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FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL Pers Jectives ISSN# 1091-8094 VOLUME 12. ISSUE 2 IFIID(D)(C C $ JrJr UllllDtil $1Dl JP> Jr lID 1b><e § , <e@lDltillDlnn<e~ N<ew §<e~Ir<et&JrY CJr&~Ik§ W@.WIID <Q)nn lElDDlllDllllDy<e<e§ <enlUl1b>§ . f what occurred recently is a indication of Ipicked what will continue, Gov. Jeb Bush' may have finally the right person to clean up what now good has has b~ .exposed to be corruption throughout the Florida Oeparbnent of Corrections (FDOC). In February Gov. Bush abruptly fired the former head of the. state's prison system, James Crosby, after months of a' steady barrage of scandals involving .corruption and illegal activities by top prison officials became public. Named by Gov. Bush to replace Crosby, Col: James McDonough, 59, a fonner Army eommander, hasn't wasted any time since he took over in getting rid of . the most obvious bad apples and launching his own investigations into areas where more corruption may be hiding. ' . . McDonough has said that his first job is to restore a code of ethics in the prison system 'that includes "honesty in all thinp." He's got a big job ahead of him to do that. As is coming to light, corruption and good old boy cronyism permeates the Florida prison'system and.has for many decades. McDonough has, however, faced tough' p"iiiblems before. Prior to coming to the FDOC he served' in the Army for almost thirty years. He waS, the commander on a mission to Rwanda in the 1990s whose ON I job wasn't just to try to stop genocidal killing, but also to figure out how to keep refugees from dying of cholera. He also led troops Into battle in the Balkans. He finished up his Army career as commander of the Southern European Task Force Infantry Brigade. Most recently he had been a part of Gov. Bush's administration as the state's director ofdrug control policy. McDonough admits .that he doesn't have experience working in a prison system. "But I do have experience in leadership," he said. He has promised that . he is going to go over the department from a management standpoint from top to bottom, thorou~ examining practices, budgets and contracts. Something many feel is long o v e r d u e . . . For several months now a dark cloud has been hanging over the prison sysiem. 'There are state and federal grand jury investigations underway into wrongdoing ~y top officials at the agency, and investigations being conducted by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement and FBI. So far the problems that have been made public include allegations of theft and misuse 'of prisoners and state property by prison guards and officials, a steroid trafficking ring of prison guards, phantom employees, assaults and intimidation by prison guards and top officials, employ~n-employee sexual assaults, and questionable contract bidding practices. See: FPLP,'VoI. II, Iss. 5 and'6, and Vol. 12, Iss. I, tor more detaiJs. As 'of mid-March it still hadn't become clear why fonner FDOC secretary James Crosby was forced to step .. FAMILIES ADVOCATES FIUSONEllS THE INSIDE MAR/APR 2006 .. ·..·····::;;'!8{v/!;,;:-· ,,y FDOC Contracts Under Scrutiny Sue Under ADA Post Conviction Comer . '. Notable cases _ 'J. ,i ·.:.: "" Prison~ Can . ~_;: .~~..:-.~ .. ~. .2.:- ._~ -,'. ~/~.77:.. ~_ :.S' fI.7 " 10 tf-XJ ~ Parole Commission Avoids Ax-Again . , Fla. Prison Phone Rates Reduced 100-_ _- ' : :I & ••• .;~~;: • •• . 12 19 23 rl~ .~0l"~L:'·~ .,:1'1-: Florida Prison Legal·Perspectives FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL PERSPECTIVES P.O. BOX lSI J CHRISTMAS. FLORIDA 32709 Publishing Division of: FLORIDA PRISONERS' LEGAL AID ORGANlZAnON.INC. A501 (e) (3) Non-plOflt Orpnizllllon E-mail: folp@aol Cllm Website: www,fnlllOQTB FPLAG DIRECTORS Teresa Bums-Posey Bob Posey. eLA David W. Bauer, Esq. Loren D. Rhoton, Esq. Publisher Editor Research FPLPSTAFF Teresa Bums-Posey Bob Posey Sherri Johnson Anthony Stuart I Florida Prisoners' Legal Aid Organization, Inc., ,P.O. Box 1511, Chrislmas, FL 32709. publishes FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL PERSPECTIVES (FPLP) up to'six times a year. FPLP is a non-prOfit publication focusing on the Florida prison and criminal justice systems. FPLP provides a vehicle for news, information. and n:sourccs affecting prisoners, their families, ftiends, loved ones, and the general public of Florida. RecbJction of crime and recidivism, maintenance of family ties, civil rights, Improving conditions of confinement, promoting skilled court access for prisoners, and promoting lU:COuntablllty of prison officials are all issues FPLP Is designed to address. FPLP's non-attomcy volunteer staff cannot respond to requests for legal advice. Due to the volume ofmall that Is received and volunteer staff IImIJatlons, all correspondence that Is received cannot be responded to, but all mall will receive individual attention. Permission Is P!ed ro reprint material appearing In FPLP that does not Indicate It Is copyrighted provided that FPLP and an)' Indicated author are Identified In the reprint and a copy of the publication In which the material is published Is provided to the FPLP publisher. This publication Is not meant to be a substitute for legal or other professional advice. The material In FPLP should not be relied upon as authoriJatlve and may Not contain sufficient information to deal with a leSal problem. FPLP Is auromatlcall)' sent to all members of FPLAO, Inc. as a membership benefl!. Membership dues ror FPLAO. Inc., operate yearly and are SIO for prisoners, SI5 for fiunll)' members and other private Individuals, $30 for attorneys, and S60 for agencies, libraries, and Institutions. 2. 1 - - - - - - - - - - - - -..... down, although Bush said it would be clear soon why he had to go. The speculation is that with the ongoing grand jury probes. there could be state or federal criminal indiCbnents coming. and not just against Crosby. A Bush spokesman has confinned that Crosby is the target of an ongoing investigation, but about exactly what nobody is sayins. Not WastIDg Time Only thirteen days after being appointed to repJace the ousted Crosby, on February 22. McDonough stunned FDOC officiaJs and employees by ordering all employee cJub activities to immediately c:ease and ordering that such clubs' financial accounts be fioomL McDonough cited a need to evaluate the use of controversial fundraising tools used by tho employee clubs to supposedJy raise money for charitable work. The clubs . are run by employees at most FDOC facilities· and have been operating without eft'ective oversight for years, leaving them open to corruption some employees now claim. Prior to 1999, each prison had its own business office and the staff would usually manage employee club 'funds aJso. When Michael Moore was appointed secretary that year the ~usiness offices were consolidated into regional offices and the employee clubs were let to manage their own finances. supposedly with oversight by individual wardens. That didn't work out very well. . Allen Clark, a high schooJ dropout, but a buddy of James Crosby, and who was forced to resign his $94.000 job as Region I director Jast year when accused of wrongdoing, was the subject of a 1999 FDOC internal investigation concerning his misuse of employee club funds at New River Correctional Institution. Th8t investigation followed accusations that Clark, then a captain at New River. improperly used employee trust fund money to pay for travel and equipment for softball and flag football teams that played in tournaments against other prisons' teams. The investigation allegedly found no reason to take. action against Clark, even though other employees reported that CJark and a cadre of his henchmen threatened retaJiation against anyone protesting how he used employee club funds. Investigators did find that: • ,Employee club money had been given to individuals but no receipts obtained for tho cash. • Employee club assets, like a Sam's Club card, were used for personal purcbases. • Clark and another New River captain, Kenneth Lampp (who was later promoted to warden) had improperly taken bolt cutters from the prison to cut locks oft' ballot boxes during employee club elections in which they. were candidates and Florida Prison Legal Penpeetives· coerced staff members into voting for certain calldidates. • New River Warden Michael Rathman was aware . ,the election .was likely rigged by ·ballot box ~umng and coercion but did nothing about it. ~ '., .1 • And neither did anyone else when all that was found during the internal investigation. Clark also managed a 2002 softball team of Florida State Pri~on employees named "The Big House." The. team's behavior was called barbaric by opponents at a state tournament and was baMed from future participation in Florida Law Enforcement Games. Seven of the 20 "Big House~ players have since been arrested or cited in state and federal investigations concerning new allegations. .pac employees have complained that sports· teams, often paid for with employee trust funds, have embarrassed the department with bad behavior and extravagant spending. Others outside the department are criticizing where employees club funds come from. Club members conduct fund-raisers like raftles and dinners as well as operate employee canteens to raise money for the clubs. Less well known is that prisoners are alsp usl:id to provide personal services to FDOC offlcials and staff for which the employees clubs get a cut of what the prisoners are paid Those services include prisoners being used as staff barbers, nearly every FDOC prison }ijls a staff ~h9p•. Unlicensed shops, as are the prisoners who work in them. Select prisoners are also quietly paid by employees clubs to wash employees' personal vehicles,. shine their. shoes . 'and boots, and work in staff canteens. Such prisoners are select, because they are only a handful among the prisoner population who get paid The majority of prisoners are strictly prohibited from engaging in any activity that might make them money. PersoaaJ.Stafl'Services Sbut DowD , For decades, however, the $1 haircuts, shoe shines and car washes have been juSt one more job perk. No one saw. lUIYthing wrong with using prisoners to do such ~. w~rk for FOOC employees. Of course, it was a1ways.. done out of the public's sight. No one saw anything. wrong, that is, until last year when it was reported that there was an ongoing investigation into FDOC officials and staff·allegedly using prisoners to work on ~onal vehicles ,and possibly using state equipment to build personal items, like trailers and barbeque grills, for officials and staff. Several FDOC employees had vehicles and other items seized from their homes last year, including former secretary James Crosby, as part of that investigation by law enforcement. In December 'OS, Florida Prisoners' Legal Aid Organi1.ation chairwoman Teresa Bums Posey contacted CrosbY abQ~t the legality of using prisoners to perform q~ ~oilal services for statT, such as cutting their hair, shining' their shoes, washing their cars and serving them in staff canteens. Burns Posey specifically questioned Crosby about the legality of unlicensed staff barbershops and unlicensed prisoner barbers. Burns Posey has a particular interest in that because she is a licensed barber and owns licensed barbershops. Crosby failed to respond to such questions, promp.ting Burns Posey to go to the governor's office and state Department of Professional Regulation with her questions and adding allegations that the FOOC. is in violation of state law by using paid, but unlicensed, prisoner "barbers" in unlicensed staff barbershops to cut the staff's (who are members of the public) hair. (See, cl)apter 476, Florida StaMes.) . While awaiting a response from the governor's office and the DPR, Crosby was fired and McDonough took over. Bums. Posey immediately gave McDonough and the Department of Insurance noti~ that unless the staff barbershops and other activities using prisoners to perform personal services for staff were not shut down she would file suit. Within days of that notice McDonough ordered the staff barbershops, shoeshine, and carwash operations closed. Burns Posey· says she·' hopes, if the staff barbershops are eventually reopened, that the Department will set up a barbering school where prisoners can actually learn the trade and be licensed. And if paid, such prisoner barbers must receive higher compensation, as state law requires deductions to be made anytime prisoners are paid to work to help payoff any r~titution or child support that maybe owed. The employees clubs were noi making such deductions when payi~g prisoners, contrary to that law. Bums PoseY .aiso wrote to McDonough in February about another: serious problem concerning prisoners' families: The extremely high rates they are being charged under the FDOC's contract with MCI to accept collect phone calls from their incarcerated loved ones. She explained how under that contract, which is ,scheduled to be renewed in May of this year, prisoners families are being charged the highest legal rates possible to stay in contact with someone in priSon. The major problem, she pointed out, is the 53 pen:ent kickback commission that the FDOC insisted on before MCI was aw8rded the contract. In-state calls average almost $6.00, while out-ofstate calls average about $20.00 for a IS minutepphone call, with more than half going to the FDOC, which has little or no costs associated with the ~te telephone system. Burns Posey called on McDonough to look at that contract and consider 'giving prisoners' families some relief from what can only be considered gouging by a state agency. [FPLAO started the Families Against Inflated Rates (FAIR) Campaign in 2003, which has been working to get the phone rates reduced since then.] In February, McDonough also ordered all employees clubs' softball activities to shut down, saying the department's name will not be associated with the activities as they have been operating. It seems that some 13 • Fiorida Prison Legal Perspectives softball activities were involved in many of the problems now being revealed about the department. as covered in other articles in this issue of~. • StlrnlldJl1lg 01Ult at FlD>OC' Sojf~1b>allll n February 27 the new head of the Department 'of O Corrections (FOOC) placed nine employees on unpaid leave behind brawls at a softball banquet and 4 tournament last year. Those placed on leave included Maj. James Bowen and, Col. Richard Frye, who along with former FDOC Region I Director Allen Clark ~ere charged with felony assault for their 'involvement in the fight at the Florida National Guard Armory in Tallahassee on April Fools Day. The felony charges were later reduced to misdemeanors, then dropped altogether in January when prosecutors said too many witnesses had conflicting statements and there was a lack of evidence. Bowen and Frye were placed on unpaid leave in Nowmber when they were' charged. but were placed on paid leave in January when the charges against them were dropped. Clark had already resigned in August after a criminal investigation began into steroid . use and embezzlement among prison employees. .Another FDOC employee, Brad Tunnell, the correction services administrator for Region I, was placed on paid leave in November. Tunnell, the son of Florida Department of Law Enforcement Commissioner Guy Tunnell. was not charged in the April III fight. but was accUsed of sweating at and threatening another employee who was helping the victim. who got jumped on. from the banquet. In addition to Bowen and Frye, the FDOC employees placed on unpaid leave Feb. 27 included: Georgia Arnold. Region I aSsistant warden for programs; James Barton. a lieutenant at Charlotte Correctional Institution; Barbara Durrance, an executive secretary at the R.egion I office; Qonnie Mayo, a sergeant· at Washington Correctional Institution; Eric McMillon, a sergeant at Apalachee Correctional Institution; and Ernest Tharpe. a correctional officer at Liberty Correctional Institution. In a meeting with 300 ranking officials in ~ FDOC a week before 'he placed the nine on unpaid leave, McDonough said there will be major personnel changes in the Florida prison system ifthat is what' it takes to redefine the culture ofthe department . Among its problems, the prison system ,is facing federal lawsuits over alleged sexual harassment of female employees and the abusive use of chemical sprays on prisoners at Florida State Prison. The department is also the target of state and federal investigations into misuse of money and prisoner labor, and is under legislative scrutiny I concerning no-bid pharmaceutical contracts. Several former employees have been convicted of steroid use and trafficking. some of whom have agreed to cooperate in other investigations into criminal activities and wrongdoing in the department. In February McDonough also fired Lanyard Owens,warden of Gainesville Correctional lristitution. The reason for Owens being fired came out in a department report released March 2. The department investigation showed that Owens used prisoners and state materials to refurbish a trailer holding two barbeque grills owned by Owens. Employees said welding, painting and installation of diamond plating were done on the trailer and grills at the GCI maintenance shop last year. Employees and prisoners who were interviewed said Owens brought the grill to the shop and oversaw the work being done. Owens told investigators that he dido't know prisoners, employees and state material were being used to upgrade the grill, which he said was used in employee events such as softball games. The FDOC also announced March 2 that two other top-level FOOC employees left the agency shortly after McDonough took over in February and that investigations of those employees continue. Jesse Whitfield was fired from his S7I,243-a-year job as an assistant warden at Union Correctional Institution on Feb. 22, Whitfield is a fonner inspector with the FOOC's central office in Tallahassee. Ron Jones, who h8d been making $88,677 as warden of South Florida Reception Center, resigned Feb. 21. Another investigation is being conducted at Hamilton Correctional Institution. It was continned on Mar. 2 that Col. David Coleman, who had been overseeing the HCI work camp, was placed on leave, but no details were released. ,On Mar. 111 more information was released. The FOOC revealed that some· of the nine employees placed on unpaid leave a few days earlier are also accused of being involved in a second fight at a softball tournament in Jacksonville in Mayof200S. The fight in Jacksonville left one employee with a broken jaw. Brad Tunnell is accused of breaking the man's jaw and causing him to be hospitalized, although a spokesman for the Jacksonville Sheriff's office said there was no record of Brad Tunnell being arrested in connection with the incident. McDonough confinned that Brad, Tunnell was involved in both the Tallahassee and Jacksonville fights. With an FDLE investigation also going on. it is riot'clear whether it involves the fights too. McDonough said. however, that he has no problem with Guy Tunnell's (Brad Tunnell's father's) agency being involved, and quickly rejected any sugges~ion that it could lead to a conflict. McDonough continued his shakeup of the department on Mar. 3 when he fired five of the nine Florida Prison Legal Penpectives rumors of problems with ~ntraets between the department and several. private companies. Smith, some believe, was fishing for details of what th,e investigations are looking at McDonough said he couldn't give details, but that he would share the information with legislators as soon as possible. "I know what I know." McDonough said. "The hell of it is. I don't know what I don't know. There are some problems with contracts. that doeS not mean there are problems with all contracts:" . The FDOC (at least since Jeb Bush became goverrtor) has expanded privatization in the prison ~ including food services, prisoner canteen operations, health-care services' for South Florida prisons. and some entire prisons. . 'McDonough later said that the questionable contracts included construction and services, but wouIdn-t be more specific. He did say none of the problems being loobd at threatened the safety of prisoners or. staft: He added that some contracts are being intemally reviewed for inefficiency or lack of oversight, while others. are the concern of the state &lid federal investigations. McDonough also. said that the nepotism and cronyism within the department is a problem that he will cmrect. He said there were more than 100 examples of questionable hiring and promotiorw that have come to his attention. "It appears to me that the protocol in the department (concerning nepotism and cronyism) have been 4isregarded in ~. years." he said. "I need to fix [Sources: Gainesville Sun, 2128106, 313/06; Orlando that immediately and I sball." Sentinel, 3/1106; AP. 3/1106; LiJUJand Ledger, 312106, He added that he is aware that in the rural areis 3/4/06; South. Fla. Sun-Sentinel. 3/2/06; St. Pelenburg prisons are the Prominent employer, he appreciated the Times; AP, 313/06; FDOC Investigation Reports.] • "family heritage" of generations working for the prison system. but said promotions and birinp should always be based on merit. FDOC COlDltIral.Ct.S Dll'&WRl1llg A few employees in powerful positions ,had SCll'1UlttRl1llY created an unhealthy atmosphere for the bulk of the agency's workers, McDonough said. A "cultural battle" DOC interim secretary James McDonough confirmed . waged by a few rogue employees has hurt thedepaitment, March 9 what had been ~uspected for awhile: The he claims. "If you (as an employee) start to exist in a state and federal investigations. one involving the Florida system in places where the other side is advanced, where Department of Law Enforcement (PDLE) and a sfato.wide the definition of prison culture is to be bigger. better, grand jury and the other involving.the FBI and a federal badder. meaner tJum the prisoneis, th8t (behavior) is where grand jury, are focusing on contracts between the prison .the reward seems to be and that can affect lots of system and private companies. (otherwise) good people," said McDonough. McDonough also told the state Senate Justice He also told legislators that he will continue his Appropriations Committee on March 9 that promoti~ of review of the employees clubs•. He froze the clubs' funds. friends and'family within the Department of COl'I'eCtions estimated to be $1.5 million statewide, in February. was .a serious concern and that he will be making McDonough was called back to the Capitol by personnel changes ·soon that are re18ted to nepotism and .lawmakers on March 13, for an update on contracts with cronyism. TYA Pharmaceuticals. . The FDOC, apparently with Sen. Rod Smith, D-A1achua (who reportedly is a Crosby's approva~ without soliciting bids from other personal mend of James Crosby_ the former FDOC companies, gave TYA. a Tallahassee company. contracts secretary who was fired by Gov. Jeb Bush in February). to split pi~ for cost ~Vings and repackage them in bubble told McDonough during the committee's hearing that containers for distribution to prisoners. lawmakers are concerned about allocating funds in the next few weeks of the legislative session considering the employees placed on unpaid leave a week earlier and demoted or otherwise disciplined the other four. Those . fired .were: Maj. James Bowen." Col. Richard Frye, Region I executive secretary Barbara Durrance, ACI Sgt. Eric McMiUon and Region I assistant warden Georgia Arnold. An FDOC investigation report found that all five had lied to investigators and that there was sufficient evi4ence to support allegations that Bowen and Frye, along with former Region I Director Allen Clark. jumped on and beat James O'Bryan at the Tallahassee banquet when he accidentally slipped in a puddh, of beer and vomit and knocked Durrance (Clark's secretary) down. McDonough said he bas begun the process of decertifying Allen Clark as a correctional officer. As for the other four: Officer Ernest Tharpe, the employee whose jaw was broken in the Jacksonville fight, allegedly by Brad TunneI~ was suspended for 30 clays without pay and transferred from Liberty Correctional lnstitution; Brad TUIlIlliU was demoted and transferred (he resigned a feW days later); Sgt. Donnie Mayo and Lt James Barton were also demoted to lower rank, and transfetred. . Internal inv.estigations continue into allegations that employees clubs. whose purpose is supposed to be supporting local charities, have been using money to throw lavish employee parties, some descn"bed as drunken orgies. and to buy expensive goods for employee softball teams, includiIig bats costing Iumdreds of dollars. F \s Florida Prison Legal Penpeetives Two reports by the Auditor General released over the past year had blasted the contracts for lack of oversight and accounting problems, along wi~ other things. "I think thiS was a classic case of mismanagement," McDonough said, adding that he planned to recommend changes within the week. Asked if he thought TYA could do the job, McDonough said he was "dubious." Keefe aDd MCI Coatracts McDonough also told legislators that he has concerns about two other contracts between the FDOC and private companies. He told legislators that he is reviewing a contrael with Keefe Commissary Network, a private company contracted with to operate the prison canteens where prisoners can buy hygiene items and snacks in October 2003. Since then Keefe, with FDOC's assistance, forced out another private company that had vending machines in the prisons' visiting parks, in which Keefe set up prisoner-operated canteens. "That (contract) will be scrutinized with great care by me and perhaps others," McDonough said. Asked if the ~others" included state and federal investigators, McDonough said, "We'll have to see." Keefe had been represented by lobbyist Don Yaeger, whom it was reported last year by the St. Petersburg Times was treating Crosby to concerts and sporting events. 'Crosby said he paid his own way. (see, FPLP, Vol. II, Iss. 5 and 6, page. 5-6, "Lobbyist Ties of FOOC Secretary Scrutinized.") '. According to the Legislature, Yaeger and two other lobbyists stopped representing Keefe on Feb. 22, less than two weeks after Crosby was dismissed by Gov. Bush. McDonough told members of the Joint Legislative Auditing Committee. before whom he appeared, that he is also concerned about the contract between the FDOC and MCI concerning the inmate telephone system. He said he is examining the high·costs of collect calls that prisoners make to their families. Under the FDOCIMCI contract prisoners can only phone friends and fiunily with collect calls that cost $1.50 as a connection charge and .26 cents a minute--for in-state calls. Out-of-state calls are even higher, a S3.95 connection fee and SI.OO per minute. The calls are automatically limited to 15 minutes and those family members or friends on the outside are charged the high rates. The FDOC receives S3 cents of every dollar ~harged for the calls under the contracl "I don't think.that's right," McDonough said. He noted that he calls his son overseas for 3 cents a minute. "Why are (the families of prisoners) being punished?," he rhetorically asked. (A question FPLAO and famtlies have been asking for years.) . [Source: Gainesville Sun, 3/10/96, 3/14/06] • 61 Tellll Top fDOC Officials OiUlste«ll, Six More 'Promoted ames McDonough, the former career Army colonel Jnamed by Gov. Jeb Bush in February to replace 'former Department of Correction's secretary James Crosby, dropped another smart bomb on March IS, 2006. That was the day he outright fired nine more top prison officials. Michael Rathman was fired as warden of Florida State Prison and Lamar Griffis was fired from his position as assistant warden of the .Reception and Medical Center at Lake Butler. In al~ two regional directors, four wardens and three assistant wardens were given the boot. Secretary McDonough said they were ousted because they "do not have my trust and confidence." Regional directors AI Solomon (Reg. I) and.Brad Carter (Reg. 11), along with wardens Kenneth Lampp, Rick Anglin and Dave Farcus and assistant wardens Dale Hughes and Cornelius Faulk were also thrown out of the FDOC's goodold boy club. Meanwhile, McDonough, who reportedly has Gov. Bush's full support in cleaning up the scandal-ridden Florida prison system, immediately· promoted six other FDOC officials, including maldng Richard Ouger director of Region U. Dugger had once been the FOOC secretary for a couple ofyears under Gov. Bob Martinez. Wendall Whitehurst, warden of Union Correctional Institution was promoted to Region I director. Wardens Ronnie Harris and Randall Bryant were promoted to larger prisons, Bryant replacing Rathman at FSP. Assistant wardens John Hancock and David McCallum were promoted to warden. The firings and promotions came a day after an investigation report released by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (PDLE) concluded that former FDOC secretary James Crosby tried to stop ~ FDLB investigation into the department last year by (allegedly) threatening FDOC employee Brad Tunnell, whose father, Guy Tunnell, is head of the FDLE. (Not reported in the mainstream media is that some people from Bay CountylPanama City,· where .Guy Tunnell was sberitT before becoming head of the FDLE, claim Guy Tunnell is corrupt himself and has sent many people to prison on false and fabricated evidence.) Crosby was forced to resign in Febrwiry by Bush . after he was named as a target in a wicf0.nmsin8 investigation into possible criminal activity ~ong prj~on employees. Crosby denies any wrongdoing, but bas hired anattomey. According to part of a report released by the FOOC's inspector general on Mar. 15, Lamar' Griffis knew about falsified time sheets for employees who instead of working were practicing or playing softball and he allegedly knew fake FDOC lO's were made for non- . , " Florida Prison Legal Perspectives S1Uljpreme COURrt IPIl'lisolIllcrs Cml11l SlIDe 1Unn(JlcIr ADA Georgia had argued that states should be immune from prisoners' ,lawsuits brought under the ADA. Not a sing~~ justice agreed with Georgia. Justice Scalia, writing for the Court, said stales can be sued under the ADA for violating individual disabled prisoners' constitutional rights. However, the Court put otT·deciding whether prison systems can be sued for general violations of the ADA, a more significant and contentious issue. Twelve other states had joined with Georgia in urging the Court to prohibit general suits brought by prisoners under the ADA. The Court, however, refused to consider that issue at this time. Gene SchaeJr, a Washington attorney, said that the justices probably didn't want to address that issue with Justice Sandra Day O'Connor there (Justice Alita had not yet taken over from her on Jan. 10). ' O'Connor was the deciding vote the last time the Court ruled on an ADA issue, joining the four more-. liberal justices in a 2004 decision holding that states could be sued for damages for not providing the disabled access to courts. ' Amazingly, Goodman had been supported in his case by the Bush ac:Imit'dstration, which argued that there was a history of mistreatment of disabled prisoners considered by Congress when it passed the ADA. It is felt by some that the Court could have used Goodman's case' to further shield states from federa1 interference, which .was notable in many cases when former ChiefJustice Rehnquist ran the Court. "This is another step forward moving away from the states' rights and recognizing Congress' power to .proteCt certain groups who are discriminated against, said John Brittain, chief counsel for the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law. See. United States Georgia, 19 FIa.L.Weekly Fed. S13 (1110/06). n January 10, 2006, in a unanimous decision, the US O Supreme Court held that states 'sometimes be sued damages by disabled prisoners. It was the first .CorIrectnolIilall Officer .Attacks IPRn~IrlllIil~cist .FDOC people so they could play on employee softball teams. There were also allegations being inv~igated in mid-March of top FDOC officials throwing parties at their state-owned (heavily taxpayer subsidized) homes where they sold tickets for attendance and charged for drinks as welt· FPLP. will report more on that story as it develops. . On March 16 McDonough also forced another top FDOC official to retir~. Greg Drake, S3, a deputy assistant secretary in charge of security for 128 correctional facilities was told by McDonough to hand in his resignation or be fired. Drake, who had been with the FDOC since 1979 was forced out of his $103,Ooo-a-year job at the department's headquarters in Tallahassee. No reason was given for his departure, although Drake is ,generally known to have been a crony of James Crosby and deeply entreIK:hed in the system as a "good old boy." ., According to a statement made by McDonough on March IS, there are going to be more front page stories about the department before there are fewer, indicating that his efforts to clean up the prison system is far from over. According to some old time prisonel'$, may not realize just how widespread the corTuption is in the prison system, but getting rid of corrupt top officials and replacing them with competent. ethical people is a step in the right direction. , And according to one prisoner, who asked not to be' identified for fear of retaliation, it all started goirig downhill for the FDOC good old boys in 1999 when a gang of them stomped death row prisoner Frank Valdes to death, for which kanna required a payback. "It just took a Uttle while to get here, Frank," the prisoner said. • ~cQonough ~US a can for case to test how the Court under Chief Justice John Roberts will handle cases involving states' rights, and in this· case it went against the states. The high Court held that Georgia state prisoner Tony Gc>odman can use the 1990 Americans With Disabilities Act (ADA) to sue prison officials. Goodman clainm GA prison officials did not accommodate his disability, that he was confined 'for more than 23 hours' a day in a cell so narrow he could not turn his wheelchair. The ADA is a federal law meant to ensure equal treatment for .the disabled. The Supreme' Court had already previoUsly ruled that the ADA applied to protect prisoners as well as free citi2leos, but had left open whether individual prisoners could sue for violations, of the ADA. Goodman's case answered that in the affirmative. It v. STARK.E. FL - On Feb. 23, '06, Starke police say 34year-old Marcus Henry, a correctional officer at Lawtey Correctional Institution, tried to rob the phannacy in a Winn Dixie store in Starke in order to steal narcotics such as Oxycontin. "The pharmacist has blood all down the front of his shirt." a caller to 911 told the police minutes after Henry allegedly jumped over the phannacy counter and was caught trying to steal pills. When confronted, he pulled a knife and attacked the pharmacist cutting his neck, according to witnesses. Then he ran. Henry's familiar face made it easy for witnesses to identify him for police who tracked him to his house, were he Was' coaxed outside by hiS father where police arrested him. I7 Florida Prison Legal Penpeetives . 'Although'a prison guard, 'Henry was apparently addicted to drugs, poliCe feel. FDOC records show he was given a drug test when first hired by the department but none since. The FDOC does not randomly drug test its staff arid only gives tests for cause after employees are hired. Curiously, although prisoners can only get drugs from someone on the outside, like visitors or staff, the department spends tens-of-thousands of dollars each year to randomly drug test prisoners, many several times a year.• lFnOll'R«ila SUllpll'~me C01lnll't De'.Ullty Mall'slhlallll U1l1l«llell' Cll'nmmnmlall HlI1lv~stngatHOml TALLAHASSEE - The toptVio security officers at the Florida Supreme Court left their jobs in February '06 behind a criminal investigation concerning the theft of ammunition from. the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, according to a report in the March 17 St. Petersburg Times. . According to that report, officials at the court would not discuss the departure of Marshall Stephen C. Robertson, 53, and Deputy Marshall Ramon Santos, 33, citing a pending criminal investigation. Santos is a fonner FDLE agent who spent three years guarding Gov. Jeb Bush before getting thejob at the Supreme Court last October after Bush wrote him a glowing job recommendation' for' the 552.00O-a-year position. Santos' former position at the FDLE included purchasing weapons. and ammunition for FDLE training classes. Records at the court indicate Santos is the target ofthe criminal investigation. Robertson, who was appointed to the 590,OOO-ayear marshall's position a year ago hired and supervised Santos. resigned Feb: 6. Robertson, who does not appear to be directly involved in any theft. remains on the court's payroll until April 28, unless there are "negative developments ,related to the Ray Santos incident,"· wrote Chief Justice Barbara Pariente in a letter obtained by the Times.• For eighteen hours no substitutes could be fou~ and California's judicial system collapsed. The State discovered it could not force, even by Court order, a physician to kill a human being. A pivotal matter was a Florida study on the level of anesthetic in the blood of executed prisoners. These revealed the men had, in fact, been tortured to death when the potassium chloride used reached the heart. The study concludes there is no way to kill a healthy human without causing cruel and unusual pain and suffering. Next, Morales was sentenced to death on the basis of the testimony of a jailhouse snitch informant. It was shown that the snitch had lied. Judge Charles McGarth, who presided over Morales' trial, called for clemency, stating that executing Mqrales on the basis of perjured testimony "would frustrate the design of our sentencing laws, and would constitute a grievous and freakish injustice." Securing perjured testimony from snitches has made a mockery ofJustice throughout America'. Activist Crystal Bybee of End the Death Penalty stated, "If they want to torture people to death on the basis of lies they are going to have to come right out and say so." U.S. District Court Judge Jeremy Fogel, who issued the "humanely" ordef' to San Quentin, then ordered hearings on the constitutionality of the death penalty for May 2006. Effectively, this has shut down all executions in California. Florida. and the nation. • lROUBlBJ SOwnON Condemned kine, Michael Morales Is c:haIIengIns CoDfomla's Injectfon protocol, wfIlch Is IISed In many states STAFlT THE SALINE An rv Is Inser1Bd forthe saline clIlp thlItwiD deUver,ldeal1y wI1hIn 5 to 10 min., the lethal thJ'eeocInrgcondl!llllllon QUIET THE MIND 5 lP8msofsodlum 8 ... Demtlbl Pennmllty COnnaJl)SHlIllg pdsonerunconsclous but by Richard 0efDcen mayWll8l' otrtoo IOCin Florida and California are ~amining the death penalty. Following the execution of "Tookie" Williams in California. officials at California's San Quentin Prison struggled with a court order to execute death row inmate Michael Morales "humanely." The event was scheduled for late February 2006. TheY hired two anesthesiologists, but when the doctors realized they may do more than merely watch. both cited ethical concerns to refuse. I ttIIcpentlII renders the STOP THE Bfl[,HHING SOccofpancuranlum bnlmlde paralyzes theenUro body but WDUld maakslS\S oflnmat8 pain • STOP TIlE HEART 50 cc at potassium chIoItdu halts the heart's electIIcal &/SISIsbutmaycause seartng pain before death Florida Prison.Legal Perspectives .' LOREN. . D. RHOTON POSTCONVICTION ATTORNEY • • • • • • I Direct Appeals Belated Appeals Rule 3.850 Motions Sentence Corrections NewTrials Federal Habeas Corpu.'Petitions ; :) The hiring of a lawyer Is an Important decision that should not be baSedlOlely cSn adv8~. Before you decide, ask us to send you free written information about our quaUficatlon~. BUY THE BOOK - ON SALE NOW POSTCONYICTION RELIEF FOR THE FLORIDA PRISONER A Comoilation ofSelected Postconvictlon Corner Articles A collection of Loren Rhoton's Postconvictlon Corner articles is now available in one convenient book. These articles are an invaluable tool for Florida inmates seeking justice in their cases. Helpful insights, case citations. and references to the relevant rules ofprocedure are provided. This book is a must for those pursuing postconvi~tion relief. To order, send 520.00 in the for.m of a money order, cashier's cheek or Inmate bank check (no stamps, cash or personal checks please) to the address above, or order online at www.rbotonpostconviction~com •. • ,1- .p " ... 19 ,Florida Prison Legal Penpeetives ~ by Loren Rho~ Eaq. POST CONVICTION CORNER Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.850 generally imposes a two-year period of limitations fOl:filing a motion to collaterally attack a judgment and/or sentence. Rule 3.850 provides three exceptions to the two-year period oflimitations: (l) newly discovered evidencethe facts on which the claim is predicated were unknown to the movant or the movant's attorney' and could not have been ascertained by the exerCise of due diligence; (2) new role of law- the fundamental constitutional right asserted was not established within the two year period of limitations and has been held to apply retroactively; or, (3) ineffectiveness ofpostconviction ' , counsel- the defendant retained counsel to timely 'file a 3.850 motion and counsel, through " neglect, 'failed to file the motion. This artiCle will address the issue of newly discovered evidence and how to raise sucli an issue in a 3.850 motion. ' In order to be considered newly discovered evidence for the purpose ofsetting aside a conviction, after trial, the evidence must have been unknown by the trial court and by the defendant or his counsel attime oftri8I. Jones v. State, 709 So.2d 512 (Fla. 1998). Furthermore, it must appear that the defendant and his counsel could not have known of the evidence by use of' due diligence. Id. Finally, the evidence must be ofsuch nature that it would probably produ~ , acquittal on retrial. hL. " , In the' context ofa guilty or nolo contendere plea, though, the standard for withdrawaf ofa plea due to newly 'discovered evidence is slightly different. The first to elements ofJones still must be proven (i.e., the evidence is newly discovered Jm!i it could not have been discovered ., thrOugh the exercise ofdue diligence). But, in the plea context a movant must prove that the withdrawal ofthe plea is necessSry to correct a manifest injustice. Bradford v. State, 869 So.2d. 28 (Fla. 2nd DCA 2004); Scottv. State, 629 So.2d 888 (Fla. 4th DCA 1993). Said standard is . more appropriate for a case where ~ere is a plea since ~ is "virtually impossible to apply because there was no trial and no evidence produced. Any detenninations as to the nature and admissibility ofthe evidence would be specul~~ve." Bradford at 29. ' Newly discovered evidence issues wluch'may gamer postconviction relief include, but are; ., not limited to: ' '. -Eyewitnes.~ te.s~i~~n>.' ~pich.~s, e~culpa~JYap4 could not have been discovefed through the Use ofdue Qlligence at the time oftrial. Clugston v. State, 765 So.2d 816 (Fla. 4th DCA, 2000). . -A key State witness has recanted his or her testimony. Stephens v. State, 829 So.2d 945 (Fla. 1", DCA, 2002). 10 I -The State suppressed exculpatory evidence or matters which could be used to impeach .' Florida Prison Legal Penpectives prosecution witnesses. Taylor v. State. 848 So.2d 410 (Fla. 1It DCA 2003). -A codefendant received a life sentence after the defendant received a death sentence for . the same offense. Scott v. Dugger, 604 So.2d 465 (Fla. 1992) ["[I]n a death case involving equally culpable codefendants the death sentence ofone codefendant is subject to collateral review under rule 3.850 when another codefendant subsequently receives a life sentence."]. -A codefendant admits to refusing to testify on defendant's behalfand refusing to give exculpatory testimony for defendant because ofcoercion from the State. Roundtree v. State, 884 So.2d 322 (Fla. 2d DCA 2004). Whether the conviction being attacked is the result ofa jury trial or a guilty/nolo contendere plea, the burden on the pOstconviction movant is substantial. Firstly, the "new evidence" mUst be something that truly could not have been discovered through the use ofdue diligence at the time ofthe original proceedings. Therefore, ifsomething could have easily been discovered by the movant and/or his counsel at the time ofthe trial/plea, the due diligence requirement will preclude the movant from raising the issue as newly discovered evidence. If anything, such a situation would more properly be raised as an ineffectiveness ofcounsel claim and, thus, be subj~t to the two year period of limitations imposed by Rule 3.850. Additionally; it must be shown the newly discovered evidence would have had a sUbstantial.impact on the likely outcome ofthe case. In the trial context, the movant must show that the new evidence would probably cause an acquittal at a new trial. This is a weighty burden which requires evidence that would strongly refute at least one 9fthe elements ofthe offense charged at triai. Speculative evidence or witnesses with dubious credibility likely will not sustain the burden. . I· II Florida Prison Legal Perspectives The following are summaries ofrecent state andfederal cases that may be usefult~ or have asignificant impact on Florida prisoners. Readers should always readthe full opinion as published in the Florida Law WeelcJy (Fla. L. WeelcJy): Florida Law Weekly Federal (Flo. L. Weekly Federal),' Southern Rep,orter 2d '(So. 2d); Supreme Court Reporter (S. Ct.); Federal Reporter ld (F.ld); or the Federal Supplement 2d (F.Supp. 2d). since these summaries arefor general information only. FLORIDA SUPREME COURT State v. Frierson. 3] Fla.L.Weekly S81 (Fla. 2/9/06) The Florida Supreme Court reviewed a decision in Frierson v. Slale. 85] So.2d 293 (Fla. 4dl DCA 2003). to resolve a conflict with the decision in Slale v. FOUSI, 262 So.2d 686 (Fla. 3d DCA ] 972). The background in Anthony Frierson's case was that he had been charged with possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. The charge stemmed from a search 'of his vehicle subsequent to an illegal traffic stop. However, after effecting the illegal stop. it was learned by the traffic officer that there was an outstanding warrant for Frierson in another proceeding. Thus. the officer had searched the vehicle incident to the arrest for the outstanding warrant It was later found that Frierson was not the individual the outstanding warrant was for. Consequently, . Frierson sought suppression of the. firearm during his trial, arguing that the found firearm should be suppressed because the traffic stop was unlawful and the warrant which provided basis for his arrest was wrongfully issued. The trial court agreed that the traffic stop was unlawful, however, the trial judge denied the motion to suppress by relying upon Arizona v. Evans,· 5]4 U.S. ] (1995), and Uniled Slales v. Leon, 468 U.S. 897 (l984). ·It was opined that the officer justifiably relied upon the arrest warrant to search the vehicle, although it was later determined the arrest warrant had been erroneously issued. The trial court further opined that the fact Frierson was illegally stopped by the 12. I . arresting officer. it did not require . suppression of the firearm because the firearm was found in a search which w~. incident to the arrest based upon the outstanding warrant and was sufficiently attenuated from the illegal stop. Thus, Frierson pled nolo contendere to the felony fireann possession offense, reserving his right to appeal the trial court's denial ofhis motion to suppress. On ·appe8l, the Fourth District agreed with the trial court in its decision except, based on prior precedent, it was concluded that because the traffic stop was without reasonable cause, the firearm seized in the search incident to the arrest on the outstanding warrant was subject to suppression as fruit of the poison~us tree, notwithstanding the outstanding warrant As a result of this opinion, the Fourth District .certified conflict with the Third District's decision in Fousl. . In Fousl. the Third District reversed a trial court's decision to suppress, certain evidence that was found after an arrest, it had held in relevant part that "the reasonableness of the search after arrest was not affected by the fact that the original stopping of Foust may have been without probable cause." On review, the Florida Supreme Court held that the question of whether evidence, seized in a search incident to an arrest based on an outstanding warrant (although the warrant· mistakenly Identified the defendant-Frierson, the arresting officer was not aware of that mistake) discovered following an illegal traffic stop. is to be suppressed should be answered by analyzing the three factors set forth in Brown v. OIinois. 422 U.S. 590 . (1975). for application of the' rule of Wong Sunv. Uniled Slales, 37] U.S. 471 (1963). In Frierson's case, the Florida Supreme Court foundthat the brief amount of time ~t elapsed between the illegal stop (which was a stoP that was not pretextual or bad faith) and the arrest of Frierson weigtw against finding .the search attenuated, that the outstanding arrest warrant was an intervening circumstance that weighs in favor of the fireann found in the search incident to the outstanding arrest warrant . being sufficiently distinguishable from the illegal stop to be purged of ~ primary taint of the illegal stoP,and that the purpose and flagrancy of the misconduct in illegally stopping Frierson· was not such that the' taint of the illegal stop should require that the evidence seized inCident to the outstanding warrant ~ suppressed. . Ac:cordingIy, the Fourth District's decision was quashed· and it was direc:ted that Frierson's conviction and sentence of the trial court be reinstated. Scipio v. Stale, 31 Fla.L.Weekly SI14 (Fia. 2116/06) On review in the Florida Supreme Court, the decision in Stephen J. Scipio's ease on appeal {See: Scipio v. Stale, 867 So.2d 427 (Fia. 56 DCA 2004» was foUri,fto be in conflict with the harmless error analysis foun~ in Slate v. Schopp, 653 So.2d' 1016 (Fia. 1995). However. it was, found that the reason the Fifth District's decision conflicted with the Schopp case was due to conflicting language that was Florida Prison Legal Perspectives discovered within the Schopp stricter per se rule of reversal. It only if the appellate court can decision. Consequently, the Florida . placed the burden on the S~te and determine beyond a reasonable doubt emphasized that a finding of that the defense was not procedurally Supreme Court was. prompted to clarify what it had held in Schopp. prejudiced by the discovery violation hannleSs error should be "the In Scipio, the Fifth District exception rather than the rule." can the error be considered harmless. had decided there was a discovery Schopp, Id., at 1023. The decision See: Schopp, Id., at 1021. violation committed by the State. In further noted that "the vase majority To the extent. of finding the relevant part, Scipio's counsel had of cases" will not have a r:ecord discovery violation in Scipio's case planned to use testimony· made sufficient to support a finding of hanDless, the Fifth District's decision during a deposition by a State's harmless. error and that there is a was. quashed and the case was witness to support Scipio's defense "high probability" that any given remanded for further proc:eedinp consistent with . , Florida Supreme theory that Scipio did not commit the error will be found harmful. Schopp, offense he was charged with. Id., at 1021. Court's decision. However, after the Witness reviewed . However, included among relevant evidence at the prosecutor's· all the language in Schopp affirming DISTRICT COURT OF insistence. the witness recanted from the rule of procedural prejudice, APPEALS the testimony he gave in the there was one statement found that deposition. This infonnation was not .appeared inconsistent with that rule: State v. Tanner, 30 FJa.L.Weekly disc,losed by the State prior to the "This analysis recognizes the D2785 (pIa. 2d DCA 12/9/05) commencement of Scipio's trial. procedural prejudice inherent in Amanda Vernell Tanner, in Thus, a discovery violation had been discovery violations. It also takes her case, was a passenger in a vehicle committed. into account the fact that errors that that was legally stopped by law Although the Fifth District reasonably could affect trial enforcement and, due to a 'dog ~ff had properly found that there was a or.. strategy are preparation alert,' the vehicle was searched. 'prejudicial,, and therefore harmful . discovery violation. due to the What the dog had alerted to language it found in Schopp it opined for appellate purposes, only when a inside the vehicle was Ms. Tanner's that the discovery violation was not change in trial tactics reasonably purse that she was commanded to sufficiently harmful to require could have benefited the defendant leave in the vehicle while the dog did reversal. by resulting in a favorable verdict." its sniffing. Illegal drugs were found On . review, the· Florida The emphasized statement inside the purse, and Ms..Tanner was Supreme Court. explained it was above was what the Fifth District arrested. focused on .in concluding the important to note that prior to the At trial, Ms. Tanner sought Schopp decision, a trial court's discovery violation in Scipio's case to suppress the found illegal drugs, failure to conduct an inquiry as to was harmless error. That language arguing that she had done nothi.ng to discovery violations (See: was· held by the Florida Supreme warrant her individual detention, nor JUchardson v. State, 246 So.2d 771 Court to be inconsistent with the was there an independent reasonable (pIa. 1971) was considered to overall formulated extensive analysis suspicion that her purse contained constitute such substantial harm as to intended in the Schopp decision. contraband. The trial court agreed mandate automatic reversal without In clarifying the Schopp and granted the dispositive motion to any consideration of hannless error. decision, it was .held in the Scipio .suppress evidence. See: Smith v. State, 500 So.2d 125, case that the harmless error standard It was also pointed out and 126 (pIa. 1986). However, while it does not focus on whether. the concluded by the trial court, relying was decided in Schopp that it was discovery violation would made on Matheson v. State, 870 So.2d 8 possible that a Richardson violation a differeJice in the verdict. Such an (pIa. 2d DCA 2003), that insufficient could be harmless,· the strict analysis would make the standard for records of the dog's field procedural prejudice standard set out procedural prejudice identical to performance and its lack of training in Smith as the standard prejudice or substantive prejudice. Consequent to to disregard residual drug odors had hann. . . its rec;ediQ8. ,~m . tht? .. incC)nsistent rendered invalid the authorities' In Schopp, it was specifically language found in· SchoPP.· the search of the interior of the vehicle to explained and repeatedly reaffirmed Florida Supreme Court reafTmned its begin with. The state appealed the of the Florida Supreme Court's statements that the inquiry is whether trial court's decisions. adherence to. the procedural there is a reasonable possibility that On appeal, the state argued prejudice standard, not substantive the discovery violation "materially that it was error for the trial court to prejudice. Thus, it had formulated a hindered the defendant's trial grant Ms. Tanner's suppression strict procedural standard for proving preparation or strategy." ·See: motion. It was further argued that it harmless error in place of an even Schopp, Id., at 1020. Under Schopp, was error for the trial court, in have • I 13 .~. .Florida Prison Legal Perspectives grimting the suppression, to base it's decision on matters relating to the dog's field perfonnance and training. Thus, the state urged the appellate court to recede from the decision in Matheson. The appellate court disagreed with the sta~'s contentions that the trial court was in error snuJting the motion to suppress. It opined that competent, subs~ evidence supported the lower court's finding that the authorities unlawfully seized Ms. Tanner's purse. Also, the appellate court declined the state's invitation to recede from the Matheson decision. The granting of Ms. Tanner's motion to suppress was affirmed. Hillmon v. StDle, 30 FIa.L.Weekly , 02839 (Fia. Sda DCA 1211610S) Paul Franklin Hillman was convicted and sentenced for two counts of burglary and one Count of agravated assault with a firearm, subsequent to a jury trial. On appeal, Hillman argued that the trial court committed fundamental .error when it instructed the jury that it could -find the defendant guilty of burglary if it found that the defendant had entered the home with the intent to commit a "burglary" therein. _ . The trial court had instructed the jury in a circular fashion on the elements of burglary. Consequently, the appellate court pointed out that it and other district courts have held that it is circular to define burglary by indicating the need to show intent to commit a burglary rather than intent to commit _an underlying offense. See: Stone v. State, 899 So.2d 421, .422 (Fla SlA DCA 2OOS); llnIce v. StQ/e, 879 So.2d 686, 687 (pIa. 4* DCA 2004). In Stone, such an error was held to be fundamental. As a result, Hillman's burglary convictions were reversed and remanded for a new trial.\ 14 Wencel v. State,_ 31 Fla.L.Weekly 039 (pIa. 4lA DCA 1212110S) Timothy Wencel's case involved an issue of whether a lower court was confined only to a sentencing record and cannot consider documentation from the Parole Commission when determining the illegality of a sentence pursUant to Rule 3.800(a). In 1996 Wencel had been temporarily confined while revocation of his conttol release supervision' was being considered. Although it was decided that Wencel violated conditions of his supervision, the Parole Commission did not revoke the supervision. Instead, the Parole Commission released Wencel and discharged him from supervision. Apparently, Wencel was later arrested and convicted of a new crime, within' 3 years of his release from temporary custody and discharge from the above mentioned supervision. In determining its designating Wencel a Prison Releasee Reoffender (PRR), the lower court used that date of his release from temporary custody and sentenced Wencel with a PRR sentence. Consequently, Wencel filed a Rule 3.800(a) motion arguing that the PRR sentence was illegal because the court could not use the date of his release from temporary custody and discharge from supervision. This. because such is not the equivalent of "releas[e] from a correctional facility•..following incarceration" as termed under the PRR statute. Wencel relied on Brinson v. State, 8SISo.2d 815 (Fla. 2d DCA 2003) (applying the rule of lenity and concluding that "release" as used in the PRR statute means actual release from a state prison sentence, not release from temporary confinement that happens to be in a state prison). Wencel further filed the Parole Commission's order that showed supervision had not been revoked to support his claim. The lower court denied the Rule 3.8oo(a) motion opining that • Wencel's claim could not be raised under Rule 3.800(a) because the claim was not discemable from the court's sentencing records. Thus. it was opined that an evidentiary hearing would have to be held before the "extra-record evidence" (the Parole Commission's order) could be considered. On appeal, Wencel argued that the lower court should have taken judicial notice of the Parole Commission's order. However. the lower court believed that it could not take judicial notice ofsuch order. The appellate court opined ,that contrary to the lower court's belief, it could have taken judicial notice of the Parole Commission's order because it was an official action by an administrative arm of the executive branch. It was fiJrther opined that .a lower court is not! limited strictly to the record before the - court "at sentencing" when addressing a Rule 3.800(a) motion. See: e.g.. Nelson Y. State, 760 So.2d 240 (Fla. 4* DCA 2000) (holding that ina Rule 3.800(a) claim, when considering movant's request for additional jan' credit: the trial court should examine not only the court file, but jail records). Accordingly, it was opined that the lower court in Wencel's case should have taken judicial notice of the Parole Commission's order and addressed the merits of the Rule 3.800(a) motion. Consequently. Wencel's case was reversed and remanded for further proceedings. King v. State, 31 FIa.L.Weetdy 0131 (Fla 2d DCA 12130/05) In Jerry B.' King's apPeal of being denied in his effort to tetrieve (free of charge) certified copies of documents needed to, file an -application for clemency, the appellate court opined that -he was entitled to certified copies of the information, judgment, and sentence documents. However. contrary to King's contentions, he was found not to be entitled to copies of the plea a~ fonn, sentencing Florida Prison Legal Perspeetives .. FOR CLEMENCY ASSISTANCE INFO. WRITE TO: NATIO~ALCLEMENCY PROJECT 8624 CAMP COLUMBUS ROAD HIXSON, TENNESSEE 37343 (423) 843-2235 BXPmuENCED.C1UMINAL DEFENSE AttoRNEY AVA!LABLBFOR STATE AND FEDERAL . .POST-CONVIcTIoN' MA'ITBRS . • .Adm.itted·to the Flonda·Bar in 1973. . .. ' ..:. Over thirty yead. ~enCe:4t the practice'ofcriminallaw ·Providina~tati()ll ~~.Ap~.~.Ap~ . 3.850 _ODS, 3.800 . motiOlis, 225$ DiQti0D8"'S~ :. JJabeas Corpus ~tiOni, Detainer ~es, . '. ana· Pedenl . .!k " .... other Posteonvietion Matters•. inquiries to: . . . £a.w djftces oj 'Danfe('D. ""tudr 2Jg.lee 'RMul, ~er:2'aTi, 7);32,789 ,'1:0((:;ree T'eG J"B8~·SS51l 1'e~.(401) 64S-sJ5z . 7ilx:·(401)'64s-SU4 --...-----------..----IIIiII-....... 1 IS _Florida Prison Legal Penpectives guidelines scoresheet fonn, or the sentencing transcripts without see: charge. Marshall v. State, 759 Se.2d 111 (pIa. 2d DCA 2000). King's case was reversed and remanded with instructions for the lower court to order the clerk -of tho court to supply King, without charge and without further delay, the documents described in the appellate court's decision. Peters v. State, 31 -Fla.L.Weekly 0267 (pIa. lit DCA 1/24/06) Robert Sheldon Peters' case invoMld a trial court's admission of an iDdependent lab report at his CClIIUDwUty control revocation hearing without the custodian of the lab's records present to testify. The report was admitted as a Business Record pursuant to 9O.k03(6) Florida Evidence Code. - Peters was chliiged I with vioJating his community control· by failing drug· tests. When the lower court admitted the lab report flndinp, Peters' defense counsel objected to its admission. It was araued that thO Written report viOlated Peters' ri~ to confrontation as set forth in Crawford v. WQ.fhlngton, 541 U.S. 36 (2004). The argument of the defense was rejected in the appellate court, where it opined that Crawford does not apply in community supervision revocation proceedinp. To support the opinion it cited Morrissey v. Brewer, 408 U.S. 411, 489 (1972) (where it was held that the revocation of parole is not part of a criminal prosecution, and thus the full panOply of rights due a defendant is such proceedinp does not apply to parole revocations). The appellafe court in Peters' Case also pointed to a recently decided case in the Washington Supreme Court, Slote v. AbdRahmaan, III P.3d 1157 (Wash. 2005), that was faced with the question of whether the dictates of Crawford were applicable in a commui1ity supervision revocation proceeding. The AbdRahmaan court I' I postconviction record (see, Fla. concluded that Crawford did not apply in such cases and the appellate - Rules of Appellate Procedure 9.141(bX2XA» shows conclusively court in Peters' case quoted a quite that the appellant is entitled to no lengthy reasoning for its conclusion. relief. See: Fla.R.Crim.P. It was also noted that in the AbdRahmaan' case, the Washington 9. 141(bX2)(D). . On appeal it 'Vas noted that court pointed to an overwhelming the record in Hampton' case did not majority of federal decisions that conclusi~ly refute his claims that have found the Crawford rationale to testable material exists. In contrast, be inapplicable in commuriity . Hampton had attached to his motion supervision revocation proceedings. a copy of a memorandum written by The appellate court in Peters; a Dr. Arthur F. Schiff ofth~ office of case, based on its findings, affirmecl the Dade County Medical Examiner the lower court's admission pf the on Mayt 4, 1973. The state had also lab report. However, it did opine _supplemented the recOrd with the that in thQSe cases where there is a deposition of Dr. Schiff taken in true dispute concerning the nature of Hampton's case on November 28, the tested substance involved and the defense can show some lack of 1973. According to those trustworthiness in the lab report, then the report would be inadmissible. - documents Dr. Schiff had taken DNA evidence from the victim and, See: Section 9O.803(6)(a), Florida Hampton. Furthermore, it shows that' Statutes. that evidence was given over to the Since it was found that investigating officer to take to the Peters' issue had not been previously Crime Lab where blood typing decided in Florida, the appellate analysis was to be performed. court certified a question of great In response to the appellate public importance to the Florida court's findinp, .the state said, "The "Does The Supreme Court, Clerk of. Courts does not have this 'Testimonial Hearsay' Rule Set Forth item of evidence in their In Crawford v. WlUhhtgton~ 541 U.S. possession.... In fact, it was never 36 (2004). Apply In Community Control And/Or Probation admitted in trial. Likewise, the investigating police agency does not Revocation ~?" have this item of evidence in their possession... Hampton v. State, 31 Fla.L.Weekly D284 (pia. 3d DCA 1125/06) The appellate court opined Jolmnie Lee Hampton had however, that the state's response did - filed a Rule 3.853 motion for not refute Hampton's claim. The deposition that th8 state postconviction DNA testing in the lower court regarding his 1973 supplemented the record with conviction of .sexual battery. His showed Dr. Schiff indicated he gave sentence was for seventy-five years the evideru:e material to the investigating officer to deliver to the in prison. ~ _ Although the postconVlction Crime Lab. It was noted by the court found that Hampton's identity appellate court that the state showed was a genuinely disputed fact at his no record that it bad even made an trial, it denied the motion stating in inquiry at that lab regarding the part that "(p]~ical evidence that evidence. • may contain DNA does not exist..... The state also argued that Thus, - denying the motion without DNA testing could not exonerate Hampton because there were conducting an evidentiary hearing. multiple assailants. The victim had Hampton appealed the denial. stated that she was assaulted by 'three Where there is a summary . denial of a Rule 3.853 motion, there males, each of whom had forcible must be it reversal unless the intercourse with her. It was argued Florida Prison Legal Penpectives Statues. which doeS not contain a by the state that if DNA testing lien provision. identified a single subject, that result The Appellee. James v. would not be enough to exclude Crosby, in opposition to Cox's Hamptoll ascne of the perpetrators. 'It was noted howevet, by the contention. argued that the holding in Schmidt should be limited to its facts. appellate C9Urt in Dr. Schiff's where the complaining party has depoSition. he acknowledged the challenged the forfeiture of gain-time possibility that material from all that has already been received. not three of the assailants could be challenges to. gain-time that has c:cmtained within the sample that, he . recowred from 'the victim. 'ThUs. . neVer been received. The appellate court did not reasoning f:bat if the DNA contains accept Crosby's argument in light of three assailants and Hampton is not .the reasoning in the Schmidt court. one of those three identified by DNA There, the Florida Supreme Court then such evidence could exonerate said "it is apparent that an action Hampton. . The lower court's denial, of affecting gain-time does in fact affect the computation of a criminal ~tOn'smotion for DNA .testing Wu reversed and the cause was . defendant's sentence, because the length of time the inmate will renianded of further proceedings actually spend in prison is directly consistent with the appellate court's affected." See: Schmidt. [d. at 366. 1incIinf,1. Cox's claim. if success~ CtJ% v.,' Crosby, 31 FIa.L.Weekly would affect his time in prison. i.e., the time would be significantly 0310 (Fia. 111 DCA 1/26106) . Leo 1. Cox's case presented reduced. Therefore. the appellate court opined that I was constrained to an issue of whether a lien for filing conclude that the proceeding in fees should be placed against a Cox's case was a "collateral prisoner's trUst aCCQunt when the filing' Concerns complaints of gaincriminal" one as defined in Schmidt. Because of the dissent's time not reCeived. but would be receive, 'i/ 'successful. versus concerns in this case, the appellate court certified a question to the. complaints of gain-time received. but Florida Supreme Court that it has been forfeited. believed to be, of great public In the lower court. Cox had importance: "Does the holding in tiled a petition that Irgued about the constitUtionality of a statute that Schmidt extend to all actions. precluded him from receiving gainregardless of their nature. in which. if time. If success~ he would have successful. the complaining party's. been entitled to more than ti~years ' claim would directly affect his or her of additional gain-time. The lower time in prison. so to preclude court issued' an order which found imposition of a lien of the inmate's Cox to be ,indigent in accordance trust account to recover applicaije filing fees?" ' with Section 57.085. Florida Statutes. and imposed a lien on his Cox's review was 8ranted to prison, trUst account ~ recover the the extent· of the imposed lien. applicable filing fees. Cox moved reversing the lower court~s order. for a revi~ o~ that Order pursuant ~ Florida Rule 'of Appellate Procedure v. State. 31 FIa.L.Weekly 9.430(a) and argued that his circuit D359 (Fla. 4* DCA 211106) court petition was a "collateral The Fourth District Court of criminal" proceeding as described, in Appeal in this case withdrew its Schmidt v. Crusoe. 87,8 Sc.2d 361 original opinion at Canete v. Stat~ (Fla. 2003). He contended that his 30 FIa.L.WeekIy D1387 (Fia. 4 indi~'should have been resolved DCA 611105). and substituted it with undei .' section 57.081. Florida Caete its opinion on a rehearing en bane requested and granted from the State. In OrllllldQCanete's case, the appellate court has created quite. a , twist to its own prior opinion it gave in Roberts v. State. 874 So.2d 1225 (Fla. 4* DCA 20041 which the majority defined the twist 'in itS Canele opinion to be, "dmtinguishable" from Roberts. . In Roberts. tho appeUatO . court opined that a MIranda wamiiII is inadequate when it fails to inform one of his right to have an attorney ".,..ttnn;nn ,.• . present "d"..;".... UlUIfj . .........oeAs in 'Roberts, Canete bad sought to suppress statements made to authorities because the MIra1idR' warning given failed to infinm of right to have attomeypresent during questioning. Canete's. mOtion to suppress was denied and he was convicted and sentenced to, hiS charges. On appeal. the appeUatO court noted the warning. in relevant part. that was given to Canete: ."If you decide to answer the qUestions now. without an attorney present; you still have the right not to answer my questions at any time until you" can speak with an attorney." It was' opined that this part of ,the wamina given by the authorities did cause Canete to "infer" that he had Ii right to have an attorney present during the questioning. " The appellate court reasoned that Canete's case was distinguished. from Roberts becaUse in Robem the. warning. in relevant part. that was giVen stated. "Yau have the righuo talk with a lawyer and have a lawyer . present before any questioning." did not infonn or have any "~ that there was a right to have .'an attorney present during questioning. Accordingly. iii that the appellate court . distinguished Canete's case as distinguishable frOm the Roberts' case. C..-'i convictions and sentencing were affirmed. the. [Note: To echo a piece of JU;dge Stevenson's very well written I 17 FIQrida Prison Legal Perspectives dissenting oplDJon: The additional warning as quoted above in relevant part, which the majority concluded that Canete could "readily infer" that he had a right to have an attorney present during questioning, which the majority did not explain why, compared with the opinion given in Roberts, it is not seen where one leads the other. If the warnings in Roberts were insufficient to infonn a person of ordinary intelligence and common understanding of the right to have an attorney present "during" questioning, then the warnings given to Canete were equally inadequate as welt.] as. Cash fast I buy houses Scott Kidd 813-752-4349 P.O. Box 5435 Plant City, FL 33563 Email lr1Jkidd. tI _!\,l.qm.1 Web http://buycastJe.org T YP I N"G S"E~VICE . Computer'" TypewrJte~ AL L KI NDS '.oF TYPI NG Including but rioj·Um.ltecUo: , L.arlefs, TtxtDoeUments. . ,NewsIetlers.Artlcle$, Books;. ManuscdDts. :Database,: chartS. Fonns,·,P\Yers;·EnYel~pes. ETC. Black'l Color Pdntlng '&, Copying "SlfplAL Mm, FqBp81!pNW- FoR ""FREF'PRlCEUST AND ~OR~INFORMA1l0N SASET(); SENt> A . LET MY,FINGERS D·O yOUR TYPING 8andra.z. ThoMas PO Box 4178 WInter Plrki FL 32793-6178 Ph4mt: 407~3 David w: Collins, Attorney at Law Fonner state prosecutor with more than 20 years of criminal law experience "AV" ~ted by Martindale-Hubbell Bar Register ofPreeminent Lawyers Your voice;n Tallahassee representing prisoners in all ~reas ojpost-convietion relief: Appeals 3.800 Motions :? .850 Motions State and Federal Habeas Corpus Writs of Mandamus Clemency Plea Bargain Rights Sentencing and Scoresheet Errors Green, Tripp. Karehesky. Heggs cases Jail-time Credit Issues Gain-time Eligibility Issues ;Habitualization Issues , Probation Revocation Issues Write me today about-your easel David W. Collins, Esquire , P.O. Box 541 Monticello, FL 32345 (850) 997-&111 ~'The hlfing ofa lawyer is an important decision thnt should not be based solely upon advertisements. Before you deCide. ask me to send you free written information about my qualifications and experience." Florida Prison Legal Perspectives Parole Commission Avoids the Ax, Once Again by Bob Posey Program Policy Analysis and Government Accountability), an office of the Legislature that performs audits, David argued that abolishing the Commission in favor of unpaid volunteer parole panels would cost up to $3.2 million more annually than the three full-time commissioners and their staff, but Rep. Barreiro said he expected the move would save money in the .long run. Rep. Joe Negron contended that the Commission isn't needed anymore, because the state no longer has parole. David,.to no avail, countered that there are still thousands of parole-eligib~e prisoners, because they were sentenced before the law was changed and that they represent only a small· pan of the.· Commission's work. . Shortly after that debate, Florida Prisoner's Legal Aid Organization contacted all state legislators informing th~m ~ the OPPAGA report. No. 06-15, relied on by David. appears to have used erroneous data supplied by the Parole Commission and faulty analysis to conclude that the Commission is doing a good job and that it would cost more to get rid of the existing Commission. FPLAO concluded the report is biased and apparently generated for use by legislators opposed to getting rid of the Commission. That effort failed. On May 2 the House and Senate budget conference . committee voted and agreed to keep the existing Parole Commission for another year. H.B. 5017 was amended again to delete the provisions concerning the Commission, then passed by both chambers and sent to the governor. _ Several lawmakers in the Florida House of Representatives seem to be determine(J to pass a law abolis~ing the Florida Parole Commission, but can't quite bring it off. For the second year in a row n,?w propo~ed.legishition to get rid of the eXi~ing Parole Commission, and replace it with volunteerregJOnal parole boards, failed to make it all. the way through t!te legislative process to become law.' The losers, once agatn: Florida's aging parole-eligible prisoners and state taxpayers. In the last issue of FPLP it was reported that FPLP staff had been informed that the legislative proposal from the 2005 session of the state Legislature to abolish the existing Parole Commission, and which had failed to pass, would not be reintroduced this year. (See, FPLP. Vol. 12,lss. I, pg. 18.) That information was given to FPLP staff by a top aide to Rep. Mitch Needelman (R-Melboume), the law maker who introduced the 51U'Prise bi1l last year to completely revamp the parole process. That information, for whatever reason, was wrong. Half way through this year's regular legislative session (which started March 6 and ended May 5), just like last year, a surprise bill was introduced in the House to abolish the Parole Commission and replace it with regional volunteer parole FPLAO Parole Project boards and tum the Commission's clemency investigation duties over to the office of the governor. However, unlike last year's Will Continue similar bill (H.B. 1899), which only concerned the Parole Commission, this year's bil1 (H.B. 5017) contained provisions Your Help Is Needed concerning the repeal of defunct statutes related to the dissolved Florida Corrections Commission, FDOC probation and The Legislature again failed to abolish the Parole restitution centers, and pretrial intervention centers (boot Commission this year. the FPLAO Parole Project. started camps). H.B. 5017 was filed on March 31, 2006, by the House Fiscal Council and Rep. Gus Barreiro (R-Miami). A week later, in 2003 to accomplish that goal. will continue. The on Apr. 6, the House voted on H.B. 5017 and passed it by a vote Commission is facing several very serious lawsuits filed of 85 go 30 and sent it to the Senate (generally, bills must be by citizens that FPLAO is assisting with. More suits will approved by both the House and Senate before they can become be filed in coming months that are going to be even more law). . serious. These suits are designed so that if even one is On Apr. 19 the Senate passed an amended version of H.B. successful, it is going to result in major changes within the 5017 by a vote of39 to 0, which, in esSence was nothing more Commission of benefit to those dependant on parole for than a "shell" bill that in effect challenged everything in H.B. their freedom. If more than one is successful, as we 5017, \Jlcluding the provisions concerning abolishment of the believe they will be. it will rock the core of the existing Parole Commission. (See Journal of the House ~f Commission and force its abolishment next legislative Representatives, Apr. 19, 2006, pg. 512.) The Senate sent Its "amended" version back to the House for approval or session. appointment of a conference committee to work out differences However. YOUR help is needed, your financial support between the House and Senate. The House refused to concur for filing fees. litigation costs. report preparation for with the amendment (of course) and a conference committee legislators. mailings. supplies. etc. If You want positive was appointed on that same day. . changes.in the Florida parole process. make a donati.o~ to Concurrent with the movement ofH.B. 5017 through the two the FPLAO Parole Project now. Every parole-ehgtble legislative thambers was the general· budget appropriations bill prisoner is asked to donate a measly $5. If You do that. tifor the entire state. The House budget bill, in line with H.B. 5017, would not have funded the Parole Commission this • FPLAO will have a war chest of $25,000 (approx. 5,100 parole-eligible prisoners left) and we will change the coming year, while the Senate's bill would have provided them system. Spread the word. Send donations to: Florida funding. Parole Commission Chairman Monica David appeared Prisoners' Legal Aid Org..Inc.. P.O. Box 151 I, before the House Fiscal Council to defend the Commission. Christmas. FL 32709.• Relying on a report issued in Feb. by OPPAGA (Office of 19 Florida Prison Legal Penpectives BiUIntroduced in Congress' That Would Lower Prison Phone Rates A bill that was introduced In December "OS to Congress will, if it becomes law, result in lower interstate phone rates charged to prisoners' family members and friends. The bill, H.R. 4466, ~ filed by Rep. Bobby Rush (O-IIl) and has been referred to the House Subcommittee on Telecommunications and the Internet. The bill, entitled the Family Telephone Connection Protection Act of2005, has five cosponsors and seeks to amend the Communications. Act of 1934 to direct the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to consider the following types ofregulation of inmate telephone service: ' . • prescribing a maximum uniform rate-per-mlnute (paid to telephone service providers); • prescnbing 'a maximum uniform service connection or other per-call rate; • prescnbing variable maximum rates depending on factors such as carrier costs or the size ofthe correctional facility; , • requiring providers of inmate telephone service to offer both collect calling and debit account services; • prohibit the payment of commissions by such providers to administrators ofcorrectional facilities; and, • requiring such administrators to allow more than one service provider at a facility so, that prisoners have a choice (and breaking up the monopoly). ~ 0 Rep. Rush's bill points out several problems with prisoner telephone services that would be addressed by his bill. It is U.S. policy, Rep. Rush contends, to ensure that all Americans are afforded just and reasonable communication services, including prisoners' families who pay the rates for inmate telephone services. It is clear from various studies that maintaining frequent and meaningful communications between prisoners and family ~embers Is key to successful social reintegration of prisoners once released. Such reduces recidivism, which in turn reduces crime and future cost of incarceration. However, Rep. Rush notes, frequent communications between prisoners and family members is burdened, and in some cases, prevented, by excessive Inmate telephone service rates, thus weakening family and community ties that are necessary for successful reenby and the reduction of crime that could otherwise result from successful reenby. Contributing to the problem is the fact that inmate telephone services in prisons is often limited to collect calling that family members pay for. Even in the few instances where prisoners' calls are paid from a debit account at the prisons, families still typically pay for the calls by making deposits to the debit accounts. And the prison phone rates being paid by families are some of the highest rates in the U.S., 'with some interstate perminute charges as high as $1 per-minute, on top of a $3.95 ce or connection fee. servi. I The reason for such excessively high rates, in part, according to information compiled by Congress and the FCC is lack of competition between long distance phone service providers, who typically contract with prison officials for a monopoly to provide inmate telephone services. With the contract going to the company promising to pay the highest commission, in some cases over SO percent ofeach call, to prison systems. And due to the lack of competition for telephone; services once the monopolistic contracts are awarded, families of prisoners, many.in low-income situations, cannot chose the long..dlstance carrier with the lowest rates and must pay the excessive rates charged by the carrier having the prison phone contract. ' ., , Rep. Rush's bill would break up the prison phone monopolies by requiring the FCC to set fair rates and policies governing phone rates at state and federal prisons. A new York Times editorial recently commented that H.R. 4466 would not only. help prisoners' families (who often must choose between talking to a loved one in prison or putting food on the table), but also help society by increasing the chances of successful reenby into society by released prisoners who were able to maintain family relationships while incarcerated. However, being realistic, that editorial also opined that the bill will face fierce opposition from phone companies and prison systems "that have grown accustomed to gouging the poorest families in the counby to subsidize some prison-related activities" by paying "usurious rates" that are actually a "hidden tax on people who already pay for prisons through their taxes." Beyond that, the Times' editorial concludes, "states should not be In the business of bleeding low-income families - and fraying already fragile family ties "'7 to pay for services that the state itselfis obligated to provide." ' ." . [Sources; H.R. 4466 (available at www.thomas.!oc.ggv); York Times, 1/4/06] .' , . N~ [Note: Be aware that H.R. 4466 would only direct the FCC to ~gulate long-distance inmate telephone rates, and policy's for mterstate calls. In-state phone rates are usually (as in Florida) set by state Public Service Commissions. However, such in-state . rat~ are also usually much higher than what the general public typically pays. Further, in Aug. 'OS the Criminal Justice Section of the American Bar Association (ABA) recommended that the ABA formally adopt the position that state and federal prisons . should afford prisoners a reasonable opportunity to communicate with those outside prison and telephone services at the lowest possible rates. That recommendation was submitted in the Crim. Justice Section's "Report to the House of Delegates" (Aug. 2005), and contains much Useful information on the inmate telephone service topic.]. State Notified That Feds May Go Aftef Former FDOC Secretary's Retirement, Pension Benefits ',' In the most telling indication so far that fornier' Florida Department of Correction's (FDOC) Secretary James Crosby may face unspecified criminal charges, on March 8, '06;' U.S. Florida Prison Legal Perspectives Attorney Paul Perez notified Florida retirement officials that retirement and pension benefits for Crosby, and former Regional Director Allen Clark. may be forfeited because both are targets of federal criminal investigation. In the highly unusual letter, that was also sent to Crosby's and Clark's attorneys, .Perez said that all of their assets, including state retirement bellefits, may be subject to forfeiture proceedings and advised both men not to "dissipate, transfer or remove from the United States nay such asset, fund or account. Conviction of a job related felony would cause both Crosby and Clark to lose all retirement benefitS, but neither have yet been charged with a crime. • Crosby, 53, stands to lose a $5,500 monthly pension and $215,000 in deferred compensation plus whatever he has. invested in homes in Tallahassee and Starke if convicted of serious crimes. The exact amount of Clark's retirement fund is not available as ofthe time ofthis article. State officials say they have no legal reason to hold up pension or retirement payments to either man as long as they haven't been convicted of a crime. But it is widely felt that the federal letter signals that a more serious investigation is underway and that charges are coming. II (Source: St. Petersburg Times, 3.30.06]. FDOC Reorganization On April 7, 2006, the Florida Department of Corrections announced the following changes. Realignments: • The FDOC will have only two Assistant Secretaries instead of five; • The Assistant Secretary of Institutions and Assistant Secretary of Community Corrections will report directly to the Secretary; • The Directors of Research·~upportServices and of Health Services (formerly Assistant Secretary positions) will report directly to the Deputy Secretary, who in tum will report to the Secretary; • The Director of Administration (a former Assistant Secretary position), Director of Legislative Affairs and Director of Public Affairs will report directly to the Chief of Staff, who will in tum report to the Secretary. Promotions or Senior Starr: • David Pridgen, Region III Director to Deputy Assistant Secretary of Institutions. • Gerald Abdul-Wasi, Inspector Genera'l to Region III Director. • Valerie Rolle, Deputy Regional Dir., Region III to Regional Director, Region III. • Don Monroe, Circuit Admin., Cir. II,. Miami to Deputy Regional Director, Region III. Promotions to Warden: • Steve Kegerreis, Asst. Warden (Okeechobee CI) to Warden (Martin CI). • Mary Holcomb, Asst Warden (Tomoka CI) to Warden (Hernando CI). • Robert ~Iores, asst. Warden (Liberty <;:9. to Warden (Century CI). ... • Robert Joens, Asst. Warden (Desoto Annex) to Warden (Desoto AMex). Promotions to Asst. Warden: • Richard Comerford, Colonel (Liberty CI) to Asst. Warden (Apalachee CI): • Thomas Reid, Colonel (Hendry CI) to Asst. Warden (Charlotte CI). • Jerry Long, Colonel (Santa Rosa CI) to Asst. Warden (Franklin CI). • Jack Howdeshell, Colonel (Charlotte CI) to Asst Warden (Region IV office). • Arlene Darby, Class. Supervisor (CFRC) to ASat. Warden (Tomoka CI). .• Jeremy Vaughan, Class. Supervisor (Liberty CI) to Asst. Warden (Liberty CI). • Willie Brown, Class. Supervisor (Apalachee CI) to Asst. Warden (Liberty Cl). • DatleneLumpkin, CSA State Classification to Asst. Warden (GulfCI). • Ken Fleming, CSA Central Office to Asst. Warden (Region I office). . • Ricky Cloud, Inspector to Asst. Warden (Jefferson CI). Officer Promotions: • DOMell Robinson, Major (Liberty CI) to Colonel (Liberty CI). • Perry Humphries, Major (Wakulla Cl) to Colonel (Franklin cl)' • Monroe Barnes, Captain (Union CI) to Major (Santa Rosa CI). Warden Reassignments: • Bob O'Connor, Desoto CI to Lake CI. • Melody Flores, Hernando CI to Baker CI. • Charles Germany, CFRC to calhoun CI. • Jeffi'ey Wainwright, Calhoun CI to CFRC. • James Freeman, Century CI to Tomoka CI. Assi. Warden Reassignments: • John Riggs, Franklin CI to Baker CI. • Hank Heatherly, Wakulla CI to Lancaster CI. • JohMy Reid, Jefferson CI to Region II office. • Greg Archie, Apalachee CI to Hamilton CI. • Rob Lowe, Hendry CI to Okeechobee CI. • Mary Ellen Dayan, Liberty CI to Wakulla CI. • Shannon Varnes, Region I to GulfCI. • Jim Tridico, Region IV to Hendry CI. Colonel Reassignments: • T.D.Anderson, Columbia CI to Hamilton CI. • Daniel Brown, F . Retirements (Forced or otherwise): • Lou Vargus. General Counsel • Thomas Fortner, Warden (Baker CI). • Joyce Haley, Comm. Corr. Region III Director jliJictments: • (To be announced later...). I 21 Florida Prison Legal Penpectives . Ex-Prisoners Sue, Claim Jail Guards Pu~ Human Waste In Food . . ~~ On March 10: ·2006, fou( former prisoners of the Citrus County Detention Facility ·filed a federal lawsuit against Corrections Corporation of America, the private company that runs the jail, claiming that two fonner jail gu.ards put human waste in their food and drinks several times dUring a two-month period in 2004. The suit, filed by fonner CCDF prisoners Javon Walker, Jeffi'ey Young, Larry Robbins and Greg Platt, claims ~ey. were subjected to cruel punishment, torture and battery. whIle ID the jail's segregation unit when two guards added urine and fecal matter to their food and drink several times between Nov. I and Dec. 31, 2004. The suit alleges that the prisoners complained that the food had a foul odor and didn't taste right, but were forced to eat it or go hungry. After eating it, they suffered ''vomiting, stomach cramps and nausea," the lawsuit say~. . . A spokesman for the private company that runs the JaIl saId company officials took immediate action once they heard about the incident. The company fired two jail guards, Kevin Hessler and Alexander Diaz, and a supervisor, Charles Mulligan, who failed to report the prisoners' complaints t~ the jail warden sooner. Mulligan said one of the fired guards acknowledged putting urine in a prisoner's drinking jug. . . . Four other prisoners were expected to JOID the laWSUIt, including one teenager whose meals were allegedly. laced with glass. . . Corrections Corporation of America, accuse~ of neglIge?t hiring in the lawsuit, is the sixth-largest correctIons system ID the U.S. and has about 60,000 prisoners in more than 60 facilities around the country, according to its Web site. The company runs six other ~i1ities in Florida, i~cluding the J3ay County Correctional FacIlity, Bay County JaIl and Hernando County Jail. [Sources: AP, 31lV06; St. Petersbury Times, 3/15106]. Prison Health Code Litigation Update In April 2004 the First District Court of Appeal, in a lengthy, detailed opinion [See Osterback v. Agwunobi, 873 So.2d 437 (Fla. lit DCA 2004)]: reversed and remanded the tri~1 court's order; holding that the repeal of § 10D-? was ~e sectl~n o~!he health code which governed health Issues In FlOrida Jal~, prisons and mental institutions (Tllis was previously reported ID FPLP, Vol. 10, Iss. 4). Upon remand, Circuit Judge Paul Russmussen issued an order declaring the repeal of 100-7 ~ invalid exercise of delegated legislative authority (meaning, ID effect, that the Dept. of Health had no authority to get rid of,. repeal, such sections of rules). .., .. This seemed to pave t-'e way for the former rules provIsIons to be ''resurrected'' and once again govern health matters for incarcerated individuals. That was the case until the Dept of 2.2. I Health decided to appeal the order (That too. was previously reported on in FPLP, Vol. II Iss. S and 6). The basis for the agency's appeal was three-fold: 1) the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction; 2) the rule repeal's invali~ity was caused ~y an "inadvertent miscitation" to the wrong statute; and 3) the trial court failed to accord proper "deference" to ~e agency in carrying out its delegated powers. In an April 7, '06, decision that nonsense was soundly rejected by the appellate court in a Per Curium Affinnance. of the trial court's order. No opinion was issued on the. merits of the agency's arguments, but Chief Judge Kahn, in a separate, . concurring opinion, sternly upbraided the Dept. of Health's attonl'ey AAG Lucy Schneider, for pursuing the appeal. Judge Kuhn described the appeal as both "improper" and ''professionally indefensible," and closed by stating, "I do not ignore the particular exigencies that face attorneys employed by a state agency. Nevertheless, just as attorneys employed by powerful individuals and corporations are \-esponsible for their professional actions, so are government lawyers." .' The 13-plus month delay occasioned by that latest (dare we suggest "frivolous") appeal is currently being redressed. A mandate in that appeal has not yet issued (as of this writing) and it could be several months (although efforts are afoot to try and expedite the case) before action is taken in ~Iation thereto. Likewise no citation is yet available for thIS latest DCA opinion. Another update on this potentially important c~e, that could benefit all prisoners, will appear in the next Issue of FPLP. Osterback v. Fran~ois, Case No. 1005-1848, Apr. 7, 2006.• News Briefs • FDOC interim Secretary James McDonOUgh is continuing to revamp persoMel. On Apr. 20, 2006, two majors were fired from their prison jobs at New River Correctional Institution. Certified letters were sent to Maj. Colin E. Halle and Maj. Rodney L. Barnett notifYing them that they were being dismissed from their jobs at the end of that day. No explanation for the firings were given in the letters, which were signed by Richard Dugger, regional director of institutions. Other changes announced Apr. 20 were the , promotion of longtime FDOC attorney tQ general counsel, i replacing Lou Vargus who retired from that position, and the , hiring of Anthony Miller, who had been working for the Dept.i Of Management Services, as deputy general counsel. • On Apr.· 20 the former executive director for the dissolved i Correctional Privitaion Commission, Alan Duffee, 40, was sentenced to 33 m~nths in federal prison and three years I probation after admitting he stole $225,000 in state money to ' help buy houses for him and his girlfriend..Duffee had pleaded guilty to one count each of mail fraud, wire fraud and money laundering. . Florid,a Prison Legal Perspectives , BECOME A MEMBER' . p YES ! I wish to become a member ofFlorida Prisoners· Legal Aid Organization, Inc. 1. Please Cheek 0/ One: CJ Membership Renewal CJ New Membership 3. Your Name aDd Address··(PLEASE PRINT) ~~ ~DC# _ Name AgencylLibnuylInstitution 10rgI 2. Select 0/ Category CJ $15 Family/AdvocatelIndividual Address OSlO- Prisoner o o City State Zip $30 AttomeyslProfessionals $60 Gov·t AgenciesILibrariesfOrgsJete. Email Address and lor Phone Number ~I~ make aU chec~ or money orders payable to Florida Prisoners' Legal Aid Org., Inc. Please complete the above form and send it along with the tnchcated membersJup dues to: FPLAO, Inc., P.O. Box 1511, Christmas FL 32709·1511. For family members or loved ones ofFlorida prisoners who arc unable 10 afford the basic membership dues, any contribution. is acceptable for membership. Memberships run one year. Ifyou would like to make a donation 10 FPLAO, Inc.. to help the organization continue its work for prisoners and their families. send donations in any amount 10 the same address. Thank You. All members receive Florida Prison ugo! Perspectives. rr FLORIDA PRISON PHONE RATES REDUCED The FPLAO F.A.l.R. '(Families Against Inflated Rates) Campaign staff are very' pleased to report success in obtaining lower phone rates for prisoners' families and friends who accept collect calls from their incarcerated loved ones. After working to reduce the phone rates for over three years .with no success, on Apr. 10,2006, PPLAO filed suit against the FDOC and Fla. Public Service Commission challenging the exorbitant phone rates. Following negotiations between FPLAO staff. FDOC Secretary James McDonough and \he Public Service Commission, on Apr. 21 Secretary McDonough agreed to reduce the collect call rates by 30 percent by reducing the amount of commission the FDOC receives from MClIVerison on the prison phone 'contract by $10 million, from $17 million, a year. FDOC had been receiving 53 percent of the rates charged, which resulted in very high charges from the phone company. Secretary McDonough agreed that the past rates (55.30 for in-state IS minute calls, and 519 for IS minute out-of-state IS minute calls) were unreasonable and unfairly burden prisoners' families who had to pay such rates to remain in contact with a family member in prison. Additionally, Mr. McDonough said the 'phone contract will be re-bid in early 2007, and that he would like to see a further reduction ,in the rates included in that contract. FPLAO has agreed to drop its lawsuit at this time. FPLAO staff wishes to thank all those who helped and made donations to the F.A.I.R. Campaign, including all FPLAO members and the Unitarian Universalist Fund which provided a grant to the campaign. Thank you all for your much needed support, it was key in achieving this success for all Florida prisoners and their families. FPLAO will be monitoring the phone contract when it's re-bid and working for even lower rates. PRISON LEGAL NEWS SUBMISSION OF' MATERIAL TO FPU Ba:ausc: of the large volume: of mail heine received. financial c:onsidcndions, IDId thc inability to provide indlvlduallcpl assislancc; manbcrs should not scnd copies of IcpI doc:umc:nu of pending or potaItiaI cnscs to FPLP without baving first c:omm:ted the staff and rcc:civing directions to SClld ~c:. Neither FPLP. nor ilS staff. an: responsible for any unsolicited lIllItcrial sent Mcmbcn an: requested to conUnuc sending news information, n:wspaper dippings (pICll5C include name of paper and daI.c), , manorandums, photocopies of final decisions in IInpublished c:ascs. and potential articles for publication. PIClI5C send only copies of such IIlldCriaI that do not have to be returned. FPLP depends on YOU, ilS readers IDId manbcrs to kc:cp infonned. 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FcIr -.weawat ialfMdaIb, ... )'C8I' subsea"- _is $25......iUMlIl or protcaiouI F'fiiIdlftClII. ~ CIIplIr..• "'I stItIsaiptiura IlkS ale S60 ')aI. A . . . . CIlpJ at PLN is -a.Mc for SI. To SldIscribc to PLN ClOCdKa: Prisaa LepI News ~ NW'" ST. 1148 SaaIe. WAftll7 (206l2A6-I0Z2 ' (1Illlml:)'I. lost. IiIaricI. ~.pI1D1 ' : ' Ad~ City State Zip po. Box 1511, @MnU to: FPLP. Christmas. FL 32709-1511 0""11 (OrikiiiA ip'~jliiiiiiarGiilileI VOLUME 12 ISSUE 2 Florida Prison Legal Perspectives MAR/APR 2006 f°N-PROFIT U.S. POSTAGE P.O. Box 1511 Christmas, FL-32709-1511 PAID OVlEDO,FL PERMIT NO. 65 ~----~