Fplp Mar Apr 1999
Download original document:
Document text
Document text
This text is machine-read, and may contain errors. Check the original document to verify accuracy.
fEMALE ~m~ON CONDITION~ ·I~~UE~ TO BE ADDRE~~ED· Tallahassee - On October 10, 1998, Florence Krell, 40, a fcmale prisoner incarcerated 31 Jefferson Correctional Institution located near Monticello, Florida, ....'8$ found hanging dead in her solitary confinement cell after filing complainlS about brutality by prison guards. On Dcumber 3, 1998. another female prisoner. Christine Elmore. 25, was also found hanging in a Jefferson CI solimry confinement prison cell she died IWO days latcr at a hospital in Tallahassee witheUi regain- ing consciousness. Christine Elmo~'s death came just days after :m investigation was slaned in late November inlo Krell's dellth by a reponer from lhe Tampa Tribune, Michelle Pcllemans. Both deaths. which lhe Floridll Department of Corrections (FDOC) hils labeled suicides, sparked calls for nn independent investigation by civil rights groups. the news medin, and cenllin politicians, into not only the deaths, but also into conditions in Florida's female prisons. FI'LP initially reponed on this situation in the feature anicle in the last issue entitled "FEMALE PRISONERS' DEATfIS QUESTIONED." Since then there have been further developments. On January 6th, committees from both the House and Senate called prison IN THIEl IElEI~ • officials before them, and concluded that the answers given were inadequate. Slate senator Ginny Brown-Waite, RSpring Bill, head of the Senate Corrections Comminee, said following the hearings, that the deaths could have been prevented and that she was dissat· isfied with the FDOCs response to lawmakers. "They still can't answer simple questions," she said. The FDOC admitted during those hearings Ihat mistakes were made, bUi defended the depanment's suicide prevention procedures. This was not sufficient 10 Sen. Brown-Waite, who questioned whelher prison omeinls pushed Krell to the point of suicide while ignoring her pleas for help. "Do you push that person to the brink of SUIcide by slripping them and leaving them naked for 24 hours al a lime?," Brown-Waite asked. The senalor said that she would draft a bill that would require the Floridll Depanmcnt of Law Enforcement (FDLE) to investigate all future prison suicides and suspicious deaths of prisoners. On January 13, 1999, Gov. Jcb Bush dismissed as "inadequate" a 500page repon released by the FDOC in December concerning Ihe death of Florence Krell. That repon was inconsis- tcnt in accounting for the aClions of prison officials in the circumslances surrounding Krell's death. Governor Bush ordered Ihe FDLE 10 conduct its own investigation into both Krell's and Elmore's deaths and the disturbing circumstances surrounding Sllme that have come to light. Gov. Bush has also directed the FDOe to seek "investigalion assis· tance" from the FDLE following any future prison murders, suicides, or sus· picious deaths; whenever a lifethreatcning injury occurs in a confrontation between prisoners and prison staff: and whenever "major" corruption or criminnl nctivities are suspected in a prison. The U.S. Justice Depanment continues to look at whether n fonnal investigation is going 10 be necessary by that depanment. The FDDe investigation repon Ihat was released conceming Krell's denlh showed thai Krell had asked repeatedly to be transferred from Jefferson CI to Brownrd el's crisis intervention unit beforc her death. Prison slafT had determined Ihat her requests were manipUlative and summarily denied them. Depanmcnt records show Ihal the senior psychologist at the prison, David Schrimer, who only has mail-order cre- PRISONS FOR PROFITS BUND JUSnCEoDEATH NQTABLE-CASES FPLP SOUNDOFE MORATORIUM 2000 ESSENTIAL READING U.O.C.:PllBOC RECORDS AND POTATO PEELERS 3 7 9 13 15 16 18 dell1ials, delemlined that Krell was not a Ihreat to herself and chose not to report her allegalions of brulality by guards to other officials. When Krell aflempled to speak to a higher ranking correctional officer while in confinement, two male and two female prison guards falsely clltimed that she had becn placed on a "suicide watch." They used that excuse to justify forcing their way into Krcll's cell with n shield, seize her few possessions-such as n cup and toilel paper they c1nimed were "conlrnband"-nnd left her naked nnd handcuffed on the noor of the ccll. Krell later unsuccessfully filed complaints that she wns lef! in that position for days without water-after having been pepper-sprayed. When Krell llllempted 10 write to the judge lhnt had sentenced her to prison nnd to her mother to repon the abuse she was suffering and ask for help, her leller 10 the judge was confiscaled by guards. Despite the official profile thaI David Schriemer placed in Krell's file~, lhat she was psychologically normal, the FDOC's own investigalive repon contained numerous illlerviews with other prisoners and guards showing thaI Krell was deeply troubled and hnd desperalely sought help to no avail. The repon detailed how Krell had stopped grooming herselr. tnlked to herself, refused to ent and had threatened to kill herself. In among the interview repons from other prisoners aoom Krell'S state of mind. FDOC investigators continually repeated references to Krell having been an exotic dancer. had breast enlargement. and her sexual preferences. The FOQC repon concluded that Krell was solely responsible for her own death. The report also exhibits inconsislencies in whelher prison guards had acnml1)' made rounds to check on confinemenl prisoners. or whether lhey had just falsified the logs and then skipped the required evcry half hour security checks. Very few prison confinement units in Florida prisons have any means for prisoners to let gunrds know they are having a problem or medical emergency beyond banging on the door. But that often lends to disciplinary aClion agtlinst prisoners. and in many cases to a beating or gassing by gUllrds, according F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 2 to numerous reports received by FPLP staff. The FDOC's investigation into Christine Elmore's delllh was expected 10 be released by February, bUl WllS not available at Ihis writing. Officials slate that Elmore had asked to be placed in solitary confinement after being lransferred to Jefferson CI from Florida CI becausc she feared another prisoner at Jefferson who she had once testified against. Elmore had only been at Jefferson CI for eight days at the time she was found hanging unconscious in her cell. Following calls by FPLP, lhe Miami officc of the ACLU, continued pressure primarily from reponer Michelle Pellemans of the Tampa Tribllne, and the threal of a pending Justice Depanment investigation and new legislation from Senator Brown-Waite, on January 20th the FDOC's new secretary, Michael Moore was called before a HOllse cornmillee to answer questions. Despite the ~get tough" reputation that Moore has broughl with him to Florida, he infonned the House committee that positive changes are going to be made in Ihe prison system. Even though Moore's predecessor Harry Singlctary's repon on Krell'S death found no wrongdoing, Moore told the commillee thllt more than 21 prison employees, including six in supervisory positions, were involved in the incidents leading 10 Krell's and Elmore's dellths. He lold the commillee that disciplinary action is pending Ilgainst some or all of those employees upon the completion of an independent investigation. Michael Moore also told the House commillee that hc is making changes to the depllnment's rules to include his orders that no prison may force prisoners 10 go naked or take disciplinary action against them for injuring lhemselves. Moore said thaI he has directed the re-estabtishrnem of a Standing Advisory Commiuee on Female OITender Issues composed of domestic violence and sexual abuse expens to address "serious female oITender issues." Moore also ordered Jefferson CI guards to undergo additional training. - TERESA BURNS. FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL PERSPECTIVES POBox 660·387 Chuluota, Florida 32766 PublisbinS Division 0(; n.oRlllA_taC,U.IolD~'I1IOI<,1IOC:. A 501(c:)(3) Non PTofil Orglll1iwlon (407) 568-0100 Web: hllp:Jlrnembcl'uol.comIfplplrplp.hlml .. _-_ _._ ___._-- _ FPLAO DIRECTORS TERESA BURNS BOB POSEY DARRYL McGLAMRY DAVID W. BAUER. Esq. FPLPsrAFF PlIbltwr TERESA BURNS Editor BOB POSEY Layout EdUor JOHN OAKS Rllallc:h SHERRI JOHNSON Admln.Aul•• USA FAULKNER TRACIROSE FPLP ADVISORV BOARD W\l.Ll.AM VAN POYCK PHnJP BAO\..EY· SHARON SIMMONS TEPJl. Y VAUQHN • M1ClfAliL LAMBRIX AlAN J. COTTON. IAMfS QVI0L£Y lAMES TAYLOR _JUDIE ItI0HT0WfJt CARL WELLS - GLENN SMITll ORlAN MORRIS -EARN HOWAPJ) UNOA OOTTUED • SUSANNE M. MANNINO lANEPRATr· PAUL ADAMS KIMBI!IU.Y PEOf>LES - PEJ'ER BlANTON JAMES MA10R - BNRIQlJ£ DIAl SCOTTORAY fLOlUDA nJ50N IS:lAL I'EJ.SI'fCJlVES .. pIIIiolIoIl w~""1'IcwIdo rn--. t..opl ~0rpIIb.0Il0a" 1.0<-. Iml It. CotoaloJ Dr.• 0tIW0. f1 Hi'll., MoiIiot Addr-: Fl'LAO. 1'.0. Doo 66O-Jl1. 0W>0u. FL )2166fl'Ll' 10 • Noo>I'rotIl ~ I!lo Florida , . . . LOll lriooio>oI.iu*o ~..;D; ""' <II . voIIido Ibr &III! _ _ all' pno....., ...... ,.,..,.. Iliooo<lo &III! _ LOll "'" pul6; 01 florida &Od "'" U.S. ~ 01 crioooo LOll f'llCiIIlvl... ....a.- <II lOriJy IIeo. ...., ripe, «IIlI!ibona 01 ~ood~....-...olIIoi '" l'ri-a. ... ....-...~ aIIio:Iala. ... .. .... m.P io ...... 10 ocl4ral. Tl>o Wor-a io FPU' dooo IlOl -..wily roo'la<I "'" ........ <II "'" _ _ II&IJ. JI\IlIli<aUoo. oIF1'U' .. IIIIdt ,.,......,. v tbo read« ondJuPllO""".~"""'" &Od_ ~ ~ h ...... '"' oubocripdooo s~ SIO-&oo <lI:h-., ns.e..- ..-.r d""'" -""""- FI'U' 'udm ood "'Pl"'fU:n 0IIidea, _1nrormoIiooo. &Od IOClOIllI'lb.no ro. poooiblo puI>IaUoo. s..bo<ri;IdoI _ _ MIl 1>0 a<k-wpd ..,. tbo ... ocriboo'. ,0<ICipt <II "'" ""'all ;.",. 01 m.P. ~ . _ ......,. ........ IU6.-.....,.IO~hloplocMoo. - lluolO....uw<llolOilLOllotoll" ~ oil 0001"""""'" I>o,..,.,&d .... but ....... _ . - ~ _ ,.,.,.. .. Jf-.d 10 fl'U' &Od ",,'""'*"I _ _ ......n.l II> Fl'Ll' ~ w.o.i6od 10 IM ....._ NOTICE ~-- The inrormation in this publicstion provides news and opinloo rrom various totlll:CS and may not prpvide sllmc:ient infomwion 10 deal with alc:pl problc:m. Neithc:r the IIIlblishcr, nor nalT, warT1IIIlS or n:~u the sllitabirity or the inrormauoo in this public:alion fOI insullll'n/l any Jellt action. An Itton:>c:Y or other knowtedac:abte pc:non in I di~. puled Ilea 'hould be conslll!ed for experience In lep!~. J'hjspu~ic:ation sbould nor be relied 011 U aulhoritanve CltaUon, ========='Page 2 CORRECTIONS COMMISSION CALLS FOR FEMALE PRISON CHANGE During late January, John D. Fuller, Executive Director of the Florida Corrections Commission, called on the new Floridll Department of Corrections (FOOe) secretary, Michael Moore, to exchange North Florida female prison Jefferson CI with II male prison in South Florida. For the pasl IWO years, the Commission has recommended to the FDOC and the Florida legislature thai such II change is needed, yet no action has been laken on the recommendation. The Commission has maintained that such a female 10 nllll~ prison conversion is necessary as the majority of female prisoners arc being housed in North Florida prisons, while most of their homes and families arc in South Florida. The Commission cites that this problem fails to accommodate the needs of female prisoners in maintaining relationships with children and families. At present there is only one prison in South Florida for female offenders, Broward CI, thai only has the capacity for approximately 500. That leaves the vnst majority of Florida's approximate 3,500 female prisoner population being placed in institutions in the northern pm1 of the state. An estimated 70% of those female prisoners are from South Florida. It will be interesting to see how the FDOC's new secretary addresses this problem that the Corrections Commission has obviously made a priority on their agenda, as it should be. ISource:Tampa Tribune, Rptr. Michelle Pellemans, 1/27/99]. PENDING ACTIONS Censorship Challenge Filed A-42 U.S.C. sec. 1983 action has been filed in the U.S. District Coun for the Southern Dislrict of Florida challenging the FOOC's censorship of "sexually explicit" books and magazines. The aclion seeks declnralory and injunctive relief againstlhe FDOC. The action requests the court to declare that the FDOC's censorship rule at 33-3.012(2), F.A.C., as has been applied to the prisoner plaintilTs, is a violation of the plaintiffs constitutional rights in that the policy is unconstitutionally vague, overbroad, and is not related F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 2 to a legitimate penological interest. Injunctive relief is sought to enjoin the FDOC from further enforcing the policy. The plaintiffs in this action are the Komar Company (the parent company of PnperWings), a Maryland corporation that publishes nnd sells books and magazines; and Florida prisoners Richard Davidson, Jr. (Okee. CI), Thomas Chick (Okee. CI), Louis Gaskin (UCI), and Ted Herring (UCl). In addition to the secretary of the FOOC being named as a defedant, the superintendents of bolh Okeechobee CI nnd Union CI are named defendants. This action is still in the initial stages with an amended complaint having been filed in late December. The plaintiffs in this case are being represcntcd by two .I!torneys from the Maryland law firm of Brown, Coldstein & Levy, LLP, and Florida attorncy Lawrence G. Waters of Winter Park. FPLP will carry updatcs on this case as it proceeds. Komar. Davidson, Gaskins, and Herring V. Singletary. Pre· vall. alld O'Neill, Case No:98-14294CIV·Davis. Close Management (eM) Challenge Attorney Pcter M. Siegcl. Florida Justicc Institute, has agreed to represent a system-wide legal challenge to Close Management confinement conditions against the FDOC. The basis of the action is the claim that long-term Close Management confinement causes serious deterioration in the mental health of prisoners nssigned to such solitary confinement in violation oflhe Eighth Amendment prohibition against cruel and unusual punishments. Only declaratory and injunctive relief is being sought. Only prisoners on CM will be considered plaintiffs. The aclion has not been certified as a class action yet, although such will be applied for if other prisoners intervene in the action as plaintiffs. For more information contact: Peter Siegel, Attorney, Florida Justice Institute, First Union Financial Ctr., Stc 2870, 200 So. Biscayne Blvd., Miami FL 33131-2310. Early Relcnse Crcdit Cases In the latest issue of The Informalll, Vol. 2, Iss. I, Feb. 1999, a publication produced by the law office of attorney Bernard F. Daley, Jr., is good coverage of the Dec. '98 decisions of the Fla. S.C\. concerning control relense. emergency, administrative gain time, and provisional credits. That issue examines the T1Iomas, Downes, Meola, Jones, Meadows, Gomez and Lancasler decisions. As copies of The Informanl were provided to all prison law libraries, and because FPLP could not add anything to Mr. Daley's analysis, for information about those cases it is suggested that The fIr/orman! be reviewed .• PRISONS FOR PROFITS Chanting "Keep it state, keep it safe:' and "Public safety not for sale," 125 corrections officers from around the country held a rally in front of the corporate offices of Wackenhut, Corp., in Palm Bch. Gardens, FL, on Feb. 5,1999. The public-employee prison guards vowed to fight the growing privatization of prisons nationwide, starting with the protest against Wackcnhut. one of the world's largest private prison companies. The rally was part of a Ihree-day quarterly meeting of state and municipal correction's guards who are members of Corrections USA, a nonprofit corrections organization. The rally was designed to prolest the boom in prison privatization across the country, not just in Florida, which now has five privately operated correctional facilities. Citing that "private prison" companies do not do adequate background checks or provide enough training to their employees, the public guards claim Ihal prison privatization is dangerous. They also claim that private prisons can conceal assaults, escape attempts, and other matters because they don't come under the same public access laws as public facilities. At least 18 states have allowcd some part of their prison system to be privatized, said Pat Cannan, a Wackenhut spokesman. Cannan claims Ihat Wackenhut private facilities arc as safe, or safer, than public correctional facilities. "Our safety records are exemplary at all our locations," he stated. He also repeated the standard lure for privatization, that states can save money by using private companies to operate prisons, a claim that has been debunked in several studies. [Source: Pellsacola Neil'S JOllr., Page 3 chain-link shank. That was the eighth stab· bing at the facility in six months. In other recent privatization news: • Between Oct. 5th to the 8th, 1998, 35 immigration detainees at the • During Oct. '98, four prisoners Wackenhut-operated INS facility in escaped from the Correctional Corp. of Queens, NY, weill on II hunger strike to America-operated (eCA) $0. Central protest their lengthy confinement while Corr. CIT. in Wayne Co., TN. All four awaiting hearings for political asylum. were later recaptured. The reason cited for the escape was inadequate slaffing. Dur• In .Aug. '98. II U.S. District Court ing September '98 there had been an es· judge prevented the opening of a cape allempl at the same facility. A recent Wackenhut.openued juvenile facility in report by TN officials detailed that inci- Jena, LA, after finding that it had an inad· dents including assauh and drug posses- equate number of guards. doctors lind sion at the same facility was 287- higher teachers. than at suite facilities during 1997. 2/6/991 • New Mexico prisoner Joshua McCann was still listed in critical condition a week after being found beaten llnd uncon· scious in a cell at the CCA-operated Tor- rance Co. Detention CIT. in New Mexico on Sepf. 10 '98. It was several hours before McCann was found. CCA staff was alerted 10 the beating by a phonecall from outside the facility. • Three officers at the Wackenhut· opcrnted Lea Co. Corr. Facility in Hobbs, NM, lost thcir jobs following an Aug.- 13 '98 incident that raised allegations of misuse of force against prisoner Tommy McManaway. Two LIS. resigned and the associate warden of the facility was removed, with four other officers receiving reprimands. According to an NM DOC report one Lt. kicked the prisoner in the groin as he lay on the noor in handcuffs and leg shackles. Another officer reported that he heard the associate warden tell other employees that he "wanted to hear a thump" when they took the prisoner down, and to "stick to their stories and he would back them up." The DOC report exhibited thai Wackenhut had concealed information from the public concerning the incident. The state allorney declined to press charges against the officers. The Lea Co. facility has been locked down at least ten times since May '98 following incidents of violence according to its warden. Following a stabbing at the facility in Dec., Wackenhut officials were looking for ways to make it difficult for prisoners to fashion weapons out of pieces of chain·link fence. The prisoner was Slabbed 93 times with a F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 2 • On Aug. 5 '98, II guard at CCAoperated Whiteville Corr. fucility in TN was injured in an altercation with prisoners. The facility houses prisoners from Wisconsin. On Nov. 10 '98 Wisconsin DOC officials released infonnation to the press that following the officer's assault 15-20 Wisconsin prisoners had been abused during interrogations that CCA officials had conducted. Wisconsin DOC investigators found that prisoners had been slammed into the walls by CCA gUllrds, had been struck in the groin and shocked with stun devices, nil to force the prisoners to answer questions. Despite the findings, WS DOC officials continue to send prisoners to the CCA facility. [Sources: Private Corrections Indllslry Neil'S Bullelin, 11/98; Pr;.fOlI (.egol News, 1-2199; USA TODAV, 12(31/98]_ WORK AND CONTROL More on Michael Moore In the last issue of FPU' it was reponed that the Florida Ocpar.tment of Corrections (FDOC) has a new secretary in charge of the agency. Michael W. Moore, 50, replaced fonner FDOC secrelary Harry K. Singletary. Moore has been confinned in the chief FDOC position and took over fron) Singletary in January. Moore comes to Florida with a controverSill I history in corrections that has some in Florida concerned about the future of the FOOC. Moore hails from Texas originally, where he spent 28 years as a prison guard, warden and regional director of the Texas DOC. Only minimally educated, Moore receive an A.A. degree from a Texas community college in 1973, and followed that up with a degree in criminology and corrections in 1976. He is married and the father of five children. In 1995 he left Texas and took over as the commissioner of rhe South Carolina Department of Corrections. Shortly after arriving in S.C.. the worst prison riol in S.C, for the past 20 years was credited to Moore's "get tough on prisoners" policies, At least 32 prisoners and 6 guards were injured in the riot thai occurred at the Broad River Correctional Institulion. As soon as Moore arrived to take over in S.C. he began implementing severe changes to thnt system, which in tum created serious problems and earned him criticism from not only civil rights advo· cates, but also from many in state government and the news media. In addition to requiring S.C. prisoners to wear short hair, slate provided clothes instead of personal clothing, cutting out packages from families, implementing new mail and publication censorship policies, and cutting out proven recidivism-reducing college and workrelease programs, Moore also stopped S.C. prisoners from receiving a paltry 18-cents an hour work payment, and instituled an 18-hour workday. Moore's policies in S.C. had prisoners starting work at 4:30 AM, and kept them busy for the next 18 hours at doing something. Moore pays lip·service to the idea of rehabilitation-stating, however, that his idea of rehabilitation only comes from work and control of prisoners. He does not believe in calling people in prison "inmates" or "prisoners,". he likes the term "ofTcnders." He says thaI no one shou ld lose sight of the fact thnt "offenders" are where they are because they committed crimes. This new FDOC "boss" says lhal the FDOC needs 10 be nm more like a business. Commenting on Ihe widespread negative impression that he created in S.C. and his business ideas, "COIltr.II'Y 10 whal a lot of the news media said in Soulh Carolina, wedid a lot ofgood things, both with education programs and economiz· ing," he said. "I believe in system management, like Wal·Mart." For one example, commenting on the FOOC, "I believe Page 4. the prison system has several thousands acres that the department owns and could be in production," In S.C. he clnims to have cui per prisoner meal costs by about 25-ccnlS with increased fanning practices. "Thai'S whal 1mean by saying we need to run Ollr prisons more on a business side," he said. Florida 1·louse Corrections Committee Chairman Allen Trovillion. R-Winter Park, said that he has lalked "prison philosophy" with Moore on a few occasions since he has been here in Florida and admires his approach to corrections. "About 90. percent of the men who are there don't have a high school diploma," Trovillion says. "They need some programs not only in education but to change their way of living, thought patterns, and to learn some lifemanagement skills. Mike Moore believes in making them learn that." "He'll whip the Florida system imo state Senator David shape," claims Thomas, R-Greenvil1e, chainmm of the S.C. Senate Corrections Committee. "I wouldn't call what he does a punishment model. bm a control model, and it works," commented Thomas. But Moore also has many detractors that he 1cfi behind in South Carolina." The emphasis in the department changed under Michael Moore, from training and gelling inmates ready to go back into society, to punishment," said GlIston Fairly, a Columbia, S.c.. allorney who represented prisoners III lawsuits against Moore. "It was discipline, bllt not good discipline. Prison itself is punishment, but [Moore wasn't] trying to make a person beller while they're in there." staled Fairly. Moore hos said his goals in Florida are "instilling order and discipline," and supporting the FODe's employees. He spent most ofllis first month on the job meeting legislative leaders and making some changes 1I1 the top administrative positions in the FDOC. He brought with him his top deputy from S.C., Mike Wolf. who will apparently replace Singletary's deputy secretary, Bill Thurber. And he has recruiled Theresa Coker, former pcrsonnel direclor for Ihc FL Depanmcnl of State, to be his assistam secretary for exeeutive sCl'Yices. Moore was (allegedly) recommended 10 Florida's new governor Jeb Bush, by F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 2 fonner Republican S.C. governor David subject (0 retaliation by prison starr. The Beasley. Bush said that Beasley's stories of five women aTC looked at in the "lough-guy" recommendation of Moore report. All five arc part of an ongoing was just what he had in mind for the Inwsuit against the Michigan Department FDOC position. Jeb Bush laughingly of Corrections. The lawsuit concerns shrugged ofT the suggestion thai his "am- claims that prison offieillis hnvc not ing Moore to replace 1·larry Singletary stopped guards and staff from sexualiy aswas a shift from rehabilitation 10 saulting and abusing female prisoners, and punishment in Florida prisons. "You that when complaims were made about the think we've been doing that? Rehabilita- abuse that retaliation from guards was the tion?" asked Bush, incredulous. "I think result. The repon is entitled Nowhere to the geneml philosophy of corrections, the Hide: Retaliation Against WOlllen in /I,fichifirst priority. needs to be to keep people gan Stare Prisons. For more infommtion who have commitled serious crimes in on the repon contact: !'Iuman Rights jail," Bush said. "The way to keep them Watch, 350 Fifth Ave .• 34th Floor, New from coming back is the second priority- York, NY 10118-3299. Ph.lI: 2121290an imponant one-and it is to provide job 4700. Fax: 2121736-1300. Email: training opponunities, education opponu- hrwnyc@hrw.org. nities,drugrehabilitation." Web:http://www.hrw.org/reDuring his first year, Moore says ports98/women/. [Source: Prison I.egal that he will tmvel to every FOOC News 2/99). institution to meet as many staITas he cnn. ~================i One of the first issues thllt Moore WHERE DID CRAIN will have to deal with in tile 1999 legislaGANG CHARLIE GO'! tive session, IIccording to one state representative. will be the continued For those of you who :lfe wondering. push to privatize prisons in Florida. A bill has already been ,IIled'III the House to ..... hal happened to fonner state $t:natOT make private prisons in Florida take Charlie CriSI (R), who 10Sl his bid at the the same high security-rated prisoners as U.S. Senate in Ihe November 1998 dection. the state operated prisons have. Currently he has lnnd~d nnothtr Slate job. Charlie, there nre five privately operated prisons who tried to campaign on the backs of in Florida that have only generally nc- prisoners, presenting him~elf as the cepted minimum or medium security pris- "toughest" all loekint up criminals and oners. making it lough for them in prison. had Moore has said that he hasn't taken a went SO fllr 11$ to give himself the nkknaml.' position on prison privatization, although "Chain Gang Charlie" after he pushed fur he real izes it is one of the top concerns the reintroduction of e1min gangs in Fladdll. of state correctional officers. "I'm neither On Feb. 10.1999, Charlie (who some for nor against privatizing," he said. prisoners caU"l'he Tuna," because he "just "Thot's a decision far above my head. But isn't good enough") was appointed deputy this criminal justice system is so large, secretary of the Florida Department of everybody could take a bite of it-lake 10 Business nnd Professional Regulation. It's a bites-and we'd still have plenty left." bet Charlie doesn't try to get IQugh on [Sources: Tallahassee Demacral, Internct] tHe business community in fhnl position, • or he may just find himself as a r --jsnnil8tion engineer in his next job, Sorry FEMALE ])RISONER ABUSE ~C:::h",,,-d,,,;ec.I.:.:- -, REPORT Recemly the HUrlllln Rights Watch issued a new repon detailing an investigation of repons of abuse of female prisoners in Michigan. TIle repon cites thaI Michigan female prisoners are being held III inhumane conditions and that women who challenge the conditions lire SEVEN ACQUITED IN BEATING AND DEATH OF FLA I'IUSONER Fori Myers - Aller a six-day trial in the federal court located in Fort Myers, Florida, seven of the ten former Florida correctionol officers originally indicted in Page 5 the beating and de:nh of prisoner John Edwards at Charlone Correctionallnstitution, were acquited by a jury on Jllnuary 15. 1999. The ex~FDOC guards. had been indicted last year by a federal.grand jury after being charged with violating Edward's civil rights by beating Edwards over several days and then after he CUi his own wrists, allowing him to bleed to death over a 12-hour period, chained to a steel bed. Ten FDOC officers were originally chnrged, and all ten were fired by the rooe when the seven-counf indictments were handed down on July 10, 1998. [See: FPLP, Vol. 4, Iss. 5, "FDOC CORRECT[ONAL OFFICERS INDICTED BY FEDS."] Only seven of tile fomler guards, that had held rank in the rDOC from entry level officers to Captain rank, were taken to lrilli. The other three officers pled guilty in exchange for their testimony against the other seven and the possibility ofa lighter senlence. Yet, in spite of that testimony, thnt detailed the horrendous condilions that John Edwnrds had been subjected to for several doys before his death, after tWO days of deliberations the jury (eighl men and four women) returned n not guilty verdict on all counts. Now, only the three ex-officers who testified against the other seven. and who pleaded guilty, will possibly go to prison for Edward's abusive treatment. They still face sentencing. Acquitted by the jury were fanner FDDC guards Capt. Donald Abraham, Capt. Kevin Browning. Sgt. Michael Carter, Sgl. Gary Owen, COl Richard Wilks, Paul Peck and Joseph Delvecchio. The prosecution's witnesses were exofficers John D. Robbins, Roben Shepard and fonner Sgl. Thomas J. McErlane. Defense attorneys for the other seven aequited officers allacked the three witnesses' testimony. saying they were the ones who beat and abused Edwards and were lying on the stand hoping to get lighter sentences by involving others - particularly supervising officers. [t lliso was presented as relevant that Edwards was in prison for killing his estranged wife and anal her man. and thlll he was a selfprofessed Satanisl. In testifying III the trial, John Robbins was considered a key prosecution witness. He admilled that he was perhaps the most enthusiastic of Edward's attackers. F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 2 According to Robbins testimony, Edwllrds arrived at Charoloue Correctional Institution (CCI) on the night of Aug. 18, 1997, escorted by Zephyrhills Corree· tiona I Institution (lCI) guards Joseph Delvecchio and Gary Owen. Infon1llltion had already been received at Chnr. CI that Edwards had lunged at a ZCI guard, Dominick Denicola. and bit his cheek and then taumed the officer thai he had AIDS. Robbins detailed how Edwards was beaten vinually from the moment he arrived at CCI and was beaten and abused for the next four days until Edwards cut his own wrists and wns then allowed to bleed to dealh chained to a metal bed. When Edwards was first pillced in a cell, Robbins testified that he was there aloag wilh former Sgt. Michael Caner, Roberl Shepard, and Thomas McErlane. Robbins said he and Carter ran Edwards into the cell wall, threw him to the ground, whcre Robbins hit Edwards six to eight times forcefully in the stomach. He said that he grabbed Edwllrds by the hair nnd sllll11med his head into the metal bunk severaltirnes. While Edwards WIIS on his knees. Robbins testified thai he kicked him in the genitals four to six times, and then "everybody began hilling and kicking him." While lhis first benling took place, Robbins said thai former Capt. Donald Abraham stood watching before telling the guards to' SlOp. Guard Delvecchio, who Robbins also claimed was present, then looked to his Sergeant. Owen, who nodded, followed by Delvccchio punching Edwards in the face. The whole time Robbins said thlll Edwards was meek and compliant, :lIld was not resisting or trying 10 a{lack lhc guards. Afterwards, according to Robbins, Abraham told the guards to falsify reports stating that Edwards attacked the guards position whenevcr an officer came into the donnitory. "It was a foml of intimidation to let him know lhal we had complete control of him," Robbins testified. Robbin's work partner in the confinel11ent unit. Richard Wilks, used another fonn of harassmem against Edwards. he would "ainnail" him his food, throw the food imo the cell and onto the floor. claimed Robbins. TIlen he [Wilks!10[d the inmate to clean up Ihe mess by picking lip the tray and hitting Edwards with it once • maybe twice," stated Robbins. Former Captain Kevin Browing, showed up later to see Edwards and slapped him twice, lauming him. according to Robbins. On Aug. 21, other prisoners began banging on their doors to draw the gUllrds anemion to Edward's confinement cell. When Robbins and former guard, Pau I Peck, arrived they saw Edwards pacing in pools of blood, pouring from slashes in his ann. '''Let me go! Let me die! Don't call medical!' he was screaming," Robbins told the jury. It was detennined that Edwards had cut his llmlS with a slmrpened idel1lification eard clip. The guards called Browning and a nursc, but by thc time they arrived Edwards was laying face down in thc blood unconsciOLlS. After nurses bandaged. Edward's arms, white he was still handcuffed behind his back, the guards took him to the psychiatric ward. [n the ward, Robbins said. Edwards was put face down on a mctal bunk. Browning stood over him and kicked Edwards in the bUllocks, telling him he beller hoped he died, before Edwards was turned over and strapped to the bunk by his wrists and ankles. That's whcn Browning bcgan tonuring Edwards. pulling hairs from his cyebrows and thighs with Wilks. who was M and had to be cOnlrolled r--------~-------------.., Thc next day, Edwards was so cowed that he would gct on his knees and touch his fore· Eight years exp~rience with DOC. head 10 the noor and Very reasonable rotes. place his hands behind his back on command, Work Release, Drug Treatment Transfers Robbins told lhe jury. Plus much more. "You beller bc right," Robbins stilled he would For More info, call Mary Cruce Crosby "t tell Edwnrds. signllting (850) 668-2599 (no collect calls please) Edwards to gct into the L. .J Work Release Services of Florida Page ~ also present, delivering blows to Edward's chest as he arched his back. Robbins said. Browning follo"''Cd that with several slaps to Edward's face, then ordered another inmate-an orderly who had washed the blood off Edwards in the shower-to hit Edwards, which he did. twice. Then the inmate orderly looked at Robbins "like. 'This gU)/S unconscious: shrugged his shoulders and walked oul," Robbins told the jury. The other two witnessing ex-oOicers described ho'" they. and the other officers waged a campaign of abuse against Edwards. Raben Shepard described how he was told by former Capt. Abraham before Edwards arri\·ed at CCI. th31 the prisoner "'auld be beaten ",hen he got there. Former Sgt. Thomas McErlane testified how he and se\'eral other officers continued to tonnenl Edwards for the three days before he 1001.. his own life. After those witnesses teslified, former Capt. Donold Abmham lOok the stand in his own behalf: He testified that he did nothing to hun Edwards or to cover up his anack. While Abraham admiued that force was used. he denied witnessing any officers beating Edwards as Robbins had claimed. He said that after Edwards arrhed at CCI. he got a call from the officers esconing Edwards to confinement \\ho told him that Edwards was combative and they had to use force. He said that \~hen he talked to Edwards later he told him that nothing had happened. Another officer, Ronald Filipowicz, who wasn't charged, lestified thm he wns there when Edwnrds was first broughl in and he didn't sec Abmhfllll. Delvecchio or Owen. A correClional probatl'on officer m CCI. Danelle Fasanella. testified that she saw Edwards Ihe day before he died and she S,)\\ no injuries on him. Jury members questioned after they had relumed the nOI guilty verdict said that there wasn't enough e\'idence to convict. One juror. Dave Rice of Naples. said: ~AlI I wanl 10 sa) is that \Ie decided the verdict based on the evidence. Irs the onl) decision \\e could make." Juror Donna Huffman sllued, "We felt for Ihese men. They did their jobs under Wfb r1llf ,\dllrnl: hllp:J/lllfmbfruol.romirpliVrplp.hlml E·mlil.\ddrru: rplplIlol.fom nlrphon~: (401) ~8-02DO F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 2 very dire circumstances.~ Some jurors expressed that they had "rc:servations~ about so",e of the defendants. but thllt ultimately they did not feel the prosecution presented enough evidence to convict them. Managing Assistant U.S. Attomey Doug Molloy. who prosC1:uted the case, showed no emotion when the not guilty verdicl was read. When asked his feelings loter. he said the trial accomplished one thing: It brought lhe allegations of abuse into the public eye. "Justice is done when the trulh comes out." Molloy said. "John Edwards died after three days at Chnrlolle COITCctional Institution. These were the men \~ho came into contact \~ith him. He was bruised, mangled and beaten. ~ Slated Molloy. Following the verdict. siaff at CCI went on a heightened alen for trouble at the institution. apparently fearing prisoners' reaction to the not guilty verdict. No trouble resulted, however. According to Ihe CCI superintendent, Warren Cornell, everybody was relieved that Ihe trial was over. He indicated that sOllle other officers and staff had been vocal about the situation. that some had thought the charged former officers should ha\'e been convicted while others had hoped they would be acquiled. John Edward's mother. Nonna Edwards. commenting by phone from Patriot. Ohio. after being infomled of the verdict. said. "I think whut my son must have went through. Thai'S terrible. I feel like his dellth was in vain if they're not going to improve Ihe prison situation." Prisoners at eCI have stated that conditions lit the institulion 11lIve actually worsened since the former officers were acquined. "There's been :I nOlice:lble change." one prisoner wrote_ "The officers :lct like they kno\\ they can get away with anything now." Another prisoner \\rote FPLP; ~I was at CCI from 1988 10 1997. Anyone who has e\ier been there knows \\'hnt goes on. Nothing will change. At least three of the (fanner officers I ~\ill pay something for whllt happened. That will only be II drop in the bucket. however, to what has been done to hundreds of prisoners over the years at CCI." (Sources: Charlolle S,m Herald 1113/99. 1/16/99: Charlotle Herald Tribune, 1/16'99: Neil'S Press. 119.'99: Readers. Ad- visors] • BLI 'D JUSTICE DEATH by Carl Ridgeway Denzel Washington is currently working on n project depicling the life of champion middleweight boxer Rubin "I-Iurricane" Carter who, as some of yOll know. was exonemted from a life sen/ence stcmming from n 1967 murder conviction. Aner nearly two decades in prison. I-Iurricnne. as Bob Dylan's lyrics describe him. "siuing like Buddha in a ten-foot cell. an innocent man in a living hell,R was frecd in 1985. Hurricane now lives in Toronto. Canada, and runs the Association in Defense of the Wrongly Convicted. In midNovember 1998. Hurricane mel with 29 other people who like himself havc been falsely accused. falsely convicted. and linally exoneraled against all the odds 10 conduct a conference on false convictions and the death penalty. Several of the 29 others came within hours of execution before the madness ended. As highlighted at the lirst National Conference on Wrongful CO[tvictions and the Death Penally. helcfat Nonhwcstem University in Chicago. since Ihe Supreme Court reinstated capital punishment in 1977. 75 wrongfully convicted people have been exonerated and freed from death rows across the country. By early February of this year Ihere have been 513 executions since the death penalty was reinstated. ThaI'S one exoneration for every seven executions that have occurred. With numbers like Ihose, it should be apparent Ihat the criminal jus[ice s)'stem is seriously flawed. Contrariwise. in true-ta-form political double·talk, politicians like former Illinois Govemor Jim Edger says dala like thllt only proves that ~the system \\orks. R1-10\\ ironic it should be then for Edgar to learn that many of these exonerations had little or no help from the judicial system. The judicial system did not free the Ford I-leighlS Four convicted of two murders in 1978 in 0 Chicago suburb. These four young men were exonerated in 1996 through the efforts of Professor David Protess and his Nonhwestem University joumalism studenlS because Ihey picked the Ford Heights Four case as a class Page 7 project And on February 6, 1999, Proftssor Protess, a private investigator and several journalism students registered another success with the release of Anthony Poner alier 16 years on Ihe Illinois death row. Last fall, Poner, who was convicted of murdering two people in 1976, and who onl} has an I.Q. of 51, came within twO days ofbcing eXe<:utcd and only got a stay "hen his hm')ers raised questions about his ability 10 understand what was happening to him. With just a few weeks of investigation, Protess and his students discovtred that the main witness againsl Poner claims that police pressured him to Ics\ify against Poner. Funher investigation led to another suspect's wife who implicllted her husband in the lIlurder. When confronted by a college professor and his dctennined students, Ihat other suspect, Alstory Simon, confessed to the killings on video tape. ffPoner'sconviction is ovenurned as expected, he will be the 10th death-row prisoner in Illinois. and the 76th nationwide, 10 be exonerated since the death penalty was reinstated. Professor Protess imends to cominue working on other cases and ....'ants to establish an "innocence project" at Nonhwestern. "What we need is a network of innocence projects across Ihe country," he says. A System That Only Gets Worse What lillie of the system II1lIt did work is fast being eroded through the effons of pro-punishmcnt politicians. Congress has defunded the nation's Death Row Resource Centers, which provided appellate lawyers for many prisoners on dcath rows. Then in 1993, the Supreme Coun ruled that the discovery of new evidence Ihat might prove innocence is no bar to exe<:ulion. To lOp il all off. President Clinton, \\ho tried everYlhing in his power to see that his 0 .... n due process rights ....eren'! being violated. allowed the gUlling of habeas corpus by Congress. severely limiting the ability of death row prisoners' to file appeals. This occurred with the passage of the Antiterrorsim and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA) (note the combination, terrorism/death penalty, as if the two were connected). Although statistics show thilt on aver- F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 2 age ;1 takes 7 years to find the evidence to exonerate a person,lhe AEDPA contains a statute of limitations requiring deathsentenced prisoners to file their one appeal to the federal eouns within one year, or in certain cases, in only six months. In the pasl, federal couns have found re\'ersible constitutional errors in over 40 percent of the death sentences they have reviewed. This will cease under the AEDPA. Federal couns are now prohibited (by a congressional law) from ovenurning a state coun's death sentence unless the sentence was "unreasonably" erroneous or contradicts explicit Supreme Coun rulings, even if other clear conslilutional violations exists. MoraloriulII Needed Few contested death sentence convictions ever receive widespread media notoriety, like Hurricane Caner or Murnia AbuJama[ (a journalist who is silting on death row in Pennsylvania for allegedly murder~ ing a police officer in 1981, yet who has thousands of supponers claiming Ihe evidence does not suppon the conviction). Most of the death·sentenced gel very lillie allention, judicial or mediawise, like Willie Enoch of Illinois, convicled of murdering a woman in 1983. Enoch has steadfastly maintained his innocence, and one day before he was seheduled to be executed he won a 90 day stay for independent DNA testing on a key piece of evidence. Independent tesling because prosecutors eonducced their own DNA tests and then refused to let outside investigators review their alleged positive findings. Upon Enoch's stay in November 1998, Senator Rick Hendon made a powerful proposal: a moratorium on all executions in Illinois until all capital convictions could be tested with DNA analysis where applicable. Senalor Hendon earned quick opposition to his idea and one of his delractors was Dudley Sharp from the pro-execution Texas group Justice for All. "When we usc vaccines, we accept Ihat a cenain number of people are going to gCt sick and die from their use. retaliated Sharp. Vel, Sharp's analogy is sophomoric at best. When an indi\'idual has need of a vaccine. usage of the vaccine is administered with prescience of the possible benefits andfor side effecls. Our judicial system is manned by monals and carries no such disclaimer as a vaccine does. It is unconR scionablc thai innoccnt people could be PUI to death for a crime they did not commit. II should never be considered palatable to have an "acceptable level of wrongful executions" as Sharp suggesls and other pro-death demagogues suggest. All Slates .....hich employ capital punishment should consider Ihe moratorium proposal. After Anlhony Poner was released in early February. bOlh of the major newspapers in Chicago called for a ban on capital punishment in Illinois until a review of the entire system can be conducted. As Bruce Shapiro, columnist for The NO/ion points out, "Most death row inmates were convicted before the new DNA technology was available. or if there was scientific evidence at all it was cooked by uncenified, unsupervised and, sometimes, corrupt stale crime labs, as investigative repons from West Virginia to Washington Slate have revealed." [t should be noted that, once again, due to a celebrity case (OJ. Simpson), much of Ihis substandard and comlpt crime lab anaylsis and repons have come 10 media auemion. Surely if one person's life is spared by such a (ClNll",wd Oil po~ /1, rRISO:~ LEGAL :-a:.w~ "l'ab.1J15 lhe IOOSt dttltiJeJ jouma1 \k"tnb· Ina !he .JC".d~t of priwrt I.,.... 1\ rtiwn Lej.all\e\.\,," •. !\1liMl H'kro,. DIle<.tOf ('moo Law I'roj~1 of the N31iillW11A\\).:rs Guill! III,N is II 24 ('lIge. InUlllhl) raUl//lline, publi'hctl )illr-l: 1m. editttl b)' WllshilllllOl\ Slute prisoner! Paul Wrigu :11111 nan I'en~ Eaeh I\S\I<.' ih packed with ~Umnwki llrld II11JI· )'5i5 of rt~nl eOlJJ1 mlinili dr:lllill~ willi pnson rights, WriUe\l frOUI tl pr!$OIler pctspeeti~e. .\15(\ indwkd [n ClIeh issUl: Me ~" ar1lel.:3 dealing \\ith prison'rel,lltd slfUllllle lind ,Ie· lili'1I1 frolll tho: U S and aroond tilt "arid Annuat subscriptioa Tatl::> lIIfC SIS fllt' pri.>0fICrI. If)'OU e:JII'1 aflOrd tt) :>~"l\d $ 1j JI nn.:c. ~ II lea\1 $1-'0 ;md \\'1: ..... ,11 ~f:l,le )uUr wbscnptiort $I SI2j per iuue. PltMekMIlo) less th:1l'l S7.S0 [)tf llon3tiro.. Nt"" (UnlbOJl US. posta,,: !um~ may be: tw:J iQ p.l}1I1O'11 fnJ' non·iIlCilrue:ra!ed IItJi~ld\lllh. the ~1lbKripllun f:lt!: is SlSl}T. tlblitutll)llllli sl>tlj..ripli~ (lor .>I~~ hbrnrit'i, gt'I'an· ment 3~1a. l\Of\.govcrnll'lCtltll <>tpniu. Urortl. de.) Jfe S60-)T. Sample CUf'IM are Il\-J[]lIble lIlT SI. Cont;m; 1'!Uon ~I News NOONW 8OthSt.Ste 148 ScauleWA9S117 Page 8 NOTABLE. by SIBri JohnsDn Retroactive Application of Parole Regulation Extending Consideration May Violate Ex Post Facto Clause On lanuary 6, 1999, the federnl Elelenth Circuit Coun of Appeals rclersed and remanded a Georgia distriet court's grunt of summar)' judgment for the 5t~"': p3rnle board holding thai the relJOIICllle llpplie:ation of parole regulations that coxlended the lime belween parole considerolion hearings wns not violathe of the E.x Post Facto Clause. The Elcl'enth Circuit delermined thnl the regulation at issue gives rise to a significant risk of incrensing Ihc mellSure of punishment aunehed to prisoners' crimes that clUInot be said nOI to violatc the Ex I'ost FllClo Clause..... here the regulation requires parole eligible prisoners to wait ~ight )'~aB belween consideration hearings, 15 not hmited to a elm of prisoners for \Ihom the likelihood of parole release: is quite remote, is not Clll'cfully tailored to inlend only to further a legitimate end and not 10 increase the quantum of punish and does not pro\ide for procedural safeguan1s, as noted lUId appro\ed in Califorma lRp't a/Corne/lOllS v. JfOfTJ/u, 514 U.S. 499 (1995). to require a full hearing. n:vic:\\ of nil rele\'lI.lIt facts, and stalement of panicularizcd facts relating to prisoners' likely future Pllrole eligibility. GA prisoner Roben Jones was given a life sentence in 1972 for murder. In 1992 he was gi\en MOther life sentence for another murder At the time ofthe second offense. GA parole regulations pro\ided for initial ramIe consideration afta 7 )-ears. and e\et)' three )'ears thereafter. Afier Jones was sen· teneed, but before his first 7 )'enr considernlion, lhe parole boan! amended its rules to prol ide parole reeonsidernlion only oncc elCl)' eighl years. Jones WIlS initially considered for parole in 1989, 7 )eaB after the 1982 comietion, and parole \\llS denied The board scheduled lone's rcconsidero.tion for eight )'ears later. In 1991, ho\\eYet. the F.benth Circuit decided Adkins \I. Snow, 922 F.2d 1558 (lllh Cir. 1991), finding that the retroacti\'e application of lhe parole consideration extention of the GA reguilltions violated the Ex Post Facto Clause. Jones wns lhen reconsidered for F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 2 parole in 3 )'car inten'als, twice. In 1995 the Supreme Court decided CalifoITua lNP'1 0/ Cornetlons v. Mornles. and the GA parole board rt:ld Moroles as olerruting Adki,u and rescheduled Jones for parole reconsidero.tion in eight )ears. again. Jones filed 11 Sec. 1983 llCllon in Ihe district coun, which dismissed the complaint as frivolous, llrld which was subsequently re\ersed by the Elc\enth Circuit on appeal. On rcmand from that appeal bolh Jones and Ihe parole board filed for summar)' judgment, \\hich the district coun granted to the p:trole board agn:cing that\foralrs olenumed Adkins. lones appealed again. lind the EIe\'enth Circuit found that the summal)' judgment fOf the parole board lIas eftor, nnd significantly, thnl Morales reinforced the dccision in AdkIns because the GA regulation lit issue did nOl meet Ihc requirements as expressly approvtd in \forales to In'oid falling afoul of Ihe Ex Post Facto Clause, Sec: Jones v GarlIer, F,3d ,12 FLW Fed. 082 (I IIh Cir. 116,99) INolr: This t i n may han II signlfinnt 1mpilei on It significanl number of Florida Ilrisoner5 who are lIn role t'liglhle. If c1mllengu are raised. In 1997, following tht' Marala decision, the FL legislalure amendrd parole slalulu to provide (or parole reconsideralion hearings 10 be held e\tf)' 5 ) ears, nther Ihan the (ormer 2 )'urs. for prisoners who ha\'e been con· vicled of murder, ltllemptt'd n!Urdu, uxual bauery. altempted sexual ballt'ry, or senlenced to a 25 yur minimum mandatory unlt'nce. The ameathnent also provitlt't1 for the ulension o( presumplive parole relusc dales (or 5 )'urs in cerlain circumSlanCts for Ihe same class o( prison. ers, Chap, 97-289, l...aws o(Florida, amend· ing seclions 947.16, 947.174, 9.t7,I 74S. Fla. Slat (1997). As in Ihe Gt\ regulalion In Ihe i1bo\'e aOletl case, Ihe 1997 amended FLpArole slatuies do nOl appear 10: be "cllrt'fully laHored," provide (or II full (initial or) reeonsideralion hellrlng, give Ihe parole hoard Ihe lulhorily 10 lailor the frequency of subsequenl reconsidenlion hearings of the particular drcumSllnces or the indi\'idual (ucept for prisoners who are within 7 )'urs of lentati\e parolt' release date), or only npply 10 a c1l1ss of llris. oners for whom Ihe likelihood o( rt'least Is quill' remole, etc. IwO Inlt'resllngly, approximllely weeks bdore the Elevenlh Circuil issued Ihe above decision, Ihe 1st DCA slate appeal court upheld Ihe denial 0(1 prisoner's n: post (acto challenge concerning the 1997 amendmenls, and Ihe parole commission's use o( SlalUlts and rulu enacted after his crime was commitled 10 sel his presumpliYe pllrole release date orr nOer his parole was revoked. That cau is allorney represented and can probably bt uptcled to go further, See: Brown I'. Fla. Paro/~ Commission, _So,2d_,24 FLW 12J117J98).-sjJ Against Ltni~ne)' for Testimony: Voices in the Wilderness In luly 1998. a three judge pancl of the 10lh Circuit Court of Appeals entered a stunning decision lhlll prohibited fcderal proseCUlOrs from using a witness' ttslimony if there was any promise of leniency in the witness' 0\\," criminal case. United StairS \'. Sing/~ton, 144 F.3d 1343 (IOlh Cir. 1998). In less Ihan ten days that decision was vaeated, lind in January the full Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals re\'trsed the luly 1998 deeision relying on the "Iongstllnding practice of lenienc), fOf testillIony." Uni/l:d S/a/tS v. Singleloll, No. 97-3178. 1999 WL 6469 (1/8199). The three: judges .... ho hid written the original decision dissented from the majoril)' opinion thai now allows the fedtllll government to offer a witness leniency in exchllllge for that witness' tcstimony. BUllheir voices have been all bUllosl in the resounding rejection of their July 1998 decision. In more than 40 cnses in over 20 jurisdictions lhal cile the original Singlcton decision, thirty-eighl have di511greed with it. Gh'en the gOI'emment's he.av)' reliance on buy. ing ttslimony in order to secure convictions, Ihls tesult was sadly prcdiclable. Whal is nslounding is that two federo.l dis· tricl courts hn\'e had the couroge and wisdom to adopt lind apply the reasoning of the original Singletoll decision. In United Slat~s v. Lowery, Jr., IS F.Supp.2d 1348 (S.D. Fla. 1998). the coun granted II. defendant's mOlion to suppress the testimony of three: co-defendllnts \\ho had entered into plea bargains wilh the: government. Applying a plain IlUIguage interpreullion to 18 U.S. Code Section 201(e}(2) that proYides for a finc or imprisonment to -whoever" offers anYlhing of value for tcstimony, the I.owery COUrI, like the original Singfrton coun, decided the 80vernment fit within the definition of ~whoel'er.- What is good for the goose was Page 9 good for the gander. The court stated. -Where a wilness. either for Ihe !gO\'ernmet1tJ or Ihe defense, knows that a promiR of leniency or other thing of value is inextricably intertWined with his testimony, the incentive 10 lie and to curry favor is lremendous.... [I]ncluding the prosecution (in prohibiting payment for testimony] would not work an obvious absurdity, but .....ould clearly preserve Ihe integrity of the judicial process." In Uniled Sttl/es \'. Frag/lefa, No. Crim.A. 96-0339. 1998 WL 560352 (E.D. La. 8127/98), District Judge Berrigan entered an order granting the defendant a new lrial becaUR the testimony ofseveral pivotal witnesses violated Section 201(cX2). Judge Benigan rejected the government's argument that it only offered leniency for "truthful" testimony, noting "il is frankly difficult to envision a more powerful incentive to shade lestimony a particular way than avoiding criminal conviction and loss of freedom." Although these voices for integrity arc virtulIlIy lost in the wilderness, Congress mo.y have heard at least an echo ofjustice on October 21, 1998, when it enacted 28 U.S. Code Section 530B, the "Citizens Protection Act of 1998." Taking effect in April 1999, Ihe new law will require federal prosecutors and 0.11 government attorneys 10 follow Slate rules regarding ethical conduct including prohibilions against communicating with persons "ho have an attomcy. Praised by the criminal defense bar and corporate counsel and denounced by the U.S. Department ofJustice, it remains to be seen whether this new law will sound even 1I whisper. [Reprinted from: Coalilioll for Prisoners' Righi Nell'sfelter, 2/99} , 30 DlIY Limit 10 Seek Judlektl Relid Per 5.95.11(8), r.s., Not Applicable 10 eM Challenge Whenever a FL prisoner has tried to claim that sensory depriving solital)' con· linemen! in what Ihe FDOC calls Close Management (CM) is punishment, the FOOC vehemently denies that CM is punishment or intended to be pUI!ishment. In a recent case, however, the FDOC"conveniently" cillimed thllt CM was punishment and that CM proceedings were ~disciplinary proceedings," Ilnd got a circuit court to agree, but then realized the consequences of their duplicity and had to back pedal - fast. F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 2 Prisoner Derwin Norris filed a petition Statutes (the habitual offender statute). See for writ ofhabeas corpus in the 2nd Jud. Cir. Hale v Slate, 630 So.2d 521 (F1a.l993). Ct. claiming a due process violation in the Approximately twenty-one months later, on procedure used to assign him to CM status. July 20, 1995. the Florida Supreme Court announced thP,t its decision in Hale applies The Florida Depanmenl of Corrections retroactively. See State v. Caffa\lQ)', 658 (FOOe) argued that Norris' claim was So.2d 983 (Fla.l995). Problems arose, barred as untimely filed pursuant to section however, when the Coffoll'oy Court ex95.11(8), F.S., which requires FL prisoners pressly held that "a Iwo-year window fol· to file any judicial challenge to prison lowing [the) decision in Half! shall be disciplinary proceedings within 30 dllys of provided for criminal defendants to chalIinlll exhlltlstion of administrative Ilppellls. lenge the imposition of consecutive habitual The FDOC Illnintained thai CM was offender sentences for multiple offenses arising from the slime criminal episode.~ "disciplinary eonfinement~ for the purpose Id., at 987. The Coffall'a)' Court's decision of moving for denilll of Norris' petition. The in effect - and BClUally . deprived criminal circuit court agreed with the FDOC and defendants of their right 10 a full two-yellrs denied Norris' petition on the stlltute of to file clllilllS for relief from the time thllt the limitation grounds. decision in Hole was announced to apply Norris didn't give up though, he filed for retroactively. Gregol)' Dixon's case illustrates juS! certiorari review of the denial in the 1st a wk il can sometimes be for how difficult DCA, which no doubt surprised the FDOC !l pro se criminal defendant to obtain warwhen the review was granted. This surprise ranted relief. In the alternative, Dixon's was evident when the FDOC immediately case could be lin indication that some conceded to the DCA that the 30 day Iiling judges, under cenain circumstances, are limitation did not appl)' in Norris' case, just not too serious about the oath lhey took since CM was not "disciplinary coniine- to protect an individuals rights. Dixon was sentenced on April 23, 1991, to two 30 year ment.~ The FDOC made this confession in a motion for Ihe DCA 10 relinquish jurisdic- prison teons, enhanced pursuant fO Ihe tion back to Ihe circuit coun for funher habitual offender statute. The trilll C(lurt consideration of Norris' petition. The DCA further enhanced Dixon's sentences by ordering them to run consecutively. The overaccepted that as lln admission of error by the all 60 year prison sentence stemmed from FDOC and QUASHED the lower court's offenses that lIrose during a single criminal denial of the habeas petition and RE- episode and were prosecuted in a single MANDED the case: for funher proceedings. After lhe decision in f1ale was enSee: Norris \' FDOC, 721 So.2d 1235,24 tered. on August 12, 1994, Dixon Iiled a pro FLW 084 (Fla. 1st DCA 12121198). se Rule 3.850 motion seeking relief from his conseculive H.O. sentences. The trilll court Timeliness of Unauthorized summarily denied Dixon's motion and the Consecuth'e Habitual Offender Third DCA affinned, per curiam <-PC,' ~), Sentencing Claims without 1I written opinion. Later, the Third DCA, attempting to justify its PCA deciFloridR Rule of Criminal Procedure sion, claimed that it assumed "f/nle 3.850 authorizes criminal defendrtrllS to mise would nO! be retroactive." Dixon 1'. Stme, claims of entitlement to relief based on be- 697 So.2d 966, at 967 (Fla. 3d DCA 1997). Illted changes in the IRW which invalidates After the decision in Callall'a)' was entered the constitutionality of their origillltl Dixon liIed a second Rule 3,850 motion conviclion or sentence. Indeed, the main seeking Hale relief. The trial coun lIgain pUrpoR of Rule 3.850, coming as it did in denied relief llIId the Third DCA affirmed response to the United Stales Supreme based on its Iinding that Dixon was -in the Court's landmark decision et1tered in Gideon position of having raised the Hale issue both \' lI'oin»'righl, 372 U.S. 335 (1963), WlIS too early and 100 late. ~ Id. Fortunately for to allow prisoners the opportunity llnd a Dixon, the Third DCA did certify the fol"forum to challenge conviclions affected by lowing question as a matter of gteat public the chanee of law announced in Gideon. In importance: Florida, such claims must be raised within 'two years of the date thm a change of 11IW is WllETllER ,IPPELLANT'S RULE 3.850 . hcld to apply retroactively by eilher the MOTION SEEKING RETROACTWE BENFlorida Supreme Coun or the Uniled States £FlTOFIMI.E V. STATE, 630 So.2(1 521 Supreme Court. On October 1'1, 1993, the Florida Supreme (Fla. 1993). SIIOULD BE DEEMED Coun held thllt the imposition of consecu- TIMEii' FILED WHERE (I) APPELI..ANT tive sentences for offenses commitled dur- SOUGIlT IIAU;; RELIEF PRIOR TO TilE ing a single criminal episode arc not autho- ANNOUNCE.\lENT OF CALUlWA I: AND rized under section 775.084, Florida RELIEF WAS DEN/ED; AND (1) APPEL- ""'. Page 10 LANT FII.£D ANOTHER MOnON FOR FPLP's Notable Cases recently noted an POsrCONVICTION RELIEF, BASED ON HALE, WI7"NIN TWO rEARS AJ'TER opinion rendered by lhe First DCA pertaining to Ihe forfeilure of prisoners gain-lime CAI.LAIl'Al' WAS IINNOUNCED, for filing frivolous pleadings. The aniele. entitled ~Frivolous Pleading Tunnel Vision,~ The Florida Supreme Coun granted Ff'LP Vol. '1 Iss. 6, indireclly prnised the review. rephrased the cenified question. llnd First DCA for doing the right thing and receded from its holding in Col/away "to the denying the Slatc's request to have Joseph limited extent that it utilized the Hale deci- Saucer's gain-lime declared forfeited. Saucer sion as the basis for calculating the two-year had petitioned lhe First DCA for 1I writ of window in which an eligible defendant habeas corpus seeking II belaled appeal on could seek /-Iale relicf,~ Although it cer- the basis that he had, 10 no avail, requested tainly didn't come easy. Dixon did finally his ,morney to take an appeal. The First. obtnin the relief he was entitled, [n the DCA relinquished jurisdiclion and nppoinled process, the Florida. Supreme Court held a special master 10 conduct a hearing, "The that "defendants whose Hale c1nims were special masterr ] ... found lhat, while client summarily rejected prior to Callaway would and counsel discussed an appelll after a sup' have had two years after {the] mandate in pression hearing was denied, later Saucer Callaway to refile their claims." See Dixon entered a plea wilh the understanding lhal \'. Stmc. _ So.2d _ . 24 FLW 5671 (Fla. there would be no appellate review: SOllcer February 4, 1999). V Stmc, 23 FLW 01972 (Fla. 1st DCA. [While finding this p:wiculllr cllse inter- 8·17.98). Based on lhe special masler's findesting, 1 couldn't help but wonder about ings, Saucer's petition for belated appeal the individuals who were in similar sillla- was denied without a wriuen opinion. lions as DhQ//; but, because the Calfali'(I)' Assuming the position lhat Saucer had Court expressly held that "a two )'ear 1knowingly or with reckless disregard for the window following Ilhe] decision in Hale truth brought false information or evidence shall be pro\'idecl ..," failed 10 timely file before the court. lhe Slale moved for an their c1l1ims for Hale relief. Declluse it's order forfeiting Saucer's gain.time pur· only reason:lble 10 believe lhal the 0/11- suanl to seclion 944.28(2)(a), F.~, The away Courl meanl just whal it said, that Stale's request WIIS initial 1)' denied when the defendants hnd two years 10 file their Firsl DCA reluctantly deternlined that "it is claim from the decision in Hale, I firmly the role of lhe [FDOC]. nol the court. to bel1n'e the DL\'oll Court erred by holding order the forfeilurc of gain-lime." Id. thaI defendants can only benefit from the The First DCA recently withdrew its 11//11' decision if they filed their claim initial order denying the State's request to "within Iwo years of th~ dale Ilhe] man- forfeil Saucer's gain-time and substituled it dale in Callaway issued on ,\ugust 16, with an order granling the forfeilure. For 1995," DLl::oi" at S69 n-7, Although an whal it's wonh. the Saucer Court did certify illegal sentence may be challenged al :1Il)' to the Florida Supremc Court, as a matter of time. two olher exceptions to the Rule greal public importance, the question of 3,850 IWO )'ear limitation period are I) whether section 944.28(2) (Il) actually apnewly discovered facts thai could not plies in criminal and collnteml criminal proha\'e been discO\'ered lhrough the exer- ceedings. But see, Ril'/:ra V. Stml!. 24 cise of due t1l1lgence; anll, 2) a chllnge in FLW 559c (Fla.• 12-10-98) (noting that the law Ihat hllS bten held 10 apply further filings of issues that should have been retroacth'e. Allhough Ihe decision in Uule or actually were raised ~on appeal or in prior was nOI held 10 apply relro:'lCli,'ely until postconvictlon proceedings .... could result the decision in C//II/11wy was rendered, it in ... sanctions under either section 944,279 seems only reasonable to conclude that or scclion 944.28(2)(a), [F.S.] (1997)."). Sce the decision in O,/fUII'II)', holding that rhe a/so, Adkins 1'. State. 24 FLW 047 (Fla. 5th, IWO years 10 bring Uale claims bl'gan DCA, 12-23-98) (warning Adkins lhat ifhe when the Ill/Ie decision became finlll, persists in filing new collaleral challenges to frustraled the right 10 bring Ihe claim his conviclion .... he may lose gain lime llnd within lWO )'ears from lhe date the risk imposition of other sanctions.-). change of law was held 10 :lPllly retroac[n his dissenl. Judge Websler found lhal live in C(l/f(lll'fl)', Because the I\\'O year seclions 944.279 and 944.28(2) (a), F.S" pl'riod was certainly frustrated b)' the which the majority relied upon 10 juslify its eXllress holding set out in Caflflll'u)'. il gllin.time forfeiture in a criminal proceeding. seems 10 me thai the onl)' reasonable solll- was "enacted as pans of chapler 96-106, lion is to I'ro\'ide cligible defendants a Laws of Florida {and] establishes with relafull two yl'ars to bring Uale c1aims.-bml tive clnrity lhat its intent was to address only frivolous or malicious civil litigation by inSlamming The Door mates." The majority, however, found no on I'risoners' Aceess reason Why Ihe gain-time forfeilure cannot 10 Court in Criminal and apply to criminrtl proceedings. ~ See Sallcer \0, State. 24 FLW D37b (Fla. 1st DCA. 12-17Collateral Criminal Proceedings F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 2 98). [In m)' ollinion, llny forfeiture ofSaucer's gain-time that stems from his decision to in\'oke his conslitutlonal right to access the courl, see Art, I, § 21, FI:), Consl., is palenlly unconstitutional. In my opinion, the Florida Supreme Court would vlolale Rivera's constitutional right againsl ex post fllclO laws if it allplied the 1997 IlIws to sanction Rivera for challenging the constitutionality of his 1990 criminal conviCllon, Cf. Britt I'. Chiles. 704 So,2d 1046 (Fla.1997) (new Slatute Ihat diSlldvAntnges offl'ndl'r hy allowing DOC 10 lenglhen senlence violaled Ex Post Fncto Cl:lUse,), In my opinion, the iaw '19S once c1ellr that any judicially imposed pemtlty Ihal discourages assenion of l\ constitutional rlghl is in :lIld of ilself unconstilUtional. See Weatherillqtoll I'. Stale, 262 SO,2d 725 (FI:I. 3d DCA 1972), Fillall)'. it is my opinioll thai the State's coward I)' ,mo\'c to deJlrive S:lUcer of his liberty under seclion 944.28(2) (a) rlllher Ihan seeking a perjury conviclion pursuanl to see· tion 837.02, F.S., was IlrObllbly due 10 a fear thai SlIucer might aClually have a figlHing chance if allowed a Irial b)' jury. Unfortunalely, my 0llinion doesn'l carry the force of law.• bm]. • , ,\f)\'f:\l.'rtSINCN01·tC£ Due to 3 OOntem ror 0Ilt ~a.lm. 1M H'I,/' Sl3lT lP:n e--cyelt'ort lCen,wc that Ff'U' ltlt.","..m.e ,eputalllc'W qu.thfic:4 rur die j.C"i<o;lI beln~ O1irltd, We ClIilmI per'WII. :Uly lIIl:el tnry ~h"t'r!lU'.Ilrm~.o:t. ''''lIfore ~ art ad'lIed 10 llW3}' ~ (<'<\lXl alIl(1\f"lta fllf Flrnher mfOfmll1l;ln (IlIlh,:i, qual~ lind (~pctim« bd'or.- mA- int .. dKilion tohtrc an 1I1cmar 0' aIher prcf~ ""-..... Wtd ,*1 ~ 10 .dYWncc1 btfonl (OIIlaCMl t~ :mil f«tI\111f dim:tOOIl$ 10 Knit 5Ud1 m....crials, I'Of IhQl;c "'WI/lit III .\ol>'l'l1i\e ill r1'I.i'. ple.\Sr: .... ntt fOf r.11c ,~rcmwioll at the hllN .odJI:"S, AnIl Ad'~ Ilt«ll,laellhe ~ lIl, !l<t»/Hler. R~M/:1I shoold llC">'Ct PI\ .mnu.olW l!:ualt FPI./'fi!aole=; Wcbpotr ~1ItlI.~t rI.l";/1'/.P • lIIeIllbt:f\ ~(.-.-,.,.r.p 5081\11$510'1 OF MATERIAL TO 1'1'l./' ~ (J( I'1'LJ'. tile fali" ,...I\IlI\o: ~r rMiI kin; r~~. 1"0'. _~d II) or>d lhe iNJllhty 10 1llII1"lIfIat It'~af ~il$l~_~, n:aJm lhoWd I"IGf ~ ~ of kaol ~1 01' pc:ndinl .... flt'/wrial ~ 11> 1-1'IJ' 'lo1Ihoul fb~ hn'inttCorIllldM II" SIMI' ~ lCOO''lIIll di:«_ rionJ to U'lIJ At1>C' NfjlherFNJ'.O:II.~."c~~ (lll' .In) unf()hl;i1Q! m_aluw fIC", !l;cWtJ . ~ rtq:ll:\1Cd 11> ~"'U: I" ~ ,,~ n.......,.. d'PP"'&S (pleas:: ,rtthldo: mf_ IIotrI\e or r~,,"' lind tille), tW<\Oft:mdllllt'l, 1'IIJI....orld or 1Trt1/~irI~~alldplllenll.t U11<1cI "'" PIIbllnlliln I'klSlIlCrld 0011 e"l'\CS'cr.1>Ch mlleOJI,h3, d\) "-1'1.1' <1tpt!IJ, W YOU, ,tJ ~.aool :u'IIl ~ '" \:«t" mr.xmed. !o<t lIUI C>fflo{)JlC n:n be Inrormcd 11wlt. }'lll.I rUf)'OIlt e<>op(raIioo w>il p.m~ In lltlrin; 11> tel. ,l~ tIC>l.. WI YIl«!" dho<lI ... nllI ha~l!lk fCl\lmCd. ."~3dy.pprtei:lted Page 11 (COIIfmutdjromfNJgt 8) morarorium, il would be wonh the extra effon. Florida Leads Nation in Wrongful COII\'ictions As revealed in a recent edition of USA. TODA I'. Florida has had almost twice the number of any olher slate in wrongful death convictions since 1976. Stlllistics from the Dealh Pennlly Infomlation Cenler based in Washington, DC, shows IIlnl lhere have becn al leasl 19 proven wrongful dea", penally conviclions in Florida since executions were staned back. The nexl state in proven wrongful con\'ictions is Illinois, which has had 9 exonerations. Many in Florida \"ould say thaI 19 exonerations proves that Ihe system works, while many in political office feel lhal maybe il works a little 100 good. Florida, like all death penalty states, is feeling the economic pinch of the appellaIc costs associllted with delllh row prisoners. To Iheir credit, lawyers from the Capital Collateral Representatives, a Slate-funded pool of lawyers who represent indigent death row prisoners in Florida, have continually aired their concerns about being underfunded and understaffed for Ihe tasks Ihey must try 10 perfonn. Now steps have been taken by the FL legislature to make CCR even less effective. Money. or lack of same, however, is but one reason for false conviclions. The one-to-seven mte of death row exonerations 10 executions proves that other areas of the system arc also at fnull. Those who hrlve been fonunale enough 10 be exonerated are Ihe lucky ones, il makes you \\onder jusl how many of Ihe 513 who \\erc executed were innocent also. How long will we as a people continue to accept Iha! ii'S okay to murder a few innocent people as long as we kill the guill)' ones too? How long will \\e continue to teach our children Ihat killing is okay. as long as you justify it as -legally" carried OUI and that Ihe end justifies Ihe means? • F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 2 CAPITAL PUNISHMENT Capital Representation in Florida Further Dispersed Last year there was a big to-do when Ihe direclor of the Florida organizalion Ihnt was set up to provide legal represenlation to deathsentenced prisoners resigned amid clnims that the legislature was not providing adequnte funding for the number of such prisoners needing representation. Thnt organization is known as Capital Collateral Represenlatives (CCR). During the midst of the lunnoil Ihat was sparked by thai resignation, a coun case was decided Ihat also held that since Florida was nOI providing adequale representluion of death-sentenced prisoners. thaI Florida was nOl entitled to "fasttrack" capital cases under new expedilion provisions of Ihe Antiterrorism and Effec1996 tive Dealh Penlllty Ac! of (AEPDA). The AEDPA provides lhat when stales meet ccnoin requirements in providing ndequnte representation to death-senlenced prisoners then a expedited appellole review oflhe case moy be required. In Hi// \'. BUf(erwonh, 133 F.3d 783 (11th Cir. 1997), however, the federal appeal coun for Florida found Ihnt Florida's capital representation did not meel the requirements necessary to receive expedited review of capital cases. The coun issued an injunction prevellling Florida from fast-trncking capital cnses. Thai resulted in several changes to rhe Capilal Collnlernl Represcnlatives program. Where before. Ihe progrnm had only had one office localed in Tallahassee, by early 1998 it was spill inlo Ihree regional offices, with one in Soulh Florida, one in the middle of Florida, and one remaining in Tallahassee. The legislature voted to fund these offices, and new directors were found for each regionaloffice. On July 30. 1998, however, anOlher monkey wrench lVas thrown inlo Ihe entire silualion. Relying on a May 26, 1998, U.S. Supreme Court decision, thllt death-sentenced prisoners mllY nOl have a court issue a declarnlory judgmelll that a state docs not meel the expedited review procedures of Ihe AEDPA, the 11th Circuit REVERSED and REMANDED irs prior decision in Hill v. Butlerworth, and direcled that the 10IVer district court dissolve Ihe injunction against Florida Ihat had prevented lhem from using Ihe expedited appellate procedures. Hill \'. Butrenl'onh, II FLW Fed. CI646 (11th Cir. 1998). Now Florida is moving again to greally speed up capital case appeals. On Seplcmbcr 16. 1998. it was announced Ihal a new program will be implemented 10 provide legal representation 10 dealhsenlenced prisoners for their appellls. Ciling the CCR money problems, the new program is allegedly designed to clear up a backlog of cases Ihat CCR had been unable to handle. SixI}' private attorneys from around Ihe state were selected to represent the appeals of prisoners now on death row in Florida. These attomeys, reponedly, will be mle maximum fee of S64,OOO paid a for each death penalty case Ihnl they handle. The llllomeys willnlso be nlJowed a maximum of S 15.000 to conducr necessary investigations to represenl the prisoners on the appeals. Few details werc released to the: public about this new program before its implementation. Few. if any, delails ",ere released [0 the public about how Ihe sixty privare anomeys were selecled; nor whal qualifications tht)· were required 10 meet before being allowed to represent one of these prisoners whose very lives hang in rhe balance. Some death penalty opponenrs in Florida have claimed that the state is now londing the dice in its own favor wilh lhis private anorney program in order to show lhe public that executions will be sped up. Unless the private allomeys have reasonable experience in handling capital cases they will find themselves in a whole new realm of criminal defense and likely be unable 10 provide effective or adequate representation. Anomeys who simply wish to receive the 579,000 fee, and who may aClUally be pro-death penalty. will likely have been selecled for Ihis program. While some of rhese llllomeys may aClually give up the reSl of their private praclice to devole the amounl of time thlll is usually required to appeal capilal cases, many will not be able, or willing, to do Ihat. And if the appeal process. which can be very expensive in not Page 12 [kar FPU' I $ub~cribe to 1'1'1.1', and I can't thank you enough for the glem work )'Ou are doing in ~o many areas. One year ago. Itrnnsferred from the Florida DOC to the Arizona DOC, and FPl.P has been my lifeline for kccping eUllent ",'ith the changes in Florida. The FDOC still controls m)' fate and 111) uillmate release: dale. Bums. thanks for publishing the names and mailing address for the members of the FlOlida Corrections Commission. This wcck I wmte lellers 10 each of lhe eIght commrUlOners asking them to please consider the "middle ground" on the collections issues thnt confront them. I asked them to mamtam a modernte Viewpoint on maners afrecling me and my fellow prisoners, e~plaining thm many men and women feel gcnuine remorse for their PllSl crimes, We arc working toward a beller future through our good behavior in prison, and our panicipalion in the al'nilnble programs. ,\Is Bum~, II occurs to me that some of your subscribers would wllte similar leners if)"Ou stressed their Imponancc mnd publi5hed a sample lener for use as:l model I know man)' anieulnte Inmates who would llSSi51 your eITorts if)'Ou told them exaelly who to .....rite and what to say, regarding a pllllieular issue lhal )ou are lobb)·ing. Toward thaI end, lIle lhere any leners lhat I could .....rite to asSIst )'Our eITons1 As anieulnte inmales, we nccd )'Our gUldancc in fllldmg a focus for our conccrns Lasl .....eek. on the BET cable channel, I wntched a live mterview with PlOfcssor Angela Davis of Ihe University of California al Santa Cruz. You may re~1I that. in 1969. Plof Davis "'"lIS on ~ FBI's "Ten IIIO$t Wanted LiSl.- She spent sixtttn months in Jail beforc being acquitted of all ehqes. She hllS continued to ",ork for puson reform sinec that time. I was Impressed by Prof. Davis's calm and rational apploaeh to lhe inequities of the criminal justice syStem. This past weekend she launched a national campaign for prison refonn, commencing with n confercncclworkshop at UC - 13erkelcy. The conference WllS subtilled "Be)oond The I'rison-lndllSllia\ Comple:<." Plor. Davis has d«:lared that April 11. 1999 will be a nalional day to 'Visit The PriKlns," I inlend to writc 10 her for more informal ion and I suggest that )"OU ronlacl her as well Ms. Bums, can )'Ou help me by obtaining a mo~ complete mailing address for her" ThlUlks! Also, Ms_ Bums. I'd like to tell )"011 a bit about myself, I have been in cuslody since: 1991. I am a former police ollicer (Orlando) who elllned a degree m Cilminal Justiec from Michigan Stale Uni,·ersity. I hal'e expelieneed the efiminaljuSlice s)'Stem on bolh sides ofthc law. Ari7.0na's prisons arc \'el)' different from Floridn's, in some wa)'s harsher, in Olher II'a)'s more benign, Their incarceration rate is even higher lh8/1 Florida's, howC'\o'er the prevailing philosophy is more rehabilitative and less punitive than m Florida. But, like Florida, conditions nrc gClling \IOOISC here 'If)'Ou're Interesled. I'll kttp )"ou informed of the significant ehlUlges here. 8/ld "'hat efforts lIle being madc to Impro,'e things. Somehow. we prisoners must shake off the Ielharg> of inllCllon and find appropriate forums for Ihe e.~pression of OUI legitimate needs. ThlUlk )'OU, Ms lJums, for helping us in so many ways Smeerely, PI. Arizona "'$ I'I'LP' I'm writing Ihis as a cry out of only one man speaking for many, that are sum:ring and enduringlhese hardships and these punishments that Rorida Stale Prison an: innieting on humans I do challenge }'Ou to prinlthis leller In )'Our publication Since )'011 Slli"e to prifllieal ne\l'S IUld tluths. this is IlS relll as II geu and scary.I'\·e condensed lhls 115 briefly as pOSSible because of space. But the leaders will gel the point. Flolida State Prison prnctiees stockinglWMehousmg ofmmates. Fintthingthey do to msure Ihis is to devise rules lhat will make lhe mass' imposSible to obey. So comes the majorilyofinmares receiving dlseiplinBl) [eporn w be placed m inhumane conditions of confinement. You do all the D.C. time Md they take away gain lime. because of peny D,R.'s and so the inmale stays longer in prison The lIemment of inmJtes III F,S.P, is the equivalenl of the inhumane ways prisoners in Germany were treated during the NllOI;I Regime allhe cOllcentrtltion camps. Just 10 namc a fcw installment plans lhey have here is lIS leads· (I) Npn-cducpljon- for all educational programs ha\'e becn deleted from F S I' so rhe) plomote il1iteraC)', {21 Poor Medical pmclj£ts-,thcn WllIlen poliCies arc not prtleticed at all The ol'eNhe-counler drugs (such l1S Tylenol, cough mediCine, etc.,) art in the control of sccunty staff, the same ones who appl)' lhese inhumane conditions, So we may rarely get medieme when lequesled, (3) NPu-rchabjljJaljQO- again their policies are nOi practiced The~ are NQ programs or advancement grollp sessions, (Z1l.CH) to prcpare inmates a pathway back into sociely. Because prisons and instilutions bllnSltlle biggest profirs to Ronda and lhe 1cgislmure. And because a [01 of VOtes come from Ihe polilici:ms crime-fighting agenda's. it st8/lds 10 reason \lhy these \lhrtc-colors ha\'e crealed a le\'olving door 10 these samc ptisons. Their mOllO is "To keep Ihem dumb, uninfonned, and lull of lUlimosit)' against lUling authord)' To msure rhC)' Will most definitel)' kttp well·stocked warehouses. (4) NQn-tommynicatjon. Herc is where a thin line divides seeuruy IUld eruellUld unusual pllni,hment. They (l).O.c.) do nofadhen: 10 Fla Stntutes due 10 a separalion of two words;.R.i.llh1i and Privileges. Visitation is a prtvilege, So the)' placc inmales in waiSl chains and handcuffs and put )'ou behind a partilion separating rou nnd rour 10l'ed ones from contnct. They promote - If )'OU try to communicate with )our fellow inmates, )'OU lIIe wliuen "trumped-up' D.R.'s fOI fabricaled infractions. Mall pt'lvlleges are almost obsolete. To gel 8/lY inforntalion out thai goes against the D.O.C. il hllS to be disguised But lhe lillie privileges left m mail procedures are 510\l'ly deterionrting. (5) ill!..lh2ril:i ~- The authorit)' IS so Intense nl F.S P. that al hmes, there nrc t\l'O Sergeant!; \I'Olking on one lI'ing. They Wille D.R.'sjust so Iher can brag about itlarer to their huddies, lfan inmate files a grievance on an officer, that offlecr usually retaliates and writes thatmmate so many D.R.'s he's buried in D.C. confinement. 'l1lis is all I'll e.~posc at this time... Plezw: prinlthis letler and wake up sociely as 10 Whlll is happening right under thell noses. After all, by a famous prediction long ago, "B} lhe )ear 2000 e,·cry family in lhe U.S,A. \lill feci the eff«ts of prisons. Anon)mous IlcyGuys, Glad to learn )'011 are now Non·I'rofit dOlllltlons nre tn:< deductible. Hope 10 make one this )~ar to help the causc(s). Aboutlhe UM deaths. I was al Charlone CI From ~S9-97~ nnd know from personal experienee how it goes! We need 10 lake advantage oFthe 10 CO.'s Indieled and go on the offensi\'e by creating a elclUing hoosc I Qut Il:ach \lhere these InCidents (grtlluitous beatings) can be properly documented and get more exposure. One of the reason5 that lhey hal'e gollen '01'11)' OUI of hand (epidcmie) is thai 1.) DOC is" expert ~ al CO\'tI up 2) Most "\"iclims~ (I~ls) lack Ihe ware-wlth-allto obtain redress. Like Ms. Klcll many are ~laughtll lesson" for stnnding up for "hat is right in a syslem largely run amok. ~help us lIll by forming n column devoted to S'-" Amendment ( cruel nnd unusual punishment) issue so we can unify to light this most serious of all issues JUSltry to imaginc If it was Yw or you lovcd onel AA To Whom It MayConeem, 1hal'e gro\ln vef)'m!erested in your maguines You get greal praises here from all Oflhe ladies at BCI. CM I "'"OIIld like to thank )·ou for FPL!' it has been \'Cl)' helpful to me. ltl)' to pass it on 10 olher inmales as well. I Ihink eNery one of us 111 prison should subscribe to fAil ItllUS ~ai>Y!dcatltlOI N prlnled NCQlISe ofspaa ~Slr,eflofU. UfUlgtled let/us WIll not M primed or fellers Ihal obl'ioUJf}'flTt nOllmcntkdfor publico_ /1M. Picou intheale in \'Our fellers I I'OU do nOIWOnt II rimcd, olheMI·'Sc. FPLP rescn....s Ihe ri h,IO rlnl 01/ fellers rect:fl'l~d otld 10 edillellers (or fen fh. F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 2 Page 13 tile HLP )'ou all do a very good job al keeping us up dated on cvery IlIing1l\1ll is happellUlg. nlBllk you ,'cry much. ,",IW HCI Dear FPI_P, There lITe no words to express our appreciation of your efforts to suppan lUld mform Ihe prisoners lUld filmlll' God llIessl IlllZei Roughlon Dear FPl?, I have been subscribing ro F/'U' for Ihree l'ears and basically I'vc been salisfied with thc informalion I','c been reading, Howevcr Ihere arc issues I have been dlnal,slied with FI'l/' co,'erage on and Ihat is close mllllDgcmem and hO\l is applied in lhe Slale of Florida as well as Ihe issue of Police brulality and official mlS«ll1duetas it is happening and pracllccd al FSP, In Dddition to FPlP Jack ofad"OClIe) fOf a new disciplinlU)' proccedmg to be instituted m the stnle ofFlondll thai has more mellllingful due process, FPlP should be sending 1I\,'estigall\'e ~paners to FSP to investigale Ihe man)' severe police assaults Ihal an: Cllfncd OUI againsl inm31es here at FSP. I m)'Self have been a victim of IIIesc many assaults and there D~ numerollS of other cases I know of. Jn the last wetk lhr«: inmates had 10 be life lligliled flOm FSI' 10 lhc outside hospilal with one inmale dying as a ~sult ofbemg assaulted, You know, as procedure Ihe average inmatc in FSI' hIlS to be handcuffed before leaving bis cell and III all cases Ihc assaults take place ,.hile Ihe inmalC is handcuffed. There's no way in my wilddt imaginal ion !hal lhe death of a inmale is ajuSlifiable use of force while he is handcuffed??? 110\1 long must the cum age go on? I guess as long as good people 01 conscious people refu~ 10 ae\ \l\ the inlerdl of JIIStice. TUllh, and Equnlily, We both kno" Ihal Ilrison ageneln do a "cry poor job of policing Ihemselves. the resulr is almost always thele's no eVidence to support the inmates anegalions thus Ihe offiCials lnullved go unpunished "llIeh only encourages the behavior direcll)' or indil«:lly. l)on'l ge ",rang, In·spite of you shorl comings )·ou and ),our organiUlion alC doing far morc IIIlhc inlerest of prisoners pod their families lhan any olher prisoners adn)Caey group I know of in Florida bul------ )'00 can do morel You hn"e the potential, Ihe means, and Ihe conscious.... The prison s)'S'tem in Florida is vcry unique in Ihal the officers have absolule aUlhonty, There life no checks and balances in pla«: to counler Ihal absolutc authority, Pri5Ol1ers in Florida III 1999 ha"e no liaison cOntmllltc unbelievable, incredible.,. Prisoners III Florida's S)'Slenl have no foret or voice III lll/Illers thai eITect their dally li,'cs in the IlriSOn s)'Stem--Ufers aud long limers panicularl) ... With long prison sentences being handed out like water "hal is the future for Florida prisons in such hoslilc nlmospherc:? Me FSI' DelU FPlP, I'm concerned aboutlhe tall money that is being mishandled by (Dcpanmenl of Corrections) DOC, The bids lhar Me put in for the ne\\' constfuetion afe bid on by conlractors who bid millions for Ihe labor to build lhesc prisons. and by contractors 'Iho are expcrieneed al Ihe rradcs necded, Well I see lhc raO( paycrs are again gelling the shall from another Slale agency here in Florida DOC, I'm a prisoner here at Taylor CII have been building prisons for 7 V, yea.rs. rhc people Ihal are hued 10 build the new buildmg5 llf(: not eomraclors as the bid requires, and aJllhe "millioos" for labor is really a joke. Because inmales an: being forced to work allradcs ....'C are nOl experienced ai, \I!lieh is dangerous. The inmates do \III the ",Ofk "skilled lrades" ,so "be~ lIfC all the laO( dollllfS. millions, going? Our famll)"s PD)' for these: things pod I'm tired ofsee,n& rhe needed money go to lhe hands of greed. Til Tel Dew FI'LP, I h&\'e cnjoyed FPlP this past year and "ish 10 rencw m)' subscriplion. I ha,'e to admit )'Our ncwsleller CO"CTS a wide seleetion oflopics for anyone looking for hnef informallon, Whelher II be legislau.'e laws being passed, or up 10 dale court rulings Stale and Fedcrol I'T ECI. l)ear FPlP, ·l1mnk you for )'our extens,,'e efforts in fighling for the rights of Florida I'risoners, I am impressed \lilh the quality of your ne'I'Slellcr. Each Issue gcts bellcr and beller. PlellSe mform all Florida prisoners ufa ncw manual on sale for $25.00 lhat hIlS been wriuen 10 usist prisoners In filing mnlare grievMces and wnt of mandamus petitions In Ihe Florida courts.. I have ptrnlll3l1y Jlurchased a copy llfld Its llfl exccllenl mllfluaJ, for any Florida Inmale \lho hIlS no legal edueDlfon or msltlullon Jaw derks ro assist 10 the filing of cOlnplaint'~ under F.A.C. 33,291 The manunl is called "I'nsoners' Guide to Ihe Inmate Gnevance I'rocedu~" It eM be purchased from the Publisher nr Ihe follo"ing address: Sam Reed, P,O. Bo~ 51, Mer~edes, T~. 78570, I recommend nil prisoners oblain a ~opy immedialely, ASCCI To Whom It MayConcem: Enclosed wilh this leller is a ~heck for $5,00 for a )'CDf subs~riplion of )'Our FPlP neM periodical. Which helps me and other brothers ketp up wjth what's going on with Ihe brothers nnd sislers who nrc incarcemled lhrough OUI Ihe US I proy to God y'all keep up the good wOlk. because nOI only do y'all k«:p us informed. but y'alliel "llIose" people know thar rhey lilt being wRlChed, Remember ,. Thc Walcher that walches is being watched", l)J Dear Sir or Ma'am, I am writing because J wanr 10 stan receiving a SUhsCllphon 10 FPL!' Do lUU knOll how hard it 1$ JuSt to borrow soffiebod) else's just to read It~ Ncar illlpossiblci l':vel)'one k«ps them and files them away for furlllc refe~nce If! had kllO\ll1 about FJltP sooner, I would certainly bc filillg mine away lIS we speak I Will recommend Ihis maguine 10 any ofrhe guys just enlerinsthe ~)'stem and to an)' old tuners who do nOlllll(ady know about FPlP, Your magtUmc gi,'es us • chance 10 keep up with Ilh~r is happening throughOllt DOC, E.'en leuers from fellO\l inmates aboul ho", they are being Ireared al thai particular instllution Agam, I \luh 10 Ihank )'011 for givmg me Ihe oppanunuy to reccl\'e FPLP MD PCI Delll' FPlP I don'r believe in Angels and \)evils, !lUI if there were, )'Ou'd be lhe Angels and Ihe [)eVils \\'Ould use the media to dope lhe masses With mnsshe umeknllng injeelions of fetl good, tnsly ~andals, anti-alme editorials and a general" spullual" almosphe~ of ignoranec and easeful, allium like primrose DENIAL QUI cd~cation induslry nel'er leveals to us lhar"e ellch inhabit our own prl\'l1le ghello:utd life·s prime purpose IS to nse up and OUI of II G(lf)' FOlIZ (AIIIIIIIU Tlcttl'td CD/llfOI!.w prlnlld MCOUJl 01JpaU UJITlciiom. UflJlgllld /tIlUs \11/1110/ M pdmld aT IllleTS llull ObV;OllJlyaTi.' "o/lII/emiedlaT pubflro. /IfNI. Please Indicalll" 'OUT leiters if 'all do nOI want il 'lnled, olhen,.,:e FPLP ,tsen"s I~,I hI to ,III/ a/l/el/ers received and to ed,tltllers 0' 1M Ih, F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 2 Page 14 capital cases, requires more than the alloted amount the representation may very well suffer. The state will not have a similar restriction on the amount of basically unlimited taxpayer monies that it can expend to fight the appeals. Under this poorly thought out program, justice will be further regulated to those who can afford it.. MORATORIUM 2000 In anticipation of the new millennium, Sister Helen Prejean and other notable U.S. abolitionists have fonned an organization called Moratorium 2000 and is· sued II worldwide call to suspend use of the death penalty next year. In II letter to anti-death penalty activists and organil.ations, Sister Helen said the group's mission is to reach out, "to friend and foe alike to convince them to join us in our efTons to oblain and ensure the full protection of human rights for all as guaranteed by the Universal Declaration of Rights." In the fall of 1999, Moralorium 2000 plans 10 rally at the United Nations in New York CilY and present the world body Wilh a truckload of national and intenllltional petilions and letters supporting an internalional moratorium on execulions. According to SiSler I-Iclen, the organization hopes to usc the event to obtain passage ofa U.N. resolution calling for a worldwide moralo· rium. Sister Helen, who wrote lhe anti-death penally book Dead Man Walking, is Moratorium 2000's honorary chair. Its chair is Michael Radelet, a professor at the University of Florida and co-author of {" Spile of Innocence, a case study of hundreds of cases of innocent men and women convicted of capital crimes in the U.S. The vice-chair is Richard Dieter, execulive director of the Washington, D.C.-based Death Penalty Infonnation Center. which studies and repons on capirol punishmenl in the U.S. Magdaleno Rose-Avila, a longtime activisl for economic, social, and criminal justice who once headed up Amnesty International's U.S. efforts to abolish the death penalty, serves as Moratorium 2000's executive direclor. Sister Helen poinls out thaI the U.S. remains one of the foremost practitioners of state-sanctioned murder. "Currently, the F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 2 Uniled Slates stands isolated with a few countries such as Iran, Iraq, Nigeria, and China Ihal refuse to respect human rights and continue to execute their citizens," she said. She noted the the American Bar Association recently took the slep of calling for a moratorium on all executions in the U.S. Moratorium 2000 is a non-partisan, non-denominational effort 10 ensure the prolection ofhutlllln righls for all. The organization's mailing address is: 8306 Mills Drive, Miami FL 33183. The email addressis:mavila@gte.net. and the phone number is: 30515967293. Those persons wanting to participate in the petition campaign should contact Moratorium 2000. [The above notice was reprinted from tile January 1999 issue of the Coalition for Prisoners' Rights Newsletter, a publication of tile Prison Project of Santa Fe, Inc., P.O. Box 1911, Sanla Fe, NM 87504-1911. Subscriptions 10 that newsletter arc free to prisoners, their families, and ex-prisoners subscribing for themselves. Subs arc SI2/yr 10 other individuals, lind S25/yr for government agencies and for-profit institutions. FPLP staff hopes readers will join in the Moratorium 2000 effort. -cd] • AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL SEEKS INFORMATION Amnesty International (A.I.) is seeking infornlalion for a new report on human right abuses in the United States. This repon will cover prisons, jails and immigration facililies and is intended to document systemic violations of human rights. The report will be issued by the end of 1999 and will include policy recommendations for governmental agencies. A.I. is seeking documentation of human rights violations and court cases that relate to such violations (especiaJly unpublished decisions). A.1. cannot provide litigation research or individual representation. This infonnation is requested only for the repon. Do not send A.1. original copies of documents or other materials which cannot be re- placed. Infonnation to be covered in the pan of the repon related to prisons, jails, and immigration fncilities includes: verbal/ physical abuse or sexual assaults (by staff or olher prisoners); use of restraints, electro-shock equipment and gas/chemical sprays; overcrowding; sexual orientalion/raccl nationality or language discrimination: treatment of families/children (including location of facility limiling contact wilh family); confinement of juveniles in adult facilities; adequacy of health care. Suggestions for other areas are welcome. The address 10 send such documentalion to is: Amnesty International Attn: AJUSA C. Doyle 322 81h Ave. New York NY 1000 I • NEW AI REPORT Juvenile Abuse Increasing On November 17. Amnesty Intemational (AI) USA released a new report concerning the growing numbers of juveniles who arc being subjected to physical abuse, excessive incarceration and delainment in adult facilities in Ihe Uniled States. Findings of this new rcport include: • Thirty-eight states now house juveniles in adult prisons with no special programs or educational services for the youthful offenders: • Juveniles in adult facilities are five times more likely to be sexually assaulted and twice as likely 10 be beaten or abused by staff thnn those in juvenile facilities; "d • From 1986 to 1995, the number of juveniles confined in adult facilities before their cases were heard or following conviction grew by more lhan 30%. According 10 William Schulz, execu· tive director of Al USA, the report should serve as a warning. "These kids will be back on the streel one day." Schulz said. "Nothing is guar31lfced to tum a confused, Page 15 _._----------------------angl')' teenager into a bincr adult than abusing them \\hen they afC in prison, ignoring their mental health concerns and housing them with adults." Schulz also commented lhal contrary to popular beliefs, the average juvenile is nOI brought into the justice syslem for a violent offense. Statistics show that only 22% of those held are accused or \\(\\,c been convicted of a violent crime. "The image that wt: have now of huge numbers oflllurderous juveniles who need to be laught a harsh lesson is a myth," says Schulz. The AI report offers recommendations that include juveniles only being locked up as a last reson. periodic inspections conducted by independent oversight bodies. scparnte housing from adult offenders ::md a moratorium on execUlions of people \\ ho commit crimes under 18 years old.• DID YOU KNOW? The U.S. population is only 13 percem Black, yet, 49 percent of the prisoners in stale nnd fedcl1ll prisons last year wtre African-AmericJns, mostly males. In 1995, one third of nil Arrican~American men be· !We.:n the ages of 20 and 29 were under some type criminal justice supervision. In 1991, the year th31 apartheid ended in South Africa. the U.S. imprisoned four and a half times more Black males per capita Ihan South Africa. CORRECTION On the front page. laSt plirasroph. of Volume 4, fssue 6, of FPI.P, in fhe llnicle enlitled 4TAXPAYERS BURDEN iN- CREASED BY OLDER PRISONERS," il was incorreclly stated that the "85% law" went inlO effect on Octobtr I. 1996. In fuct, that law wen! into effecl on October 1. Th:mk you • 10 those who brought this error 10 our attention.oed l22l whalever they can afford to donate. Up until that date, current subscribers who still have some issues remaining on their current subscriplions, may rp,new and eXlend those subscriptions for another year longer at the "old" rates of $5, $ I0 and $25, respectively. Or, new subscribers can still receive a year subscription at the "old" rates - up until May3lsl. Any subscriptions or renewals received after May 31st must contain payment at the new rates. If a subscription or renewal is received after May 31 st that accompanies payment at the "old" rate, lhe subscription will be pro-rated, with the subscriber receiving five (5) issues for a year's subscription inSlead of the normal six (6) bi-monthly issues. New subscription fonns renecting the new rates will accompany the MayJune issue of FPLP. New, unused U.S. postage stamps will still be accepted for subscriptions after May 31st - in an amount equal to the new rates. The Ff'LP stalThas worked hard to keep this rail,' increase as low as possible so lhat everyone can have access to this valuable resource. This increase. modesl as il is, will allow more information 10 be distributed and allow the growth of the network 10 conlinue, which is very important. Also, as noted in the last issue, FPLP has obtained federal non-profit 501(c)(3) status as a charitable organization and donations are tax deductible. Please consider an additional donation when subscribing to or renewing it subscription to FPLP. every lillie bit helps. FPLPs readers and supporters are Ihe lifeblood of this unique and effective resource. It cannot be done without YOUR support. Thank you.• SUBSCRIPTION INCREASE As noted in the last issue, on May 31. 1999, there wilt be a slight increase in the subscription rates for Ff'Lf'. After that date, one year subscriptions or renewals will be S6fyr for prisoners, $ 12/yr for free citizens, and S30/yr for institutions and businesses. Low income f,"lmily members or friends of prisoners may receive a subscription for F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5: ISSUE 2 ESSENTIAL READING Several magazines have fe3tured articles recemly covering the growing concern over the burgeoning imprisonment binge in the United States and problems and abuses associated with same. The December '98 issue of the AI/all/ic an article by Eric Schiosser exanlining ~The Prison Industrial Complex" in America. Schiosser explores the booming prison business in the U.S., exposing how groups of bureaucralic, political. and economic special interests have encouraged increased spending on imprisonment, regardless of an actual need. "The lure of big money is corrupting the nalion's criminal justice system," Schlosser reports. Thc articlc is availablc on the AlIa/ltiC MOII/hly Website at: wwv,theatlantie.com. or: 77 N. Washington SI., Boston MA 02114. The September '98 issue of Ms. magazine carried a special report on the crisis and increasing incarceration of \\'omen in the United States. The report was prepared by Nina Siegal and is entitled "Bad Girls or Bad Laws: Why are So Many Woman in Prison?" This report explores Ihe lillie known filet thai while there arc many more men in prison than women, Ihe female prisoner population is growing nt a faster rate than men, and in large pan for non-violent, first offense crimes. An interesting and informative expose. The December 27, '98. issue of /N THESE TIMES magazine carried twO very good, faci filled. and informative articles on lhe injustice of the death penally and sexual abuse of female prisoners in U.S. prisons. The first article. by Craig Aaron is a well written piece emitled "Innocence on Death Row" covering Ihe first National Conference on Wrongful Convictions and the Death Penalty that was held at Northeastcrn University during November '98. The conference was held to bring allention to the large number of people who have been sentenced to death in America and who werc later proven to be innocenl. Florida has the highest number of death sentences that have later been found to be wrong. The USA TODA Y newspaper carried a full page article on this conference on Nov. 13th. This IN THESE TIMES article covers the people who Ilrtended the conference and many of their stories. The second IN THESE TIMES article in the Dec. 271h issue is enlitled "RAPE CAMP USA," by Christopher Cook lind Chrislian Parcmi. This article explores the increasing rapes and sexual abuses being perpeluated 3gainst female prisoners in prisons and jails. The article ciles Monthly features Page 16 numerous factual inslances of sex crimes againsl female prisoners, usually by their keepers. This article is shocking and shines a ligJlI on secrels Ihat prisoncrals would ralher the public never learn. Back issues of IN THESE TIMES are available for $3. Address: 2040 N. Milwaukee Ave., Chicago IL 06047; email: ilt@inlhesclimes.com; Website: www.inlhesetimes.com.• moc INl\It\TE WELFARE TRUST FUND 1997-98 Merchandise Sales S33,441.616 Gross ProtitslSales 12,363.373 FDOC Telephone Commissions ................................................ 13,840.084 June 30. "98. Retained in 111'11' 22.709.065 {Source: FDOC Annual Rpl. 1997-98] MONUMENTS TO FEAR, GREED AND POLITICAL COWARDICE The Prison Industrial Complex California has the Western industrialized world's biggest prison system 40% bigger than the Federal Bureau of Prisons and holds more prisoners than do France. Great Britain. Germany. the Netherlands. Singapore, and Japan combined. The U.S. has approximalely 1.8 million people behind bars; about 100.000 in federal custody. 1.1 million in Stille custody lind 600.000 in local jails. We imprison more people than any other country in the world - perhaps half a million more than Communist China. America's prison population has grown so large it is difficult to comprehend - the equivalent of the combined populations of Allanta, St. Louis. Pinsburgh. Des Moines and Miami. ~We ha\e embarked on a great social experiment.~ says Marc Mauer, author of the upcoming book, Race 10 Incarcerate. ~No other society in human hislory has ever imprisoned as many of its own cilizens for the purpose of crime control." The nation's prisons hold 150,000 armed robbers. 125,000 murderers, and 100,000 sex offenders - enough violent criminals to popuilltc a medium-sized city such as Cincinn<lti. Few would dispute the need to remove these people from society. The level of violent crime in the U.S., dcspitc F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5. ISSUE 2 POST CONVICTION RELIEF, PAROLE, CLEMENCY & PARDON Call the experienced expelts at the Law Office of Bernard F. Daley, Jr. David Collins, Of Counsel, ***and Troy Browning, our paralegal specializing in clemency, pardons, and restoration of civil rights. Contact Bernie Daley, David W. Collins, Attorneys at law, or Troy Browning, at (850) 224-5823 Web Site Address: www.floridaclemency.com ····'Thc hiring of a lawyer is an important decision that should not he based solely upon advertisements. Before you dC(;ide. as).. the lav,'Yer 10 send you free information about his qualifications and experience." recent declines, still dwarfs thllt in Weslem Europe. But the proportion of offenders sent to prison ellch year for violent crimes acltmlly fell during the prison boom. In 1980 about half those elllering slate prison were violent offenders; in 1995 less than a third were violenl offenders. The enormous increase in America's prisoner populalion can be explained moslly by the sentences given people who commined non-violent offenses. Crimes that in other countries usually lead 10 community service, fines, or drug trealment nor arc they not considered a crime at all in lhe U.s. leads to a prison tenn, by far the most expensive fonn of punishment. "No matter whnt lhe question has been in American criminal justice over the last generation,~ says Franklin E. Zimring, Earl Warren Legal Institute director. "prison has been the answer." In 1961, President Dwighl D. Eisenhower used his farewell address to issue a warning as the U.S. continued its cold war with the Soviet Union. ~[n Ihe councils of govemment," he sllid. "we mUSI guard against the acquisition of unwarranted innuence whether soughl or unsought. by the military-induslrilll complex." Eisenhower had grown concerned about this new threat to democracy during the 1960 campaign. when fears of a "missle gap" with tile Soviet Union were whipped up by politicians. lhe press and defense conlractors hoping for increased military spending. Eisenhower kncw no missle gap existcd, and Ihat fear of one might lead to a costly, unnecessary response. The polential for the disastrous risc of misplaced power exists and will persisl," he warned. Three decades after the war on crime began. the U.S. developed a prisonindustrial complex: a set of bureaucratic, political and economic interests that encourage increased spending on imprisonmcnl - regardless of the aClual nccd. This complex is not a conspiracy, guiding the nation's criminal-justice policy behind c1o~ed doors. [t is a confluence of spccial inlerests that has given U.S. prison conSlruction a secmingly unstoppable momentum. Irs composed of politicians, both liberal and conservative. who tlse the fear of crimc 10 gain votes; of improverished rural areas whcre prisons became a cornerstone of economic dcvelopmcnt; of privatc companies thai regard the roughly S35 billion spcnl each year on corrections no[ as a burden on American taxpayers but as a lucrative markct: and of government officials whosc fifcdoms expanded along with the prisoner populntion. Since 1991. the rale of violent crimc in thc U.S. felt by about 20%, while ·he number of people in prison and jail rosc Page 17 by 50%. The prison boom has its own inexornble logic. Steven R. Donaiger, a )'oung anomey who headed the National Criminal Justice Commission in 1996, ex· plains the thinking; "If crime is going up, then we need 10 build more prisons; and if crime is going down, it's because we built more prisons - and building even more prisons will therefore drive crime down even lo\\er." The prison-industrial complex's row material is its prisoners: the poor, homeless, mentally ill, drug dealers, drug addicts. alcoholics, and wide assonment of violent sociopaths. AboUi 70% of U.S. prisoners are illiterate. perhllps 200,000 prisoners suffer from a serious mentlll illness. A generation ago, such people werc handled primarily by the mental-hcahh, not lhe criminal justice system. And, white 60% 1080% of tile U.$. prisoner population has a history ofsubstance abuse, drug treatment slots in American prisons declined by more than half since 1993 - available to just one in len who need them. Among those arrested for violent crimes, the proponion \\ho are black men has tripled. Although the prevalence of illegal drug use among while men is approximately the same as among blnck men, black men are five times as likely to be arrested for a drug offense. As a result. about half the U.S. prisoners are blllCk. One out of every 14 black men is now in prison or jail; one OUI of every four black men is likely to be imprisoned at some period during his lifetime. The number of women sentenced to a year or more of prison has grown twelve· fold since 1970. Of lhe 80,000 women now imprisoned, about 70% are non-violent offenders, :Illd aboul 75% have children. The prison-industrial complex is not only 11 set of interest groups and institutions. It lllso is a state of mind. The lure of big money is cOITUpting the nation's criminal justice system, replacing notions of public service with a drive for higher profits. Elected officials' eagerness to pass "Iough-on-crime" legislation, combined with their unwillingness to disclose the true costs of these laws, encourage all sons of financial improprieties. In lhe realm of psychology a complex is an oyer-reaction to some perceived lhreat. Eisenhower no doubt had that meaning in mind when he urged lhe nation to resist "a recurring temptation to feel that some spec- F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 2 tacular and costly action could become the miraculous solution to all difficul· ties." "The era of governmenl is over," said President Bill Clinton in 1996 - an assenion proved false in al least one respect. A reccm issue of "Conslruction Report," a monthly newslelter by Correctio,tal Building News, provides details of the nation's latest public work: a 3. 100·bed jail in Harris Co., TX; a SOO·bed mediumsecurity prison in Redgranite, WS; a 130-bed minimum-security facility in Oakland Co., MI; two 200-bed housing pods al the Fon Dodge Correctional Facility in IA; II 350-bed juvenile correctional facility in Pendleton, IN, and dozens more. The newsletter includes phone numbers of project managers, so prison-supply companies can call and make bids. All across the country new cellblocks rise. And every one of them, every brand new prison, becomes a lasting monumem, concrete and ringed with deadly razor wire, to the fear and greed and political cowardice that now pervade American society. (Excerpted from "The Prison Industrial Complex" by Eric Schlosser in the Dec. 1998 The At/omie /Ilon/hly.) [Note; Although the FDOC currently has approximatcly 6,000 empty prison beds, in 1998 the IcgislalUTe appropriated S48,080,959 for addilions to two youthful offender instilutions; adding secure housing units to five existing instilUtions; and providing site work for three new prisons. These projects will add more than 800 new prison beds in Florida. The FDOC budget for 1997-98 was SI,736,244,716. The overall cost per prisoner per day during 1997-98 was S50.S 1. Out of a t01a1 of 22,654 prisoners admitted to the FL system in 1997-98, 60.7% were incarcerated for non-violent crimes (24.4% of that for drugs). Over one Ihird of new female prisoner incarcerations in 1997-98 was for drugs.·edll D.O.C.: PUBLIC RECORDS AND POTATO PEELERS "Every person has the right to inspect or copy any public record made or received in connection with the official business of any public body, officer, or employee of the state, or person acting on their behalf, cxcept with respect to records exempt pursuam to this section or specifically made confidential by Ihis Constitution."l The purpose of this article is to provide you with some of the basics when trying to get public records from the Department of Corrections (DOC). Getting What You Wanl Figure OUI what you want. Do yOIl want a specific record, an item within a record, or a group of records'? DOC ,. . has the responsibility for lhe supervi· sory and protective care, cuslody and control of inmates, buildings, property, and all olher mailers pertaining to ... "~ adult offenders. Because of this DOC generales many records, including but nol limited to records concerning prison in· speclions,) inmate property.~ incidem reports,' grievances regarding lost property.' incoming legal mail/ sanitation,' in-prison disciplinary repons,9 special facilities for Ihe physically disabledcompliance wilh standards,'o visitation records,lI visitation denials,ll inmates in special status. II etcetera. I~ Knowing what you wam is imponant because you will be paying for records, if you request copies. I The Fifth District Coun of Appeals has held thaI indigent prisoners ". . . arc not entitled to free records disclosure under Chaplcr 119. Floridn Stalules, [and] are nol thereby denied llny constitutional ri~hts [when charged for public records)." 6 Further. more, DOC may charge you for searching for the records, if "such ... require (sl extensive use of technology resources or clerical or supervisory assistance.,,17 This rule was upheld by the Firsl District Coun of Appeals when the Court interpreled § I 19.07(1)(b), Fla. Stat, which provides for addilional charges when "the nature or volume of public records requested 10 be inspected, examined, or copied ... is such as to require extensive use of information technology resources or extensive clerical or supervisory assistance by personnel of the agency involved .. ,,11 Ask for whnl you want. Requests for public records may be made to Ihe main Page 18 office in Tallahassee or 10 any office of DOC where such records are kepi. However,lo be safe you may want 10 make your request 10 the Secretary of the Department of Contt\\ons to protect yourself because Ihal person is "charged with the [overall] responsibilityofmainlaining the office having public records."::O Although nOI required by the Public Records Act, pUI your request in \~riling and maimain a copy of il for (ulUrc reference.: l DOC may insist Ihal requests for some records be put in writ. !l mg. Fla. Admin. Code R. 33-6.006(4) sets out the process 10 be used by inmates desiring "infonmllion."u Firsl, a wriucn request is made to the inmate's classification specialist (CS) or officer-in-charge (OIC). Second, "[lIf the request meets the requirements specified in §945.1O(3), Ihe request sholl be approved without funher review... ~· If the request includes exceptional circumstances, the CSs or OIC ".. shall make a recommendation to the c1l1ssificalion supervisor or superintendent of communit}' facilities \\ho shall be the final authorilY for approval or disapproval of re':' quests 1 Irom mmales... " ~ To gain access to your health records requires a wrillen requesl to the health information specinlist/supervisor. 1• The process follows along Ihe same lines set out in Fla. Admin. Code R. 33-6.006(4). If Ihe request includes exceptional circumstances, Ihen lhe health information specialislfsupervisor shnll review the request and mllkc n recommendlltion to !he chiefhcallh officer, who will make a final deeision.:T Information regarding inmate participation in drug abuse prevention or treatment functions shall be confidential, however, with inmate permission and by following Ihe requirements in Fill. Admin. Code R. 336.006( II), an outside party may gllin access 10 Ihe malerial.:'J In your requCSI include Ihe following: MPlease Slllle lhe basis of any and all exemption(s) \\hich )'ou comend is (/are] applicable 10 Ihe record(s) requested. including Ihe statulory cilation 10 an exemption creattd or afforded by statute. lind Slate in writing and with panicularity the reasons for the conclusion lhat the recordls) is exempl.~ This puts the burden of claiming and proving up any exemptions on DOC. Funher, you should include: "Please do not alter. destroy, conceal, or transfer posses- I' F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5. ISSUE 2 sian of the records requested." This pUiS DOC on nOl"ice thaI the material should be safeguarded. By sending a copy of the above to DOC allomeys you may trigger Ihe Rules of Professional CondUCI that prohibil a lawyer from obstructing another pany's access 10 evi1lI dence. Potential Roadblocks After you make your request severnl things may hllppen. First, you may get the records you requested. Second, DOC may not respond to your request. 111is may be due to the fact that the agency did not receive your request. If you can verify lhal the request was received, you may illlelllpt legal proceedings, see below. Third, DOC may refuse to tum over any records. However, there is ".. . no rational basis for totally denying inmates access to information in the files of .. [DOC] ... While there are legilimate securilY concerns as to some information found in Departmental files, such as maintaining security and protecting the identity of prison informants, such concerns can be met without a blanket denial of access. MJI Here a mandamus action mllY be appropriate, see below. Fourth, DOC rna)' claim thllt the records requested lire exempt. In lhe event an exemption is claimed, review lhe claimed cxcmplion to cheek OUI whc!lIcr it may Imve been validly claimed. All public records mllY be inspected unless there is a specific Stlltutory cxemption.': These exemptions mllst be nllITowly applied and limited to their stated purpose.)) DOC will benr the burden of proving that Ihe records should not be released. J.I Ultimlltely a judge may ha\'e to do an inspection privately in chambers. This is known as 11/1 in camera inspection. If there is any doubt as to whether an exemption was properly claimed. release or disclosure is the proper result. l \ If DOC holds information regarding. the case Ihal resulted in your incarcerntion and it would benefit you. then you 11IIve a right to thllt information. The Florida Supreme Coun held Ihat public records shall be disclosed if they conlain material that is exculpatory." "(TJhe Stale must still disclose any exculpatory document within its possession or to which it has access, even if such document is nOI subject 10 the public records law.11 I hllve been informed Ihat DOC frequently c1l1ims exemptions, \\hen inmates make records requcsts. under §§ 945.10 and 945.25, Fla. Stat. and Fill. Admin. Code R. 33_6.oo6.Jl § 945.25 relates 10 those records gen· crated lind maintllined "on every person who may become subject to parole. Ml~ Based upon the discretion of DOC, these records may include information relaring to the crime charged, psychiatric history, atlorney nallles, etc.'O The records shall include .. a copy of rite seriousness-ofoffense . . . favorable-parole-outcome scores [and] II listing of the specific factors and information used in esrablishing a presumptive parole release dllte for the inmate. ,,~I The Third District Coun of Appeal held that these records are for the confidential usc and consideration bv Ihe coun and (are) not a public docume~t. ,,'1 The Office of the Attorney General has opined that the Florida Parole and Probation Commission has the right to promulgate rules to exempt information from being disclosed under the Public Records l Act" § 945.10 is an allempt to create a public records exemption tidal wave. Information and records relating to the following areas are liSICd as exempt: mental health, medical, substance abuse, presentence investiglltions, federal witness protection program, Parole Commission records, information which released would jeopardile a person's safety. information conceming a victim's statemem, Ihe identity of an executioner. or records that are otherwise confidential or exempt." The statute then lists a variety or methods to gain access to these records:' However, most of these methods are re· Slricted to 11Iw enforcement or prison agencies. A public defender representing a defendllnl may gain access [0 "[pJreplea. pretrial intervention, presentence or postsenlenee investigative records:-'6 Iflhis is the infommtion, that you desire, you might consider contacting your trial allomey to gain a copy of these materials. The Florida Rules of Criminal Procedure require a judge to disclose all factual material to the Page 19 H panies. "A person conducting legitimate research" may also request this information, bUT the material released remains confidenfinland exempt frolll public records disclosure when held by the receiving person or entity. ,,_I The hammer of 9-15.1 0, with regard to an inmate or offender making a records request, falls under subsection 3, which states in pertinent part: Due to substantial concems regarding institutional security and unreasonable nnd excessive demands on personnel and resources ifan inmate or olTender has unlimited or roUline access to records of the Depanment of Corrections, an inmate or an offender who is under Ihe jurisdiction of the department may nOl Imve unrestricted access to the department's records or to information contained in the department's records. Howe\er, except as to another inmate's or olTender's records, the department may pemlit limited access to its records if an inmate or an offender makes a written request for infonlHllion contained in the department's records and the infonmttion is otherwise unavailable"~ Confusing? Yes. The crux of the first sentence conveys the message that inmates have too much free time to make too many records requeSIS on an overburdened, understllffed, under budgeted DOC. The second sentence grants DOC the discretion to make limited exceptions for an inmate's records request upon a showing of exceptional circulllstances.)(I "Exceptional circumstances include. but are not limited to... "SI requests for material relating to: conflicts between commitment papers and court documents, I. work perfonnance records for prospective • rc Iease, ~.. . emp Ioyment aller vlCtllll restItution thm has been paid,loO Internal Revenue Service claims,u Social Security applicatiOllS,~ claims with the Department of Labor and Employment Security,S1 applications or claims with olher state or federal tlgencics,llthe curren! IIddress of a relativc whose address is in DOC records, S9 or ". other similar circumstances that do not prc· scm a threat to the securitv order or rehabilitative objectives grlhe correctional svstelll or to anv person's safetv."oo Note that the two sections underlined, in the paragraph above, are complementary. The first section is Ihe broader constmct F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 2 with which to' build your argument to gain access to the mllterial that you requested and should always be included in thc event your request does lIot fall within one of the specific exceptional circumstances. That the exceptional circumstances upon which records may be released is 1I0tlimited to those areas in the statute is good. You lire only limited by your imaginntion lind good arguments as to what would confonn to this standard. However, the second underlined section, in the paragraph abme, goes to core mission of DOC and is therefore imponant. You should make sure that your arguments do not conflict with the factors in the second section underlined above as no court would likely issue a ruling that could be construed as presenting a threat to the security, order or rehabilitative objectives of the system or any person's safety. Notwithstanding, ". !seeurity] concerns CBn be met without a blanket denial of Bccess. ,,61 Section 945.10 previously included tOlal prohibitions on inmille access to 62 DOC records and information. But sections of the statute were declared unconstitutional in Dia; v. Florida Dept. of Corrections.'s The statute has been rewritten so llS to allow inmate access to records as noted above. The Dim: case still has good language that should be included in your arguments. The Court reasoned that there was" .. no rational basis for totally denying inmates access to infomllltion in the files of the Department of Corrections... ,,1\oסi Further, when challenging a records request denial review whether the denial is based solely upon your status as an inmate. The Court in Dia; held that "[l]here is no logical basis for [al classification [of levels of deniall where the information in the hands of the press and the public is deemed harmless to legitimate concerns of the Department [of Corrections} but the same infomllltion in the hands ofinl1llltes is presullled hamlfu1. ,,6S Fla. Admin. Code R. 33-6.006 is the DOC rule regarding confidential records and inmate access to records. The mle begins by pointing back to § 945.10, which is discussed above. The following records or information arc confidential or will be released only as the rule permits: medical records, mental health records, etcetems and then the mle begins to parrot § 945.10, Fla. Stat. If the use of this rule is more restrictive than the enabling statute, here § 945.10, Fla. Stat., then the rille is an invalid exercise of delegmcd legislative authority.'" However. merely repeating the language of Ihe enabling law, is not an invalid exercise of delegatcd legislative authority 67 Navigating Roadblocks If you made your request and did not receive a satisFactory response, what options remain? You have severnl oplions including: further letters, administrative review, mediation, mllndamus, or a lawsuit. If you received no rcsponse or a confused response, yOll may send another leller with a copy of your original request. You may indicate, in a leller,to the person responding to your request that he or she misapplied the Ill\\' with regard to exemptions. You may use an administrative appeal through DOC. You may enter into the Allorney General's public rccords media61 tion program. You may also pursue litigation in the couns by filing a complaint (a lawsuit) or by filing a petition for a writ of mandamus. Regardless of whether you take the mandamus or complaint route you rnusltake care to follow the Florida Rules of Civil Procedure. Several preliminary steps are necessary. First. the service of process (delivery of the [Iction) is handled by the local sheriff or a designated process server. IJ4 The summons is an "[i]nstmment used to commence a civil action .. ~and is a means of acquiring jurisdiction over a pany .. "it directs the sheriff or other proper orncer 10 notify the person named that an action hlls been commenced against him/her in the court from where 7Q the process issues. The summons fonn is located in the forms for use with the 71 Floridll Rules of Civil Procedure. Second, a cover sheet is used and it indicates the panics, the altomeys, the action's classification, and other mailers is also needed. The foml to be uscd is located in the fomls for use with the Florida Rules of Civil Procedure.'~ Third, the actual compillint or pelition is needed. Finally, when the case is finished a final disposition 71 fonn mllst be filed OUt. Page 20 A writ of mllndamus is an order from a court that commands the performance of some ministerial act by a public official." A petition for a writ of mandamus is an approved method of seeking disclosure of 7S public records in the State of Florida. The essence of a mandamus action is that you arc trying to gCI a coun to order some govemment officinl to do thaI which he or she is supposed to do automatically. Wrils of mandamus lire covered by the Florida 16 Rules of Civil Procedurc. Make sure to follow all of the rules. In your pctition you must include the facts upon which you are seeking relief (a public records request was made to DOC and no response was received), a request for the reliefsoughl (you want lhe public records requesled), and an!, legal argument with citations ofaUlhority. 1 If you present II prima fllcie case. the court may order DOC to show cause why the order should not be granted. n I f the response is not sufficient, the court may order DOC to tum over Ihe records. Alternatively, you may file a complaint (lawsuit) regarding the response and production of records relating 10 your requesl. Make sure to follow all of the dictates in the Florida Rules of Civil Procedure including process service,79 claims for relief.wand the fonns for use with the rules of civil procedure." A complaint must conlain the following: I.) the claim for relief must include~. . . a shon and plain statement of the grounds upon which the coun's jurisdictions depends ....·: 2.) " ... a shon and plain statcment of the ultimate facts showing thai the pleader 1l is entitled to relief. 3.) "... a demand for judgmenl for the relief to which the plcader (or plaintiff (you» deems himself or herself entitled. " U By filing a lawsuit you gain Ihe ability to use the lools of discovery." These tools include depositions,kl inlerrogatories or wriUen questions," and requests for the proJI duction of documents and Ihings. By pursuing a lawsuil you opcn yourself up 10 the use of Ihese tools on you too.·~ Beclluse the headquarters of DOC are located in Tallahassee, they typically succeed in demanding thlll lhese lawsuits be filed in Leon CounlY· Conclusion A book has been wriuen thai more F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 2 thoroughly discusses aspects of public in Florida. The record laws Governmelll-ill-lhe-SItI/Shine-Mallllal is prepared by the Office of the Attorney General and published by the Firsl 90 Amendment FoundRtion. The book is updated each year and is promotcd as "A reference for compliance with Florida's public records and open mect.mgs Iaws. " This anicle provides the basics of how to get public records from DOC. Gelling what you want mllY be difficult, but wilh determination, thought, and the right research you should be able 10 gel the records you want. DOC is a large bureaucracy and maintains probably what amounts to millions of pages of records. Some of Ihe record keeping is shoddy at best. I reviewed some records that were kept in tunnels under the Florida State Prison in Starke. Because [ wanted to ensure thaI I did nOl miss anything I went through each page in ench file in a box thm I was searching. I was reviewing one file regarding the purchase of an aUlomatic potato peeler, and I ron across documents relating to one of my death row clients... in a file about a potato peeler. Il. 14 IS. 16. 17. " 19 1O. 1I in wrillng. 11 Biography of Peter N. Mills I am all Assisralll Public Defender with Ihe Office of Ihe Public Defellder for Ihe 10th Judicial Circuit. f am curren/I)' assigne(J 10 Ihe fe/all)' Irial unit. Prior 10 my Il'ork in Bartow I was all Assislam CCR willr lire Office ofrlre Capif(ll Co//aleral Representalive. CCR is a stale agency Ihm handles most of the poslconviclioll cases ofIhe /IIell and women all Florida'.f dealh fOil'. II grem deal oflhe work 01 CCR involved litigalion over public records. Notes 5 Art J. § 24(a).I'la Conn ~ 945 OlS( I). t'l. Sm. § 944 32. Fla 5Lill, Fla Admin Cod~ R n-3 0025 and § 'J.l4 516. 1-1. Sill Fb.Admln CodeR 33·30066(UI~of 6 7 8 9 10 II 12 1-13. Admin 1-1•. Admin Fla. Admin Fla. Admin Fla Admin Ra Admin Ra Adm'n I 2 3 4 l3 l3. 26. 27. 28. ".30 F~J Cod~ R 33-29.010 Code R. 33-) 005(15Xa) Code R JJ-8.012. Cod~ R. 3)·22011(2Xe) Cod~ R. 33·18 017 Cod~ R 33.500) Code R 3)-5007 Fl. Admin Code R n·5 QO.l The DOC prooute$ numelous fDlms for usc '" doeumenuIIg III ,;ka!mp mlh of· fendcrl and the publIC and "1\1eh 1I:t, e been eodlfied under rul~ 1'1- JJ-J 00275 (Propcny forms): ))-) 0065(4) (Unllal~'SI~ Tesuntl Chain off.~ldellce rorms). 333.(l065(5Xg) (Ur;nal)"'5 TCSllnt: re<:nrdl). JJ.) 0066(5) (Usc ofFo'ce f,.,nn). ))).OO66(t 5) (Mediul fOllnl f01l0"'lIg Use of Force); 33-).0081(tO)(d) (Admlmstrall\'e ConfillClllC1\llunns). )3) OOa2( II) (ProleclIve Mlll1.IIgetnenl forms). )).) 0085(4Xa) (5pte,al Managemenl Meal fonn). ))·)018()) (SpeCl~1 Wllhdrawal fQrm). n.22.0117 (DiSClpHn~f)'Ael;on fmm,). 3)·29 01 H (Glievanee forms): and J).J& 012 (Close M~nagemenl rl:COfds and fomu) Other fOlllU and recollb life found throoghOUI CN-pler )). Fla. Admin Code ROf'sch O' SiOlt, 63) So 2d I (Fll, 199)) £Iam 0'. SIGle. 689 So 2d 12J2 (FI3. Slh DCA 1997). § 119 01{1 )(b). Fill. S181. Fin flUl. I.tgol &r. 1m: O' Ff>OC, 579 So 2d 267 (FIll. lSI DCA 1991) §11907{I)(al.Fl! 5131 (1995) §11902I,R.. SllIl.(1995) NOlhlng In ChaplCl 119 of the Flonda Slalules requlrCS Ihal a 'equCSI be made In ,,"unll and a person m~k'"llll requcsl can· nOI be required 10 prQvide Wrlllcn doeumenlJlion of a rcqllCSl Solll''On 1'. Cll)' of New Pori Rieht)·. No 86-1 I29CA (Fla. 6th CII CI May 22,1987), affirmtd. 529 So 2d 1124 (Fl•. 2d DCA 1988) 1l0""C\'er. as noted l\ertln Fla. Admin. Code R ))-6006 ro:quln:$ InmalCS 10 make: rcc:ords ro:queslS " 9~5 100t). ~'a SIal tl seq and R~ Admin Code R. 33-6006 Sft Fla. Admin Code R 33-6006(4) genemily for ro:quesl proecdur~ I'ta Admlll Code R JJ-6 006(~Xemphasl$ added). Fla Admin. Code R. 33-6 006(~Xe:mpha515 added). Sit FIll. Mmin Code R 33-6006(6)(a) geneflltly for Informal Ion regarding IlCCeS.5 10 medleal records. The rule rcqUI/CS a spc:elal DOC releasc fOf an OllUMle ~rty 10 pin acc:c:ss HOW'C"CI, Ihe usc:: ofllle relene: (for1ll [)C4-71 lB) ml)' be defeale:d by lhe: rulcs of discovery in 0 e,vll I)r criminal ClSe. The form IS aO'/IIJ3ble from Ihe Olliee Qflkallh Sen'ices. 2601 Bla" SlOne Road. Tallahassee:. FL 32)99·2500 Fla Admin Code R. ))-6 006(6)(a). Form[)C4.71IHmUSlagambeullltud. St, § 119 07(2Xa), FJ3 511ll (1995). Stc R. Regulaling Fla. Bnr 4·3,4 "hieh ltnlcs III pertinenl pan "" lawyer shall mol' (a) unlawfully ObSllUCI anolher party's accC$.$ 10 "'idence or olherwise unlawfullr alIa. destroy, 01 conceal a dOCUmenl or olher malerial thaI Ihe lBW)l:f know~ or ICasonably sllould know is relevanl 10 a pending or a reasonably r<lfCs«~blc proc~~d'"R. !\Of CQIlllS<'l 0.- IUliI llIlOlh~rl""SOlllo do any we:h ",,Ilw: ~. 1'70",10 lXl't 01 (''''"tllt''u. 519 So 2d 41 (Ib 151 PCA 19U). "1""1: "t- T~m<r Su § Page 21 n. v SajI~Y. 101 SCI 22S4 (\9&7), and dlOng Flo"do IfUl!lullonai bgat S..,..,u.., Inc• •, F/tlndD!Jq>' o/CtHrfflIl'm. 50 fla. Supp. 91 6$. 66 (Fia 2d ell. Ct 1910) 61 Wall Tnhllllc C"",pIJ1!),., CatlMlIQ, 1M. HS So 2<1516 Mu.hI..."" ,. /)I,1f¥t., 623 So 2d 480 (Fta 1993). Wall"" ,. /)I,ggtr, 621 So 2d US7 CF4· 1993): MrnJ}k.' Sml., '92 So 2d 1016 (1992); linj,'fr •. o..~r. j76 So 1d 6% (Fla. 1991) W"llM, 621 So 2d Al 136() (c;li"ll 1lrtJ</y ", 313 U,S 83 (l96J»). C~nce from MI Bobby Po$cy, F..dltor, Flo"da Pm"" fAgal P."p<'C"".a, d MOf}~IJf"J. ,«""... NO\unbn 30,1998 f 94S1S(1~ f1I Sial f 94' 1$(1 )(1), Fl•. 5111 . f/ uq f 945 2'(4), Fl. 5111 <t. 1912) • Op. AllY. Gm .074·H7. Au&- 9,1914 f~'.IO(II.Fl. 51.1 194$.10(2). Fla SIll. II 94S.10(2Xd) and 91$ 10(1)(10). flo Sill. Fl~. R. Com. P.l.1U 1l0",~wr.lhi, r~l~ awl;~. to tile trill ,oun Ind nc)l DOC. ~r Smgl<lary Y. ....'I!r. 7D7 So 2d 340 (Fl•. 2d OCA 1997). Acld'liOllll! issua lbout Ib< rda$<" or PSI III e~t ~pnl'fII fonfidtntial inr<>mllltlll<L ~e Gatdnn •. FlomJa, 97 S Cl 1197.430 U S 349 (1977). FU"I:""e " Sime. 391 So, 211336 (FlI. 4th DCA 1980). ClUUlll1J;lwm ", StOle. )49 So 2d 702 (F\I. 4th DCA 1977). em. ,I,,"'et! J62 So. 1d IOS2. /ztIitr p Smlf!r. J4B So 2d 1119 (FlI 4,h DCA 1977). B1Q'ISIIrI • SiDle. 34S So 2d In (flo 2d DCA 1977), 1945 10(2Xll. Fl~. Stl1. t 945 10(). Fla, St.t Th" doe. nol irn:l>lde r~ll\1linll ~ req,,"st rQ< an· O!hc' iNnIle·. rocordJ n.:.l" 10 loIy.one Lnm>le·. rtwrd. ~pnhnllllOlhn ,nmale may IlOl bo twfillod A l;I.iC mip.l bo made 10 tldea! ,h,. "'hon ,oruiikrm, Ihe hu;;lhnl or d'Klphrwy rcpons (DR) One ,nm~te'l DR ""th ,he lime Q< sllml~r ci",umltan'es to anothe' ,nmate ""h a DR m~y bo~n handled d,ITelemly You would an ....t.. nl ,n proporrlOllllllly. ,f an~ IMUlC IC'ttl''C'Il more fa'1Inlbk t~_ ,n ~. ". nwm- ". "" Edition ."..... '" N Y.S.2d 217. 289. e,.. R e,.. f\a R F~d R 72. Flo I' Form 1.997 CO''CT Shtcl 13, Fill R e", I' Foom 1.998 (1991) " S1"'''''~. McMdll11l. S97 So. 2d 940(FIII hI DCA). "" de",ffl, 605 So 2d 1266 (f4. 1992). M,II, • /)oJle 407 So 1d 348 (Fla. 41h DCA 1981) "" "". ". "" "" 80 ~ ... 81. Fla. R Flo. R. Flo R f1a R fla. R. fla. R. e,v P 1 6JO e,y I' 1.610(b) e,v I' 1 6lO(d). Civ P 1 010 ety P 1 II00b). Ciy 1'. form, 1.901. c1 seq ~'a. R. etV, I' ~'a R I' 1 I 1O(b)(2). Fla. R e,v P 1.l1O(bX3) Sec ...... mlyfl. R C1Y.Pl210.c1Kq Fla. R. C" P I 310 snd 1320, fla R C.. !' 1.340 Fla. R Ct,· " I 3SO Ind 1.3S I e" F1~Re,vPlnO " The F'nl AmcndmrnI fOllllC!llhOllIS lowed ., 3M E.. Colle~ A'".• SUlle 300. TaJlahas· 9/. The Oo'''mn\Cnt.",.. thc·Sun,llIM·Manllll. =.FLl2]OI VoILlme20.(1998 EdUlon) , By William Vlln Poyek 1 94$.10()Xa), ~'a. St~l. R ,. IJ /d This S>lb p:ll1.pecil\~ltly JlJl~' tblllh~ add,ess il in 1XlC. f«OfllJ Illll. " II,. ,d~ti,,, hu IlOl ,ndICale" • des"c IlOl to be eonlKted by lhe IMIIIc Of off<tdcr.- 19H to(3)(.). FI.& SIll (cmphaJls added) n", docs IlOl mean thaI the ,clatwe is mlnllcd 10 ,ndl.lt, a dcll1C 10 be contaeted. The "'b puts eX(1l'lpliOll i. U1ggcted "h~n Ih~ lel>II"~ ",d"OI" a de",e nOl to bo conlxtod, 1945 100lj(ll. FIll Stat. «(Ulp!wi, adclcd). /JItr: •. FlOIdJ 0..". D/CtH'trCIiM.'. Sl9 So 2d 41.42(Fla.lilDCA 19").. I94S10.Fla.Slal (1915) Flonda /)<-1" r>/C&""c'w,u. 519 So 2d 41 (FI~_lst DCA 1988), D'a:. $19 So. 2d ~142 J>ia: •. F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 2 Final DIsposition f"",,. 14 BIIOt's law P,'I;o<W)'. S,oth EdItion tu,,, tu,,, 19JJ.IO(J}/b). ~'ll. Stat 1945 10(3X'). Fl:a Stat §94S. 100lXd). fla Sta, e",l I' foom 1 902 DEATH ROW CLASS ACTION YARD CASE SABOTAGED ll. "". S'~lh 'oqu:J' JuclIa Ill'\llllOll. f 945 10(3). Fla, Stll (cmplwi, .&led), ". ". "" "n. ". Blxt', law Dlclionary. (1991). ntrnlll" rc lXlI. .l6 Mi" 1d 1017. 8lDdb"m l' SIll'., 261 So 2d 861 (Fl. 3d DCA ".... "" 69 70 1'4(0) SO 23IS(198Sj ".". "o. You can "",."." more ,nfOfmlt,on about lhe modilllon progrom by eonlXllnlllhe Office of the AltOf'llCY GCncnlll P1.O I. The Capi101. TaJ!IhI»ft. Flondl. )2399-10$0 Flo R. C,v 1'1 070. 0'..... (Fla. 2d DCA 1911). quwhrd on (JIMr gl'OliJld$.. 4'8 So. 2d 1075 (Fl. 19M). 0PP<<l1 dum'unl lith 110"'.. DtJ><rlr • Tnh.m. O!lrlflll'1J'. 10' lB. m".....' 65. /d. FloridD Frn:OOm 1I'r;M-spa/Nn. • Dt..p.<q. 41& So 2d 112& lalOCA 1915) ". Dc",,,,,,,,,,,, "r FI",uJa !'"",.., If l"f:h' en. 372 So. 2d p. 420 (FliL 1979). ". Dia:,$19So2t1114J. rna: ~ lkpr. "/Ca,,..,.IIl1<U. (OOAlI &6-4912R). 10 FALR 5141(1911) Se. grnuaJlJ lHil: y, Co,- Se. After 18 years of litigation in federal court the class action death row "Yllrd" case, DOllga" 1'. Single/fir)', fI 81-11-Clv-j·IO, met an undeserved ignominious end when U.S. District Judge William Terrell Hodges abmplly dismissed Ihe enlire case on January 21, 1999. Dougall began in 1981 when a handful ofdealh row inmates filed a pro se civil suit in Jacksonville seeking their conslitUlional right to one (I) hour per day of outdoor exercise. Soon thereafter the court "invited" attorney William Sheppard to represent the prisoners, llnd the case was certified as a class action. In 1983 Sheppard llbntptly "settled" the cnse by signing II consent decree which gave the prisoners only four (4) hours of yard per week, despile Ihe overwhelming body of case law holding Ihat confinement inmates have a constitutional right to a minimum of one hour per day. The four page consent decree was so poorly drafted that it pennitted the State to blatantly disregard the consent decrec for the nexi eight years, which lhey did. The proceedings in lln attempt to enforce the tems of the consent decree, although he sleadfasl1y refused to move to amend the consent decree 10 give his clients their constitutional minimum of one hour per day. [n 1996 the Prison Litigation Reform Act [P.L.R.A.] became law; Ihe act permits any conse", decree to be dissolved aller 2 years upon motion by llny party. The State immedinlely moved to dissolve the DOIlgall consent decree. a move applauded by class members who wamed to go to trial llnd rcceive their conSlilutionally mandated minimum of one hour per day. After an appeal to the 11'" circuit,the District Court held a "SWillS conference" on January 21.1999. Immediately following the conference (at which no prisoners were present) the court not only dissolved thc consent decree, but, wilhout any legal basis and without making llny findings of facl or conclusions of law, thc court, in a 3-sentencc order dismissed the entire case. Sheppard, who has been totally anlagonislic towards his ,. clients" ( the prisoners) throughoul this protracted litigation has collected over half a million dollars in altorney fees and costs over the years. Sheppard has written to class members infoming them that he has no intcnlion of appealing the order of dismissal and advised one prisoncr class member that Ihey were now" on their own" and should" Slllri all over again." Class membcrs are now seeking a rcal altomey to represent them in a new sui!. Arter 18 years and $5,000,000 in collected fees Sheppard has bailed om, gUllrnnteeing that Florida remains the only slale in Ihe nation where death row inmatcs receive less Ihan one hour per day of outdoor exercise. I'IU',S1l START RECO\,I-:R\' PROGRAMS OFFERS U STP.P SUPPORT CROUl'S FOR TIIOS': EXPI-:RIF.NC· INC I.lFE COSTROLl.ING PRORl.EMS. TIlE GROUPS MEET EVER\' TIIURSDAY AT 7:JOPM AT t4lHl N. SI-:MOllAI'l 111.\'0.• SUITF. 1', ORI.AI'DO. FlOlllllA FRH M ...·nON. CALL o~· CIIARCI-:. FOil MOIU: INFOII_ (~07) lBl.JlJ1 OR }l1·lllS. Page 22 THOMAS E. SMOLKA ATTORNEY·AT·LAW 3126 W. CARY STREET, SUITE 122 RICHMOND, VIRGINIA 23221·3504 TELEFA.X(I')4)6U 4UJ TELEPHONE (104) 6oU-4-461 ANNOUNCEMENT Thomas E. Smolka is proud to announce the establishment afms law practice in Richmond. His practice areas include: Criminal Defense Law, Appellate Criminal Law. Post·Conviction Relief. Major Civil Litigation, Inmate Administrative Law and Proceedings involving the Department of Corrections, Probation and Parole, Executive Clemency. Interstate Compact and Institutional Transfers, Immigration Law and Detainer Actions. Additionally, Thomas E. Smolka and Associates located at 909 East Park AvenI/e. Tallahassee. Florida 32301·2646. Tebwhone C8JQI 22Z·64Qa. TeWax (850) 2226484, will continue tQRrovide a filii ranu QlConsultjne Seryjces to Inmates on Administratiye Executive Clemen", and Parole Related Matters. Subsequent to his 1975 graduation from America's oldest law school at the College of William & Mary, Thomas E. Smolka was admitted to the Virginia State Bar and became a member of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers. Tom's legal experience includes service as an Assistant City Attorney of Norfolk, Virginia followed by many years in private law practice. Most importantly, Tom Smolka's direct understanding of the American judiciary came when he confronted the criminal justice system, won his direct appeal and was exonerated. See Smo1kD v. State. 662 So.2d 1255 (Fla. 5" DCA 1995), rev. denied, Stote v. SmolkD, 668 So.2d 603 (Fla. 1996). F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 2 Page 23 Florida Department of Corrections 260 I Blair Stone Rd. Tallahassee FL 32399-2500 (850) 488-5021 Web Site: www.dc.state.fl.us Florida Corrections Commission Office of the Goyemor Florida Resource Organizations 2601 Blair Stone Rd. Tallohassee FL 32399-2.500 (850)413-9330 Fax (850)4 13-914\ EMail: fcon:om.!9naiJ.de.slllle.n.us · d n Web SIte: www. O5.518lc. wlfgllslagencieslfcc: PL 05 The Capitol Tallahassee FL 32399-000 I (850) 488-2272 florida InSlilutional Legal Services (Florida Prison Action Network) Ch Ie fl nspector ~--, ut;Il...IGoI-... Citizen's AsSlslanCC Admm ..922-4637 . 488-7l46 Michael Moore. Scaaary .. ..438-7480 The Aonda Cooccuons Commwlon lS composed of CommlsslonlGo\'CI1lment Ac:countabllit) Informlltion .., ................ 488-0420 eight CIIlztr1S appointed by the governor to oversee the to the People.......... . 922-6907 (tnfo Dira:tor. Kerry f1llCk) FJonda Department of Corrections. 3dVlSe the 8O\-er, Office of Executive Clemency .... 488-7052 nor and legal.ture on correcuonal ISSues. and promote Correspondence Conuot. 2601 Blair Stone Rd. Inspector General. Fred Schuknechl ......488-9265 public: eduClltlon about the coucetlonal system in Bldg. C, Room 229 Interstate Compacts .... 487-0558 Florida The Commission holds relulltr meetings around Tallahassee FL 32399-2450 Health Services..... ......922-6645 the stale ....hich the public may attend 10 proVide (850)488.2952 (Charles MUllhcws, MD. AsSI. Sec.) Input on. issues. and p~blems :tfTc,cllng the cO~llonal Coordinator. Jonel Keels system In FlOrida. Pnsoners families and fnends ate Assistant (crclary for Securityllnst. Management Sian Cu:mllll,-... .488-8181 encour1lged to contact the CommiSSion to advise them Rorida ParoleIProbation Commission Inmate Clllssification .488-98S9 of problem areas, The CommiSSion is Independent of 2601 Blair Stone Rd., Bldg C the FOOC and IS interested in public pamcipation snd Sentence Structure . . 413-9337 Tallohassee FL 32399-2450 comments concc:ming lhe oversight of the FDOC. Vicltm AsSistance ,488·9166 Comml~uon Members; (850)488-1655 PopulnllOn Mgt.. . _, . 488·9166 Edgar M. Dunn • Jr,. Esq -ChaIr Regional Offices Region I Region IV (850)482-9533 (352)955-2035 (407)245-0840 (954)202-3800 Region V. (813)744-8555 Region II Recion III Kane C. Nleoo!s-V.ec ctwr - Hen Wdham E\'CfS-Ma)'Or or8radc:naon (h\'1d F Har\'q'. SbmfT. Wakulla County Tallahassee FL 32302 (850)488-7880 Web Site: www.fdlc..statc.n.us Alma B llttJe:s., MO Guy I«\'dl. Jr .,Former Pa:roIc Corm:nwioner Ray Sansan.llbJoclg Cowlty Comnu"""", ~'3rd Nocbrse. A erE SUBSCRIPTION EXPIRAnON?? Please check your mailing label for the dale that your subscription to FPLP will expire. On the lOp line will be renecled a dale such as ••• ov 99· ... That date indicates the last month of your current subscription to FPLP. When you rec.eivr the FPLP issue for that monlh, plun renew your subscription immediately so Ihal you do not miss as issue of FPLP. Your support through subscriplion donatioM makes publication possible and is greatly appreciated. Please lake the time to complete Ihe enclosed subscription form 10 subscribe to or renew your subsc.ription to FPLP. If the subscription form is missing, you may write diredly, enclose Ihe requested donalion, to subscribe. Moving? Transferred? Please complete the enclosed Address Change Notice so Ihal the mailing lill can be updated. injusriu anywhere is a IhreQI to jusriu everywhert!.. ~ Afartin Lurher King. F.P.L.P. VOLUME 5, ISSUE 2 Department of Law Enforcement P.O. Box t489 FLORIDA I IIO-C W 8th Me. Gainesville FL 32601 (352)955-2260 Fax: (352)955-2189 EMail: fils@afn.org Web Site: www.srn.org/fiIs! Fllmilies wilh Loved ones In Prison 7\ 0 Flanders Ave. Dnylona Beh FL 32t 14 (904)254.8453 EMail: flip@afn.org Web Sile: www.afn.org/ flip Restorative Justice Ministry Network P.O. Box 819 Ocala. FL 34478 (352) 369-5055 Web: ww\\o.Jjmn.net Email: BemiC@;rjmn.ncl PRlSO NO -PROFIT U.S. POSTAGE LEGAL PERSPECTIVES P.O. BOX 660-387 CHULUOTA, FL32766 OVIEDO, FL PERMIT NO. 65 PAID