supervisors are tnlined to order workerS to scoQP food from pans in a way that wouldn't jam too much food into the ladle notwithstanding mandated size portions the established by 'state dietitians. the Ohio investigation team suggested Aramark" should be liable .for , damages as a result of the lack of training, cleanin~ and maintenance." Ohio~s contract with Aramark was not renewed. On its website, Aramark promises to reduce the costs of its customers without corrections "shortcuts" or a drop in quality. It boasts ofa computerized recipe and . menu system that reduces waste and prevents. the ord~ng of excess meals. - Ohio was not the only state to experience problems with Aramark. In August 2001 a Wisconsin state lab'" confinned that S5 prisoners in the Winnebago County Jail had been poisoned by salmonella-tainted 'food. The country~s health director said analysis found salmonella strains CI and C-2 in spaghetti that had been served to the jtul's prisoners. Several prisoners had to., be hospitalized with salmonella 2------- _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL Perspeqtives - - - - - - - - - poisoning. The county sheriff's As corrections officers will department confmned that readily tell you, in a world where foodservice at the jail is handled by · eating is perhaps the day's only pleasure, if prisoners are not Aramark Inc., a Philadelphia:based food service corporation. Aramark · properly fed the potential for riot was hired in 2000 to take over the exists. "It's an officer safety issue, " said Shopp, referring to Aramark's jail's food service. The $7.8 billion company was low bidder for the jail food episodes. "It's just a situation that I'm afraid will eventually go contract. Sheriff Michael Brooks said he couldn't justify spending awry." more taxpayer funds on prisoner Though prisoners have meals than necesslU)'. Doug Warner P complained, "there have been no of Aramark said his company prides security incidents whatsoever," said itself on its sanitary preparation and Elizabeth Hirst, a spokeswomllQ for Gov. Bush. That may depend on handling of food and is careful to avoid food-borne illness threats. which side the fence you are on. In Florida, however, the In February, in an unuSual problems have been caused by not show of unity among Florida's new age prisoners, prisoners at a major On many days enough meals. institution in Hardee County staged a Aramark runs out of food leaving many inmates in line for 20 - 30 one-day food strike. In Jackson County, where minutes while additional food is prisoners recently received wateredprepared. Often, the hastily prepared food has no relationship to the day's down roast pork, cold spaghetti, scheduled menu,· a violation of the undercooked meat and watered jelly in place of pancake syrup, there was rule. that mandates consistency. "tension in the dining hall" when Aramark's methodology for earning millions from the corrections Aramark served crumbled cake that system is not complex. First, · had to be served by spoon, a Aramark is fully aware that corrections officer wrote in a report. When Aramark served up complaints of prisoners will rarely imdercooked potatoes and grits to reach beyond the fences ofthe prison confinement prisoners at a Walton so they are not a potential threat to County institution, an officer the company's operations. Second, Aramark is paid for each inmate reported, they "began to yell. Rattle ! listed on the institution's daily roster cell doors and became disorderly." Hirst discounted such regardless whether each inmate visits incidents. "There have not been any the chow hall for their meals. riots or lives in jeopardy. The Consequently, Aramark habitually inmates are not always 'pleased with • under prepares the number of meals the food, but that's going to happen by anticipating only a portion of the from time to time.... No one's going prison population. hungry," Hirst said. Al Shopp, a former "We're almost always corrections officer who now monitors working conditions in hungry since Aramark' took over," said one prisoner at a Sumter County . prisons for the Florida Police prison, who asked not to be Benevolent. Association, said that identified for fear of retaliation. "]'d Aramark too often gambles on a estimate that a good third of the food lower inmate turnout at each meal. isn't edible, undercooked, poorly Too often, he said, corrections prepared or spoiled," the prisoner officers are forced to intervene when told an FPLP reporter. "If you don't quality is low or the portions too have money to eat out ofthe canteen, small. In effect, Shopp said, they and the prices there keep .going up "prop up" Aramark. 3---.;. _ arid up, then you either go hungry most of the time or get it the best way· you can. A.lot of food stealing and selling goes on, guys just trying to survive." Burns-Posey, Teresa chairperson of Florida Prisoners' Legal Aid Organization that is.based in Orlando, said the situation is actually more complex that recently reported in the St.. Petersburg TImes. The problems being reported against Aramark now are nothing new, she said, the same problems existed when the Department of Corrections ran the .kitchens; only then they weren't officially reported by inspecting corrections officers against their fellow officers running food' service. "There's a lot of disgruntled state prison employees right now," Bums-Posey said. "They would like to see Anuilark fail." They see any privatization as a tJ.ueat and believe if Aramark can be forced to pull out then they can keep privatization from spreading further in Florida's prisons, according to Bums-Posey. That view would support why shortly after Aramark took over food service at most of Florida's prisons the FDOC suddenly revised its rules· concerning food service operations, making the rules much stricter. It might also account for why the administration at a major institution in Lake County uses food service job assignments for prisoners as punishment. There, records show, the prisoners with the .worst disciplinary histories are forced to work in food service, placing the burden of trying to control such prisoners directly on Aramark employees who are not trained as corrections officers. Commenting on Ar8mark's history in Florida's prisons so far, Sterling Ivey, the FOOC's new public relations director, said, "It was a bumpy start," but, "We feel like we're' moving in the right direction." _ ---=-------------- FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL Perspectives FOOD STRIKE SUCCESS propose in IIll)' DlllIllIa' tIuII food strikes me I!te solution 10 food prolIlcms, We, like Ihe TImes, ore mcreIy rcponiDS news. If we were 10 IUIJ8C$1 a solution il W1luId Iikdy be tiligalion. HUDdmIs of coun cmos fiJcd asainsl AnmIrl<.' dIIIt I!tey would haw 10 defend with !heir owp law)u's III sreat C05l 10 IhC company. prcbahIy would ha~, a sijpUlic:ant itnpaal • 2, "Wheel of Death: Florida's Other Lottery Game.") Already debate has started in Florida about the court's ruling and how many death-row prisoners may be affected by it. Some prosecutors claim it will affect only a small by Teresa Bums-Posey number" while some defense attorneys claim it could affect the WASHINGTON - In a 7-2 decision majority cit Florida's 373 death-row handed down by the U,S. Supreme prisoners. Court on June 24, 2002, the high , Supreme Court Justice Ruth court ruled that juries, not judges, Bader Ginberg, writing for the must decide whether there are majority of the court, made clear the aggravating factors that warrant the extent of the ruling, stating, "This imposition of the death ,penalty. The case presents a question of who decision throws into doubt decides; judge or jury. The context potentially hundreds of death is capital murder; the issue. life or sentences in nine states, including death.... Capital defendants.... are Florida, where either judges alone entitled to a jury determination of decide whether factors exist to any fact" that increases their justify a death sentence or where punishment. judges can· override a jury's Justice Sandra Day ,recommendation of life and impose O'Conrier, who dissented ftom the the death penalty. majority's ruling, said the decision In this latest ruling, that will unleash a rash of claims by strikes a blow against disparity in defense attorneys. But, she capital punishment, an unusually predicted, most will be unsuccessful united Supreme Court h~ld that because the prisoners are either too allowing judges, instead of juries, to far along in the appeal process to detennine whether factors exist to raise new claims on this new impose the death sentence violates decision or will be unable to show defendants' right to a jury trial as how they were harmed by being guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment. sentenced under the old procedure,. The decision is expected to have an impact on death-sentenced prisoner's sentences in Arizona, Idaho, Montana, Nebraska, ATrENTION PRISONERS Colorado, Florida, Alabama, Indiana and Delaware. The impact may be Have you ever requested the production less in those latter four states as they of witnesses or evidcnce at '8 disciplinary hearing and been denied that production? If allow the jury to make a so, did you grieve that denial ofdue process recommendation on whether the or proceed to a court action? death sentence should be imposed or A court action is currently pending that not but then its up to the judge to challenges such due process 'violations. If make the' finai decision. In cases you ever filed a grievance or court action on this issue, please provide us an outline of where the judge followed a jurythe relevant facts. Ifyou still do not possess recommended death sentence there your grievances or court pleadings, we can may not be 11 conflict with this latest obtain copies with your information. Supreme Court decision. If the Contact: Super/a,. Invest/gotjona ofFlorldil judge overruled the jury's A//n: Due p,.ocen Suit recommendation against the death PO Box 384 penalty, however, this new ruling New Pm Richey, FL 334654 will likely require the sentence to be thrown out. (See FPLP, Vol. 8, Iss. JURY, NOT JUDGE, MUST MAKE DEATH DECISION [Sources: St. PeterSburg Times, 6/17/02; The Northwestern, 8129/01; FDOC records; interviews]. On July 2 the St. Petenburg Times ran an editorial entitled "PriS0119 need better food service" that complimented that paper's June 17 article C()nceming Anunark and the problems that C()mpany has been experiencing inf1orida's prisons. (See above article.) FDOC Secretary Michael Moore was quick to respond with a letter to the Times' editor that was part spin control and part veiled threat Moore emphasized in his letter, that the Tunes printed, how much money has been saved taxpayers by Aramark taking over prison food services. He also nOled. thaI Aramark was only given 90 days 10 move into and take over food service operations at 126 C()rrectlonal facilities, but failed to explain why such a short period was allowed for such a massive undertaking. He made no mention that Gov. Jeb Bush basically ordered the FOOC to give the contract to Aramark - inunediately. Perlutps mosl notable in. Moore's letter was his labeling the homole conditions at many prisons as exampled in the Times' June 17 article as "isolated incidents," an apparenl favorite .label of Mr. Moore and one he is reaching the point of abusing. He also warned the Times that, "What is critical now is to stop reckless rhetoric. including completely unfounded speallation about possible 'food riots: I sincerely hope your editorial did not unwittingly exacerbate inmate anxiety or jeopardize safety." Michael Moore IIpparently did not Wish to mention that between June 22 and June 25 hundreds ofprisoners at Avon Parle Correctional Institution staged an almost unprecedented food strike against Aramllrk's food service. According to eyewitness 8CC()UDts, the peaceful protest waS in response to Anunark shorting on serving amounts, substituting constantly running out of food and prisoners having to wait in long lines while more was cooked. Prisoners report that the food strike was successful. At the time Avon Parle CI held 823 prisoners. On th!= fU'St day of the stn'ke only 210 ate, on the sCC()nd da,.188, on the third day 161, lIIld by the fourth day only 110 ate. Reportedly, by the third day prison officials were C()ncemed, ....ith the ASSl Warden and Colonel going dorm to dorm asking prisoners to go eat: On the last day the Asst. Warden. even had, Aramark preplll'C fried chicken and french fries hoping to lure prisoners to the chow hall. A rumor circulated, however, that he was overheard saying fried chicken would surely get the black prisoners to eat and break the strike. Only 88 prisoners showed up for the fried chicken. Prisoners report that after the strike the food did improve. fNDle: FPLP staff wishes to IlllIIco it cIcllr dIIIt we do not ----.,..------------- , 4--- _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL DNA SCORE: 110 PRISONERS FREED by Linda Hanson For the 110 prisoners freed from prison after their convictions were overturned by DNA tests, the vindication brought neither a happy ending nor a happy' beginning. Their time in . prison, when totaled, surpassed 1,000 years. Recently the Associated Press conducted an examination of what happened to the: 110 prisoners who were all wrongly co"victed, but released years later after DNA tests exonerated them. . Vincent Moto, a 39-year-old father offour, Sl:U'Vives on odd jobs, welfare and food stamps. Mota was unjustly convicted of rape and. imprisoned for over 10 years before being released. ~I have to live with these scars all my life," Moto says. "It destroyed my family." Richard Danziger is even less fortunate. Wrongly convicted of rape and sentenced to life, he suffered pennanent brain damage when his head was bashed in by another inmate. Danziger was released in 2001 after he 'served II years in Texas. In reviewing the cases the AP examination found: • AbOut half of the men exonerated had no prior adult convictions, according t,o legal records. • Eleven ofthe men served time on death row; two came within days ofexecution. • Slightly more than a third have received compensation, mainly through state claims. Some have received settlements from civil lawsuits or specia' legislative bills. For others, claims or suits are pending; and some had lawsuits thrown out· or haven't decided whether to seek money. • The men averaged 10 Perspectives - - - - - - - - - - - - - - and a half years behind bars. The shortest wrongful incarceration was one year;·· the longest 22 years. Altogether, the I JO men spent 1,149 years in prison. • Their imprisonment came during critical wage-eaming years when careers and families are built. The average age entering prison was 28. Leaving, it was 38. • Their convictions follow certain patterns. Nearly two-thirds were convicted with mistaken from victims and testimony eyewitnesses. , About 14 percent were imprisoned after mistakes or alleged misconduct by forensics experts. Nine were mentally retarded or borderline Tetarded and confessed, they said, after being tricked or coerced by authorities. Finally freed by detennined attorneys or their own perseverance - the men were dumped back into society as abruptly as they were plucked out. Often, they were not entitled to the help given to those rightfully convicted. "The people who come out of this are . often very, very severely damaged human beings who often don't ever fully recover," says Rob Warden, executive director of Northwestern University Sehool of Law's Center on Wrongful Convictions. • About 60 percent of the men were helped by a 10-year old legal assistance program called The Innocence Project located at the Cardozo School of Law in New York. The project's first DNA releases came in 1989. Most of the 110 men' released had been convicted of rape; 24 were found guilty of rape and murder; six ofmurder alone. Legal experts differ· on whom these men represent. But Peter Neufeld, who co-founded The . Innocence' Project with attorney Bany Scheck, says these men are the tip of the iceberg. In other words, marty more' men remain imprisoned for crimes they haven't committed. The increase in exonerations has prompted legislation allowing prisoners access to DNA testing. Twenty-five states now have such laws, most passed in the last three years. Meanwhile, the number of prisoners asking for genetic analysis grows. The Innocence Project says it has 4,000 requests. The biggest problem is racing against time. In three-quarten of the Project's cases, physical evidence such as hair or blood has been lost, misplaced or destroyed. During a criminal trial, the disappearance of evidence can mean acquittal. After conviction, it can mean losing all chances to prove one's innocence. When lawyers for Marvin Anderson wanted DNA analJ'sis in 1993, they were told the evidence against him had been destroyed. But a swab containing genetic material was later found, taped to the inside of a lab technician's notebook. It proved Anderson was not guilty. For those wrongfully convicted men who have no genetic material for testing their plight remains hopeless. They are caught in a Kafkaesque vortex - the rest is history. t [Source: AP Press, Citrus County Chronicles, 612/02] • GOT THE MESSAGE? 5-------------- - - - - - - - - - - - - - FlORIDA PRISON LEGAL Perspectives - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - confessions come because the was later definitively cleared. suspect is bewUdered, frightened. or A 1996 Justice Department CONVICTED BY exhausted. Other times confessions report entitled Convicted by Juries; JURIES, may come bec8use they are children, Exonerated by Science detailed or adults with the mental capacity of . twenty-eight cases of wrongful EXONERATED BY children. convictions. Eyewitness Studies have shown that identifications. usually by the SCIENCE children in interrogation rooms will victims. were the decisive factor in sometimes confess to crimes they did most of them•. Like a confession, the With the advent of DNA not commit on the assumptions that testimony of an eyewitness, (genetic testing) many of our they will then be allowed to go particularly a victim. is powerful nation's prisoners have been home. The mentally retarded. too, stuff, oftentimes viewed as the gold exonerated and freed from their will sometimes falsely confess, and standard of evidence. But in fact imprisonment. SeventY years ago for the same sorts of reasons; .eyewitness accounts can be Edwin Borchard produced a classic eagerness to please, naivete about fragmented and changeable and study of how the wrong person gets the legal weight of a confession, a subject. to the deep desire to see sent to prison or to death. The somebody punished for a crime. yearning to be back home or to see hapless innocents Borchard profiled their mothers. ' Experts have come up with in his book called Convicting the Just last year, DNA evidence two very good ideas for making Innocent included a coal miner and a exonerated Jerry Frank Townsend; a wrongful convictions less likely in doctor, Central European immigrants twenty-seven-year-old retarded man, the future. One is. to .improve the and American blacks. In those days who had admitted in 1979 that he standard police lineup by letting . exoneration was almost always a had committed six murders and a. witnesses see only one purported matt~r of luck. rape. Townsend served twenty-two suspect at a time, so they can make Today, thanks to genetic years at FSP before being cleared. an absolute judgment about C!lCh testing (when it is available), As Borchard recognized, .. one. When witnesses see six people wrongful convictions can be "even' without the use of fonnal at once, they make relative reversed more confidently than ever third-degree methods," as he judgments. comparing the six and before. And that confidence allows us to analyze the reasons for such . described it. "the influence of a . picking whoever looks most like the stronger mind upon a weaker often person they remember from the convictions with greater centrality or crime scene rather than evaluating than Borchard or his contempories .' produces, by' persuasion each individually. Conducting suggestion, the desired result." Even could. able-minded adults, subjected to the lineups sequentially seems like a Yet· what is striking about right combination' of coercion, minor change, but research the recently overturned death!penalty sleeplessness and grief, can falsely conducted by psychologists convictions (110 have been reversed confess. Eli2abeth Luftus and Gary Wells has in the past 30 years) and other cases . In 1999. Keith Longtin, shown that it reduces the number of in which DNA evidence belatedly whose Case was documented in a mistaken identifications by as ~uch showed the accused to be innocent is' Washington Post series on wrongful as SO ~nt without significantly . how clearly the convictions rested on convictions. allegedly made selfreducing the number of convictions. the same flawed foundations that incriminating statements .to the Ensuring the detective running the Borchard identified. police about his wife's murder. lineup does not know who the real What appears to do in the Longtin had been held for thirtysuspect is, and so does not make wrongly convicted is the kind of eight hours of questionipg. during leading comments (Don't you want evidence that seems clinching, that which he slept (according to police to look at number 3 again?), helps often is clinching - namely, logs) for a total of fifty minutes. too, for the same reason that good eyewitness identifications and While Longtin was in prison, the clinical research is double-blind; confessions. However, the human real killer, whose identity was later otherwise it's easy to contaminate memory is not a video recorder; established by DNA evidence, the results with intentional or eyewitness testimony is notoriously sexually assaulted five women at unintentional bias. flawed. And although most of those knifepoint. one in front of her young The second notable idea is to who confess are goUty, people can child. video tape all police interrogatories, and do confess to crimes they did not In 1988 Christopher Ochoa so that a reliable record exists of the commit. Most of the time the confessed to raping and mu~ering a questioning that produced a confessions are the product of law young woman in Austin, Texas; he confession - how leadiJig, how enforcement . . coercion. Sometimes j 6---------------- - - - - - - - - - - - - FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL Perspectives - - - - - - - - - - - - MICHAEL V. GIORDANO AGGRESSIVE POST-CONVICTION REPRESENTATIN The Law Offices of Michael ~. Giordano 412 E. Madison Street, Ste. 824 Tampa, Florida 33602 (813) 228·0070 A STATlWIDE practice specializing in Post-Conviction Relief on both the State and Federal levels: **EXECUTIVE CLEMENCY** . . **PAROLE** **DIRECT APPEALS** **HABEAS CORPUS** **POST·CONVICTION RELIEF** *INEFFECTIVE COUNSEL *WITHDRAWAL OF PLEA *ILLEGAL SENTENCES *ACTUAL INNOCENCE *I.N.S. DEPORTAnON I am a fonner Assistant State Attorney (Felony Division Chief), Assistant Public Defender (Lead Trial Attorney), and member of the faculty at the University of Florida College of Law. I have devoted over 2S years to the teaching and practice of criminal defense law, and I am an author of a 1,2So-page text on federal practice in the Eleventh Circ~t. The major thrust of my practice has been post:.ce>nviction oriented. There is approximately 70 years 'of combined experience in my office. I do not believe you can find more experienced representation in the State of Florida or elsewhere. 7 ---------------- - - - - - - - - - - - - - FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL coercive, how open.ended and of the suspect's comportment during it Many law enforcement agencies already employ videotaping during interrogations. Videotaping makes some police officers who haven't used it a little nervous. They worry that it will cost too much, that curbside or squad car confessions will be inadmissible because taping hasn't started yet, or that officers will feel constrained form using aggressive but legitimate interrogations techniques - for example, telling suspects they have evidence that they don't, a method the Supreme Court has upheld. The objections are largely unfounded. Videotaping is cheap: cameras cost a few hundred dollars, and whatever expense police department incurs in videotaping is considerably less than the multimiJlion-dollar awards some states have paid for wrongful convictions. It is also ubiquitous, both in law enforcement (recall the buzz about those traffic tickets with a PerspectIves - - - - - - - - - - - - - surveillance photo of yoUr car?) and in 'everyday life. Indeed, in the era of amateur videos, Court TV, and twenty-four-hour.a-day news coverage, we have come to expect a video record of almost anything that matters to law or to history, and plenty ofthings that don't. Certainly laws can be written to include goodfaith exemptions for confessions (It is obtained off-camera. noteworthy to mention that many police agencies have cameras mounted on the dashboards of their cruisers; just watch clip ~ clip of the . greatest chase on network television.) Despite some initial reluctance, police officers and prosecutors in the places where videotaping is already standard practice now tend to support it ju~ as much as do advocates for the wrongfully convicted. AcCording to Ii 1993 Justice Department study of police videotaping, the most thorough search to date on, the subject, 97 percent of the departments that taped reported that it was "very useful" or "somewhat . useful." The study found that videotaping increased the number of convictions and guilty pleas and decreased allegations of police misconduct. Moreover, when such allegations are made, videotapes can prove or disprove them to almost everybody's satisfaction. Videotaping is one of those rare innovations that can help either side in the criminal-justice system, for the simple reason that it serves the quest to find out woat' really happened, which is to say the quest for the truth, that, in the ,end, is it's ~I virtue. "To me, videotaping is m the same category' as DNA evidence," says William Geller, the author of the 1993 Justice Department study and currently a consultant to police departments. "It's a powerful truth·finding tool." [Source: The Atlantic Monthly, "The Agenda," July/August 2002J • AFTER 28, YEARS IN CRIMINAL LAW, INCLUDING POST CONVICTION WORK, ONLY RECENTLY HAVE I LEARNED HOW DIFFICULT IT IS FOR DOC INMATES TO FIND LAWYERS WILLING TO EVALUATE AND ASSIST IN POST CONVICTION MATTERS AT A REASONABLE PRICE: THE PROBLEM IS MADE EVEN WORSE BY DOC EFFORTS TO LIMIT LAW LIBRARY ACCESS AND MUCH NEEDED SERVICES LIKE COPYING. I AM HERE TO HELP, IF I CAN. IF ·FOR WHATEVER REASON I CANNOT PERSONALLY HANDLE YOUR PROBLEM, I WILL TRY TO FIND A QUALIFIED LAWYER IN YOUR AREA WHO CAN.' FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT MARC L. LUBET, ESQUIRE, 209 E. RIDGEWOOD STREET, ORLANDO, FLORIDA 32081 OR AT 407:0841-9336 OR TOLL FREE 1-888-4JUSTIC. The hiring of a lawyer is an importa~t decision that should not be based solely upon advel'ttsemenL Before you decide, ask us to send you free written information about our qualifications and esperience. 8 FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL AROUNDTHE SYSTEM •. During June posters started appearing on bulletin boards at many Florida prisons encouraging prisoners to have outside sources send money to their prison accounts using Western Union wire transfer services. When the posters first appeared, obviously with the FDOC's approv~ the Department's rules did not authorized such wire transfer. Before the month was over, however, the FDOC proposed a new role that would authorize wire transfers (from Western Union only, which is specifically named in the . rule proposal). Additionally, the rule proposal would only allow funds to be mailed to the FDOC's Tallahassee financial center and repeals the existing rule allowing funds to be sent to institutions to be forwarded to the main financial center. Questions have been raised about bow Western Union was picked to be allowed to do wire transfers and how much the FDOC is receiving from the transfer charges. Western Union is charging approximately $12 for every $100 it wires to a prisoner's account. Prisoners at some institutions report they will boycott the Western Union service to prevent the FDOC making even more money off their families and friends than they already are with exorbitant collect phone rates and steadily increasing canteen and visiting park vending machine prices. • On May 24, 2002, the FOOC attempted to launch a surprise fmal rulemaking notice to quickly adopt major and negative changes to the Department's routine, legal and Perspectives - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - privileged mail rules. The initial notice on this proposal had been published almost 1V:J years ago on January 5, 2001. The proposal, if adopted, will prohibit prisoners' outside correspondent from including more than three 8 112" x. 11" pages of additional written material (not counting the letter) in routine mail per envelope. That provision would effectively hinder or prevent prisoners from sending legal materials to family members, friends or clerical services to be typed or. photocopied and returned; prevent prisoners from receiving bank statements of more than 3 pages from outside bank accounts; prevent prisoners from receiving articles,. clippings, Internet research ex.cept 3 pages at a time; prevent prisoners from. obtaining case copies and law review article copies from state university law libraries; prevent prisoners from purchasing trial transcnpts from' court reporters, etc. The proposed rules would also limit . photographs in mail to 3 per envelope and limit what items may be sent to a prisoner as legal mail. The proposal would also prohibit any written materials from being received as privileged JJ;lail, from public officials or the news media, except correspondence. Other written materials would not be allowed in privileged mail. FPLAO was prepared for such a sneak attack by the FDOC on this proposal. This is the fifth time the FDOC will have tried to adopt these or similar rules in the past four years, but was st~pped by FPLAO the four previous times. FPLAO immediately moved to challenge this latest proposal by administrative means. FPLAO will do its best to stop adoption of this latest proposal that seeks to place severe and negative· limits on all Florida prisoners' and their correspondents' First Amendment rights. (The outcome of FPLAO's challenge will be reported in the next issue of FPLP.) • ANOTHER PLANT CITY POLICE OFFICER PLEADS GUILTY ~ Tampa- Four days into his federal trial on Corruption charges Plant city police officer Annond Contnoir pleaded guilty and agreed to testifY in a federal probe that has implicated high-ranking police and city officials. Contnoir is the third officer to plead guilty to corruption charges in the probe that has shoken the very. foundations of criminal justice in this South florida town. Contnoir broke down in his defense after two fonner Plant City police officers testified that police there routinely searched homes without warrants, lied to .judges, stole pornographic videotapes and bent the law to ~e arrests. Those two fonner officers, Gregol)' Laughlin and Roben D. Dixon, described a conspiracy stretching from the depanment's elite drug unit to the police chief and city manager. Dixon testified that Cotnoir, his fonner pamer, and he routinely operated in the "gray area of the law." Cotnoir will be sentenced at a later date and the sentence will be based on how much he coopenues with federal officials continuing the corruption probe. (FPLP reponed on this in the last issue in "Plant City·Mayor, Police ChiefAccused ofCover-up".) [Source: Tampa Tribune, 7/12102) JUVENILE OFFENDER ABUSE INCREASING IN FLORIDA . The Daytona Beach Nc:ws.Joumal reponed in a recent anicle that since Jeb Bush became Florida's governor repons of alleged abuse of incan:erated children In Florida have almost doubled. . In the 1997-9.8 fISCal year, the last period before Gov. Bush took office and appointed fonner state Sen. Mill Bankhead to ron the Juvenile Justice Depanment. there were 1,237 abuse allegations from juvenile prisoners. By the 2000-01 fiscal year abuse complaints had risen to 2,2285. During the same four year period, the verified number of abuse against juveniles showed "some indicators" rose from 271 to 488. The News-Journal based its report on data compiled by the Department of Children and Families, which operates the Florida Child Abuse Hot line. [Source: Daytona Beach News-Joumal. 6I30/02J 9--------------- FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL Perspectives are to be held to a less stringent standard than formal pleadings drafted by lawyers: The reasons for the Haines test are manifest. A pro by Justin Case se complaint often provides an unsatisfactory foundation for Most litigating prisoners proceed deciding the merits of important as indigents. Not surprisingly, questions because typically it is most also proceed without counsel. inartfully drawn, unclear, and Thus, in terms of both the judicial equivocal, and because thorough treatment of the litigants and the and possibly an pleadings, affidavits, legal issues confronted, there is a evidentiary hearing will usually fair amount of overlap. As a bring· out facts .which simplifY or subject that is too often ignored make unnecessary the decision of and too little understood, however, questions presented by the naked pro se litigation merits separate complaint. attention. According to one court, pro se One characteristic common to • pleadings must be read with "the most pro se cases is frustration See: appropriate benevolence." from delay; from distrusting of Eisen v. Eastman, 421 F. 2d 560, opposing parties and counsel; from 562 (2d Cir. 1969). But what is lack of familiarity with the law, "appropriate benevolence?" judicial processes, and even legal Recharacterization of pro se terminology; and from lack of pleadings is a frequent occurrence. confidence in a legal scheme that Typical examples of routinely refuses to afford amends recharacterization include treating where the pro se litigant feels they an application for a writ of habeas are due. corpus as one for injunctive relief On the problems of litigating under 42 U.S.C. Section 1983. See: without counsel, see: Larsen, A e.g. United States ex rei Johnson v. Prisoner Looks at Writ-Writing, 56 Chairman. New York State Board 0/ Calf. L. Rev. 343, 352 (1968): Parole, 363 F. Supp. 416, 417 (E.D. "The uneducated \Yrit-writer is not N.Y. 1973), affirmed 500 F.2d 925, capable of intelligently analyzing 926 (2d Cir. 1974);. and treating the function' of law in our society applications for leave to proceed in or of interpreting the court forma pauperis or assignment of decisions construing the law. Pro counsel on appeal as one for a se litigants commonly make the of probable cause (now a certificate mistake of selecting dictum from a of appealability), required certificate decision and interpreting it as the by 28 U.S.C. Section 2253 before a absolute rule of the case. And habeas corpus appeal may be taken. when they lose they retort: Justice See: e.g. Madison v. Tahash, 359 is· nothing but an elusive 1h F.2d 60 (8 Cir 1966). abstraction, a fiction. It assumes Unfortunately, the problems of an air of reality only because the dealing with pro se litigation are majority of people in this country complicated further by the fact that live their lives without being not .only are these mostlyrequired to seek justice. The handwritten petitions, letters, unfortunate ones who seek justice requests and motions disorderly, find that it exists on.ly in the minds numerous, repetitive, discursive, and ofthe judges." . sometimes mad, but many are In 1972, the Supreme. Court illegible. and unintelligible. decided the case of Haines v. major problem with Another Kerner, 404 U.S. 519, 92 S.Ct. 594 pro se litigation is the "frivolous (1972), where the per curiam While not all pro se litigation filer." opinion held that pro se pleadings PROSE LITIGATION is frivolous, the number of suits that are overshadow the more meritorious suits that may not receive a fair determination because of the court's frustration wit'l the frivolous cases. And, indeed, the courts and legislators have responded by putting laws on the books to curtail prisoner pro se litigation. See: 18 U.S.C. 3624, 3626, The Prisoner Litigation Reform Act of 1995; 28 U.S.C. 2244 et. seq., Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996. When Shakespeare wrote in King Henry VI, "The first thing we do, let's kill all the lawyers," he probably did not have the pro se litigant in mind. Although appointed attomeys sometimes are indifferent to their clients' concerns, see e.g., Wilkins v. United Siales, 441 U.S. 468, 99 $.Ct. 1829 (1979), the fact remains that the vast majority of pro se post conviction litigants seek not,only leave to proceed in forma pauperis, but the appointment of counsel at state expense. This is no wonder. In one empirical study of habeas corpus ~ases, for example, pro s~ petitioners· were successful in only 0.9 percent of the cases, while petitioners represented by .counsel had won in 13:7 percent of the cases. See: P. Robinson. An Empirical Sludyof Federal Habeas Corpus Review a/Slate Court Judgments, 58 (1979); See also: Shapiro, Federal Habeas Corpus: A Study in Mas.~achusells, 87 Harv. L. Rev. 32i (1973). . The authority to appoint counsel stems from. 28 U.S.C. section 1915 (d) (1976), which provides in part that the court may request an attomey· to represent any indigent person unable to employ counsel, and 18 U.S.C. section 3006A (g) (1976), which provides in part that any person subject to revocation of parole, in custody .as a material witness, or seeking relief U11der section 2241, 2254, or 2255 of Title 28 may be furnished representation whenever the U.S. Magistrate or the Court determines that the interests of justice so require and such person is financially unable to obtain representaticn. 10----------..:-...--~ FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL A question that has begged an answer is whether appointment of counsel in post conviction proceedings should be of right, rather than in the court's discretion. Both the Committee on the Federal Courts of the New York City Bar Association and th American Bar Association e recommended that counsel be appointed in 1983 actions an habeas corpus applications to avoid inefficient treatment of the substantive merits of claims and in order to conserve judicial manpower. . In any event, under present law there is no broad right to court-appointed counsel in post conviction proceedings. Although no United States Supreme Court case is directly on point, Ross v. Moffitt, 417 U.S. 600, 94 S.Ct. 2437 (1974), provides a close analogy. Faced with the question whether Douglas v. California, 372 U.S. 353 (1963) - which requires appointment of counsel for indigent state defendants on their first appeal as of right . should be extended to require counsel for discretionary state appeals and for applications for review in the Supreme Court, in a' six-te-three decision, the Court The decided in the negative. !dissenters made a valid point: "there can be no equal justice where the kind of appeal a man enjoys depends on the amount of money he has." Leave to proceed in forma pauperis and appointment of counsel are both significant aspects of access to the courts. But there are other important issues as well, not the least of which is how a pro se prisoner is to write a sufficiently intelligent application for such preliminary relief in order to get over the fri.volousness hurdles. In Bounds v. Smith, 430 U.S. 817, 97 S.Ct. 1491 (1977), the Supreme Court held that the fundamental Constitutional right of PerspectIves and other legal services. Following access to the courts requires prison Hooks, the DOC has begun to authorities to assist inmates in the preparation and filing of meaningful effectively dismantle the Plan legal papers by providing prisoners promulgated by the DOC and accepted with adequate law libraries or . by the Court. Long gone are many of adequa e-ass1stafice· frOm~ the legal books that once were available med in the law. In Johnson v.'\ to inmates. Long gone are the available Avery, 393 U.S. 483, 89 S.C hours or the unrestricted access to law ( 1969), the e Court . libraries to research and present regulation' that mva I ate meaningful actions in the courts. Long gone are the typewriters. Long gone • prohibited state prisoners from are law clerks, replaced by research assisting each other with habe8$ corpus applications. Johnson was aides who can only provide answers on questions related to the inmate's unanimously extended to cover criminal conviction, civil rights assistance in civil rights cases as complaints, administrative actions filed well. See: Wolffv. McDonnell, 413 U.S. 539, 94 S.Ct. 2963 (1974). with the Florida Parole Commission or Also in 1974, the Court struck down the Florida Bar, and .grievances tiled a regulation that barred law students with the DOC. Research aides cannot and paraprofessionals employed by assist with Divorce, Paternity, or lawyers who were representing Adoption proceedings notwithstanding prisoners from seeing inmate clients. Constitutional implications, especially See: Procunier v. Martinez, 416 when there is a risk of parental rights U.S. 396, 94 S.Ct. 1800 (1974). The being terminated. The list goes on. touchstone in these cases was not Among other things, the above merely access to the courts, but concerns show that a particular legal meaningful access to the courts. . decision is not necessarily carved in To say that pro se litigation as stone. It is only a resting point between the previous case and the succeeding come a long way, however, is not to say that no problems remain. one, and much more often than not it ForemQst among them is the raises more questions than it answers. For definition of "meaningful." While law is not a techn.ical example, what. items must be science, .highly educated, devoted included in an adequate prisoii' judges and practicing attorneys find it library? An adequate law library is difficult to read a statute, a legal treatise not the only problem facing pro se or an -opinion and determine its precise prisoners. What can be done for meaning. Legal research often requires illiterate or unlearned prisoners? In browsing through various materials in Florida this problem was resolved in search of inspiration; tentative theories Hooks v. Moore (Wainwright) may have to Ix abandoned in the course . closing nearly thirty years of of research in the face of unfamiliar 'litigation. The District Court for the adverse precedent. New theories may Middle District of Florida concluded occur as a rcsult of a chance discovery that the plan submitted by the of an obscure or forgotten case. of Defendant Department Certainly a prisoner, unverSed in the Corrections designating the contents law and the methods of legal research, of the prison's law library will need more time and more collections provides inmates with assistance than the trained lawyer in the constitutional right to access the exploring his case. It is unrealistic to courts enunCiated in Bounds. expect a prisoner to know in advance exactly what materials he needs to At the time Hooks was decided, Florida's' prisons were equipped consult. With the DOC dismantling the with adequate law libraries, word Hooks Plan, it may take another thirty processors and typewriters used to years to restore what has now been lost. prepare legal documents, law clerks, • 11--------------- " -------~-- FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL ',/, !.: ; , ! .' Perspectives ------~--- ~!; DIRECT APPEALS {;} STATE POST CONVICTION {!: SENTENCE CORRECTIONS ~!.: FEDERAL PETITIONS FOR WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS ~:+} NEW TRIALS {!: INSTITUTIONAL TRANSFERS· 412 East Madison Street Suite 1111 Tampa Florida 33602 (813) 226-3138 , ,Fax ,/;81,3), 22'1-2182 ',: ,. ,':";i; it~ii;aii±'l(f,G:'~r8fiti~~;W~'~i;,:~J"C; ". '!~ 'v'· Ie" , ; , ri1;W:ibti1!J\A0iJ&l'i1i8J(' l£J\to#*I0YU,0!~~01li 12 - - - - . . , . - - - - - - - _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - flORIDA PRISON LEGAL Perspectives - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - DAVID .W. COLLINS, Attorney at Law fonner state prosecutor with more tIum 1S years of criininallaw experience "AV" nted by Martindal~Hubbell Bf"' Register of~reemlnentLawyers Your voice in Tallah"ssee representing prisoners in all . areas o/post-conv!ctil!n relief, including: • • writs of mandamus • clemency representation before Parole Commission appeals Heggscases ,habeas corpus '3.850 motions 'Write me today abo~t your easel P.O. BoxS41 Monticello, FL 32345 (850) 997-8111 '7M IIlrl"ll of" ItNYU u al"q"",., d«iIIoII tJItIl.hould IlOl w/sasH wely upon advertisementl. BefOre you . , . _ _ /o.ruJyoujlw writ"" It(twmtitltRI abt1tII myqrtQl/fteatlO/V "nd Dperlence. - ESQUIRE & ASSOCIATES PARALEGAL SERVICES Florida Prisoner's Utfgation Manual Volume 1 Danell E. Blackwelder ManaaJng PlU'IIIcgaI 235 West Brandon BLVD 293 BramIon. FL 33511 Ph: (813) 63G-1488 Fax: (813) 63G-5.547 E-mail: Esqassoc@hotmall.com ' Richard D.SparIanan Supervising Attorney .5 J5 Holiday Terrace BI'lII1don, FL 33.51 J ' Ph: (813) 657-1738 Fax: (813) 657-J978 E-mail: Esqassoc@hotmaiJ.com , • Free initial Consultation • Record Reviews • Obtain Records • Written summaJy ofFindings • Investigations • Locate Witnesses • DiScover Critical Facts • .Secure Expert Witnesses • LexisINexis Research ' • Research Summaries on Specific Questions • Document Preparation • Motions • 3.800 • 3.850 • Petitions • Habeas Corpus • Mandamus • Certiorari Legllllnlonnadon on Prison DlscJplJne, MllndtlltUlS, andAppellate Review Soft cover - 313 pages- Albert PUblishing c.,LLC (2002) Special Low Price for Prisoners: S14.95 piUS 53.95 SAn A Must Have Book for Every Florida Prisoner. Doing time in a Florida prison? If so. you need a copy of F/oridD Prisoner's Liligation Manual, Volume I. Every year thousands of disciplinary reports are written against Florida prisoners. The results are confinement; loss of gaintime; restrictions on mai~ telephone access, visitation; and. in many cases, confinement on Close Management for months or even years. Most DRs. however. can be beat if you have the right infonnation and know the proper proc:edures. How can DRs be effectively defended against and challenged? What are the proper legal and administrative remedies? What legal protections exist? Do prison officials have to comply with their won rules? What can be done to stop enforcement ofmade up or inValid rules? How do you file and litigate a Petition for Writ of Mandamus, Certiorari, or Appeal? Volume t of FlorldiJ Prisoner'$ Ullglllion Manual will answer all those questions and many more. It's a self-help survival guide for Florida prisoners• Order )'Our copy todayl To order send $24.95 plus $3.95 shipping and handling to Florida Pmon Legol Penpecttvel, Ann: Utigalion ManuaJ. PO Box 660-387, Chuluota FL 32766. All orders will be shipped from the publisher. Allow U weeks for delivery. • Briefs • Memorandums of Law • Lawyer Rcfenals 13------------- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL PerspectIves - - - - - - - - - - - - - - The following are summaries of recent state and federal cases that may be useful to or. have a significant impact on Florida prisoners. Prisoners Interested In these cases should always read the full case as'publlshed'in the Florida Law Weekly (Fla. L. Weekly); Florida Law Weekly Federal (Fla. L. Weekly Fed.), 'u.S. Supreme Court McKWle v. Lile, IS Fla. L. Weekly (Fed) s333 (Sup. Ct 6/1 0/02) Kansas prisoner Robert Lile was convicted of multiple sex offenses and prior to his scheduled release was advised by prison officials that he would be required to part~cipate in a Sexual Abuse Treabnent Program (SATP). As part. ofthe program, participating inmates are required to complete and sign an "Admission of Responsibility" form, in which they accept responsibility for the crimes for which they have been sentenced, and complete a sexual history form detailing all . prior sexual activities, regardless of whether the activities constitute uncharged criminal o~enses. The information obtained from SATP participants is not privileged, and ! might be used against them in future criminal proceedings. Officials informed Lile that if he refused to participate in the SATP, his prison privileges would be. reduced, resulting in the automatic curtailment of his visitation rights, earnings, work opportunities, ability to send money to family, canteen expenditures, access to a personal television, and other privileges. He would also be transferred to a potentially . more dangerous maximum-security unit. Lile refused to participate in the SATPon the grounds that the required disClosures of his criminal history wo~ld violate his Fifth Amendment privilege against compelled self-incrimination. Lile sought injunctive relief pursuant to 42 U.S.C. Section 1983 and the appraisal ofthe benefits of obtaining confessions from sex offenders, balanced against the cost ofhonoring a bedrock constitutional right, the plurality opinion holds that it is permissible to punish ~e assertion of the privilege with what it views as modest sanctions, provided that In a 5-4 split decision, the U.S. Supreme .Court held that the • those sanctions are not given a Indeed the ''punitive" label. SATP serves a vital penological sanctions are severe, but even if they purpose and that offering inmates were not so, the plurality's policy minimal incentives to participate does not justify the judgment does not amount to compelled selfof a constitutional evisceration incrimination prohibited by the Fi~ Amendment. rigb!:] U.S. District Court granted Lile summary judgment. An appeal to the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals by the State was affirmed. On Certiorari review, the U.S. Sup~me Court reversed. [Comment: As Justice Stevens correctly observed in his well written dissent, no' one could possibly disagree with the plurality's statement that "offering inmates minimal incentives to participate [in a ~habilitation pro~] does not amount to compelled selfincrimination prohibi1ed by the Fifth Amendment." The question that this case presents, however, is whether the state may punish an inmate's assertion of his Fifth' Amendment privilege with the same mandatory sanction that follows a disciplinary conviction for an offense such as theft, sodomy, riot, arson, or assault. Until this recent decision, the Supreme Court has never characterized a threatened hann as "a minimal incentive." Nor has the Court ever held that a person who has made a valid assertion of the privilege' may nevertheless be ordered to incriminate himself and sanctioned for disobeying such an order. As Justice St~vens so pointedly remarked, this is truly a watershed case. Based on an ad hoc Devlin \I. Scardellelti, 15 Fla. L. . Weekly (Fed) s3S4 (Sup.Ct. 3/26/02) The U.S. Supreme Court has held that no named class members in a class action lawsuit who have objected in a timely manner to the approval of ~ settlement agreement at the fairness hearing have the power to bring an appeal without first intervening. Federal Court Circuit Jackson \I. FDOC, IS Fla. L. Weekly (Fed) C 629 (l}1h Cir 6n102) In this case the 11 th Circuit Court of Appeals addressed the issue of .whether a district court may determine that a habeas petition is time-barred even though the state did not raise the issue. In analyzing the limitations . period of the AEDPA, the Court reaffirmed that a criminal conviction for a Florida prisoner becomes final upon issuance of the mandate on direct apP,ea1. See Tinker V. Moore, --.:------------14-------------- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL 255 F.3d 1331, 1333 (lI rb Cir. 2001 ), cert. Denied, 122 S.Ct. 1101 (2002). In Tinker, the Court held that even though Florida law allows prisoner two years to file a Rule 3.850 motion. the prisoner must file the motion within one year after his conviction becomes final in order to toU the one-year limitations period under the AEDPA. In resolving the issue above, the Court recognized that every other circuit that had dealt with the issue has found that, even. though the statute of limitations is a aff111Dative defense, the district court may review sua sponte the timeliness of the 2254 petition. . Following the reasoning of the other circuits, the 11~ Circuit held that the ~istrict court possessed the discretion to raise the timeliness issue. Swan v. Ray, 15 Fla. L. Weekly (Fed) C 636 (11 11I Cir. 5/3/02) The 11 rb Circuit reviewed the above case on appear and held that no abuse of discretion existed when the U.S. District Court denied Swan's motion for joinder in a case fild by another inmate after entry of judgment. The Court reasoned that Swan did not -have the right to the same injunctive relief as the other inmate claimed in his action. TJte Court held that a district court may join a person to an action when the person seeking joinder aSserts a right to relief jointly, severally, or in the alternative with the party who failed the action; that right to relief arises from the same underlying transaction or series of transactions; and, the claims have a common factual or legal basis. Florida Supreme Court Griffin y. Sistunck, 27 Fla. L. Weekly S~78 (Fla. S.Ct. 5/2102) PerspectIves - - - - - - - - - - - - - - In this case the Florida Supreme Court revisited its prior decisions in Haag v. State, 591 So.2d 614 (Fla. 1992), which established the prisoner "mailbox rule,... and Thompson v. State, 761, So.2d 324 (Fla. 2000), which remedied further problems associated with the "mailbox rule." 'Both cases established that for purposes of timely court filings, the document is deemed filed on the date the prisoner lists in his certificate of service. The issue' in this case was whether an inmate must include the exact language set forth in Thompson and rule 9.420, which was amended shortly after Thompson was decided, in order to invoke them mailbox rule. Recently, the Second DCA examined the Thompson decision and concluded that the Supreme Court did not intend that an inmate recite the exact phrase, "the pleading was placed in the hands of prison or jail officials for mailing" on a particular date in the certificate of service in order for the pleading to fall under the mailbox rule. The Supreme Court agreed with the Second DCA and held that its decision in Thompson was intended to reduce the hurdles inmates encounter in gaining access to the. courts, not to put in place additional hurdles. Currently, no special IllngUage other than the regular certificate of service is So.2d 620 (Fla. 2000). is not "adversely affected: if the reasons invoked for going outside the guidelines would be valid under both the 1994 and 1995 laws". This case hinged on the meaning of the term "adversely' affected" found in ·the Beggs opinion. The Second District Court of Appeal had interpreted the term to mean that a defendant would not be "adversely affected' by the application of the 1995 guideliJies law iila sentencing proceeding so long as the departure sentence was based on departure reasons that would ~ valid under both the 1994 and the 1995 guidelines."· See Roy v. State, 772 So.2d 18 (F1a. 2d DCA 2000) and Kwil v. State, 768 So.2d 502 (Fla. 2d DCA 2000). However, the Fourth District Court of Appeal interpreted the definition of "adversely affected" when applied to a sentence outside the guidelines as being based on whether the trial court would have initially sentenced a defendant to a departure sentence if it had seen a 1994 scoresheet, instead of a 1995. scoresheet. . Resolving the conflict the Supreme Court agreed with the Second District's analysis and disapproved the Fourth's. The term "adversely affected" is applicable to both guideline and departure sentences. required. [Note: The matter was referred to the Appellate Court Rules Committee to propose an amendment to Rule 9.420 to include a separate certificate of' service form for use by prisoners.] State v. Lemon, 27 Fla. L. Weekly S 563 (Fla. Sup. Ct. 6/6/02) In a 4 - 3 split decision the Florida Supreme Court has held that a defendant sentenced outside the guidelines (departure sentence) under the 1995 amendments invalidated in Heggs v. State, 759 - . . . . . - ------------15---- Youngv. Moore, 27 FIa. L. Weekly S514 (Fla. Sup.Ct. 5130/02) In an original. writ proceeding to the Florida Supreme Court Florida prisoner Chad' Young argued that the Department of Corrections was precluded in his case from imposing a gain time calculation based on a gain time statute from a year different than used for sentencing. The Supreme Court rejected Young's argument and held the plain meaning of the statute goveming Young's gain time calculation specificaIIy directs 'the _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL Department. to calculate Young's gain time as of the date the crime was committed. In January 1997, Young pled guilty. to first-degree. scheme to defraud that began in 1991 and ended in 1996. In April 1997, Young was sentenced to two years on community control. However, in 1998, Young was adjudicated guilty of violating community control and the court resentenced Young under the 1991 guidelines to five and a half years in prison. Young was placed in the DOC on April 27, 1998. The DOC applied the 85 percent. gain time statute to Young's sentence, which prompted this action. Because Young's scheme to .. defraud, which was a continuing offense, which' over-lapped into 1996, the DOC correctly applied the 85 percent statute to his crimes. For purpose of calculating date, of offenses, the offense date is when the last overt act in furtherance of the scheme was committed. State Y. Seraphin, 27 Fla. L. Weekly S473 (pIa. S.Ct 5/16/02) In this case the Florida Supreme Court ~ted jurisdiction to resolve a certified· conflict . between die Fourth and Second District Courts of Appeal on the issue of the perceived view that a "per sen rule permitted a defendant threatened with deportation tQ withdraw his plea any time a trial court fails to provide the information required by rule 3.172' (c)(8). In Pearl Y. State, 756 So.2d 42 (Fla. 2000), the Supreme Court identified the proper vehicle through which a noncustodial defendant could present, as a basis for post conviction relief, a violation of rule 3.172 (cX8) due to the trial court's failure to provide advice regarding the possible immigration consequence of the defendant's plea. The Court expounded on the process. , In order to establish the required prejudice component as a Perspectives - - - - - - - - - - - - - - McConnell and other similarly result of the trial court's failure to provide advice regarding possible situated prisoners were entitled to for immigration consequences of plea, a any period' before November 30, 1995. defendant must show prejudice not only by subsequent threat Qf On certiorari review, the deportation, but also must First DCA agreed that the Supreme demonstrate that he or she was in Gomez Court's decision prejudiced in the process by entering foreclosed further review. The Court the plea because trial court failed to recognized that McConnell argued provide the information required by that Gomez was wrongly decided on rule 3.172 (c)(8). the merits, but be bad not contended Even in cases where that Gomez's preclUding relitigation defendant mistakenly believes that on the merits violated due process. Further, the· Court . found that he or she is a United States citizen, if defendant alleges that a plea would McConnell failed to cbalJenge the not have been entered had applicability of the charts listed in Gomez'to bis particular Isituation. information been provided as required by rule, this would require McConnell's petition sought review of the record in light of "the award of emergency gain time defendant's allegations, and an credits· for each month the prison evidentiary hearing in the evel!t the population exceeded 99 percent of lawful' capacity from October 19, record did not conclusively refute 1990 to date." The Court noted that defendant's allegations. The Court went on to caution that Peart did not McConnell failed to allege that the create a "per se" ruie allowing the prison population exceeded 99 automatic withdrawal of plea by all percent of lawful capacity at any time after November 30, 1995. defendants threatened with mAdams v. DOC, 801 So.2d deportation in cases involving 150, 151 (Fla. 1111 DCA 2001), the violation of the rule, but explicitly requifes showing that, absent the , DCA held that the decision in Gomez does not preclude the possibility that failure to inform defendant, he or she , a prisoner might p,rove that the would not have entered plea. prison population has risen again Novembei' 30, 1995, to the Florida Appeal since applicable threshold. But again, McConnell had not made such an Courts ,allegation. Instead, be argued that the DOC bad incorrectly determined McConnell v. Moore, 27 Fla. L. at and calculated the formula in Weekly Dll12 (Fla. l DCA 5/9/02) determining total design capacity Alan Florida prisoner and thai the calculations the DOC McConnell petitioned for a writ of provided in Gomez are not accurate. certiorari that alleged the circuit DCA denied certiorari The court departed from the essential rmding that McConnell· alleged no requirements of the law when it basis for relitigating the question and denied emergency gain-time he methodology for determining periods sought by the petition for writ of beginning on and after July 1, 1985 habeas corpus. resolved in Gomez. The trial court found that the Florida Supreme Court decision in Newell v. Moore, 27 Fla. L. Weekly Gomez v. Singletary, 733 So.2d 499 D 1195 (Fia. 1111 DCA 5/22/02) . (Fla. 1998), foreclosed McConnell In this proceeding, the First from litigating anew whether the DCA reversed a trial court order that DOC had correctly determined the motion to assess denied a prisoner's amount of emergency gain-time ---:-------------16---- _ - : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL costs following an earlier reversal on a significant issue on appeal. The trial court had denied the moti~n to assess costs because the appellant had not prevail on the merits of his earlier claim. As the DCA correctly recognized, under Rule 9.400(a), Fla. R. App. P., costs award does not depend on a partyts ultimate success on the merits of a claim; it is sufficient if the party prevails on the significant issue raised in the appeal. Whisner v. Moore, 27 Fla. L. Weekly D 1195 (Fla. III DCA 5/22/02) On appeal from the denial of a petition for writ of mandamus, the FDOC sought to have the DCA treat the appeal as a certiorari review instead of a plenary review. The DCA denied the FDOC's motion. Although a portion of the order on review reflects that the trial court, in its appelJatecapacity, reviewed a quasi-judicial action of the FDOC, the order also involves an original disposition of constitutional claims over which the FDOC had no jurisdiction. Thus, AppelJant is entitled to a higher standard of review to the appropriate portion of the order. ! Harris v. State, 27 Fla. L. Weekly D 946 (Fla. 151 DCA 4/26/02) In this case Morris Harris entered into a plea agreement which provided that he would be sentenced to a tenn of 15 years imprisonment, and, at the conclusion of seven years incarceration, the remainder of the sentence would be suspended and he would be placed on probation with the special condition that he complete a sex offender treatment program. However, four days prior to his fentative release date from prison, the state attorney filed a petition seeking Harris' civil commitment under the Jimmy Ryce Act. Harris filed a motion to enforce the original plea agreement, which was denied by the circuit court. On Perspectives - - - - - - - - - - - - - - appeal the First DCA held the , doctrine of equitable estoppel was applicable and that the State can,not violate the terms of the plea agreement, and that a motion to enforce the agreement is the most effective means to cany out the intent ofthe agreement his judgment and sentence, pursuant to Fla. R. App. P. 9.141(c). In his petition, Brooks alleged only that at the time his sentence was imposed, the trial court advised him of his right to appeal, that he told his attorney he wanted to appeal, and that he did not learn that no appeal . had been filed until after the time for [Note: The First DCA certified the doing so had passed. folJowing question to the Florida An' order to show cause was Supreme Court: May the State issued by the First DCA and the state initiate 'discretionary civil attach'ed an affidavit from commitment proceedings under the petitioner's trial attorney to its Ryce Act (part V of Chapter 394, response. The affidavit contained a denial by petitioner's attorney that Florida Statutes) where, by seeking civil commitment, the State would petitioner had requested that he file a notice of appeal. violate the terms of a plea agreement previously entered into with the The DCA relinquished defendant?] jurisdiction back to the trial court directing the chiefjudge to appoint a special master to receive evidence Gave v. Florida Parole Commission, 27 Fla. L. Weekly D 945 (Fla. III and make a finding regarding the DCA 4/26/02) factual dispute. . Following ,an Florida prisoner Shane Gove evidentiary hearing, the special filed a petition for writ of habeas . master found that petitioner had not timely requested that his attorney , corpus that contended his detention was illegal because he had been, filed a notice ofappeal. unlawfully classified as a conditional In an en bane decision, after ~Ieasee when be was released from the trial court proceedings, the First DCA found the master's report to bQ. prison in 1998 and that, as a result, his return to prison upon the Florida supported by competent substantial Parole Commission's determination evidence and denied Brooks a that he had violated the terms of his belated appeal. conditional release was unlawful. [Note: .This. principle established by The First DCA determined that the circuit court erred by finding the First DCA may eventually reach that Gove's acceptance of the the Florida Supreme Court because benefits of conditioital release the court failed to distinguish the constituted a waiver of his right to fact in this case from those in Roe \I. challenge the legality of that release. Flores-Ortega. 528 U.S. 470 (2000); The' DCA recognized that indeed, the case above completely conditional release was not a benefit, fails to acknowledge its potential but an additional burden. Because applicability. The 'essential facts in Gove did not meet the statutoI)' Flores-Ortega and Broolcs are nearly requirements for placement on indistinguishable. Because of limited space, I cannot expound on conditional release, Gove's violation and subsequent return to prison was the material facts, but I do encourage unlawful. anyone who finds themselves in a like position to, read this case . Broolcs \I. State. 27 Fla. L. Weekly D carefully iit order to develop your 1035 (Fla. 151 DCA 5n102) strategy when drafting your petition.] Florida prisoner. Alvin Brooks sought a belated appeal of ----------------17----------- _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL State v. Famiglietti, 27 Fla. L' Weekly D 1056, (Fla. 3d DCA ,5/8/02) The question presented in this case is whether a defendant in a crimimll case can invade the victim's privileged ~mmunications with her psychotherapist if the defendant can establish a reasonable probability that the privileged matters contain material infonnation necessary to his defense. In a divided en banc decision the majority answered the The question in the negative. majority's opinion was premised on the fact that neither an Evidence Code provision, .nor an applicable constitutional principle, allows the invasion of the victim's privileged communications with her psychtherapist. Further, the Court certified conflict with Stale v. Pinder, 678 So.2d 410 (Fla. 4lb DCA 1996), which requires a defendant to a' reasonable first establish probability that the privileged matters contain material infonnation necessary to his defense before he can compel disclosure. Bell v. State, 27 Fla. L. Weekly D 924 (Fla. 3d DCA 4124/02) Earnest Bell remains incarcerated within the Florida DOC following a violation of his probation. The sole, basis for the violation and subsequent incarceration was that Bell failed to file a monthly report. The Third DCA affinned Bell's incarceration but certified conflict with the First DCA decision in Carter v. State, 24 Fla. L. Weekly 1063 (Fla. 1" DCA 1999), rev. granted; 740 So.2d 528 (Fla. 1999). The Supreme Court is scheduled to resolve the issue of whether the failure to file a monthly report can support a violation of probation absent a willful and. substantial intent to file suc~ report. Perspecbves - - - - - - - : - - - - - - - - Alexander v. Bamash, 27 Fla. L. Weekly D 941 (Fla. 41b, DCA 4124/02) Florida prisoner Stuart Alexander appealed an' order by the circuit court which detennined that he was not a beneficiary of an estate. He filed directions to the clerk to prep~ the record and requested a transcript. Having received neither, he motioned the Fourth DCA for an order compelling the circuit clerk to • prepare the record and furnish him a copy of the transcript at no costs. The Fourth DCA denied Alexander's motion for a free transcript because there is no constitutional or statutory right to one· in an appeal by an indigent litigant in a civil case. See Lee County v. Ealon, 642 So.2d 1126 (Fla. 2d DCA 1994). fJowever, the 'DCA did direct the clerk to provide the record without charge pursuant to section 57.081 (1 ) Fla. Stat. (2001). Dellahoy 11. State, 27 Fla. L. Weekly Ross v. Moore, 27 Fla.L. Weekly D 1296 Fla. 2 DCA 5/31/02) Florida prisoner Dwight Ross sought certiorari review of the circuit court's order that denied his petition for habeas corpus. Ross claimed that he was entitled to credit against his prison sentences when the overcrowding statues in effect on the date of his offense were applied to current conditions. Ross filed a habeas corpus in the circuit court seeking for the Court to detennine "the amount of overcrowding in the Florida corrections system from November 30, 1995, until today." To state his claim that the prison population exceeded the pertinent levels, Ross alleged specific numbers regarding the bed counts and inmate population at the facility where be is incarcerated. The circuit court denied tho petition, holding that Ross "falls outside the time period of reliof under Gomez because he did not begin his sentence uotd 1996, --------------18-- D 1293 (Fla. Sib DCA 5/31/02) Florida prisoner Walter Dallahoy appealed the sQ.mmary denial of his motion for post conviction relief. Dellahoy's motion alleged that he agreed to and was ' sentenced by the trial court to a period of 125 months with credit for 96 months. Subsequently, however, the DOC advised Dellahoy that 1098 days of gain time had heeD' forfeited and he would have to serve lJpproximately 3 years more' than the 29 months called for by the agreement. The Fifth DCA vacated the trial court's denial of Dellahoy's motion and remanded to either resentence him in a manner that effectuates the plea agreement 'after considering the DOC forf~iture of gain time or allow him to withdfaw his plea. The DOC's forfeiture of gain time cannot be countennanded by the Court, but neither ciu1 that forfeiture thwart the, plea agroement.· _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FLORIDA PRISON LEGALPerspectlves - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Part One-: THE' FLORIDA PAROLEGAME by Bob Posey given an incentive to change their behavior. In order to get out of prison without doing the entire sentence the prisoner had to be paroled and in order' to be pat'Qled the prisoner had to show that at least he or she was tJylng to change their life and be rehabilitated. Everyone understood how the system workt:d. Judges knew everyone they sentenced to prison would be eligible for parole and they took that. into account with the length of sentence they gave, which in turn. was taken into considera~ion by. the .parole board when considering when to grant parole. Of course, those paroled weren't just turned loose. Being paroled involved . close supervision for a set. period of time after an offender was released back to the community. In that way, under the parole system of sentencing, the offender' was punished for the crime committed, given incentives to change his or her life while in prison, and then supervised when released to help ensure a successful reentry into society. APPRENDI NEWS Currently, there are a little over 72,000 prisoners in Florida's state prison system. It might make one . wonder then why last year only 101 Florida prisoners were released on parole. Largely unknown to the public is that the majority of prisoners in Florida cannot receive parole and haven tt been able to since 1983. Equally unknown is that locked in Florida's prisons are a few thousand prisoners who are paroleeligible, but. who have become captives to justifY the continued existence of an agency that should have ceased to exist more than two decades ago: That agency is the Florida Parole Commission. In order to more fully understand the parole situation in Florida it is necessary to understand some of the history of criminal sentencing and changes in sentencing that have occurred in recent decades. In Florida, up until the 1980's, Parole in Florida like inmost other states, people The Florida Parole sentenced to p'rison were generally Commission (FPC) was created in eligible to be paroled at some point 1941 .. Before the Commission was before the end of their sentence. established the only way a prisoner Parole-eligible, or what was termed could be released prior to completing "indeterminate," sentencing allowed a fuJI sentence was by a pardon from judges great flexibility in· what the governor and Cabinet members. sentence to give to. someone From 1941· to 1975 the convicted of a crime. The idea was Parole Commission had total that giving judges such discretion authority over which prisoners were would allow them to tailor the granted parole and over the. sentence to each individual supervision parolees were under according to the particular when they were released. In 1975, circumstances of the crime and the however, laws were changed and the person who committed the crime. reorg8nized. Parole Commission was could· be Hardcore. criminals Many of the Commission's duties sentenced for a longer time in prison to the Florida . were turned over than say the first time offender who Department of Corrections (FDOC), committed a similar crime to get including p8:l'Oie field officers and food because he had lost his job supervision responsibilities. From a under indeterminate sentencing. of 1,321 employees the FPC high Once in prison, regardless of suddenly found. employees reduced' the sentence, then the offenders were . ~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 9 - - - - - - - - - - - -__ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL Perspectives - - - - - - - - - - - - - - to ISS, including 8 parple commissioners who where the ones .who actually made parole deCisions. other Congressional dissenters were ignored on the issue and the expected problems they warned about. The effect of guideline sentencing on the fe4eral system was felt almost immediately. From 1987, when the new law took effect, to 1988, the number of drug offenders in federal prisons increased by almost 1,200; the next year it jumped by more than 3,900; and the year after that it leaped to more than 5,500 and has continued to increase every year. Federal Retreat On the federal level, members of Congress began to disparage indetenninate sentencing. Isdeterminate Problems About that same time, during In one study published in 1974, fifty federal judges were given twenty the 'mid-1970s, the idea of parole ~W ~ commg ood~ fire identical files of actual criminal nationwide. For years, some state cases and asked what sentences they and federal lawmakers and attorneys would impose on the defendants. had been questionmg reports that The answers ranged from 20 years in prison and a $65,000 fine to 3 years under indetennffiate, or paroleeligible, sentencing defendants faced in prison and no fine. The issue was with similar or identical- criminal debated in Congress for years. In cbaJ'geS were receivmg widely 1984 U.S. Senator Edward Kennedy different sentences. Judges, with called federal criminal indetenninate sentencing "a national disgrace" and almost total discretion over States Lead the Way Actually, although the states called for change. The result was sentencing, might give one defendant follow the federal usually no time for the same charge as the Congress stripping federal judges of next defendant who got the book almost all sentencing discretion to goveniment's lead in any type of thrown at him and ended up in prison crimffial reform, in this situation eliminate disparities in prison tenns. for years or even decades. Instead, a complex series of some states had acted first. In states where judges were sentencing "guidelines" were In 1976, California's elected and not appointed (like implemented in the federal system in Governor J~ Brown signed into law a new set of criminal sentencing Florida) the problem of disparity in 1987 that mandated sentencing sentencing was often worse. With according to a chart and a point schemes that did away with parol\, in crime rates increasing in .the 1970s that state. Significantly, where system for adding up "factors" along with the public's fear of crime, indeterminate or parole-eligible related to the crime and/or the judges depending on being ~lected . defendant's criminal history. . sentencing largely incorporated the every few years often felt an The federal shift from idea that prisoners could be rehabilitated with incentives, the increasing press,ure to appear . indetenninate parole-eligible to "tough" on crime. On~ of the best "guidelinett sentencing was not new California law essentially platfonns f~r many judges was the without dissention. In 1984, U.S. abandoned rehabilitation across the media reporting large amounts of Representative John Conyers, Jr., at board. "The purpose of prison time being given out by a imprisonment," the new law read, "is the time chairman of the Criminal Justice Subcommittee in the U.S. punishment." Oth~ states followed judge. Hardline judges, knowing House, argued strongly against the behind California. That same year that regardless of the amount of Maine abolished parole and six other prison time a defendant was use of guidelmes. He warned that sentenced to, he would still be the system was faulty in that political states - PennSylvania, Arkansas, Ohio, ' Hawaii, Colorado and eligible for parole at the discretion of pressure couid escalate the sentences the parole board once in prison, imposed ooder guidelines and in tum Delaware - lengthened prison sentences. Other states turned away began to feel no qualms about giving create a huge increase in the from indetenninate, or flexible coootry's prison population. out large or even outrageous sentences. At the same time, Conyers also pointed out that sentencing, and replaced it with lawmakers reacting to increasing removing sentencing discretion from guideline sentencing that guaranteed judges "may merely place that crime rates were changing laws to fixed prison terms. Within ten years, thirty-seven states had passed discretion in the hands of allow judges to give even longer mandatory sentencing laws and the prison sentences. Other laws were prosecutors." The probl~m Conyers prison population explosion was in passed that allowed stacking several noted is that guidelines allow prosecutors to decide what charge to . full swing. sentences one bebind the other for bring against a defendant, and where more than one crime for a consecutive sentence that in some the sentence for the crime is Florida Abolishes Parole predetennined, the charge dictates It took a few years, but by cases resulted in hundreds of years for a single defendant. ·the sentence. However, Conyers and the early 1980s ihe indeterminate vs. 20-- - __ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL guideline sentencing debate reached Florida. Following a study directed by the state Legislature into indeterminate sentencing disparities. indeterminate parole-eligible sentencing was abolished and guideline sentencing became effective for anyone sentenced after October 1, 1983. There was one. exception to abolishing parole. however. The new guideline sentencing laws would apply to everYone except those charged with a capital crime and who instead of receiving a death sentence were sentenced to life in prison with a 25year mandatory minimum that must be served before they could be considered for parole on the life sentence. After October I. 1983, the Florida Parole Commission only retained parole authority over prisoners sentenced before that date and those sentenced to life with a 25year mandatory after that dilte. It was the intent of the Legislature when switching from indetenninate to guideline sentencing in 1983 that eventually the Parole Commission wpuld be' . phased out completely. However, that "sunset" provision was later extended and a decade later was repealed altogether leaving the Commission intact. The Commission. however. had a problem. Except for the relatively· • few new prisoner admissions with a 25-year mandatory life sentence who were sentenced after October 1, 1983. and who fell under the parole system. all new admissions after that date were guideline-sentenced and not eligible for parole. Most of those prisoners who were in prison before that date and who were parole-eligible had reasonable sentences with expiration dates that meant they would either have to be paroled or expire their sentences in the next few years. That kept the Commission .busy up until the early 199Os. but the pre1983 parole-eligible pool of Perspectlves - - - - - - - _ prisoners was rapidly shrinking, and "technical" violations. Thus, parole then in 1994 the state legislature did in Florida bas become a Sisyphean .away with 25-year mandatory life endeavor, with parole-eligible . sentences, cutting off the last source prisoners locked into an indefinite cycle of disparate hell. of prisoners who could be sentenced to any type parole-eligible sentence. By 1997. with Florida's [Source: FPC and FDOC Annual prison population standing at almost Reports; Florida Statutes; FPC 65.000 people. having more than records; correspondence from Peter doubled since 1983 when guideline FPC Director of Peterson, sentencing was implemented, only Operations, 7/11/97; FPC· Website: 6.076 prisoners remained in prison http://www.state.fl.usltpc; Joseph T. who were parole-eligible. Of that Hallinan, Going up the River: Travels in a Prison Nation (New number 2.786 were· serving 25-year York: Random House, 200 I] mandatory life sentences and 3.290 bad been sentenced before October I. 1983. That latter group was' [Note: Part Two of this article will largely made up of prisoners who appear in the next issue of FPLP and will take up where left off here. It had received the outrageously disparate sentences that had led the will cover the changes that have legislature to. switch to guideline been made to the FI9ridB ParOle Commission in recent years and the sentencing in 1983. In many cases if those pre-1983 sentenced prisoners impact those changes will.have, or had been sentenced to a sentence not have, on Florida's parole-eligible under the guidelines they would only prisoners. Part Two will also detail have received a fraction of the time tJte numbers, facts, and budget ofthe that they did and would have been FPC up to the current time to show how parole-eligible prisoners out years before. In a curious twist. however, they had now become· continue to be disparately treated as pawns in a bureaucratic game. compared to' guideline-sentenced prisoners. . . In 1996 the legislature. that FPLAO is putting had previously reduced the number together a complete section on its of parole commissioners to five as new Website at www.UJlao,ors their workload of parole-eligible concerning parole in Florida that will prisoners was greatly reduced, be available to the families, friends, further reduced the commissioners to and advocates of parole-eligible only three. That same year a new . prisoners,with the intent of creating law was adopted allowing the debate and activism on this subjectbp] • Commission the option of changing the .parole review time'from every two years to every five years for the GAVEL CLUB majority ofparole-eligible prisoners. The fact remained, however, FLOURISHES that for its continued existence as the WITHIN DOC "Parole Commission" there must by Phillip Stratos continue to be parole-eligible prisoners. The solution was for the Gavel Club #84, an affiliate Commission to start paroling only of Toasbnasters International, about 100 prisoners out of the recently conducted its Awards remaining parole-eligible pool per Ceremony at Sumter Correctional year and to replace them with Institution in Bushnell. Florida. As parolees who had. been out but an invited guest 1 was amazed at the suddenly found their parole revoked professionalism displayed, by both for, in the majority of minor --------------21 case,. _ - - - - - - - - - - : - - - - - - FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL corrections staff and inmate members. The event was both infonnative and successful" and proved to me that programs within the Department of Corrections are vital to the growth and transfonnation ofour state's criminal offenders. The event was highlighted by confident orators that included I Paul Sparato, Oscar Hanson and William Gage. George Rolle served as the Master of Ceremonies and Doug McCray was the evenings' Toastmaster. Club Sponsors John . Langley, George Hummell and Assistant Warden of Programs Lanyard Owens accommodated a spectacular evening that I will remember for years. It was especially rewarding to see the men of Gavel Club #84 conduct themselves with.. an aura of professionalism despite their incarcention. It was hard for me to continue to see th~ men as criminals. They becaqte my friends. I salute tbe loen of Gavel Club #84 and credit the Administration at Sumter Correctional Institution for fostering such a successful program tha~ allows the men to learn and develop important communication and leadership skills provided by the Toastmaster program. It is my hope that this program as well as others . will continue to flourish as Gavel Club #84 has•• Perspectives - - - - - - - - - - - - - - treatment programs that require them to admit being guilty of the crime they are imprisoned for can be subjected to maximum security confinement and loss of privileges like work and recreation opportunities. Voting 5 to 4, the high court~s conservative justices held the majority vote to reject a claim by a convicted rapist, Robert Lile, that his right against self-incrimination was •violated by being forced to choose between admitting his guilt in a treatment program or being placed in maximum security and . losing privileges. Justice Anthony Kennedy penned the majority decision and was joined by Chief Justice William Rehnquist and Justices Antonin Scalia, Clarence Thomas and Sandra Day O'Connor in rejecting Liles' claim. The Court's more moderate justices, John Paul Stevens, David Souter, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen Breyer all dissented with the majority opinion, asserting that the majority had disturbed long-standing constitutional principles by now curtailing the Fifth Amendment rights of prisoners. The Fifth Amendment guarantees that no person "shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself." This case is the latest in a series ofcases that have come before the supreme court in recent years testing sexual offender and sex offender civil commitment laws that Ct. OKAYS have been passed by many states. This case was a test of a Kansas HARSHER Sexual Abuse Treatment Program ~RISONMENT policy that allows prisoners convicted of sex offenses to be FOR SEX placed in confinement and have privileges taken away if they refuse OFFENDERS to admit their guilt in the required program. Lile challenged the policy, WASHINGTON Favoring claiming it was a violation of the government over individual rights, °the U.S. Supreme Court roled June' Fifth Amendment because of the additional punishment factor and 10 that incarcerated sex offenders where any admission of guilt that he who . refuse to participate in o s. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 22 might be forced to make could be used against him in the future. Four of the justices who voted to reject Lile's claims said that such a .policy does not violate the guarantee against' self-incrimination if the penalties imposed "do not constitute atypical and significant hafdships in relation to the ordinary incidents of prison life," quoting from the 1995 case of Sandin v. Conner, 115 S.Ct. 2293, that severely restricted prisoners' rights to remain ftee of arbitrarily-imposed punishments by prison officials. Sandra Day Justice O'Conner, the swing vote for the majority, disagreed with the majority's limited view of Fifth Amendment protection for prisoners, but voted with them because she said that the penalties Lile would face were not so great that he should feel compelled to incriminate himself if he chose not to. This decision will likely ensure the continuation of numerous other state and federal programs that pennit confinement and retraction of privileges when imprisoned or civilly-committed sex offenders refuse to participate in treatment pro8ramS or refuse to disclose their entire sexual history. In· Florida, the impact of this new decision will most likely be felt with sex offenders who are· civillycommitted after doing their prison time under the Jimmy Ryce Act, as no treatment. is available for sex offenders who are in prison in Florida. [Note: For a more legally detailed review of the Lile case see McKune v. Lile in this issue's Notable Cases-; editor] • 0 _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL 1. Plwe Cbeck ./ One: PerspectIves - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 3. Your Name and Address (PLEASE PRINT) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,DC# Name D Membership Renewal _ (] New Membership AgencylLibrarylInstitution IOrg! Address 2. Select ./ Category D SIS Family/AdvocatelIndividual City State Zip (] S9 Prisoner Email Address and lor Phone Number (] S30 Attomeys/Professionals . (] $60 Govtt AgencieslLibrariesiOrgsJetc. 4. Additional Donation I understand that FPLAO depends on its members to grow and operate effectively. Thereforet I would like lO make an additional donation of: FAMILIES ADVOCATES PRISONERS ~ S10 $25 SSO S100 S2S0 Other UNITED FOR PRISON REFORM r:r Please make all checks or money orders payable to: Florida Prisoners' Legal Aid Organization. Inc. Please complete the above form and send it with the indie:ated membership ducsor subscription amoUDt to: Florida Prisoners' Legal Aid Organization Inc., P.O. Box 660-387. Chuluota. FL 32766. For family members or loved ones of Florida prisoners who are unable to afford the basic membership dues. any contribution is acceptable for membership. New, unused, US postage stamps are acceptable from prisoners for membership dues. Memberships run one year. Prisoners: Have a free copy of FPLP sent to a famIly member or friend on the outside. Simply send us their name and address on this form. PLEASE PRINT. If SOt please complete the below information and mail It to FPLP so that the mailing list can be updated: NEW ADDRESS (PLEASE PRINT CLEARLY) Name Address Name City Inst. State Zip @ r:ir Complete and Mall to: FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL PERSPECTIVES . P.O. Box 660-387, Chuluota, FL 32768 Address City State Zip @Mailto: FPLP, P.O. Box 660-387, Chuluota, FLJ2766 23 -----:~--------- _ _ ~NGNOTlCE Due CD cries to .'caacem b' our manbas. tbc FPU' staff dad advc:rtisas in these pages arc IepaIIM: tmd qualified to provide Ibe beina otrcrcd. We cannot meet every DdYatiser, howewa', CIISUR scmca so mcmbcn arc: advised to o1wa)'s' pascmaUy contact advadsas Cor fbnhcr iIlforamtioa Oft Ibm qualifieati<ms and cxpcricncc bcfarc IDIlkiaI IS d!cision to hire lID attomey or other pmf'cssioual savicc provicfcr. You should acver send tcpI at other documalts to an advatiser before contm:Iing them and receiving directions to scad such mataiaL For drosc wisbins to advertise in FPLP, please write for rase infbnnadcm. Adcbas such mail to: Florida PrisoD LcpI Paspcdives AaIr Advatisina, P.O. Box 660-387 Quluom. FL 32766 Or Email: FPLP@aolcom S1JIIMISSION 0' MATERIAL TO FPLP 8ca:asl: or die lap yoIumo or mail being I'CCCiYed. fiDmIdaI coasidalSions. 8Itd die inability to provide ittdividulllcplassistmce, members should not SCItd copies of IcpI documadI of pcading or potaItiaI cases to FPU' without havina first COfttBCUid the stall' and rccciWtg diIcc:ticms to scacl same. Heidler FPLP, nor its ~ arc ~lc for any unsolicited material scat. . . Manbalrme requested to COIltiIluc sendiD& ' news infarIDation. newspaper c:Iippinp (p!casc include ntIJItC of paper mtd date). mcmomndums. photocopies of final dccisioas in unpublished cascs. BDd potcatial aItidcs for publiadicm. Ptcasc send only copies of such rMtcriaI tb4t do not have to be n:tumcd. FPU' dcpards on YOU. its rcadcn and members- to keep iDfimned. ThaDk )'DO for your coopcraIion and participation in helping to get the DCWS out Your cftbrts arc gRady appRCiatcd. PRISON LEGAL. NEWS CONTACTS 1'bc Florida Ccm:ldiaaI Owmnfsciam is oamposed·ot d&flI cidIlClII sder:kd bf the JlMIDDI' CD lMI'SeO die opcntiaD of die Florida 0epaaIad 01 0mdi0cIs. 1be Qnmfsrion mabs i b b'il til co die &'MII* qtsIIa:ft caaccmfas proIllcm . . . widliD !tie . . . systaD. the Cmmzrialon we1uacI • 6aa die pabIic iltentifyIag pnilIem lIaS. The ("«rmiaian'. ICIiwiIieI em be fGQQlI oa its websa. The (;ommjgion is it! "em fhlm die FDOC. _&tim ill,." RfJrltID CtJtftCllOlU Ctimmmum 2601 Bftz; Sttmtl1&JtuJ T~ FLJ23~2jOO Phfl (8S0) 411.9330 Ematl:fcm'co~= W.N/tc: 1dIp:IIwww~JLwI Additional: /1I1IttllS Ban1/~ Toll FlU: (BSO) ~66 Email Addresses: Gov. Jm Bush - J.b.~CG1tI Micbad Moote. fIX)C • IIiOD1'e.mtdral@1ttaJLtlt:.IfttM.jI.ra .Prftat'" PIP"'" NaG isa J6 mapm.e Rich hal IIcaa paIlIidIecI'" 1M. II is obcl bY W~ IIIte prisaacr PIal Wnps. P.adl . . , is par:bd • tlIIIImIria IDII aaJrds ofIalCIII CIClUlt deciIiaas hm IftlUBII tt. ClOCIII!IY cIatiq \Wh pUaaer riItda mil writfm &am • prima« penpec:dw. The aupziae oem caria" atfdes he tttomeyI sMDI bGw-m IitiptiaD IIIhise. Also iDdudal ill ada iaae are IlCWI atida daIiq wida ..is....4C&:u1 IIiqSIe lIDlIldMsna &am the U.s. mllMUld die \Wi'Id. AbIII1 adIscriptica mes arc S18 £or prisaaea. It you CIQ" aff'anIlD cad S18 d aace. smI d leal 59 ... PLN will prar:ate die iaaa II $1.50 adI r.. • sill mcclII ~ New aDd aused postIp stIqlS or c=ou.oct ClMlopcs lDay be lISell a pyIDCII!. Fot ~ ~ 6e ,arty saltsaiJlIic:e lite is SUo IDsrimticmI or pntfadcal ( ~ I:itnria. ~. agcDCia. oapniDIbls) ~ ilia arc S60 • JCit. A IIIIqlle CCIpJ at PLN illMiIUIe !or $I. To mbsc:riIlc to PLN. ~ PrUott 1AgaI Nern UDO NW IJtJdr SI1aI PMBU8 Sctt/e, IVA 98117 See PLNa WebsilD at 1ttIp:1.......~ EmaltPLHat ~OI% NON·PROFIT U.S. POSTAGE . PAID OVIEDO, FL PERMIT NO. 65 to·tettew··yQu_r membership andJor 'subSCription 'b~ore·\",~'; tt)Cpiration~~~ .. . .. . ".. :~.... ... - "....MQVlrag11ran$f8rTed? IfsOJPluse ·eom.PI.·~j!:i,e.' enClosed address change form. -SQ: -that. the mentb~i's~ip_ rolls and mailing list· AD be·upd~. ltJarlk you! . _.VDlume-:8z lsSuL4-1ilb1tAUa;20tJ2 .., ... -