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FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL ers ectives VOLUME 11 ISSUE 4 ISSN# 1091·8094 JUUAUG 2005 IDA S1mIP>Il\eIIIIIle Co_ permitted, and failed·to provide them a chaplain trained in their faith like are available to mainstream religious IDlPJlhl~Co~InlIl1lI¢y adherents in Ohio prisons. . The prisoners initially filed suit asserting their ofl'~u~iJnn claims wider the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the Act U.S. Constitution. ·After filing suit, Congress enacted a new law, the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized n a unanimous decision, the U.S. Supreme Court has Persons Act of 2000 (RLUlPA). and the prisoners upheld the constitutionality of a law enacted by amended their complaints to include claims under section Congress in 2000 that was designed, in· part. to protect . 3 ofthat Act. . religious freedoms of institutionalized persons, including . Section 3 of RLUIPA provides in part: "No prisoners. In holding that the law does pass constitutional government shall impose a substantial burden on the muster, the high Court overturned a decision of the federal religious exercise of a person residing in or confined to an Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals that had held that the institution," unless the burden furthers "a compelling section of the law that applied to prisoners was governmental interest," and does so by "the least unconstitutional because it gave greater protection to restrictive means." The Act defines "religious exercise" religious rights than is afforded to other constitutionally to include "any exercise of religion, whether or not protected rights. The high Court disagreed. compelled by, or central to, a system of religious belief." . The case began when several Ohio state prisoners, And section 3 of the Act applies when "the substantial adherents of "nonmainstream" religions, Satanist, Wicca, burden [on religious exercise] i~ imposed in a program or Asatru religions, and the Church of Jesus Chri~t Christian, . .activity that receives Federal financial assistance."· The filed federal civjl rights lawsuits clai~ing that Ohi~ prison Act also specifically provides that a "person may assert a officials were retaliating and discriminating against them violation of [RLUIPA] as a claim or defence in a judicial for exercising their non-traditional faiths. The prisoners proceeding and obtain reliefagainst a govemm.ent," claimed that prison officials denied them access to When the prisoners amended their CQmplaints to religious literature, denied them the same opportunities for . include a claim that Ohio prisonofficials' actions failed to group worship that were afforded adherents of mainstream accommodate their religious exercise in violation of religions, prohibited them from adhering to dress and RLUIP~ the prison officials motioned tO'dismiss that appearance' requirements of their religions, withheld claim, arguing that section 3 violates the Establishment access to religious ceremonial items that are essentially Clause of the First Amendment, more commonly known the same as those that mainstream religious adherents are as the clause mandating separation of church and state. I FAMILIES .'\DVOCA1ES PRISONERS • ON I \ THE INSIDE Is The Prison Boom Ending? : Family Ties: DNA Searches In The News Post Conviction Comer Commission Complicit in Pri\:,ate Prison Fraud Notable Cases r 3 .4 ~W YJ I" 6 8 9 : . . "! !~mil Florida Prison Legal Perspectives Fl08IU18,80111'-0."-': . . ~" A SO I (c) (3) NonllrOfit Organization Fax (407) S68-o2GO E-mail: (P1p@llOl.com Website: W\\w,fplao prg fPlAO DIRECTORS Teresa Bums-Posey Bob Posey, CLA David W. Bauer, Esq. Loren D. Rhoton, Esq. FPlPSTAff Publisher Editor Research Teresa Bums-Posey Bob Posey Sheni Johnson ADVISORY BODD William Van Po)'ck Anthony Stuart 2 Linda Gottieb SusanManning Prison officials also claimed that forcing them to comply with RLUIPA would compromise prison security as prison gangs use religious activity to cloak their illicit and often violent conduct . The federal distript court rejected the argument that section 3 conflicts with the Establishment Clause and prison officials' weak, and basically unsupported, claim that enforcement of RLUIPA would, inevitably. threaten prison security. The motion to dismiss was denied and the prison officials filed an interlocutory appeal. Tlie federal Sixth District Court of Appeals reversed. That court held that section 3 of RLUIPA "impermissibly advanc[es] religion by giving greater protection to religious rights than to other constitutionally protected ri~ts." therefore affording religious prisoners more rights than nonreligious prisoners. which might. the court suggested, "encourag(e] prisoners to become religious in order to enjoy greater rights." That. the appeal court held, was an unconstitutional promotion of religion by the government not allowed by the Establishment Clause. The prisoners sought review of that finding, which the U.S. Supreme Court granted. .The high Court held that the Sixth Circuit wrongly decided the issue. Foremost. the high Court held, that section 3 of RLUIPA is compatible ,with the Establishment Clause because it prevents exceptional govemment-created burdens on private religious exercise. And courts properly applying RLUIPA must take adequate account of the burdens . a· requested accommodation may: impose on nonbeneficiaries and must be satisfied that th~ Act·s requirements will be administered neutrally among different faiths. Noting that section 3 covers state-run institutions. in which the government has a great degree of control uncomparable to civilian society and severely disabling to private religious exercise, the Supreme Court opined that RLUIPA thus protects institutionalized persons who are unable to freely attend to their religious needs and who are therefore dependant on government·s permission and accommodation to exercise their religion. But. the Court held, RLUIPA balances the accommodation of religiouS exercise so that it does not override other significant governmental interests. suc~ as prison security. Lawmakers. who enacted RLUIPA. were mindful of the importance of prison security and anticipated that courts will apply the Act·s requirements with due difference to the experience and expertise of prison and jail administrat~rs. In fact. the Court continued, if prisoner requests for religious accommodation should become excessive. impose Florida Prison Legal Perspectives wUustified burdens on other prisoners, or jeopardize the effective functioning on an institution, the facility would be free to resist the imposition, under the compelling interest provision of the Act. And finally the Court held that the Act is constitutional because it does not differentiate· among bona fide religious faiths. The Supreme Court did not address the individual claims of the Ohio prisoners who originally brought the suit. Instead, it sent the case back to the district court to hold further proceedings on those claims under RLUIPA standards as explained by the high Court in its decision. . Ohio is not the only state to have challenged the institutionalize person provisions of RLUIPA. Several states filed briefs in support of Ohio~s position. It is expected that Ohio and other states will continue to challenge the law on other grounds where it provides a measure cof empowerment to prisoners, which prison officials naturally oppose in any context. For now, however, prisoners have some protection to exercise their religious faiths. See: Cutter, et al. v. Wilkinson, et al., _U.S.--, _S.Ct.--, 18 Fla.L.Weekly Fed. 8317 (S/3110S). • All states, including Ohio, receive federal funds for their prison .systems. .• SJIDMItt or srm.? III. JP>JrDDmliNmm ~ lEm<dllImB? by Joseph Washawitz • here may be a shift from building prisons to offering rehabilitation in some states. California, for. example, where 33 prisons were built since 1984, has decided to build no more prisons and on July 1, 'OS, even renamed its corrections department the California· Department of Corrections and Rehabilitations. The last prison built by California, the Kern State Valley Prison, is reportedly marked as the first maximum security prison to offer rehabilitation on a full scale. Other states, like Massachusetts and Michigan, have also made a change in policy and established programs to help releasees reenter society. But is there really a shift in corrections policy? Beginning in the 1970's, the powers that began to ~~ on crime, corrections and .law enforcement in a different way. State and federal taxes (viewed as pocketbooks from which monies could be indiscriminately taken, if the excuses were good enough) were used to erect prisons all over the nation. The entity primarily' responsible for the boom in prison growth, and the concomitant caging of hundreds of thousands of men, women and children, is the American Legislative Bxchange Counsel (ALEC). In fact, the nation-wide correction industry was boosted to over $SO billion a year by the mid-1990's, ~more than two million people were locked behind bars. ALEC had the answer to generate revenues; all it needed was the problem. T The problem was created through criminal legislation introduced in large measure by ALEC and its . constituents. All sorts of common human behaviour became criminal, or, if already criminal, punishments became harsher. Public outrage waS founded by political rhetoric and a well-motivated media campaign. The agenda was easy to advance, too, because, after aU, who wants to defend criminals? It seems that too few Americans actually stopped to consider why so many. were being labelled as "criminal" all of a sudden. According to Paul Sutton, a criminal justice professor at California State University, San Diego, "The binge of the '80s and '90s was simply political; it was not correlated to crime or increases in the civilian population." .Somewhere in the political landscape, elected officials forgot that they were supposed to represent all of the American public...and not play one group against another. "In the past, it has been you are either for the victim or for the offender. It was a specious dichotomy," said Peggy .Burk, an agent at the Center for Effective Public Policy: Politicians and law enforcement had begun to treat hundreds 0 thousands of Americans as though they were disposable citizens. An example of misplaced loyalties: intolerance and ineffective policies, in our public .schools has led to greater numbers of children roaming the streets with uninformed minds to guide them (indeed, misinformed if contemporary media, movies, music and television are their primary soun:es of information). Another example: many mental health institutions across the land were shut down in the name of budget concerns. With the overhaul effected by ALEC and like>-minded legislators (the "get tough on crime" agenda), our youth and mentally infirm were soon packed away in prisons·throughout the nation. No longer were they children and mentally ill, but juveniles and offenders. ·"1 applaud California for saying this is the last prison they are going to build," said Ohio Department of Correction director Reginald Wilkinson.· Two Ohio prisons have closed in this century. "If you build a' prison," Wilkinson said, "you are going to find people to put in it. u . . . . . .. " ."- -, . In fact, the present structure of the criminal justice system not only ensures that more people go to prison to serve longer sentences but also ensures that two-thirds of all prisoners are rearrested within three years of their release. .These statistics hold true despite a drop·in the crime rate nationally. Thus far politicians acknowledge no responsibility for the $SO-plus-billion-dollar-a-year beast that is the corrections industry, nor for the lives, families and economics damaged by the tough-on-crime rhetoric used to allocate taxes to me>-too pockets. Prison spending increased by more than 1,000 percent in the United Stats over the past 1S years. I 3 Florida Prison Legal Perspectives Despite an across-the-board decrease in crime, most sheriffs. police commissioners and law enforcement lobbyists still have their hands out for more taxpayer dollars; moreover. to justity the budgets already in use. law enforcement is driven to' be more inventivo-indeed, creati'{~in its "protection" of the public. This. in many instances. the' public servant is transformed into the suspicious and intrusive inquisitor. To some, the arrogance encountered in those sworn to "serve and protect" is appalling. Where the media is often used as a tool to promote universal fear for isolated crimes. grassroot outcries are beginning to influence the political landscape in the opposite direction. Groups like Families Against Mandatory Minimums are attempting to unveil the troubled reasoning behind placing our citizens in prisons for decades at a time for property crimes or cries that involve no injuries. The discontent does not stop there: overextended state and federal budgets are ~using some politicians to raise eyebrows and ask questions. The correctionsllaw enforcement beast has gotten out of hand, and something must be done about it Hence, the shift in focus is now to try rehabilitation. Irl California. Governor Arnold .Schwarzenegger (R) has called for. a conceptual shift, which may indicate that something more than rehabilitation of prisoners is in order: perhaps the rehabilitation ofthe criminal jUstice system. But some are unconvinced that a shift is occurring at all. Rose Braz, director 'of Critical Resistance, stated that Governor Schwarzenegger has cut educational programs and added beds to existing facilities. "Beyond rhetoric, we have not seen [the governor] put his money where his mouth is~" she said, "other than changing the name of the department and shuffling some chairs around." The Florida' Department of Corrections has likewise cut education and added beds in its prisons. It may be that there is no shift, but a recession of a sort due to the strain on the nation's financ:eS. Professor Sutton said, "Why all of a sudden does it stop? Once again it is not tied to a crime tum around or people leaving the state [of California]. Once again it's political. This time the politics driving the ch8nge is economics." Actually, it was always economics; what started out as a cute little revenue generator has turned into an obese beast that is hungry for billions and billions of taxpayers"dollars. and it is ravaging the society that it is supposdd to be protecting. A shift mayor may not be in the making. but one thing is certain. A shift is needed. A big one. ' more [Source: Christian Science Monitor. 6120/0S] • 4 lFJIolri&lll JP>JrUcmelr ~. ~AmmelDlldlmmeimt <CIldmm by Glenn Smith t a recent settlement conference conducted by a A senior magistrate judge in Smith v. Mingo, U.S. District Court Southern District of Florida Case No. 04140IS·CIV-MiddlebrookslWhite. prisoner Glenn Smith settled a First Amendment claim against former Florida Department of Corrections Warden Timothy Mingo. While warden at Martin Correctional Institution, IndiantoWn. Florida, Mingo repeatedly refused to allow Smith to receive, routine mail containing newspaper clippings. even after FDOC central office officials had approved Smith's receipt of the clippings. The central office response to Smith's grievance of the newspaper clipping's rejection stated, "We cannot conclude that they are a threat to security." The rejections took place during a period when the FDOC was engaged in formal rulemaking proceedings to amend the routine mail rules specifically to allow clippings and other enclosures. At a status conference preparatory to a bench trial in the case, District Judge Donald M Middlebrooks ordered the settlement conference, indicating that the necessary due process applied to Smith's First Amendment rights was apparently the grievance procedure which Smith followed and was successful on. But, Judge Middlebrook noted that due process was essentially abrogated when "Mingo said no." The judge also told Smith the clownside at trial would be that it didn't appear that he had much in the way ofdamages. Smith was ably represented at the settlement conference by Rene D. Harrod of the Ft Lauderdale office of the law firm Berger Singerman, which took the case pro bono through the Volunteer Lawyers Project of the . Southern District of Florida. Smith had contacted the Project for assistance prior to the status conference. The case was settled for $SOO to Smith and $2S00 to the attorneys and Project. • . lFilIDIIlftIly n.: lD>NA.~.UJmccver OOcn''II'Ilnium lFammftIly ~ by Oscar Hanson aw Enforcement agencies in the United States and the L United Kingdom have begun to solve not just crimes committed by suspects whose DNA profiles are in govenunent databases. but also those committed by relatives whose profiles were not on file. Siblings. parents. and even uncles and cousins are being investigated for crimes because their genetic fingerprints closely resemble the DNA of a known criminal. Florida Prison Legal Perspectives The technicians determined that Brown and the man they were seeking likely inherited their DNA from the same parents. Law enforcement took that information and began to stalk Brown's brother, Willard. They got what they were looking for when Willard discarded his scenes. cigarette butt. PoliCe collected I and extracted DNA from Statcc and federal agencies have collected over 2.4 the saliva. It was a perfect match with the DNA collected million DNA profileS and have used those profiles to from the crime scene. . . solve more than 16,000 cases. Police expect to use Willard Brown ultimately plead guilty to the familial profiling to double or even triple the size of the crime that had. occurred nearly '10 years earlier and was databases without adding new samples. Yet the new techniques raise a.host of ethical and .' sentenced to life in prison. plus 10 years. Meanwhile, the man who .was wrongfully Convicted of the ~rime was legal questions: Is it fair for.someone who has committed finally freed ·after spending 18 years in prison for the no crime to become a "virtual" suspect because he crime and had persuaded a court to order DNA testing. happens to have a relative who. has been required by la~ But as this case demonstrates how,D~A advances to provide his DNA profile because of his crime? And·· can free innocent men, the technology of familial searches how can familial searches of DNA' databases avoid has pitfalls.. In 1999, Great Britain thought it had matched violating the rights of unrelated people whose· genetic a DNA sample from the scene of an unsolved crime to a profiles happen to resemble that of someone in· the man who had a perfect alibi. He was in jail when the, databases? Since all humans share some similarities in .crime occurred. their DNA, thousands of unrelated people could have The convict's DNA and that from the crime scene DNA profiles that partially. match. .sample matched at 12 alleles.. Had this man not been in Here's how the technique works: Familial jail, he. could have been a prime target for awrongfuJ searching is based on the power of modern computer convjction.' databases and on genetic principles that are as old as the human race. .. . The technology on familial searches is relatively new in the United States t and· there are few Jaws on the With the exception of identical twins, each subject. person's DNA profile is believed to be unique. But long Federal privacy law bars the FBI from performing . stretches of the chemical sequences that make up the DNA familial searches within its own databases. Yet New York molecule are identical in all humans. DNA analysis works and Massachusetts have laws that authorize familial by comparing areas, called alleles, where the sequence varies greatly among individuals. I searching. California's DNA database technicians report In the 90s, the· United States and· the United partial inatches that "appear Useful" to law enforcement, .Kingdom began to maintain databases that use a series of but theY do not actively search for relatives. In VU'ginia such alleles to match DNA from unsolved crimes to lab examiners are permitted to tell law enforcement that a crime scene. sample might have come from a family known or suspected offenders. Nationally, state and federal agencies keep DNA indexes of suspects and member when the DNA near match is very, very close. unsolved Crimes, and share information through a Beginning this year, Florida's DNA 'database operators have bee permitted to give investigators the computer system maintained by the FBI. Herein lies a slippery slope: SiblingS inherit their names of convicted· offenders. who match a crime scene sample at 21 of 26 alleles. According to David Coffinan, . DNA from both parents, meaning that even non-twin a state crime lab supenisor, research using Floridats siblings often have several alleles in common. Only a complete match, meaning 26 identical alleles, can be used convicted 'offender database suggests that· men who ,have·· to Connect a suspect to an unsolved crime. But a near . 21 alleles in common almost always are brotherS;' AlDiost .. match call indicate that the suspect·is a close relative. Just always? . . . how many alleles dOes it take to connect .the relative? Florida also has begun searching its database for . Only 16. The problem is that unrelated people can have rape suspects by using the DNA of children born to rape .some ofthe same genetic markers. . victims to identifY their fathers. The database has helped . The evolution of this science came into the solve at least eight rape cases. • / spotlight when North Carolina authorities· were searching MnrdIe fa nUt for the man who raped and killed a Winston~Salem· 1'IIpl cUcaIt ar' CIIIllIIDCII newspaper editor. Lab technicians compared DNA left at ...... IIlIwnldIIa In FPLP. Par ," " . am IIId I'IIlI iIIfonIIItIoo the crime scene with the genetic profiles in the state's wrIcI ar IlIIIIIIO die bOlw: . '.. . FPLP· . database. of convicted felons. The crime scene DNA AllIl: Adva1lIIaa didn't match any of the 40,000 felons on file, but I did 15232 BuI CoIoalaJ Dr. .~PL32126-SlU offer a clue: The unknown suspect's profile was or remarkably similar to that ofAnthony D. Brown. .....,...I~ 5 The familial searches have expanded the power of the computer databases that authorities in both nations have used for the past decade to compare genetic profiles taken from convicted criminals with DNA left at crime Florida Prison Legal Perspectives AZ ,- During March 2005, Ray Krone, who was twice wrongfully convicted of murder and sentenced to death. reached a $1.4 million settlement with Maricopa County, Arizona. Krone spent over two years on death row and a decade in prison overall after being wrongfully convicted of killing Phoenix bartender Kim Ancona in 1991. Advanced DNA testing conducted in 2002 cleared Krone of the murder. CT - A prisoner who sparked an anthrax scare when he sent a white powder to a state prosecutor received 30 ',years in federal. prison on May 11, 2005. Noel Davila, 34, is the fitst in person to be convicted Connecticut of threatening to use a weapon of mass destruction. The letter containing the white powder was sent in 2002, one year after someone sent anthrax through the mail killing five people. FL - On May 12, 2005, prison guards and police were searching for William Hawley, 41, who escaped from a road crew from a work camp at Martin Correction Institution, located near Stuart, Florida. Charlotte Yoder said she ~ad unwittingly drove Hawley around for three hours and gave him $20 for a ineal. Hawley had told Yoder his car had broken down. He waS serving 10 years for charges including burglary and theft. 6 FL - On March 4, 20()5, former Hernando County jail guard Louis Gregory, 38, was sentenced to six months in jail after pleading guilty to sexual misconduct involving the sexual assault of a 17-year-old female prisoner at the jail. The jail is run by the private, for profit Corrections Corporation of America. FL - Jacqueline Santoni, 25, a Seminole County Jail guard was arrested and charged with driver license fraud, forgery, perjury and criminal use of a public record on March 19, 2005. Santoni, before being hired at the jail in Dec. '04, had worked as a prison guard at the Central Florida Reception Center in Orlando. There she started a relationship with a prisoner and in order to visit him and conceal it from the jail, which prohibits such relationships, she obtained state identification under a false name. GA - Tommy Cardell, 52, a guard at Rogers State Prison, was reinstated to the payrolls May 23, 2005, while th~ Georgia Bureau of Investigation and Department of Corrections his claims. that investigates handcuffed prisoners were beaten at the prison. Cardell says he was fired May 11. On May 23 he was unfired and suspended with pay. Five others at the prison, including the warden and deputy ~arden, were also suspended with pay pending the outcome ofthe investigation. MA·- David Smith, 58, a former Taunton police officer, was allowed to enter a plea agreement during May 'OS that will allow him to keep his pension .and stay out of prison, despite the fact that he admits molesting his adopted daughter. Smith resigned after his arrest and was sentenced to four years of probation under the agreement, although he admitted to assaulting the child almost every night for a year starting when she was 7-years old. As part of the agreement Smith was ordered to undergo sex offender counseling and stay away. from the child. (Talk about benefits of the job!) National - US CaUJolic bishop! launched a campaign during Marct 'OS against the death penalty. Th( effort will include increased advocacy in Congress and state legislatures, and filing legal briefs in death-penalty cases. Archbishop Theodqre McCarrick of Washington, DC, said the campaign fits into the church's general ideology of respect for life. Use of the death penalty has been falling. In 2004, 59 people were executed, the lowest number since 1997. The number of people sentenced to death· has also fallen, from a high of 320 in 1996 to 136 in 2004. TN - A state prison guard resigned as officials investigate the fatal stabbing of a prisoner just minutes after the guard left his post. Sgt. Warren Russell claimed stress caused him to resign about two weeks after prisoner Keith Drinkard was stabbed . to death and his body set on fire at Riverbend. Prison. Another guard was fired over the same incident. VA - During Apr. 'OS advocacy groups launched a campaign to help convicted felons regain their right to vote. Those organizing the Virginia Voter Restoration Initiative say they will soon an~ounce a toll-free number where convicts call to get help filling out lengtly voter restoration applications. FL - During July 'OS almost 3,100 prisoners and hundreds of prison employees were tested at a women's prison in Marion County after confirmation of three cases of tuberculosis and five suspected cases were discovered, said the Fla. Dept. of Corrections. The facility was placed under quarantine, visitation was suspended and transfers of Florida Prison Legal Perspectives prisoners in or out of the facility were stopped. FL' A federal lawsuit was filed against the Jacksonville Sherifrs Office in July 'OS by Ginger Laughon' the mother of John Laughon, 39, who suffered injuries in Feb. 'OS after getting in a fight with guards at the jail. Laughon's injuries have left him in a persistent vegetative state. He was serving time in the jail for marijuana possession. According to reports, Laughon was placed in a restraining chair. for attacking a guard at the jail. Later, reports claim, he was .found out of the restraints and then attacked two other guards, they had to restrain him. He was then taken to a hospital , for treatment of minor injuries and a mental evaluation. When he arrived he was not breathing, had no pulse and was cold. Doctors resuscitated him, then found he had nine broken ribs, both lungs punctured and a head injury. U",dersheriff Frank Mackesy said Laughon only had minQr injuries when taken to the hospital and that the more serious injuries may have been caused by doctors resuscitating him. National - The federal Bureau of Prisons is moving to collect DNA samples from all prisoners in fede~l custody or under fedelfll supervision who have a conviction for any type felony, sex offense, violent crime or conspiracy to commit such crimes. The DNA samples are being collected for the FBI's electronic Combined DNA Index System' • (CaDIS). Authority for the collection was included in the Justice for All Act of 2004 that was passed in October 2004. Those refusing to cooperate will be charged with a Class A misdemeanor, carrying up to a year in prison. The Act also provides that those required to provide DNA samples may be subjected to whatever means are necessary to collect the samples. PA - Prisoner in Blair County Jail must pay a $50 fee if they wasn't to visit their children. The fee covers transporting prisoners two blocks from the jail to the courthouse and salaries of deputies who monitor the visits, said Sheriff Larry Fiel~. It would also cut down on "frivolous visits," Field said. Prisoners and their families protested the fees and the jail warden said he would look at other ways to pay the cost of visiting. LEARN TO PROTECT YOUR RIGHTS YOU HAVE A RIGHT TO PA - On August I, 'OS, Thomas Doswell, 46, who spent 19 years in prison for the 1986 rape of a 48-yearold woman at a hospital in Pittsburgh, was released after new DNA tests proved he didn't commit the crime. Prosecutors had opposed the new tests but were overruled by a jUdge. Doswell had been convicted on witness testimony resulting from an apparently rigged photo lineup conducted by police. The victim and other witnesses picked Doswell out of a group of eight photos shown to them by police. DosweWs photo had the letter "Rn underneath it, signifying, he was a rapist. The Pittsburgh police no longer marks photos with an "R!' Doswell had said he was innocent from 'the time he was charged. He was represented ' in his DNA challenge by the Innocence Project at, the Cardozo School of Law at Yeshiva University in New York. _ ' • • • • Adequate medical care Protection from assault Humane living conditions Safety from offlcer abuse Learn how to defend your basic human rights with the compr(.henSive litigation guide, Protecting Your Health and safety, written specifically for ir,mates who are unable to receive help from a lawyer. Written by Robert E, Toone A Project of the Southern Poverty Law Center COST $10 (includes shipping/handling) ORDER A COPY Send a check or Illoney, ordef to Pro~ctlng Your Heath and Safety Southern Poverty Law Center P.O. Box 548 Montgomery, AL 36101-0548 Donatlona Needed , FIortda Prtsonera· Legal AId erg.. Inc.. many projects besides just pu!)IIshfng FPt.P. The organIza1Ion depeuds on l'n8Mbef&. readers and ohtr concerned people to fund. those prcJecIs. uauaIIy Uuou;t\ donatlcM. P1eaM consider maIdng a don8tIon to help FPLAO continue thoIa ptOjed& and to continue woItcIng for Florida state prisoners and their families and frtends. Donatlona. In any amount. shoUld be sent to Ff:JLAO at the address given on the fonn on page 23 of thJs isaue of FPLP. Thank you for conctuds your support. Be sure to InClude your name, identification 'lumbr,- (if any). and mailing address. If using a credit card. please Include the type of card (VISA or Maste..=ard). card number. and elCpirar;?n date. Upon request, priso" law l'braries will be sent a copy at no cC':it, WE DO NOT ACCEPT ORD.:RS S', TELEPHONE. This book does n'Jt tleal ~ith legal defense against "rlminl" charges or cha~ lenges to convictions thill are on appeal. Edition last reVised In 2Ci02, 7 Florida Prison Legal Perspectives ~ , .. • -.""0 ...; POST CONVICTION CORNER '~. by Loren Rhotcm, Esq. Often when a 3.850 Motion for Postconviction Relief makes it to the stage of an evidentiary hearing, it seems that the State will take whatever position is necessary to refute the . movant's claims. Sometimes this means that the Stat~ will take a position which is directly in conflict with its previous position at trial or on appeal. It is improper and unethical for a prosecutor to do this. Unfortunately, though, it happens often enough that one should be prepared for such tactics at an evidentiary hearing. If and when the State tries to switch arguments on an issue at a postconviction evidentiary hearing, one should be ready to argue the doctrine ofjudicial estoppel to prevent such an unfair and opportunistic attempt to refute claims. In Florida, the general rule ofjudicial estoppel is that a claim or position successfully . maintained in a former action or judicial proceeding bars a party from making a completely inconsistent claim or taking a clearly conflicting position in a subsequent action or judicial proceeding, to the prejudice of the adverse party, where the parties are the same in both actions. Grau v. Provident Life and Acc. Ins. Co., 899 So.2d 396 (2005); see also, Federated Mut. Implement and Hardware Ins. Co. v. Griffin, 237 SO.2d 38 (Fla. Is DCA, 1970) [Litigants are not permitted to take inconsistent Rositions in judicial proceedings, and a party cannot allege one state of facts for one purpose and at the same action or proceeding deny such allegati9ns and set up a new and different state of facts inconsistent thereto for another purpose]. The doctrine of judicial estoppel has been developed to protect the integrity of the judicial process and to prevent parties from "making a mockery ofjustice by inconsistent pleadings." Grau quoting American National Bank v. Federal Deposit Ins. Com., 710 F.2d 1528, 1536 (l ph Cir. 1983). Judicial estoppel further prevents parties from "playing fast and loose with the courts." Russell v. Rolfs, 893 F.2d 1033, 1037 (9 th Cir; 1990). A situation justifying the application ofjudicial estoppel "is more than affront to judicial dignity. For intentional self-contradiction is being used as a means ofobtaining unfair advantage in a forum provided for suitors seeki~g justice." Scarano v. Cen. R. Co. ofN.J.. 203 F.2nd 510, 513 (3rd Cir. 1953). Thus, ifa prosecutor argues an issue one way at trial and then latertakes the opposite position at a postconviction evidentiary hearing, he should be judicially estopped from using the intentional self-contradiction as a means of obtaining an unfair advantage at the evidentiary hearing; Even if the prosecutor at the evidentiary hearing is different from the original prosecutor on the case, he still should not be able to argue a position which conflicts with the one which the State presente~ at trial or on appeal. Any State Attorney's office is the equivalent ofa law firm. Loren Rhoton is a ",ember in good standing with the Florida Bar and a member ofthe Florida Bar Appel/ate Practice Section. Mr. Rhoton practices almost exclusively in the postconviction/appellate area o/the law, both at the State and Federal Level.. He has assisted h~ndreds ofincarceratedpersons with their cases and has numerous written appel/ate opinions. • 8 Florida Prison Legal Perspectives State Watchdog Commission C.omplicit in Private Prison Fraud . by Sandra Arnold T he two' .private, for-profit prison. companies that receive taxpayer money to run five prisons in Florida were allowed to over bill the state by almost $13 million and even rebated some money to cover expenses and salaries of the commission that was suppose to be policing their contracts, according to a newstate audit. The audit was released a year after the state Legislature abolished the controversial Correctional Privatization . Commission (epC). (See: FPLP, Vol. 10, Iss. 6, pg.. 4.) The CPC h~ been set up to oversee the contracts between the state and two private pr,son companies that have operated five private, for-profit prisons in Florida for a decade. The two companies are. Corrections Corporation of America of Nashville and The GED Group (formerly Wackenhut) of Boca Raton. The disclosures in the audit, which was performed by the Department of Management .Services, that was given the job of overseeing the private prison contracts last year, paints a picture of a cozy, if not felonious, relationship between the defunct CPC and the prison companies. ''The CPC failed to safeguard the state's interests ... The CPC consistently made questionable contract concessions to vendors," states the audit report. The audit was based on records dating from 1997' and include findings that: • The private prison companies were paid $4.5 million for jobs that were vacant, in part because CPC. failed' to require the companies to report the vacancies. • The CPC authorized $5 million in cost-of-living salary adjustments at GED's South Bay Correctional facility. Auditors ~y the money wasn't fully passed on by GED to employees as required. • Corrections Corp. received $2.9 million more for facility maintenance at Gadsden Correctional facility than was actually spent on maintenance. • The CPC, when the Legislature cut its budge in 2001, simply increased each private prison company's perdiem rate by. the amol,lnt needed to cover CPC's operating costs and salaries and the companies "in tum remitted the per-diem increases' baek .to the CPC's Grants and Donations Trust Fund," The funds were then u~ed to pay CPC expenses and salaries that . the Legislatlire refused to fund. . Alan Duffee, the last director of CPC; said, ~'I agree .100 percent of what's' in here," referring to the audit. report. Duffee" who noted that the alleged discrepaIlcies most occurred before he took over as CPC' directOr, said it illustrates weaknesses in privatization, as companies holding contracts use lobbyists to fend offcompetition and set specifications favorable to their bottom line. . Ken Kopczynski. lobbyist for the Police Benevolent Association, the union for Florida prison guards which opposes prison privatization, was more harsh. "We should be talking criminal charges," he said. . But .it.. is very unlikely th~t any serious ramifications will result. Republican {lawmakers, who generally promote privatization and reap its benefits, have been reluctant to change the system despite recurring questions and evidence showing the state's private prisons cannot meet the 7 percent cost savings required by law and as was promised taxpayers when they were sold the private prison idea a de9ade ago. fr. f3~t, during this year'f: legislative sesf:icn,' lawmakers voted to build additional' beds at three of the private' prison facilIties, requiring a two year extension on their contracts. And negotiations are underway to build a sixth private prison in Jackson County, which either Corrections Corp. or GED will contracfto run. Florida's private prisons are a $106.4 million-ayear business. This year Gov. Jeb Bush vetoed legislation that would have created new protections for taxpayers concerning all kinds of privatization. Bush has lead the charge for privatization in Florida. As long as private prison companies continue to ply politicians with campaign cash' and lobbyists, and . Republicans continue to control Florida's Legislature and governor's office, it's a fair bet that the interests of the private prison companies will trump the interests of taxpayers.• 9 Florida Prison Legal Perspectives The following are summaries ofrecent state. andfederal cases"that may be useful to or have a signif..:ant impact on Florida prisoners. Readers should alway.~ read the full opinion as published in the Florida Law Weekly (Fla. L. Weekly); Florida Law Weekly Federal (Fla. L. Weekly Federal); Southern Reporter 2d (So. 2d); Supreme Court Reporter (S. Ct.); Federal Reporter 3d (F. 3d); or the Federal Supplement 2d (F.Supp. 2d), since these summaries are/or general information only. ' UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURTS Doss v. Crosby, 18 Fla.L.Weekly Fed. D5RO (N.D. Fla. 6/6/05) This case irlVolved a petition for writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. section· 2254 that challenged prison disciplinary proceedings for possession of narcotics and bribery, which resulted in forfeiture of gain time, and the forfeiture of additional days of gain time as the result of an audit. The respondent" James V. Crosby, Jr., filed a motion to dismiss Richard Scott Doss petition as moot. Respondent asserted that Doss had been released from prison ,on the expiration date ofhis sentence. Doss replied to the' motion to dismiss raising two arguments in contention that his petition was not moot. First, if the unlawfully forfeited pin time were to be restored. he could· have started serving his probation (to which he was released on expiration of sentence) much sooner. Second, Doss contended that the petition is not moot because he may not seek compensatory 'relief for false imprisonment until the disciplinary reports are overtUrned. A Magistrate Judge filed his Report and Recommendation. which asserted that Doss' first argument on reply was not persuasive. According to exhibits brought out in the respondent's motion to dismiss. Doss was sentenced 'to . 22 years imprisonment and 8 . years of probation. a probationary split sentence under Florida law. This made Doss' issue smular to that in a 10 prior case that was ~rought befOre '512 U.S. 477 (1994). The Supreme the district court. In that case, it was found by the Magistrate that a Court has said: "That is a great non sequitur, unless one believes (as we petitioner challenging the loss of .donot) that a section 1983 action for· gain time (based on allegedly false and retaliatory disciplinary reports) damages must always and everywhere be available... See: was mooted by expiration of the sentence, even though petitioner was Spencer v. Kemna, 523 U.S. I, 17 released to the probationary portion (1998). See also: Nonnette v. Small. 316 F.3d 872,' 876-878 (9tb Cir. of his split sentence. That rationale 2002), cert. denied, 540 U.S. 1218 followed United States v. Johnson, 529 U.S. 53 (2000). • ' (2004)(because no case or In Johnson it was found that controversy remained for released the Florida Statute authorizing a split inmates and habeas petition would be moot· under Spencer, Heck did not sentence specifically states that the defendant may be placed on bar settion 1983 suit). probation "upon completion of any As a result, the Magistrate Judge's .report recommended that· specified period of such sentence," respondent's motion to dismiss be' and that the period of probation' or granted and Doss' petition be community control "shall commence dismissed as' moot. There were no immediately upon the release of the defendant from incarceration, objections to the recommendation whether by parole or gain-time and the district court held that the allowances." See: Florida Statutes, report and recommendation was section 948.01(6). correct and adopted it as its opinion. The district court added an additional The Magistrate stated that the same statutory language applied , note: "[T]he conclusion that this in Doss' case, and Johnson controls. petition is moot is correct regardless Doss could not serve his probation of whether petitioner's release removes the· bar to any civil Cause of and incarceration simultaneously and action he .might have, under 42 even if he could prove that gain time was wrongfully forfeited, the court US.C. section 1983 or otherwise, for could not grant relief.' Under Florida challenging the revocation of his law, gain time may only be applied . gain time." to shorten the term of imprisonment and that term had expired. Therefore, . the Magistrate FLORIDA SUPREME COURT recommended that Doss' petition should be found moot. Van'Poyck v. State. 30 Fla.L.Weekly In regards to Doss' other· S373 (Fla. 5/19/05) argument. it was stated that it was William Van Poyck, along unsuppOrted. The United States with his accomplice Frank Valdes·, Supreme Court has rejected the was convicted of first-degree murder argument that a habeas petition is not of a Florida correctional officer moot because a 42 U.S.C. 1983 during a botched 1987 attempt to free action for damages would then be a mutual fti~d from a prison foreclosed under Heck v. Humphrey, transport van. Both defendants had Florida Prison Legal Perspectives was decided speedy trial rights were 19, 2005, a majority of the Florida Supreme Court waived. The decision made by the disagreed with Van Poyck and First District expressly and directly upheld his death sentence. In a 6-1 vote, the Court, while implicitly conflicted with what was decided by the Fifth District in Williams v. State, conceding that Van Poyck was not 757 So.2d 597 (Fla. 5t/a DCA 2000). the triggennan, nevertheless stated In Williams, the court rejected the that "we hold that there is no argument that because Williams was reasonable probability that Van Poyck would have received a lesser . assisting the state he was unavailable for trial, The court reasoned that a sentence had DNA eVidence person' is deemed unavailable, as establishing that he was not the trigpnnan been presented at trial." prescnDed in Florida Rule of The Court did not cite a single case Criminal Procedure 3.191(k), for trial in support of that remarkable if the person or the person's COWlSel proposition and simply ignored the ,fails to attend a proceeding where wealth of prior decisions holding the their presence is required or the opposite to be true. Justice Anstead person or counsel;is not ready for authored a vigorous 4-page trial on the day trial is scheduled. dissenting opinion, .calling the The Fifth District had found majority decision contrary to that Williams had not (expressly or '"common .sense and our death written) waived his right to a speedy penalty'jurisprudence." trial, nor had he engaged in conduct that would stop him from asserting ·Frank Valdes was subsequently his rights. The same was found of murdered in his death row cell by the defendants in the consolidated Florida State Prison guards on July cases from the First District. 17, 1999. Despite overwhebiling It was noted. by the Florida evidence, none of those guards were Supreme Court, in reviewing the convicted for Valdes' brutal murder. conflicting opinions, that is was the state that essentially had complete Bulgin v. State, 30 FIa.L.Weekly control of the chain of events in the S368 (Fla. 5/19/05) Fifth District's Williams' case, as In this case the Florida well as the cases from the First Supreme· Court held that· a District, (e,g., arrest, offer and terms defendant's right to a speedy trial is of the cooperation agreement, renot waived just because the arrest, lind timetable on filing formal defendant agreed to cooperate With charges). It was reasoned that any the police. delay or unavailability in prosecution On review, William C. and trial would be attributed to the Dulgin's case was consolidated with state because of their seeking the twQ other cases out of the First benefit of the· defendant's District Court of Appeals, State v. cooperation to make other arrests• Patel, and State v. Pelky. In these . To waive a person's speedy trial cases the First District opined that right,· there must be some more 'because it was the defendants' explicit action or evidence of an agreement to help law enforcement intent to do so than the mere in a continuing drug inveStigation agreement to cooperate with police and because it was decided to delay in other criminal investigations or' prosecutions. ' trial proceedings due to the defendant's concern that formal The Florida Supreme Court charges and court appearances would held that the First District improperly jeopardize their covert assistance, the attributed the delays to the delay was attributed to the defendants. ThuS, the First District's defendants, not to the state. Thus, it d~ision in its cases was quashed and On May 11 Florida Prison, Legal rerspectives the Fifth District's in Williams was approved. , - have - been - imposed test. Under that test, scoresheet error does not require resent~ing if the sentence could have been imposed (absent a departure) with a correct scoresheet. In Anderson's case on appeal, Anderson v. State, 865 So.2d 640 (Fla. 2d DCA 2004), the Second District agreed with the lower court's decision in that the offence level was incorrect, however, it disagreed with the standard the lower court used found in Hummel. Consistent with prior Second District cases and a test used by other districts, the Second District applied a would - have been - imposed test in Anderson's case. Under that test, a scoresheet error requires resentencing unless the record conqlusively shows that the same sentence would have been imposed using a corrected scoresheet. Absent such showing, the lower court in Anderson's case was instructed to resentence him with a corrected scoresheet. ,In conclusion. the Second District certified conflict with the First District's decision in Hummel. The Florida Supreme Court noted, in reviewing the conflict, courts have developed a harmless error analysis to determine whether a scoresheet error must be merely corrected (harmless) or whether the error warrants both correction and' resentencing (harmful). This, by using the would - have - been imposed test, from the original sentencing guidelines in 1984 through to the current Criminal Punishment Code, in both rule 3.850 motions and on direct, appeals regarding scoresheet errors. In reviewing, the could have - been - impOsed test used by the First District in Hummel, the Florida Supreme Court found that the First District had actually renounced the would-havo-been-imposed test. Instead, it had embraced the "new harmless error analysis to· be applied in dealing with scoresheet inaccuracies," which it believed that the Florida Supreme Court had adopted in Heggs v. State, 759 So.2d 620 (Fla. 2000). However, Heggs did not supplant the would - have been - imposed standard for claims alleging scoresheet errors. Heggs concerned unconstitutional guidelines, and it held that if the sentence that was unconstitutionally impOsed could legally have been imposed under the still - valid 1994 guidelines (without a departure) no resentencing was required. The , Heggs remedy for ,sentences imposed under the unconstitutional 1995 guidelines does not apply to situations that do not involve those guidelines. Th«efore, it was found by the Florida' Supreme Court that the test adopted by the First District in Hummel, rested on a faulty premise that Heggs imposed a new standard for determining whether scoresheet error was harmless. • Accordingly, the First District's decision in Hummel was disapproved and the Second District's decision in Anderson was approved. It was noted just before the conclusion of this case that lhe decision reached will only apply to ' scoresheet errors raised on direct appeal or in a motion filed under rule 3.850. Also, although it was stated that a issue of whether the standard, would-havo-been-imposed test, applied to rule 3.800(a) motions need not be' reached in this case, it was opined that such standard may be too speculative and subjective for purposes ofrule 3.800(a). Dmnucr APPEAL COURTS OF Gomez v. State, 30 Fla.L.Weekly 01152 (Fla. 4* DCA 5/4/05) Francisco Leonardo Gomez's case involved' time 'limitation and jurisdictional issues of a trial court when it rules on a motion to disqualify a trial judge. Pursuant to Florida Rule of Judicial Administration 2.160, a motion for judicial disqualification must be ruled on by the court within' Florida Prison LegsJ Perspectives David W. Collins, Attorney at La.w Fonner state prosecutor with more than 20 years of criminal law experience "AV.. rated by Martindale-Hubbell Bar Register ofPreeminent Lawyers Your voice in fal/ahassee representing prisoners in all areas ofpost-convictionre/ief: Appeals. 3.800 Motions 3.850 Motions State and Federal Habeas Corpus 'drils oi Mandamu:; Parole Hearings Clemency Plea Bargain Rights Sentencing and Scoresheet Errors Green, Tripp, Karcheslcy, Heggs cases Jail-time Credit Issues Gain-time Eligibility Issues Habitualization Issues Probation Revocation Issues Write me today aboUl your case! David W. Collins. Esquire p.6. Box 541 Monticello. FL 32345 (~SO) 997-S!l 1 "The hiring ora lawyer is an important decision thai shoul.; not be based solely upon advertisements. . Before you decide, ask me to send you free written information about my qualification!> and experience." .ACheckered Past 13 Florida Prison Legal Perspectives thirty days following its presentation to the court. In Gomez's case the trial court failed to rule on his motion to disqualify the judge within thirty days..Thus, the Fourth District court of Appeals decided that Gomez's motion should be granted. , It was also noted in Gomez's appellate review that while a motion to disqualify is pending. the trial court is not authorized to rule on any other pending motions; all such motions that the trial court has ruled on must be vacated. Maine v. State, 30 Fla.L.Weekly DI 0 It (Fla. I It DCA 4120/05) In this case. Samuel Maine's request to the trial court for his trans(:ripts to use on his direct appeal was denied. The trial court reasoned that Maine had waived his right to appeal, except for the legality of the sentence he received, which the court decided was a legal sen~ce. , The trial court opined that because Maine had no right to appeal a legaJ'sentence, and although he was found to' be indigent, the costs of the transcripts for purposes of an appeal should be borne by him and not the state. As a- result, Maine sought to have the First District Court of Appeals quash the trial court's decision. He argued that just because he entered a plea does not preclude him from pursuing his direct appeal with a record.on appeal, citing State v..Trowell, 739 So.2d 77 (Fla. 1999) and Ford v. State, 575 So.2d 1335 (Fla. lit DCA 1991). In reviewing Maine's case, the First District" opined ,that an indigent is entitled .to have all proceedings transcribed at public eXpense that' are necessary to support the claims raised in an 'appellate As a matter of' equal court. protection, the state must ': provide indigent defendants with the basic tools of an adequate defense or appeal. wheD those tools are available for a price to other defendants. See: Griffin v. Rllnols, 351 U.S. 12 (1956). Furthermore. a 14 trial court cannot withhold transcripts based on its belief that no reversible error has occurred. Although the lower court in Maine's case was convinced that his sentence was legal, the First District vented that that was judgment for the appellate court to make, not the lower .court, after a review of the record, including the transcripts. In granting Maine's request to quasho1 the lower court's order of denying" him the transcripts, the First District opined that to decide otherwise would give another defendant who can pay for his own transcripts a greater review than what would be afforded to an indigent defendant Thus, the order denying Maine his transcripts was quashed and the lower court was instructed to enter all such orders as are necessary for Maine to obtain a transcript of both his plea and sentencing hearings. Norman v. State, 30 Fla.L.Weekly 01058 (Fla. 2d DCA 4122105) In an effort to resolve a violation of probation (VOP) from an offense in Sarasota County, due to being arrested and convicted of an offense in Alachua County, John Lee Norma filed a writ of mandamus in the Second District Court of Appeals. 'In the petition Norman claimed and presented documents that the,state had filed an affidavit of violation, arrested him, and gave a ' first appearance hearing on the Sarasota VOP in Alachua County. For relief he sought to compel the lower court in Sarasota County to conduct a hearing on the affidavit alleging VOP, in hopes that any prison sentence for that VOP can be ran concurrently with the Alachua offense. When just a detainer has been issued against a prisoner, generally the prisoner will nOt be entitled to prison credit in the case causing the deta~ when he is sentenced in that case following the completion of the sentence he would be currently serving. However, if an warrant was transmitted and the prisoner was arrested under the authority of that warrant for a VOP, the prisoner may then be entitled to credit because of him being held on both the current charge and the VOP charge at the same time. In further revJewmg Norman's case the Second District noted from a prior case that a prisoner who has actually been arrested for a VOP is entitled to a hearing "as soon as practicable." 'See: section 948.06(4), Florida Statutes (2004). In Norman's case the state had not concede that he was arrested for the VOP, and the appellate court could not conclude that the lower court had a ministerial duty to conduct a hearing when it may not be deemed "practicable" to do so since Norman was imprisoned elsewhere. However, it was opined that if Norman was correct in that he was arrested on the affidavit ofVOP, then it would seem that he would have a good argument regarding prison credit for the Sarasota case that was accrued while serving his Alachua offense sentence. The Second District decided that is would. not resolve the matter in Norman's case. denying the petition, but opined that Norman would be free to. make his argument if or when the state conducted 'a hearing on the VOP in Sarasota County. arrest Jewett v. State, 30 Fla.L.Weekly 01152 (Fla. 4lb DCA 5/4/05) On appeal from a denial of a motion to .correct an illegal sentence where Todd R. Jewett. claimed he had been denied proper jan credit, it was found that what he was actually complaining of the Department of Corrections (DOC) application of forfeiture ofgain-time. One of the sentences that the DOC had a copy of for Jewett was found not to be the sentence imposed according to the lower court's files. That particular copy DOC had in their file showed Jewett was sentenced to a ~year prison term Florida Prison Legal Perspectives followed by twenty-two years of. probation for a second degree felony. . What the lower court files revealed was a stipulated order vacating that sentence. which was· Jewett's original sentence, indicating that he had been resentenced to nin~Ye8r prison with no probation imposed. As a result of these findings the state . conceded that the sentencing document DOC had a copy of and was enforcing was an illegal sentence. Consequently. the Fourth District Court of appeals reversed that sentencing order' and remanded the case back to the lower court. directing it to issue an order vacating ~t sentence. The lower court was further inStructed to furnish' the DOC with the vacating order so it would enable DOC to reCalculate the forfeiture of gain-time in accordance with the correct sentencing document. Cooper v. State. 30 Fla.L.Weekly 01156 (Fla. 411I DCA 5/4/05) The issue that was involved in Clayton Cooper's case concerned the trial court instructing the jury, in part, with a non-existent crime as a lesser included offense instead of giving the proper lesser included offense. Cooper had been charged. with attempted first-degree murder. but was convicted of attempted second-degree murder following a jury trial. The contents of the instruction the trial court issued related to. in Part. attempted manslaughter by culpable negligence, a non-existent offense. On appeal. the Fourth District Court. of Appeals opined that it was fundamental error for the trial court to instruct the jury that it may find guilt of the non-existent crime instead of giving the proper lesserincluded offense instruction. See: Reid v. State. 656 So.2d 191 (Fla. 1It DCA 1995). The state argued that Cooper had not been convicted of the n0nexistent crime. he was convicted of attempted second-degree murder, which was supported by the record. causing Cooper's case to be distinguishable from ReId. The state also cited to State \/. Abreou, 363 So.2d 1063 (Fla. 1978) and argued that in Abreau it was held that "[oJnly the failure to instruct on the next immediate lesser-included offense (one step removed) ~nstitutes error that is per se reversible." When the omitted instruction relates to an off~e two or more steps removed. the error is harmless. The appellate court, however, noted that, the Supreme Court later clarified that, Abreau "stands for the rule that a refusal to instruct on a lesser include offense two steps removed from the offense for which defendant is convIcted is harmless error." See: Acenslo v. Stale, 497 So.2d 640, 642 (Fla. 1986). The Fourth District found that the trial court in Cooper's case did not instruct on the next lesser included offense of attempted manslaughter, but rather. instructed on ~ non-existent offense. It was concluded that under Abreau and Acensio the error was fundamental and Cooper was entitled to a new trial. Accordingly, Cooper's case was reversed and remanded for a new trial. WIlliams v. Stale. 30 Fla.L.Weekly 01157 (Fla. 411I DCA 5/4/05) The main issue involved in Mack Charles Williams' case was a seizure of drug paraphernalia when authorities conducted an Inventory search of Williams' car subsequent to his arres~ for possession of cocaine. The arrest for possession of cocaine was executed away from where Williams' car was legally parked and where he was initially approached by the arresting authorities. After Williams' arrest, authorities allegedly followed their standard policy in the impo~ of his car by conducting an inventory search. That search revealed a crack cocaine pipe and digital scale found in the car. As a result, the authorities further charged Williams with possession ofdrug paraphernalia. At triat. Williams sought to ~uppress the evidence found in his car, arguing that the search was an unjustified inventory search. The trial court denied the motion to / suppress. it concluded that the standardized policy to tow an arrestees' vehicle, upon arrest, is "one of, the possible justifications" for a warrantless search. Williams appealed the denial of his motion to suppress. The Fourth District Court of Appeals noted that warrantless searches are generally prohibited pursuant to the Fourth Amendment. However. it was further noted that well-recognized exceptions to the. general prohibition have been, created. One of those exceptions is the inventory. search. . It was explained that such a search the needs of protection of the owner's. property, protection, of police against claims .of lost 'or stolen property. and protection aSainst potential danger from such things as explosives. , To satisfy the Fourth Amendment for an inventory search. . law enforcement must, conduct the search in good faith and not use it as a subterfuge to conduct a warrantless search for incriminating evidence. See: U.S. v. Prescott, 599 F.2d 103 (511a Cir. 1979)., A court' must determine the inventory search's purpose in whether the impoundment of the vehicle was justified. and not just a pretext to an exploratory search of it "Standing alone, the arrest of a defendant does not justify the .impoundment of his legally ~ car." Quoted from Robert M. Gross. Automobile Inventory Searches. L V 6 Fla. Bar J. 483, 484 (June, 1981Xciting G.B. v. State. 339 So.2d 696 (Fla.2d DCA 1976». The Fourth District found that Williams' car was legally parked in a .parking lot There was no evidence presented that the care was serves 15 Flqrida Prison Legal Perspectives in danger of creating'a hazard to the public or of· being lost or stolen. Consequently, it was concluded that the state may .not rely on the inventory search of Williams' vehicle. Accordingly, the denial of' the motion to suppress the related evidence seized during the inventory search was reversed. Williams' case was remanded for the lower court to vacate the conviction and sentence for' the use or possession of drug paraphernalia. ; Florida Parole Commission v. Hulkelbury, 30 Fla.L.Weekly DIl87 (Fla. III DCA 516/05) This case pointed out some . of the necessary showing a petitioner , must make to establish abuse of . discretion by the Parole Commission when it decides to suspend a presumptive parole release date and defer setting an effective parole . release date. The First District Court of . Ap~Is.. cit~ tp Williams v. Florida Parole 'Commission, 625 So.2d 926 (Fla. III DCA 1993). In Williams it was observed that an abuse of discretion may be established. in various ways, including a showing that the commission deviated from the legal requirements imposed upon it, such as the obligation to review the inmate's complete record and to articulate the basis for its decision. An abuse of discretion also occurs if the denial of parole is based upon illegal grounds or improper considerations. Once it can be shown that an '. abuse! 'of' diScretion has been committed, the Parole Commission's decision can be set aside by a court directing the Commission by order to reconSider its decision. . The petitioner in this case failed to show any of the showings necessary to establish abuse of discretion by the Parole Commission, therefore the denial of his petition was aftinned. 16 The First District reasoned, however, that.by strictly construing the rule regarding its time limitations in Anders cases would present a procedural quagmire. The United , States Supreme Court in its Anders deCision expressly provided for the indigent appellant to raise any points on appeal that he wished in a separate pro-se brief. It clearly intended to allow the indigent appellant to continue with the proceedings pro-se and any pro-se poirits raised on appeal would supplement the 'exhaustive review done by the appellate court to the extent they were properly preserved. Proctor sought to preserve or have corrected three errors. in the written judgment It was nOted by the First District that those errors did exist. However, absent the trial court's ruling on a rule 3.800(bX2) motion, the errors were not preserved, thus precluding the errors from being addressed on appeal. The First District gave the opinion that not to allow the filing of a rule 3.800(b)(2) motion after the filing of a counsel's Anders brief would render meaningless the appellant's ability to file a pro-se initial brief to the extent that sentencing' errors were raised in it. The outlet create by the Florida Supreme Court for preserving such errors in rule 3.800(b) would no longer be available. A counsel's Anders brief should not be construed as a "party's first brief." To be held otherwise would prevent a pro-se appellant from preserving aJleged sentencing errors that were missed by an appointed counsel: The opinion of the First District conflicted with that of the Fifth District in Rodr~ez v. State, 881 So.2d 671 (Fla. 5 DCA 2004). In Rodriguez it was held that a pro-se appellant may not file a rule 3.800(b)(2) motion after an Anders brief has been filed. The First District noted that the Fifth· District not only construed the Anders brief as the "party's first brief," it also was determined. by the Fiftli District that Florida Prison Legal Perspectives -_ .._----~ r ~_ _ - - - - -- -~-~------- -~ ~~. -- --_. - _ EXPERIENCED CRIMINAL DEFENSE ATTORNEY AVAILABLE FOR STATE AND FEDERAL POST-CONVICTION MATIERS • Admitted to the. Florida Bar in 1973 • Over thirty years experience in the practice of criminal Law • Providing represen~on in Direct Appeals, Belated Appeals, 3.850 motions, 3.800 . motions, 2255 motio~, State and Federal H~beas Corpus Petitions, Detainer Issues, and .other Postconviction Matters. .' ., n.. '1#9\liries~o: £aw Offices. of 'Danie{'D. :M.azar 2153 £ee 'Roaa Winter Pari, :1'£ 32789 'T'otf:free 7"ee 1-888..645"5352 Tee ·(407) 645-5352 :Fax: (407) 645-3224 Bernie DeCastro, Having overcome great adversity in his own life, Bernie can identify with the average working man. Sentenced in 1976 to life plus 30 years for drug related offenses there was little hope that Bernie would ever again be a free man. In 1983 he had a Spiritual awakening and his life began the process oftransformation. Three years later he was miraculously released on parole. In 1994 Bernie was granted a full pardon by Governor Lawton Chiles. Bernie is the Founder and President ofTime For Freedom, Inc. in Ocala, FL. . A few ofhis issues include: *Get in step with most other states criminal justice policies by adopting a "Get Smart on Crime" strategy rather than the failed "Get Tough on Crime" policy. . *Make the return of discipline in our public schools a top priority. Adopt an enforceable dress code. Better training and higher pay for teachers. Smaller classrooms. ·Continue to expand on the Faith & Community-Based Initiative. Especially when it comes to at-risk youth, prisoners, exoffenders, and substance abusers. *Ensure that the citizens of Florida never lose the fundamental right to amend the Florida constitution by a simple majority. . ·*TO FIND OUT MORE ·www.bernieforgovernor.com INFORMAnON ON Bernie DeCastro VISIT. IDS WEBSITE AT: U!e3§iEEE~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~iiiiiiiiii!ii~~~~~~~iiiiiiii!iii!~!!!!!!!!i!!!!~~17 Florida Prison Legal Perspectives such a motion (rtlIe 3.800(b)(2» would 'be an unauthorized filing because the appellant would still be represented by counsel at the time of the filing. Nevertheless, the First District conciude that to accept the view as opined by the Fifth District in Rodriguez would remove the main internal functions of the spirit of Anders. The indigent litigant's right to raise his own points on appeal would become simply illusory if he was barred from filing a motion to properly preserve the issues on appeal raised within his pro-se brief. . The First District granted Proctor's motion for' leave to file a rule 3.80O(bX2) motion in the lower court, and certified conflict with the Fifth District's decision in Rodriguez. not exceed the initial number) which . agrees with Tubb v. Florida Parole Commission, 580 So.2d 616 (Fla. 511l DCA 1991). . Thomas v. State, 30 Fla.L.Weekly 01280 (Fla. 4th DCA 5/18/05) In this case Dorrie M. Thomas filed a rule 3.800(a) motion in the lower court that challenged parole statutes. The lower court determined that Thomas did not have an illegal sentence and due to the motion challenging parole statutes, the motion was treated as a petition for writ of mandamus, the proper vehicle in reviewing parole statue challenges. ' . On appeal, the Fourth District Court of appeals affirmed the lower court's decision of treating the motion as a petition for writ of mandamus. However, it was found that the lower court erred in requiring Thomas to comply with section 57.085, Florid Statues. Collateral criminal proceedings are exempt'for that statue and the general indigency statue. Section 57.081, Florida Statutes, would apply. See: section 57.085(10), Fla. Stat. and Cason v. Crosby, 892 So.2d 536, 537 (Fla. 1" DCA 2005). . Nevertheless, Thomas was found not to be entitled to relief because his claims have been fully litigated more than once and without merit. [Note: This appears to be. the first case finding that Florida parol~ eligible prisoners may proceed as indigents under s. 57.081 instead of s. 57.085 in challenging parole commission actions, inactions or statutes. An important distinction as far as paying filing fees goes. - bp.] Jumper v. State, 30 FIa.L.Weekly 01309 (Fla. 2d DCA 5/25/05) Laine A. Jumper originally filed a rule 3.850 motion in the lower court, timely filed one-year' and 363 days after his judgment became final from a direct appeal. The lower court dismissed the motion because Jumper failed to include a proper oath. The order of dismissal stated it .would allow Jumper to refile a legally .sufficient motion. Because the order failed to specify a time limit to refile, Jumper sought a rehearing or clarification regarding the amount of time he would have to refile his rule 3.850 motion. The lower court granted Jumper's rehearing or clarification and issued an order that stated, in part, "the law is clear that a refiled postconviction motion that merely corrects a technical deficiency is not subject to the two-year limitation" regarding rule 3.850. The order reiterated its allowing Jumper to refile a proper motion again, without . including any time limit to file it Almost 9 months after the . lower court's order granting the rehearing/clarification motion, Jumper refiled his rule 3.850 motion. Almost one-year after that he. filed a supplemental motion to the rule 3.850 motion. Eleven months later the lower court denied all of Jumper's motions as untimely. (Jumper had filed tow other supplemental motions several months after the first supplemental motion. However, those two asserted new claims, therefore they were properly dismisSed). On appeal the Second District Court of Appeal cited to Mendes v. State, 770 So.2d 202 (Fla. 4th DCA 2000). In that case Mendes ,had been given leave to .file an amended motion for postconviction relief. Because Mendes waited eight months after the leave was granted, the lower court summarily dismissed the amended motion as being untimely. In Mendes, the Fourth District determined that Mendes had been granted the leave without the lower court specifYing a time limitation of when the amendment should be filed. Based' on those fmdings the Fourth District concluded that Mendes' amendment was not time barred. .Likewis'e in Jumper's case, the lower court did not specify a . Florida Prison Legal Perspectives limitation as to when Jumper's deadline would be to refile his motion. Over and beyond that fact, Jumper sought a rehearing or clarification regarding the lower court's order in relation to the amount of time he had to .refile, to which the lower court still failed to specify. The Second District opined that under the circumstances found in Jumper's case and being consistent with the Mendes rationale, it decided to reverse the lower court's dismissal of Jumper's refilled motion and his initial supplemental to that motion. The lower court was instructed to consider those motions on their merits. FIa.L~ Weekly D1235 (Fla. 5t1l DCA 5/13/05) The issue involved in this case concerned whether a firearm is an antique and it being a defense for a' convicted felon arrested for possession of such a firearm. David Christopher Bostic was arrested and charged with possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. He sought to have the charge dismissed arguing that the firearm he was in possession of was exempt from being defined as a firearm under the statutes because it was an' antique. . See: seCtion 790.001(6) Florida Statutes (2001). The trial court denied Bostic's dismissal motion' for two reasons. . First, it pointed to an interpreted that section 790.23 of the Florida Statutes as prohibiting any firearm, whether antique. or otherwise, from being possessed by a convicted felon. Its second reason was that because Bostic added a fiber optic sight tot eh firearm, it was no longer considered to be an antique or replica of a firearm manufactured in or before the year 1918. Bostic appealed the lower court's order denying his motion to dismiss the charge. The Fifth District Court of Appeals pointed out that the lower court's first reason was in error because the statute, or its face, provides that the firearm a convicted felon is prohibited from possessing excludes an "antique firearm." However, as to the second reason, the Fifth District agreed that because the firearm had been added to with mOdern equipment, the fireami was no longer considered an antique as pr~vided by the statutes defining an S~: . . section antique .firearm. 790.00I(1}, Florida Statutes (2001). The Fifth District also decided that the term "replica" under the statute is not so vague as to As a render it unconstitutional. result of the findings the· appellate court affirmed the lower court's denial of Bostic's motion to dismiss charge. Bostic v. State, 30 [Note: Fifth District's Judge Sharp gave quite an interesting and· wellwritten lengthy opinion dissenting from the court's majority decision in Bostic's case. It is a must read for convicted felons who enjoy the hunting seasons and plan to acquire a legal antiqued firearm for their hunting purposes. It depicts numerous ideas of precautibns one (convicted felon) should take when seeking to legally possess such a firearm.]-as Smith v. State, 30 FIa.L.Weekly D1310 (Fla. pi DCA 5125/05) . In this case the issue revolved around whether odor of marijuana on a person, .by itself, justifies searching an area from which that person came. Because of an anonymous tip to authorities that Douglas Smith was growing and selling marijuana in his' home, the authorities went to Smith's home to question him. After entering the home with consent and seeing no visible incriminating evidence, or' receiving no incriminating statements, the authorities requested and was denied consent to search the home. While there in the home, however" one of the investigating authorities noted that he detected a burnt marijuana odor on Smith's girlfriend's person. Afterward, consent to search was requested and denied a second time. Consequently, the authorities set up surveillance of Smith's home nearby while they sought to obtain a search warrant. During that time, 'Smith, his girlfriend, and their child entered their car and left the area. A short time later Smith returned to his home where he was advised by the authorities to remain in his car and that he could not enter his home: When Smith was advised by authorities that they -believed there was probable cause to obtain a search warrant and were awaiting such, Smith made a decision and negotiated with the authorities; allowing them to search his home. Ultimately, contraband was found At trial Smith sought and . was denied suppression of the' found contraband evidence. He had argued that the authorities lacked probably cause to detain him and secure his home, and that the negotiation to allow the authorities to search his home was .not a result of his "consent," but was, instead, an involuntary submission to authority. On appeal, it was noted by the First District Court of Appeals that in Brown v. State, 330 So.2d 861,862 (Fla. 4t1l DCA 1976), it was held that "probable cause cannot be based on mere suspicion, but must be based on facts known to exist." The only . incriminating fact "known to exist" in Smith's case was the odor of burnt marijuana on his girlfriend that was used to justify the search of his home. Like "plain view." .whatever probably cause the odor on the girlfriend would have provided was limited to the location of the "plain smell," which was on the girlfriend. The First District decided that the odor of burnt marijuana on Smith's girlfriend, by itself, did not amount to probable cause to search the home. It was noted that the fifth District has held an opposite opinion in that it does give probable cause. See: State \I. Bennen, 481 So.2d 971 19 Florida Prison Legal Perspectives (Fia. 56 DCA 1986) and State v. Wells, 516 So.2d 74 (Fla. ~I!I DCA 1987). Furthennore, it was found in Smith's case that his consent to search was coerced. thus involuntary, it was the result of submission to authority. Whereofflcers represent they have lawful authority to search, a suspect's tesulting acquiescence is not an intentional and voluntary waiver of Fourth Amendment rights. See: Bumper v. North Carolina, 391 U.S; 543, 548-550 (1968). In regards to the odor of burnt marijuana being detected on Smith's girlfriend, the First District pointed out that if such could have given probable cause to search the area from which she came, then the authorities could search anywhere she's been: the home she came out of; the car, 'after she entered it; and one would have to conclude that if she stopped and went into a neighbor's house, that home could be searched as well. The First, District declined the state's invitation to stretch the "plain smell" doctrine into a de facto roving proxy for probable cause. Accordingly, the First District certified conflict with the Fifth District's opinion and finding the search of' Smith's house illegal, reversed the denial of his motion to suppress. The case was remanded for the lower court to conduct proceedings· consistent with the First District's decision. July, 2003 due to failure of paying court fees or filing an affidavit of indigenci· Subsequently, Cooper filed a rule 3.850 motion in May, 2004, more than two years after his resen~cing in' February, 2001. Consequently, the lower court denied the ,motion as untimely, and Cooper appealed that decision. The Fourth District brought out that typically, the two-year limit for filing a rule 3.850 motion does not begin to run until the appellate court issues it mandate disposing of a direct appeal or, if no appeal is filed, when the time for filing such expires. Cooper's time limit for the rule 3.850 motion would have expired on or about March 15, 2003 but, he filed his belated appeal of the resentencing on March 8, 2003. Being the Fourth District granted that belated appeal, it was. as if Cooper filed the appeal back in February, 200 I, within 30 days from his rosentencing. Thus, not only did the lower court not have jurisdiction to rule on the motion, due to the direct appeal pending. Cooper's rosentencing had not become final until that appeal was dismissed. As, such, Cooper's time limitation to file his rule 3.850 motion did not begin to run until that dismissal. Therefore, the Fourth District concluded that Cooper's motio~ was timely, and the lower cOurt's summary denial of his rule 3.850 motion was reversed. Cooper Y. Stale, 30 Fla.L.Weekly D1386 (4dl DCA 6/1105) This case .involved the timelines of a rule 3.850 motion after a belated appeal from a re-sentencing Kennedy Y. Stale, 30 FIa.L.Weekly D1419 (Fla. 4th DCA 6/8/05) Ronnie Kennedy's case gave a good example of a manifest injustice. if relief was denied and it did, not matter that it was successively brought to the lower court on a rule 3.800(a) motion because the issue had not previously been raised in the appellate court. Apparently, Kennedy had previously brought up in the lower court, pursuant to a rule 3.850 ~otion, the claim that the lower court incorrectly scored his 0 0 o 20 became final Leon Cooper's sentence was reversed by the Fourth District Court of Appeals and upon remand, he was re-sentenced in February, 2001. Cooper's counsel failed to file a notice of appeal regarding that rosentencing. Cooper sought and was granted a belated appeal in May, 2003. That appeal was dismissed in 0 o conspiracy offense as a level 8 on his guideline scoresheet. .Later, . Kennedy filed a.rule 3.800(a) motion regarding the subject He argued that his conspiracy to traffic in cocaine offense should have been classified as a level 7 offense. 'The trial court subsequently denied him relief stating that his motion was sucCessive, and Kennedy appealed this decision. On appeal, the state asserted that it disagreed with Kennedy's argument and relied on the provisions of section 893.135(5),' Florida Statues (1998). which make conspiracies to traffic in illegal drugs equal in severity to the trafficking offenses themselves. Consequently, the state determined that Kennedy's conspiracy offense should be scored at a level 9, the same offense level as his substantive offense of trafficking in cocaine in excesS of 400 grams and less than 150 kilograms. The Fourth District Court of Appeals, after reviewing the parties arguments, stated that penal statutes should be construed in favor of the accused and against the prosecuting agency. See: Preston Y. State, 667 So.2d 939, 939 (Fla. 2d DCA 1996). For that reason, the appellate court held that the clear reading of section 921.0013 of the Florida Statues requires . 'that unlisted first-degree felonies are to be classified as level seven offenses. Additionally, . the state brought up the issue that Kennedy previously filed a rule 3.850 motion in the lower court. In reply, the Fourth District stated, "However, he has .not previously raised this issue in this court. Therefore, we determine that a manifest injustice would result ifhe is deriied relie£" As a result" regarding the issue raised, Kennedy's case was reversed and remanded for resentencing on the conspiracy offense to score it as a level seven offense. . Paige Y. Stale, 30 FIa.L.Weekly D1368 (Fla. 111 DCA 5/31/05) 0 Florida Prison Legal Perspectives .. . This case brought out a construing the predecessor' to the " Thompson v. State, 761 So.2d 324, current version of rule 3.850, the 326 (Fla. 2000), later held that the distinguishing effect from that of the date on the certificate of service opinion held in Proctor v. State, . Florida Supreme Court has held that controls issues of timeliness. probation "in and' of ~tself" summeized under this column of this However, when a document lacks 's " constituted "custody under sentence" 'FPLP issue herein. within the meaning of that rule. See: . certificate of service: as' it did in " On appeal. Terrill Paige's State v. Bolyea, 520 So.2d 562 (Fla. Westley's case, then the d8te on the counsel sought to withdraw the face of the motion is controlling. 1988). The Fourth District opined initial brief he filed for Paige in order See: Haag,Id. at 617 n. 3. that it saw nothing in the recent to seek leave to file a motion to .It was' further opined that correct sentencing error, pursuant to amendment to the rule to. preclude a rule 3.800(b)(2), in the trial court. probationer from seeking relief under whether a" prison official initials the rule 3.850. Unfortunately, however, The state filed an objection to the date has .no. legal significance.. the probationer in this case was Nothing in the rules requires prison granting of such motion arguing that officials to initial a motionts date. appellant's "first brief" had already . found to be untimely in his filing. . been served and, accordingly, the Such a ~uiremeni"would .. run counter to current case See: rule 3.800(b)(2) remedy is Westley v. State, 30 Fla.L.Weekly DI449 (Fla. 2d DCA 6/8/05) foreclosed. It was further argued that Haag, Id. at 617, where it was the rule makes no provision for reasoned that "the pro-se prisoner is The issue involved in this withdrawal of a party's brief if a case was whether a date stamp on an una~le t9 do anything but trust ~ envelope containing a prisoner's proprison officials... if they betray this sentencing error is discovered after trust. ..the prisoner is usually unable' . se motion is controlling because the service of that brief. stamped date is initialed by a prison to even prove who is at fault" " The First District, in official. agreeing with the state's argument, Because of the above William E. Westley's time findings' Westley's rule 3.850 noted the similarity of Paige's case to limit to file a rule 3.850 motion motion. was timely. The lower that of Proctor's but pointed out the distinguishing matter involved expired April 10, 2004." When he court's order of denial was reversed had filc;d that motion, it was noted by between the two cases. and the case remanded for In Proctor, the public the receiving lower court that a date consideration of the motion's merits. stamp on the face of Westley's defender filed an Anders brief on behalf of the appellant, where in motion reflected April 10'.:\r2004. However, the lower court also Paige's case an initial brief arguing noticed a date of April 13, 2004, was reversal of the case had been filed. Therefore, the First District stamped on the motion's envelope, SERVICE"' accompanied by the initials of a distinguished Proctor on that basis Com put er - Ty pe wr ite r prison official. . and limited its holding to the facts in. Consequently, the lower Proctor, where counsel filed an ALL KINDS OF TYPING Anders brief and the pro-se appellant court . reasoned that because the seeks to file a motion to correct stamped date on the face of the Including but not limited to: sentencing error prior to the filing of motion did not .reflect a prison legal Briefs. Newsletters, ArtIcles, his or her own brief. "official's initials, while the one on Books, Manuscripts, . Paige's motion to withdraw the envelope did, and Westley did Text Documents, Database, Charts, the initial brief was denied. not pr~vide any documentation Forms, Flyers,.Envelops, ETC... reflecting otherwise,' the date Black I Color Printing & Copying McFadden v. State, 30 Fla.L.Weekly accompanied by the initials of a lh D1415 (Fla. 4 DCA 6/8105) prison official controlled. Westley's ~plZelel 'Qetsza for prj8on~r8 This case briefly pointed out motion was denied as being untimely that probation is a "sentence" within and he appealed the decision. FOR A FREE PRICE LIST AND the meaning of Florida Rule of On appeal it was pointed out MORE INFORMATION CONTACT: Criminal Procedure 3.850(b). See: that a motion is deemed filed the Lyell v. State, 872 So.2d 447 (Fla. 2d moment an inmate places it in the LET MY FINGERS DCA 2004) and Fla.R.Crim.P. hands of a prison official: See Haag DO YOUR TYPING" Sandra Z. Thomas . 3.710(a) (providing ~t "[nlo v. State, 591 So.2d 614, 617 (Fia. sentence or sentences other than 1992). The date on the face. of the PO Box 4178 probation shall be imposed•.. It). motion deteniunes whether it was Winter Park, FL 32793-4178 The Fourth District Court of timely received by prison officials. Phone: 407·579-5563 Appeals in this case opined that Although not receding from Haag, . 21" "law. . . " TYPING I!:::==========!J ·'. ....... .. " ~ .. : Florida Prison Legal Perspectives .-',1 . ," ..' ..... ., ; .It; ...... f "~:e:-..~;. "'~~.' ~;: 'f . '\f'~r r ; " l /' - - - . : . . . . . - - - - - - - - - FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL Perspectives -------------- Florida Prisoners' Legal Aid Organization Inc. I BECOME A MEMBER . I YES ! 1wish to become a member ofFlorida Prisoners' Leg~ Aid Organization, Inc. 1. Please Check '" One: ·.Cl Membership Renewal 3. Your Name and Address (PLEASE PRINT) ___________ ~DC# _ Name Cl ~ew Membership . AgencylLibraryllnstitution IOrp/ 2. Select '" Category a SIS Family/AdvocatelIndividual Cl SIO Prisoner Address City State Zip Cl S30 AttomeyslProfess~onals Cl S60 Gov't AgencieslLibrarieslOrgsJete. Email Address and lor Phone Number er Please make all ~ or money orders payable to: Florida Prisoners· LcgaI Aid Organlzatian. Inc. Please complete the above fonn and send it with the indicated membership ducs or subscription amount to: Florida PrUonen' Ugal Aid OrpnIzaIIon Inc.. P.O. Box 660-387. C'!W"ota, FL 32'166. For family members or loved oncs of Florida prisoners who are unable to afford the basic membership dues, any contribution IS aa:epta~e for membership. New. unused • US postage stamps are acceptable from prisoners for mcmbcrsbip dues. Mcmbcrsbips run one year. l MEMBERSHIP RENEWAL F.A.M.M. Special Meeting Please check the mailing label on this Issue of FPLP to Saturday September 10,2005 9:30am determIne when you need to r&mrN so you don't miss an Pompano Beach Lib,,,,,, Issue. On the top line of the malRng label Will be a date, such 1213 E. Atlantic Blvd Pompano Bch FL as -Nov 07·... That Indicates the month and year that your Attendon all prisoners in Florida: Please urge your families FPLAO membership dues are paid up to. P~ renew your and friends to attend this special meeting. This meeting will be membership by completing the above form and mailing It , a ~ALL TO ACTION". 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WA9I117 (206)N6.I022 . n" ~.p~.luh";;!1!~~' ...4!J.X (0rdeIJ lICll:IqIlld by ptIaae« aafDet to FPLP so NEW ADD~SS (PLEASE PRINT CLEARLY) Nnme Inst.' "" Ii!lIIria. pGIWCUI acmda. GfIIl!iaIiaas) .tll q,duo fIIIIa S60. )aI'. A . . . . ClOp)' of PI.N is ...... tar $1. To (~ If so. 1)lease complete the below information ~ind mail it that the mailing list can be updated: Address Cit)· State E:JMuil to: FPLP. P.O. Box 666-387. Chuluotu. FL 32766 VOLUME 11 ISSUE 4 JUUAUG2005 -------_ .... __ .. _.. _- ---_._Florida Prison Logal Perspoctlvos . NON-PROFIT U.S. POSTAGE PO Box 660-381 Chuluota Fl32766 PAID OVIEDO,FL PERMIT NO. 65