Fplp Nov Dec 2008
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FLORIDA ,PRISON LEGAL ers e:ctives , ISSN# 1091-8094 . VOLUME 14 ISSUE 6 Economic Downturn Means More Business for Privat~ Prisons rivate prison companies are getting ready to cash in as the current economic repression is making it harder for the federal government and states to afford to build and operate even 'more prisons andjails as the' number of . incarcerated continues to grow. .. In recent months, the Federal Bureau of Prisons and several states have sent thousands of prisoners to detention .centers an~ prisons run by Corrections Corporation of. America (CCA), GEO Group, Inc. and other private corrections companies, as more people are detained for illegal immigration and mandatory sentences have been lengthened for certain crimes and other f~ctors have led to overcrowding in many government facilities. As of mi,d-2007, private prisons housed 7.4 percent of the country's 1.59 million incarcerated adults, up from 1.57 million in 2006, according to the Bureau of JiJstice Statistics, the statistical department of the U.S. Dept. of )ustice. And prison-policy experts expect prisoner populations to increase by 25 percent or more, in I0 stat~s .that were surveyed, between 2006 and 20 II, according to a report by the nonprofit Pew Charitable Trust..' CCA, the largest private prison company in the United States, with 64 facilities, built two prisons this. past year and expanded nine existing facilities, and the company is scheduled to finish building two more: prisons in 2009. P ON I THE INSIDE 11.--1 , NOV/DEC 2008 During.its third quarter of 2008 CCA put 1,680 new prison beds to use, helping to boost net incpme 14 percent to $37.9 million. "There is going to be a larger.opportunity for us in the future," said Damon Hininger, 'CCA's . presiden~ and chief operating officer. California has shipped over 5,000 prisoners to private prisons run by CCA in Arizona, Mississippi and other state's since late 20Q6,;when Gov. Schwarzenegger ordered emergency measures. Prisons were s,o overcrowded· th~t hundreds of prisonets were sleeping in gyms, according to . one report. An additional 2,900 prisoners are scheduled to be transferred to private prisons outside the state by the end of2009, according to the CA DOC. GEO Group,. based in Boca Raton, Florida, the second largest private prison company, built or expanded eight facilities' in. Georgia, Texas, Mississippi and 'otherstates during 2008. And it plans seven more expansions or new prisons by..20 IO. GEO waS recently awarded a contract by Florida's Department of Management SerVices to design . and build a special-needs prison in NW Florida (See this issue of FPLP, pg. 3). GEO had already opened a new private. prison, Gra~eville Corrp:tional Facility, near the ' same area in Florida in 2007. . Since 1997, the Federal Bureau of Prisons, ·has awarded 13 contracts to private prison companies to build prisons and detention centers that .house low-security. prisoners, primarily "low-security criminal aliens," said Felicia Ponce, a spokeswoman for the BOP... Proponents of private prisons claim that outsourcing incarceration to private prisons can reduce gcwemment's Writ Writing 101 Post Conviction Comer ; : Mail from Readers News in Brief ~ : Appeal ProcesslCOAs in Habeas CorPUs Map ofFDOC Correctioilal Facilities ;: : 4 9 11 13 19 22 . Florida Prison Legal Perspectives ..------------.,.-.--.......,.----..., f.LORIDA·PRI$QNilJJ:GAa.\PERSP.EC:f;IVES· ----' P.O. iBeX. ~1069 .. ... Marion•.N~rth(Caro1ilUl.28752· .~ . . . ·~~~~~~'~fc~,::.'.: '.~ . '":> ~-.~ ••,. (" <:J:.~.',.~:::.;. ~:. ,:~~, . ':'~_~: !f.P.~l?'~~I5~l{'9"S ~ ., ~,' i'esa$'W'itSiIB ·~e>. , ,._ ,y,O'se', lt, . .'. ., . ' , "Qh'A" • '. J ., ~~Y~I,.~:, :.; ; ,'. ,1~~Q~.~~~;::- , . )RIi"'#itio~ . .:,;".r/;·.J~iI~~,·};> \ "j _ I, ,',' 1~ { ),:.j ...,".:. " .. 1 ... ': i .~ ~~'. < I ~~7 ,;t.yJ >-tJ:t: l j~~ t'A'j: ~ t' :TJ· . ;.::. ',' :'<lr' ... ~ (~ ." ._ .~.:: .::~':.;~(,:t·\:~;;;~;);;:.~\ri~?. ~:~~:>.' ,:~,),\ .",': .'; : :". I L,' .; /1' '.'" ~ ~~~; ~-~:. 'i1---< i.~~~~,i"·:i\ ;,; I'j'Ji~\\i;'~ i~~~O{It: .' ~ ~,I if"~ ' ~,\.~Ji·.,'I~l~< ., ,It' '~J (r.t{}~lyll( /; '} ,~:~~~r ~, 7.:?~l4(!~~1;,~~fif> ~ ~<~ /"1' ....'f'~M/J;J~· fI/!l '("YI ~ I ,~\~K~ . -, i ,,'!, )i',.,{.~,,>~ "~~I'" 4V~~~~~'~ .\,~,~~.:i( ;t~;~~~c '>f 1:~~~l A~ /, cost of housjng those prisoners by as. much as 15 percent. Private prison companies say they can build prisons more quickly and operate them less expensively than governments, because their payroll costs are lower and they can' consolidate prisoners from many jurisdictions into facilities' located in areas where land and building costs are low. . Opponents and tritics of private prisons accuse them cjf neglectiqg' prisoners and putting them in bad conditions. "Profit is still a m'otive and it's structured into the way these prisons are operated," says Judy Greene, a justicepolicy analyst for Justice Strategies, a nonprofit studying prison-sentencing issues and problems. "Just because the .system has expanded doesn't mean there is evidence that . conditions have improved," /iaid Greene. "We have serious concerns about for-profit prisoh companies because, they are notorious for cutting essential costs that need to be provided to maintain a safe and constitutio.nal environmerit for prisoners." says Jady Kent, a public:'policy coordinator for the American Civil .' Liberties Union National Prison Project. Private prison companies' optimism that their businesses will find a boom in these~onomic times of dire straits is probably not misplaced. Cash-strapped stat~s are going to be looking at all ways to reduce costs, . including those for incarceration. As incarceration continues to grow, and other sectors of business feel the crunch of the repression, private prison operators and their shareholders will be smiling all the way to the bank. They finally figured out how-to make crime pay legally.'Their business' opportunities are Limitless as long, as the U.S. continues tei incarcerate. more of its own citizens-than any other COUDtry in the, world.. ;'~", '. :Help;, :SUPP~OJtt FPLAO,' :.. :~':L"; i {. ," I:· . . . ;. . .: . ' : ' : . . ' , ' '...' .. .; .·.If·ygu'have-..r~ 'made .;•.....40l.1afjpn '" tO\ : :::~lol1d"': ',PriSonets'>~¢gal .Afd· ,Org~, :In~,·. )::,~eDtlY,p~eaJe,,'do/so .)Jow. Me~be~hip·.f",,! e'Q'Q4I ad$ .. b.1 FPtJ'\:o~y &:ov;er.,tbe &:o.•t'of: !jliubu.sbi#gl.nd,~ol~~!J,Qg,:,thiii··"aluable' .news,. ! ! "j91JrgttL_''lD: iord~r •. for .FPIJAO :(0. f$ke 'O~:'i r,.. .,' -'," ..'_. ... :.. , .. . '.';..-1. .~ ! l ,.: '. .. .:. ~ \ . . ~ ." .. . . . ..' .... (, ... ' I ;·adaitio~a.:'Pro.je&:tstto'·imprOv,e"~Jl«1iflnJJSfifoJi·': :",Florida" . PrisoneJ$ ·and,· ,their :famwes' ~·.::::=::j;.,~~~t~~::!:J~;:;,=r~f~;:::z: ;".regr~~.ppr~J ..tedl:and :\~~JPS'1il'UO" ::,,;~~::;:;'.;~~·.-~:~~~:·e:!ck{:r~~:: . ~r'~J·'.:! Fitb,e\:Jloiifls,;"})risoli: ;system. ':m~pk\ '¥pui";lo,:1 :':YQ~l'sijpP.9rt. 2 ,, ,. . :. ,. Florida.Prison Legal Perspectives New Private Prison for North Florida A privately owned prison that will house Florida state prisoners is going to be built right near 1-10 close to Milton, which is located in Santa Rosa County. The prison will be built by the Boca Raton-based GEO. Group, a private prison profiteer company, and will cost $120 million. Cloid Shuler, vice president of business development for GEO. said construction of the prison should begin by March 'o?> and will take about 18 months to complete. Touting the economic benefits to the local community, who might otherwise have objected to another prison being built in their county, Shuler announced at a news conference held in Milton in late October that the prison will be built and run almost exclusively by local people. Shuler said the average salary for employees at the prison will be over $37,000 a year, about I.S ,percent above average Santa, Rosa County salaries. It is projected that about 400 people will be employed at the prison,. including doctors, teachers, counselors and about 200 prison guards, among otherS. "The only people we will bring in are people like myself who make their living running prisons," said Shuler. The prison will house 2,000 medium-and closecustody male prisoners, with chronic medical and mentalhealth 'problems. The new facility will be located just down the road from the state-run Santa Rosa Correctional Institution, which reportedly is one of the worst operated. and most abusive prisons in the state. Gretl Plessinger, public information officer for the FDOC, said that state agency will provide oversight of the new private prison once it is complete. The new prison will help alleviate the pressure from the state's growing prison population, which now is at almost 99~000 prison~rs, Plessinger said. "Our inmate population is growing. As the population continues to grow, we are looking,at building more prisons." [Source: Pensacola News Journal] _ Public Defenders Crisis P ublic defenders across the country say that budge cuts are forcing them' to refuse cases because that may not be able to effectively handle the growing caseloads. At present. Florida. Kentucky, and Missouri have taken the first stand, with a half dozen other states considering challenging their growing caseloads in' court. "Many public defenders are f~eling the squeeze at this point," said Maureen Dimino with the National Association of , Criminal Defe'1se Lawyers. . Bennett Brummer, Miami-Dade County Public Defender, filed a lawsuit against, the State of Florida in June this year after the Legislature cut his budget 9%. Brummer argued th.at his lawyers, who each handle around 436 cases a year, could not take any· new felony cases .without being in danger of committing malpra~tice. A Judge ruled that starting last September IS, Brummer can send, his least serious felony cases to the state, which wil! ha~e to provide attorneys or pay for private lawyers for insolvent defendants. ' The Miami judge's ruling, which will impact thousands of felony cases,. "will have state wide and some nationwide impact," said Brummer. He also added that "Many defenders would like to take meaningful steps to alleviate their caseload". , . The state attorney's office is appealing the ruling claiming that Brummer is exaggerating the caseload. A spokesman for the Miami-Dade County state attorney's office, Ed Griffith, says that the public defenders are compromising victim's rights by withdrawing. Griffith also stated that if defendants do not get trials within ,a set amount of time, judges are obligated to ' release them to the detriment of all the citizens. SimillJrly, .Kentucky's former public advocate, Ernie Lewis, has petitioned a judge to declare his offiCe under funded in order to refuse misdemeanor cases. . Lewis states that budget cuts forced him to leave nearly 100 positions open and that his attorneys' caseldads could add up to SOO each this year. "It's very clear to me that our caseload would be unethical, said Lewis. According to. tlie Am~rican Bar Association, a pubic defender can competently handle I SO to 200 caseloads a .year. ' In a similar manner, last September Missouri public defender's office notified the courts in two jurisdictions that it will reject new cases there. The two jurisdictions were Ava and Jefferson City. . The state created a new rule that limits the number of cases that each attorney will handle and public defcmders exceeded that limit. . Cathy Kelly, deputy director for the Missouri State Public Defender .System said, "Our lawyers have an ethical responsibility to not take on more cases than they can handle." She added that, "We just feel like we have reached the point where we have to say no." The growing caseloads could force states to either spend more money on. public defenders, delay trials or cause ,many cases to be overturned on appeal due to the ' ineffective assistance of trial lawyers: _ _ . . . . . . . *_.------.;..3 Florida Prison Legal Penpedives . • Writ Writing 101 • FDOC Grievance Procedure by Melvin Perez I n the last decade or so writ writing has become a . foreign concept for most prisoners in the FDOC. This may be in part because of the young generation flooding the prison system or the retaliation writ writers suffer by DOC. Prison officials in Florida call writ writers prisoners that file grievances against DOC. In other parts of the country a writ writer refers to ajailhouse lawyer. In the past, DOC officials have retaliated against this distinguished class of prisoners in the form of placement in segregation', units, on false misconduct charges, depriving them of proper food by either placing them on loaf (and unappetizing substance made by mixing various foods and baking the mixture) or not providing them any food and hygiene materials. transferring them to a more punitive prison, and interfering with their legal documents and mail. Further, some have been beaten, placed on strip status (practice involving removal of all property including clothing" bedding and writing materials until the prisoner earns it back), forced to sleep on a steel bunk at cold temperatures. applied chemical agen~ for no reason, and even killed by DOC guards. DOC has not hesitated in its effort to stop these prisoners to the point that. writ writers have become an endangered species. . r Many DOC officials believe that these prisoners fiJe grievances because they have time on their hands and enjoy harassing' the administration. However, DOC officials ignore the truth that these prisoners file a lot of grievances because they are subjected to a lot of abuse and unjust treatment. Moreover, that these prisoners have a constitutional. right to file griev~ces. Constitutional Rigbt The US Supreme Court has made clear that convicted prisoners do not forrelt all constitutional protections by' reason of their 'conviction and confinement in prison. See: Bell v. WolfISh, 441 U.S. 520. 545 (1979). Again. the high court reiterated its position when it held that prison walls do riot separate prisoners form their constitutional rights in Turner v. Safley, 482 U.S. 78 , (1987). See also, WolJfv. McDonnell, 418 U.S. 539, 555-56 (1974X"Thei'e is no iron curtain drawn between the Constitution and the prisons of this country."). Further, prisoners clearly retain protections afforded by the First Amendment. See: Pell v. Procunier, 417 U.S. 817, 822 (1974) and G/ano v. Senkowski, 54 F~3d 1050, 1053 (2nd Cir. 1995) ("A prison inmate... retains those First Amendment rights that are not inconsistent with his status as a prisoner or with the legitimate penological objectives of the corrections system.") (citations omitted) 4 1 The First Amendment also prohibits jail and prison officials from retaliating against prisoners who report complaints. file grievances, or file lawsuits. See: Allah v. Seiver/lng, 229 F.3d 220, 224 (3 rd Cir. 2000); Babcock v. White, 102 F.3d 267,275 (7th Cir. 1996); and Williams y. DOC, 208 F.3d 681. 682 (8th Cir. 2000). See also, Crawford-E/ V. Britton, 523 U.S. 574, 588 n. 10 (1998) (statjng that "[t]he reas~n why... retaliation offendS the ·Constitution is that it threatens to inhibit exercise of the protected right"). In addition, retaliation against prisoner for pursuing grievance violates right to petition government fo/redress of 'grievances guaranteed by First and Fourteenth Amendments and is actionable under § 1983. See: Gayle V. Lucas, 133 F. Supp. 2d 266, (S.D. N.Y. 2001) and Bridges v. Russell, 757 F.2d 1155 (11 th Cir. 1985). Filing a grievance is protected activity. See: Mora/es v. Macka/m, 278 F3d 126 (2nd Cir. 2002) and Graham v. Henderson, 89 F.3d 75, 80 (2nd Cir. 1996) ("[Plaintiffs] filing of a grievance and attempt to find inmates to , represent the grievant is constitutionally protected...") Similarly, a prisoner has a right not to be subjected to bogus disciplinary reports in tetaliation for his exercise of a constitutional right. See: Nunez V. Goord, 172 F.Supp. 2d 417 (S.D.N:V. 2001) and Hines v. Gomez, 108 F3d 265, 269 (9th Cir. 1997) (finding that filing false charges against a prisoner infringes on. the prisoner's "First Amendment right to file prison grievances.") , Althou,gh the filing of a false disciplinary charge is not itself actionable under § 1983, the filing of a disciplinary charge becomes actionable if done in retaliation for the prisoner's filing of a grievance. See: Dixon v. Brown, 39 F.3d 379 (8 th Cir. 1994).. . Moreover, a prisoner can establish retaliation by demonstrating that the prison official's actions were the result of having 'filed a grievance cQnceming. the conditions of his or her imprisonment. See: Wi/derger V. Brackne//, 869 F.2d 1467, 1468,(11 th Cir. 1989) and Gill v. Mooney, 824 F.2d 192, 194 (2~ Cir. 1987). Likewise, the First Amendment insulates from retaliation a prisoner who engages in a protected activity on behalf .of other prisoners. See:. Adams v. James. 784 F.2d 1077, 1081 (11 th Cir. 1986) and Au/eta V. LaFrance, 233 F.·Supp. 2d 396 (N.D.N.Y. 2002). Grievance Procedure The FDOC prisoner griev'ance procedure is found in Chapter 33-103 Florida Administrative Code (hereinafter F.A.C.) Rule 33·103.001(1) provides that the purpose of the grievance procedure is to provide a prisoner with a channel for the administrative settlement of a grievance. In addition to providing, the' prisoner with the opportunity of having a grievance heard and considered. this procedure will assist the departmenr by providing additional means for internal resOlution of problems and improving lines of communication. This procedure will , Florida ~rison Legal Perspectives also provide a written record in the event of subsequent . judicial or administrative review. /d.· While. many prisoners have used the grievance procedure and may con'sider it useless, a properly fiJed grievance can get DOC officials' attention and. resolve an issue withqut any need for litigation. Additionally, reviewing word usage 'and grammar before filing your grievance. will' help' you write your grievance clearly, correctly, and interestingly. Other tips that will help you properly file a grievance . include: 1) rewriting your grievance; 2) using .concise . language; 3) reviewing it to refine the language and grammar; and, 4) reviewing the grievance procedure. These factors will make your grievance look more professional and staff may want to review your grievance more carefully. " Not to say that DOC staff really C~lfes about your grievance. How~ver, y'our ability to properly present,your wievance may make staff think again and properly review your claim. It is better for DOC staff. to, do this than find themselves defending a lawsuit later. . . Also, k~owing how to properly fife a grievance is important since a prisoner is required to exhaust administrative remedies .before seeking judicial review 1n most civil actions. Each ~rlsoner shall be entitled to invoke the grievance procedure .regardless of any disciplinary, classification or . other administrative action or legislative decision to which the prisoner may be subject. See Rule 33-103.001(2). Each, institution. shall ensure that the grievance mechanism is accessible to ,prisoners who have disabilitIes. This may be accomplished .by providing assistance through the institution library ifrequested./d While many prison law, clerks refuse to' help other prisoners with grievances and litigation against DOC, assisting pri!!oners in this area is certainly part of their job. See: F.A.C., 33-501. 301(7)(c) and 33-501.301(2)0>. The following is a list of issues' that prisoners may grieve: • • • • • The substance, interpretation, and application .of rules and procedures of the department that affect them personally; The interpretation and application of state and federal laws and regulations that affe.ct them personally; " Reprisals against prisoners for filing a complaint or appeal under the prisoner grievance procedure, or for participating in' a. prisoner grievance proceeding; Incidents occurring within the 'institution that affect them personally; and, Conditions of care or supervision within the authority of the FDOe. See: 33-103.001(3)(a)-(e). This section also provides a list of issues that prisoners cannot grieve. These are the following: • • • • The substance of state and federal court decisions~ The substance· of state and federal laws and regulations , Parole decisions; a n d , . Other matters beyond the control· of the department. See: RUle·33~103.001(4)(a}(d). The Informal Grievance Step· Prisoners are required to use the informal grievance step befo,re filing a formal grievance. The only exceptions to this rule are when the grievance categories: ,falls under one of the following , 1) An emergency grievance; 2) A 'grievance of reprisal; 3) A grievance of a sensitive nature; 4) A grievance alleging violatio'n of the Americans with Disabilities Act; 5) A medical grievance; . '. . 6) A grievance involving admissible reading material; 7) A ·grievance involving gain time governed by Rule 33-601.101; 8) A g..ievanc~ challenging placement in cl~se management and subsequent reviews; 9) Grievances regarding the return of incoming mail governed by subsection 33-2JO.IOJ(l4); and 10) A grievance involving disciplinary reports. See: Rule 33-103.005(1). These grievances may be sent in a sealed envelope through routine institutional mail channels. See: 33103.006(3). If the grievance does not fall within the above categories, the prisoner must file an informal . grievance. Filing The Informal Grievagce The first step in the grievance process is ~ file 'an informal grievance. An informal grievance shall be submitted to the designated staff by personally placing the informal grievance 'in a locked grievance box. Locked boxes shall be available to prisoners in open population and special housing units. See: 33.103.005(IXa). Informal grievanCes' must be ' filed within" a reasonable time of when the incident or action being grieved occurred. Reasonableness shall be determined on a ca~e-by-case basis. Availability of witnesses· and relevant documentary evidence are factors. among olbers, which should be looked at in determining' reasonableness. See: Rule 33-J03.011(1)(a). When submitting the informal grievance. the prisoner shall use form DC6-236. Inmate Request 5 Florida Prison Legal Perspectives ' The prisoner must cheek the appropriate box indicating to whom he or' she is submitting the informal grievance. If the prisoner ,checks the box designated "other" he or she shall print the name or title ot the person the form is going to in the space underneath the box. and complete the other sections of the heading. See: 33-103.0QS(2)(a). , Inaddition, on topof the page, on the first line of the word "Request," or on the first line of the request section,' the prisoner shall print the words "Informal Grievance."Failure to do this will cause the request to be handled routinely and it will not be considered an informal grievance. See:'33-103.005(2)(b). Likewise, this will also cause the form to be unacceptable as documentation of having met the informal step if it is attached to a formal grievance . submitted at the next step. [d. Prisoners cannot asJ< qu.estions, seek information, guidanc~ or assistance in their grievance or it will be ,considered a request and not an informal grievanc~. See: 33-I03.005(2)(b)(I). " , Further, section (2)(b)(2) states that "When completing the inmate req~estform for submission as an informal grievance, the'inmate shall ensure that the form is legible, that, included facts are accurately stated, and that only one issue or complaint is addressed. If additional space is needed, the ,inmate shall use auachments and not multiple copies of Form DC6-236>" Attachments that are a continuation of the grievance statement do not need, to be submitted in . triplicate. DOC eliminated this requi'rement on March 25,2008. , ' .. However, a prisoner may want to include other attachments to support his 'or her claim. In that ease the prisoner should make copies of such attachments by following the procedure set forth in, 33501.302(3)(a), F.A.C.and Procedure 591.302(15). The prisoner shall sign and date the form and write in his or her DOC number and forward the informal grievance to the designated staff ,person. If the prisoner fails to sign the grievance, it shall result in a delay in addressing the grievance until it can be verified that it is that prisoner's grievance. See: 33,I 03.005(2)(b)(2). " Thereafter, '33~103.005(4) provides t~at "The recipient shall respond to the inmate following' investigation and evaluation of the complaint within , , 10 days...... " Furthermore, "The recipient'shall state that the grievance is approved, denied, or returned without action. The respon~e shall also state the reason or reasons for die approval, denial" or return." See: 33l03.00S(4)(b). ' The response to the informal grievance shall include the following statement, or one similar in content and intent ifthe grievance is denied: You may 6 obtain further administrative review of your complaint DCl-303 Request for by obtaining form Administrative Remedy. or Appeal, completing the fClrm as required" by Rille 33-103.006, F.A.C., attaching a copy of your informal grievance and response, and forwarding your complaint to the warden or assistant warden. See:33-103.0~S(4)(d). The Formal Grievance A formal grievance being filed at the institution must be submitted no later than 15 calendar days from: 1j The date on which the informal grievance was responded to; or 2) the date on which the incident or action being grieved occurred if an informal grievance was not filed pursuan~ to the circumstances specified in sub-section ~3-103.006(3). See: 33-' 103.011(1)(b).. . The prisoner shall state his or her grievance in Pan A: If additional space is needed, the prisener shall use attachments and not multiple copies of Form DCI303. If the prisoner writes his or her complaint anywhere other than within the boundaries of Part A or on attachments, the grievance shall be returned for n,pn-compliance. See: 33-f03.006(2)(c). Sometimes these grievances are not returned , because staff answering grievances do not know the rules. 'However, do not take the chimce; follow the rules. The same requirements of the informat grievance apply here as to being legible, the facts accurately' stated, addressing 'only one issue, and attachments, except as' not~d hereunder. The prisoner shall sign, .date, write his or, her DC number, and address the, grievance to the warden or Asst. warden. ,When the, formal grievance at the institution is, a disciplinary report (h~reinafter DR) appeal, the prisoner should be allowed to raise more than one issue. However, there is no rule that addresses this issue in 33-103, F.A.C. ~nd different institutions have" different policies when it comes to this issut;. Some institutions anow you to raise more than one issue, others do not. But central office is ~ore likely to agree that on a DR grievance more than <rme issue may be raised. The prisoner, shall also, attach a copy of the informal grievance and the response to the informal grievance to the DC 1-303 form, unless the grievance is a direct formal grievance,' as previously discussed. A computer generated receipt or Part C, receipt section of the grievance, shall be completed and retum'ed to the prisoner. See: 33-103.006(S)(b). If the formal grievance is a direct grievance the prisoner shall clearly state the reasons for by-passing the inform~1 grievance st~p and shall state at the beginning of Part A the subject of the grievance. Failure to do so and failure to justify filing directly Florida Prison Legal PerspectiveS shall result in the formal grievance being returned without action to the prisoner with the reasons for the return specified. See: 33~103.006(4). On the other hand, if the prisoner is filing an amendment to a previously filed grievance or appeal, the prisoner hall clearly state this at the beginning of Part A. Amendments are to be filed only regarding issues unknown or unavailable to the prisoner at the time of filing the original, grievance and must be submitted within a reasonable time frame of knowledge of the new information. See: 33-' . 103.006(2)(i). ' Issues appealed should raise any counter arguments to the responses received and address any claim overlooked or sidestepped by the respondent. Rule 33-103.011(3}(b) provides that following investigation and evaluation by the. reviewing authority, a response shall be provided to the prisoner within 20 calendar days of receipt ofthe grievance. If no response is received within that time, a prisoner may go to the next step of the grievance process. This applies to any grievance filed at any level. If this occurs, the prisoner must clearly indicate this fact when' filing at the, next step and also state that no extension was agreed to by the prisoner. See: Rule 33-103.011(4). The response to the. formal grievance shall include the following statement, or one similarin content and intent if the grievance is denied: Y qu may obtain further administrative review of 'your complaint by obtaining form DC]-303, Request for Administrative Remedy or Appeal, completing the form, providing attac~ments as .required. by paragraphs 33103.007(3}(a) and (b), F.A.C., and forwarding your complainuo the Bureau ofInmate Grievance Appeals, 260 I Blair Stone Road, Tallahassee; Florida 323992500. See: 33-103.006(7). . Seeking Appeal to The Secretary In the event that a prisoner feels that the grievance has not been satisfactorily resolved during the formal ,grievance procedure, an appeal may be submitted according to the time limits' set. forth in Rule 33103.0 II, F.A.C., using the Request for Administrative Remedy or Appeal, Form DCI-303, to the office of the secretaJ'Y, without interference from staff. See: 33103.007(1). ' The prisoner has IS calendar days to file an appeal to the office of the secretary', frQm the' date of the deniaL The appeal must include a copy of the informal grievance and response, also the copy and response of the denial of the institutional grievance to the DC I303, Request for Administrative Remedy or Appeal (if such were filed). The same requirements as to being legible, the facts accurately stated and attachments apply at this level. Also, all the other information must be included ~ in the previous steps. and it must be signed. The appe~ should· argue the response received . from the warden, any factors not addressed by the respondent and any other issues that may be present. The secretary has 30 calendar days from the date of the receipt of the' griev~c~ to take action and respo~d to appeals. See: 33-103.011(3X~). ]f the prisoner does not agree to an extension of time at the central office level of review, he or she shall be entitled to proceed with judicial remedies as the prisoner would have exhausted his or her administriuive remedies. See: 33-103.011(4) and Lane v. Moore. 765 So.2d 777 (Fla. 1st DCA 2000). The response s~all state w~ether the appeal or direct grievance is approved, denied. or being returned' and shall also state the reasons for the approval, denial or return. See: 33-]03.007(4)(t). Direct Grievances to The Secretary The following grievances can be filed directly with the secretary: I) Emergency grievances; 2) grievances of reprisals; 3) grievances ofa sensitive nature; and 4) grievances alleging a violation of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act. See: 33- ~ 103.007(6)(a). Moreover, the prisoner can forward these four types of grievances in a ,sealed envelope by following the procedure in 33-1 03.006(8)(d}. . , Key Points ,b . '.. Ifthe Is day falls on a weekend or holiday the due date shall be the next regu!ar day. See: 33-103.011(~). . ' • The first DCA has ruled that the mailbox rule ,ppliesto grievances filed by prisoners. See:' Gonzalez v. Slale, 604 So.2d &74 (Fla. 111 DCA 1992). • If you do not argue any issue on your" grievances, you may not try to raiSe them in any judicial proceedings. See: Holland v. Slale; 79J.So.2d 1256 (Fla. Sib DCA 2001). • Follow all the rules in the grievance procedure and make DOC·staff follow them also. • ' Exercise your right to file grievances; it makes a difference for every prisoner. • Learn.how to.deal with retaliation. • Staff found to be obstructing a prisoner's access to, the grievance process shall be subject to 'disciplinary action Tanging from oral reprimand up to dismissal in accordance with Rule$ 33-208.001-.Q03. F.A.C. See: 33103.017. End Note In writing this article, ] have tried to cover the areas that, in my humble opinion, will be very useful to the , 7 Florida PrisoD Legal Penpectives Florida prisoner. However. fora full review of the FDOC prisoner grievance procedure, See Chapter 33-103, F.A.C. I,hope the information provi~ed in this article will help the Florida prisoner bal~ce the injustice and abusive treatment Florida prisoners are subjected toby some DOC staff members. _ . FDOC Wants More Money he secretary of the' Florida Department of Corrections (FDOC), Walter McNeil, says' that some of the department's top priorities are restoril'!g money cut from prison education programs and probation officer budgets. To obtain those 'goals the FDOC will be asking the 2009 Legislature for an ad9itional $286.8 million over and above its current budget of2.2 billion. McNeil says ~e understands there is a cash ,crunch, but maintains that the additional money is' needed for 'successful prisoner, re-entry efforts and to maintain adequate, effective offender supervision. " A large part of theFDOC's request, $81 million, would pay for the expected increase of prisoners' next' Fiscal Year.• T McNeil said. The expanding-prison population could mean there will nee<l to be 26 ne\y prisons over the next several years at a cost ofabout $100 million each. , McNeil said about 88 percent of prisoners return to their communities, but Florida has a 32.8 percent recidivism rate. FDOC hopes to cut that rate in half over the coming years. \ '''We've got to do something different in prisons t~roughout the 'state," McNeil said. "The worst crime committed on society is someone who spends I0-15 years in prison and then reoffends, with results not only in that persOn's life but it also impacts that victim'~ life. We need to deal with those inmates getting them pushed in the right direction. Reception is the key." "We are going to do great things in the Department of , Corrections," s,aid McNeil. _ Mystery Involved in Prison Guard KiUi'og ccording to an investigation into the stabbing death " of 'IJ female prison, guard on June 25, 2008, at Tomoka Correctional Institution the guard wasn't wearing a mandatory body alarm or caiTying a required radio when she was killed. ' ., Washington CI Becomes Enoch Hall, 39 who was a prisoner at Tdmo~ CI, is charged with first· degree murder of Officer Donna Reception Center Fitzgerald. Hall is already serving consecutive life . . sentences in the 1993 kidnapping, beatin& and rape of a ashington Co~ctional Institution, located in the 66-year-old Pensacola woman. Florida Panhandle, was officially renamed Fitzgerald was reportedly' supervising pr'isoners for Northwest Florida Reception Center in a ceremony held PRIDE Enterprises, a non-profit, company that runs work Nov. 4, 2008. . programs in Flori~a's prisons, when she ~ attacked,and The all-male prison is part ofthe FDOC:~ Region I that stabbed to death by Hall.' . covers sixteen counties .in Northwest Florida with 22 Investigators claim to be baffled' as to why Fitzgerald prisons. The new reception center includes the main didn't have her body alarm or radio on her when she was prison and the annex and will receive an average of 160 killed. ' newly-sentenced prisoners a week. '~We regret that she wasn't wearing them/" said Gretl Asst. Warden Richard Comerford said the plan to' Plessinger, an FDOC spokeswoman. "Could that have change the prison to a reception center took over a yea~s saved her? I don't know." , ' preparation., 'Plessinger said a team is reviewing the investigation. " Once received;,nwprisC?ners will go through a five-day report that was released in November and the team will orientation process. Once processed. prisoners will then make recommendations that could lead to policy changes. spend 3-4 weeks at the ~nter before being transferred to So far the only visible change that the FDOC has made other state prisons. ' following Fitzgerald's murder. is the mid-November FDOC Secre.tary Walte.rNcNei!was the featured I posting of posters at various locations throughout Florida's speaker at the, changeover ceremony. He described the· prisons. The posters show aodiverse group of prison guards reCeption process as the ,lieginning of the effort to slash huddled together along with a (rather ironic, and Florida's high recidivismIrate and reduce the need to spend inaccurate) caption proclaiming, "We Neve,r Walk Alone.'" hundreds of millions on new prisons. McNeil noted that about one of every 145 Floridians is [Note: The initial reporting in FPLP on Officer Fitzgerald incarcerat~, on probation or under some other form of being killed raised question,S about whether a body alarm supel'Vision by law enforcement "We expect to handle and radio were present months,before the FDOC finally about 125,000 imitates over'the next three to'five years, admitted Fitzgerald had neither. See FPLP, Vol: 14,lss. 3] and that's a treme,ndous burden on the State.of Florida." _ W 8 A Florida Prison Legal Penp~ctive8 by Ryan J. Sydejko POST CONVICTION CORNER A defendant may not be subjected to a criminal trial while possessing mental defects which prevent full understanding of the proceedings against her. Drope v. Missouri, 420 U.S. 162 (1975). To conduct a trial while a defendant may be incompetent violates her right to a fair trial, Hill v. State, 473 So.2d 1253, 1259 (Fla. 1985), as well her right to Due Process guaranteed by the federal constitution. Pate v. Robinson, 383 U.S. 375,378 (1966). , The burden on the trial court to ensure a criminal defendant is competent is "a great one" and requires the judge to be "very diligent in ascertaining competency." Fuse v. State, 642 So.2d 1i42, 1146 (Fla. 4th DCA 1994). Thus, in order to preventtrying incompetent defendants, • Florida courts have developed a series ofsteps to follow. Initially, the issue regarding competency arises when "there is reasonable ground to believe the defendant may be incOmpetent, not whether he is i~competent.", Petrena v. State, 914 So.2d 999 (Fla. 1st DCA 2005); see also Fla. R. Crim. P. 3.21 O(b). The disti~ction between actual incompetence and mere suspicion ofincompetence is important. All that is required to trigger the protections afforded ' under the Rules," is a "reasonable ground to believe" that a particular defendant is incompetent. Fla. R. Crim. P. 3.21O(b). The Rule states that this doubt can be expressed by defense counsel, the prosecutor, or even the judge. Id. ," . . . , ' " . .Once a reasonable ground to question the defendant's competence has been expressed, the trial court must conduct a hearing on the matter within twenty days. Id. Such a hearing is • absolutely mandatory. Boggs v. State, 5:']5 So.2d 1274, 1275 (Fla. 1991). Failure to conduct the hearing constitutes reversible error. Nowitzke v. State, 5~2 So.2d 1346 (Fla. 1990). ,Prior to the hearing, however, the defendant must be exami~ed by two or three experts. Fla. R.· Crim. P.. 3.210(b) and Fla. Stat. § 916.1,15(1)(b). These expert evaluations are intended to assist the court, during the hearing, in determining whether the defendant is competent to proceed. When the trial court fails to appoint experts, or only appoints one expert, the Florida Supreme Court has held that ·'there is no doubt that the trial judge erred." D'Oleo-Valdez v; State/531 So.2d 1347, 1348 ,(Fla. 1988). At the competency hearing, the judge will consider the evaluations, as well as any testimony that may be heard. The trial court will then make a determination as to the defendant's competency. In the event the defendant is found competen~ standard pre-trial proceedings will occur as usual. The trial court's ruling is difficult to overturn on appeal, as courts have held that it will remain undisturbed absent an abuse of discretion. Carter v. State. 576 So.2d 1291, 1292 (F1a. 1989). Not all courts, however, abide by the clear dictates of Rule 3.210(b). An example is Pinellas County, Florida. There, Courts have adopted their own procedure which, arguably, averts the whole process outlined in Rule 3.210(b). When a reasonable ground to doubt a ,9 Florida Prison Legal Perspectives defendant's competency arises in pinellas County, the judge simply files a pre-filled form entitled "Order for Psychological Evaluation." The form states·that ."The Court finds that the issue of the Defendant's competency must be addressed. It is therefore necessary to appoint the Court P~ychologist for the Criminal Division to evaluatc the Defendant for tne purpose of determining the need for a full competency evaluation and/or to conduct such evaluation." First, by ordering that "competency must be addressed". the Co.urt is acknowledging that a reasonable doubt as to the defendant's competence exists. And, as a result, the Court is . ordering a competency evaluation. Thu~. at first blush, it appears the Court is abi~ing by Rule 3.210(b). Where the Court goes astray, however. is the reason the evaluation is needed. The evaluation is needed "for tl)e purpose of detcnnining the need for a full competency evaluation." In other words, the·Court is ordering an evaluation to see if it needs to order an evaluation. Such .a process effectively circumvents the entire purpose of Rule 3.2 IO(b). The Rule clearly states that once a reasonable ground to doubt the defendant's competency arises; two competency evaluations must be conducted, followed by a hearing on the '!latter. Fla. R. Crim. P. 3.21O(b). Pinellas County avoids that whole process by appointing the "Court Psychologist for the Criminal Division" to detennine whether an actual evaluation is necessary. Ofcourse, the Rule does not provide for such preliminary evaluatioris.. The remedy for violations ofthe Rule, as appear to be occurring in· Pinellas County, is vacation ofthe judgment and sentence with directions that rc-proseeu~ion only occur a~er a full and adequate determination ofthe defendant's competency to stand trial. Hill v. State, 473 So.2d 1253, 1260 (Fla. 1985). A post conviction competency hearing is inadequate because it is • impossible to retrospectively assess a person's competence. ld. at 1258-t259.. Thus, the defendant must be placed in a pre-trial posture where n contemporaneous determination of . competency can be made. Id. at 1259. Only a contemporaneous finding of competency will ensure'a defendant's constitutional right to Due Process ~as been protected. Id. at 1259 and Drope v. Missouri, 420 U.S. 162, 182-183 (1975). Ryan J. Sydejko. is an associate attorney at the law qUice q( Loren Rhoton. P.A. in Tampa. Florida,. and i'S a member i:J good standing with the Florida Bar. Mr. Sydejlco is a publishedamhor on terrorist investigations and how they have reshaped the Fourth Amendmel1l. Mr. Sydejko focuses prim(lri~v on representation qf incarcerated. persons vdth post cOIll'iclion matters in both State and Federal' courts. . Loren D. Rhoton is a member in good sfcmding with the Florida Bar and a member of the Florida Bar Appe/latl:! Practice Section. Mr. Rhoton practices almost . exclusively in the postconl'ictionlappe/late area q( the law. both at the state and jederal levels; He has assisted Illmdreds qfincarcerated persons with their cases and has numerOl/S written appe/latc opinions. rnJ 10 Florida Prison Legal PerepectiVes FPLP': I am an avid reader and subscriber to,your newsletter "Florida Prison Legal Perspectives". I would like to say first and foremost that the prisoners of Florida greatly appreciate your information and advise that is offered in each edition, and I want to personally thank you for I deal in a lot 'of administrative remedies' and try to educate other prisoners of the rights they can be afforded through education and other resources available. 'I wish there was some way to bui'd more unity among prisoners on a humble level, instead of trying to gain the . favor of staff who in the long run wind up screwing you over for your "Good Deeds". Snitching or telling is becoming such a cominon place on the most silliest and superfluities levels. When will we stop hurting ourselves and others who are in the same situation as us, and start becoming the men/women that society·argues' we will never be? ' Dear FPLP: Greetings, as I'm 'very happy with my FPLP, I also become more aware of this prison environment that I am in. As you know I am residing in one of the wo~t know institution, Taylor C I, but I thank Go~ that things are no longer the way they used to be. 8' tremendous change has taken place unexpectedly, well·God only knows..Your legal magazine has helped me to have a quiet mind, and encouraged me to use some ofcited cases to work out my own case. I am very grateful for your service. SN TCI Dear FPLP:' I see that the Legislature has cut the educational budget so that many public schools are Closing up. While Governor Crist is demanding that more prisons be built (at tax payers expense). My Suggestion would be that our Governor simply order the DOC to put razor wire around the vacated public schools and use the abandoned buildings to house prisoner's. What do yO\! think: I.Iook fory.rard to recei.ving the next issue of FPLP. .' Thank you. KR SCI , Dear FPLP: I am currently serving a natural life sentence for· a RICO violation, which was based solely on forged checks that did not exceed $20,000 total. I am still at disbelief that I received such a sentence. I am no angel, but life imprisonment is sb;nply unwarranted. I have on~ issl1e to inform the readers aboui and. Loren Rhoton wrote an article in the post conviction corner upon me writing him. In a nutShell, I was charged in St. Lucie county, FL 19th circuit by the Asst. State Attorney. The state alleged 43 check crimes underlying the . RICO charge. As I looked into the charging ~ocument I discovered at least 23 of the offenses occurred outside . St. Lucie County. Actually from 6 counties and four judicial circuits all the way to Hillsbourgh County: I challenged the states jurisdiction to file'charges'when ,the offenses occurred ,in two or more judicial circuits which was denied. The 4th DCA affirmed with 2 page opinio~ 965 S02d 350 (4 DCA 2007). According to the Florida const. there is only one person who .can do that, called the statewide prosecutor under Art V sect. 4(c) Fla. const. Fla. Stat. 16.56(a) authorizes the.OSP to prosecute crimes occurring'in two or more judicial circuits as part of a related transaction.· It does not apply to ASA's in one circuit. The DCA opinioned that in fact an . ASA can charge defendants with' crimes that are committed in any county- in the state. This ruling enhances a prosecutor'sjurisqictiQn tantamount'to the OSP. They were created for that purpose King v. State 790 S02d 477., The legislature budgeted $7,182,399.00 for 08-09 operation for the OSP. Why fund the O~P if Asst. State Attorneys can prosecute cases involving ~rimes occurring in other judicial circuits? The DCA's decision done just that and renders the OSP superfluous. Unfortunately'the Sup. Ct. denied review. Hopefully rcan obtain an attorney to file back to the Sup. Ct.. The tax payers of Flo~da should not funcl the OSP if the existing state attorneys can d,o what the OSP can do. Just goes to show how the courts twist and misinterpret clear language of a law in order to deny a person relief. LS APC~' 11 .' Florida Prison Legal Perspectives Dear FPLP: Unlocking America- The JFA Institute. This r~port was done by a group of Law Professors in snon it states: There is no end to the growth under current policies. The PEW charitable Trust Reports that under current sentencing policies the state -and Federal prison populations will grow by'anoth.er 192,000 prisoner's over the next five years. The incarceration rate will increase from 491 to 562 per 100,000 populations. And the nation will have to spend an additional $27.5 Billion in operational and construction costs over this five year period on top of the over $60 Billion now being spent on corrections each year. A,ssuniptions about crime and punishment are in correct. In particular, we demonstrate that incarcerating large nUIfiQers· of people has IittJe impact on crime, and show the improper use of probation and parole increases incarceration rates while doing little to control crime. We. set out an organizing principles for analyzing sentencing reform, embracing a retributive sentencing philosophy that is mainstrear.n among contemporary prison policy analysts and sentencing scholars. Based on'that analysis, we make a series of recommendations for changing current sentencing laws and correctional policies.'Each Recommendation is practical and cost-effective., This recommendation would safely reduce the nation's prison and jail population to half their current size. This reduction would ge~erate savings of an estimated $20 Billion a year. The result would be a system of justice and punishment that ~s far less costly, more effective, and more humane than what we have today. A statement by Justice Anthony M. Kennedy '08' "Our resources .misspent, our punishments tQo severe. our sentences too long." It's time . brothers and sisters. this is a 32 page report giving recomme.ndation on changing our system. BE GCI are Dear FPLP: well first of all I want to thank: you all for the great job you have done over the years, not just for us behind the Wire but for our families on the <?ther side. I have been in prison in Florida for II years and I've been a subscriber for most of those years. The info in your magazine has been a great"help to me. Now I wish to show my now adult daughter what FPLP is all about and how she can help make a difference by. being a member of FPLAO. FPLAO thank you for all you do fOf us and our families. We a,re grateful. JM' AP C~ , I am a resident of Georgia, but I am trying to bring attention to what I feel is an unjust prison system. I have a relative in prison in Florida; therefore. I am concerned that he' may never be released under the, system now being used. Our local news comes from Jacksonville, so we hear often of the overcrowded conditionS in the prisons, the indictments over corruption by officers in the prison system and other abuses of the system from inmates and those entrusted to uphold the law. There are about 5,000 prisoners in the system that have a sentence of life, with 25 years mandatory. These cases need to be looked at 'On an individual basis to determine , if they need to be released. That is not being done under th~ system Florida is using. Many of these, after serving 25 to 35 or more years are simply being rubber stamped "denied or see you in five years for another hearing." Gov. Charlie Crist said when he signed the Civil Rights RestorationBiII forex-inmates "it was time to show compassion for,those who had paid their dues." Crist and the legislators should look at a parole system that is costing the state $15 milliori a year. a system that is broken and has not been functional in years. It is a parole system that is holding a' bunch of old men hostage. These men are 55 to 80 years old or older. men who , . have already served 25 to 35 or more years in prison.·In any other state in America, these men would 'be home living productive. crime-free lives. Statistics prove these "lifers". have the I,owest recidivism rates. These old men are mostly sick. costing millions of dollars a year in medical expenses alone. Where is Crist's compassion for these men who have also paid their dues? These men are being overlooked every year. Most of these men will probably die in prison because no one cares enough to help fix the parole systelJl. Where is the compassion? I know the average citizen of Florida isn't concerned with a. problem that doesn't touch their lives, but it is touching them in the pocketbook, every year i~ the millions of dollars. I know that the present sYstem isn't working. ,so try something different. Most of these lifers are sick and old and need to be home with their families. Allaine Ridenour Ga. Note: Takenfiom Letters from Readers The Times-Union. Lelters'to the Editor from FPLAO me".'bers· may be printed in this section, The identity of letter writers will be by abbreviation. unless otherwise specified by the writer. for protection against possible retaliation and to encourage freedom of speech. All letters printed are subject to editing for clarity and length. All leiters cannot be printed but are invil~d. Address letters to:. Editors. FPLP. P.O. Box .1069. Marion. Ne 28752. If your leiter also concerns membership. membership renewal. address change. etc., please address that matter at the beginning of the leiter. to assist staff in 12 processing your mail. • Florida Prison Legal Perspectives NEWS~RIEF AL- A judge ordered DOC on October 8. 2008. to release records into the death inxestigation to the prisoner's mother: after ,she sued DOC. Farron' Barksdale. 32. was found comatose in' a cell three days after arriving at a state prison. Barksdale was convicted, of killing two Athens police .officers. DOC claims the prisoner died from antipsychotic drugs and excessive heat. wound. Authorities say Beavers shot two p.eople over domestic issues while on a weekend furlough .. The two victims are expected to recover . fully. The names were not released by authorities. ' AR- Authorities on October 22, 20Q8 captured a prisone~ who drove a tractor off prison land during the first week of October. Dina Tyler, 62, was captured trying to visit his daughter's house in Pope County. The incident took place' at the Varner Uni~. . AL- On Dec. 3. '08. the wife of Robert Doyle. who spent over two years in prison. was ,awarded $129.000 by a state panel. The money must still be appropriated by the Alabama Legislature. The compensation was , monetary ,recompense for Doyle's unjust conyiction and incarceration. and was awarded to Donna Doyle since Robert Doyle. died last year. Robert Doyle had been' wrongfully convicted of abusing daughters frc;>m a previous marriage but had been freed when it was learned that a state prosecutor had withheld evidence that showed Doyle's innocence. The prosecutor is immune' from paying any penalty for trying to destroy Doyle's life. AR- On July 23, 2008, Shawn Goodwin. the former police chief of Plainview was sentenced to six years in prison after a no contest plea to second-degree sexual assault. Goodwin was initially charged with raping a 13 year old girl. The charges were filed after his family's teenage baby sitter tiled a report: AR- Authorities found the body of a state prisoner on a weekend furlough about a half-mile from where a shooting occurred on September 21, 2008. The body of Craig Beavers Jr. was found the next lay in a wooded area near Nashville. Beavers died of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot All- A prosecutor told the Miller County Sheriff, Linda Rambo, on October 29, 2008 to resign or face criminal prosecution. This came as part of an investigation that Rambo allowed a jail sergeant to use a county-owned truck and help from a jail inmate to assist in a move. Rambo claims that she did not realize she was breaking the law. ~ CA- In a 4-3 decision, the state Supreme Court on August 21, 2008, ruled thilt, Gov. Schwarzenegger improperly . denied parole to' a rehabilitated murderer who spent 23 years in· prison. The court further held that the governor must consider more than just the nature ofthe crime when he votes decisiC?ns during parole hearings. CA- The city of Los Angeles settled a civil rights lawsuit filed by a former prisoner, Eric Robinson. The settlement took p.lace on July 23, 2008, with the. city agreeing to pay $1.15 million to Robinson who spent nearly 14 years in prison for murder before DNA eVidence cleared him. Robinson argued in his suit that police framed him. He had been convicted of a 1993 gang kiUing in South Los Angeles.. CA- Danielle Jones, 21, the wife of a prisoner, pleaded not guilty on · ~eptember. 16, 2008, to charges she· tried to free her husband by forging documents and. judges' signatures authorizing his release: Jones. was charged with five counts facing up to five years in prison. Jason Jones, her husband, is serving two life sentences for murder.' attempted murder and ~ shooting. CA- A man sentenced to 53 years to life in prison for murder on September 18, 2008, told a superior court judge that the murder victim "deserved what he ,gol" Angus Macintyre, 48, shot and killed his attorney for .iscrewing. up" his workers' comp~nsation case. The attorney, Jay Bloom Becker. 61. was shot in'the head in his office in Live Oak two years ago. Superior Court ' Judge Jeff Almquist in response fo Macintyre's comments said. it gave · him "great pleasure" to sentence him . to the maXimum~ CT- A former Madison police officer was sentenced on Septe~ber 16, 2008 to probation and ordered .to repay more than $4,500. A judge sentenced Joseph Gambardella' for stealing sea~ood fr<!m a restaurant and gasoline from town pumps. Gambardella pleaded no contest to burglary and larceny charges. He is one of eight Madison police officers arrested, fired or investigated 'for wrongdoing. The Madison police · chief is also currently on leave pending an investigation. . FL- During early Nov. '08 a Bay . County Jail correctional guard was arrested and charged with 'smuggling co.ntraband into the jail. The guai'd, Angela Chiles was found to have .prescription pills on her when starting a shift, ~ccording to the 13 ~~orida sheriff's office. Further investigation discovered that she had been taking other contrBbait~ into the jail. FIr The Florida. Department of Law . Enforcement and' FDOC's Inspector · General's Office arrested a prison guard Nov. 7, '98 on a charge of sex.ual.battery. Geno Lewis Hawkins. 43, a 'prison guard at Gadsden Correctional Facility, a private prison run by Corrections Corporation of America, was arrested at his home and booked ito the Leon County Jail. He was being ·held without bail. Hawkins aHeged.ly was involved in a. sexual relationship with a prisoner at the female prison. He faces a maximum 30 year ilrison sentence. A 37-year-old corrections officer with the Collier County Sheriff's.Office resigned Sept. 5, '08, following accusations that he raped a female prisoner in a jail stairwell, ·molested another female prisoner and made sex.ually explicit comments to . a third. Cpt. Louis J. Aguinaga resigned days after he refused to provide tes~imony about the detailed accusations during an internal investigation. Two' of tile female prisoners passed polygraph tests on . their allegations. Aguinaga was the second Collier corrections officer to resign in just over. a year after . allegations' of se~ual misconduct were leveled by femille prisoners. The Collie'r state attorney has refused to press charges on either officer. , FL- FIr On ~ov. II, '08. a woman who spent a night at the Volusia County. Correctional Facility, filed a formal complaint aHeging that she had been sexually assaulted by one or more female - corrections . officers. According to her complaint. the woman claims that after she was booked into the jail on Nov. 4 for misdemeanor retail theft she complained of diabetic low blood ·sugar she was ignored '~nd taken to a cell. Once there she claims she felt dizzy and fell to the floor. Four officers then' entered the cell and 14 I Prison Legal Perspectives begin slapping her and pulling her hair. She was then taken to the infirmary where it was claimed she' was faking. The officers then took her to an isolated cell and ordered to her to strip for a search. According to her .complaint, once she disrobed one guard pinned her legs while another sexua'ly battered her with her hand. While that was happening another guard groped her breasts to the point of pain. while the fourth guard stood and watched. The accused guards were not named in mainstream media reports. Sheriff officials said the investigation was turned over to the FOLE. FL- A probation officer who has worked in Calhoun County for several years was.arrested on ctrarges of Out along' with possession' of meth and less than 20 ,- grams of marijuana. Arrested' was Ryder Laramore. '44. of Marianna. According to the Bay County Sheriff's Office, several 911 calls had be~n received about a black car running vehicles off the I'()ad. The car was stopped and a deputy spoke with the driver. ~dentified as Laramore, who was wearing women's clothing, black hose, and a blonde wig. A bottle ofVodka was in plain view. Laramore failed a test. A search of the car turned up meth. a glass pipe. and a small bag of' marijuana. FL- />.to correctional officer who had worked in the Calhoun County Jail was fired Sunday. a day after he was· charged with out by a Florida . Highway Patrol trooper. Arrested was 46-year-old Andy Ray Cook. This was his fourth' DUl. according to FHP Sgt. Lonnie Baker. Cook attempted to follow the trooper's directions to conduct a roadside sobriety test before he stopped aJ1d said. "1 can't do it". AS he was handcuffed. Cook told the .trooper. that he was the work squad officer for the sheriff's office. Cook was ~en to the jail and gave a breath sample on the intoxilyzer to determine his blood alcohol level (BAC). Florida's .BAC is 0.08. Cook's' samples. taken at 'I :03 a.m., were .107 and .103. FL- On .September . II, . 2008. a Tampa Judge Daniel Perrey ordered 61 jail inmates back to the jail so . they could change into better-fitting orange panis. The judge said that he did not want to see people "with their rear ends hanging out." The Hillsborough County sheriff's office sent' spare pants in various sizes to the courthouse for future offenders, said officials. . ID- On September 7, 2008. a judge rejected plans to build a new Bonner County juvenile jail and work release center. The judge ruled that th~ state constitution required pU\llic votes on debts that extend beyond one fiscal year and no public votes had be~n. made. The cOuntY would pay more. than 5782,000 a year under the plan. After 30 years the county would own the buildings. The plan called for financing the buildings through fees charged to inmates. ID- After, a judge ruled that Keith Allen Brown was incompetent 'to face criminal trial proceedings for a murder, a jail chaplain resigned his ministry ata jail to speak publicly about Brown. Scott .Herndon, resigned his ministry on September' 22, 2.00& at a northern Idaho jail to speak publicly about the mental' competency of Brown. Herndon claims he spent time with Brown 'at the jail and insists that Brown is competent to. face trial for. firstdegree murder.. KS- On October 22,. 2008. two guards working at the maximumsecurity section. of the Leavenworth Detention Center were stabbed. The attacks took place separately but simultaneously. said authorities. The names of the two inmates that allegedly stab6ed' the guards were not released. Neither were the names of the guards who were hospitalized. Florida Prison Legal Perspectives Officials claim that the motive of the attacks is unknown. and Terry Lewis were'dating when thc::y were sentenced in 2005. NH- Carl Laurie, 58, surrendered to Concord police on October 30, 2008 after he walked away from a halfway house on October 29, 2008. Officials said that Laurie left his halfway house to .Iook for a jpb and did not return. DOC records .show that Laurie was serving time for a 1989 second-degree murder conviction. NY-. On Nov. 24 a former corrections officer, Everitt George, 38, was sentenced to life in prison for murdering his two children, one of whom was a toddler who was sitting in her highchair when shot. George reportedly killed the children' to punish his wife for seeing anoth~r man. NJ- On August 19.2008. a prisoner serving a 30 month sentence in Camden admitted. that he 'tried to have his estranged wife killed. Richard Kaplan asked another prisoner to find someone to kill his wife. In tul'Q, this prisoner snitched on Kaplan. He now faces 10 years. The name of the snitch was not released by authorities. . NY- What a _Thanksgiving~ On Nov. 25, '08, Steven Barnes walked out of Oneida County Court a free man after DNA testing cleared him of raping and killing Kimberly Simon, 16, in 1985. Barnes spent more than 19 years in" prison for the crimes, which prosecutors tinally had to admit-he didn't commit. NJ- .Sgt. Christopher Stahl. 39. pleaded .guilty on September 15, 2008 to theft. The Rockaway Township police walked out of a Quick Chek in Rockaway Borough with eight breakfast sandwiches worth almost S30. Stahl was fired and must pay S100. Robert Bianchi, the prosecutor, said that the plea "represents the fact that no one is above the law." PR- A prisoner was released from a Puerto Rico prison after' being wrongfully convicted of murder. Jonathan Roman Rivera serv~d eight months in prison for killing a Canadian businessman in 2005. Rivera was sentenCed to 105 years in prison. However, FBI investigators determined that Rivera was innocent and wrongfully sentenced. Another man has been arrested and charged with the murder, said a prosecutor. The courtroom announcement took place on September 15, 2008, three months after- the FBI determined that Rivera was innocent. NV- A federal jury awarded damages to a former guard on August 20, 2008 in the' amount of $350,000. Richard Cosgrove filed a lawsuit against the DOC head after being sc- Prison officials announced on August 25, 2008 their plans to install tired from the Nevada Stat: Prison. Cosgrove was allegedly tired for • . better equipment, drilling new wells bringing 'DVDs into a gun tower and using other conservation tools to while on duty. The former guard save money. Officials say that by argued in his suit, that he was fired . doing so they will save $1 million a for criticizing the warden's decision year in energy and water costs. The to cut prisoner programs at the project is ~ing funded by the State prison. Infrastructure Bank through a $14 million state loan. NV- DOC officials responded on September 11,2008 to a lawsuit filed sc- The Col4mbia newspaper on behalf of two prisoners who want reported during the last week of August 2008, that a DOC employee to marry. DOC argues that allowing filed a lawsuit asserting the DOC the two prisoners to marry would retali~ted against her for reporting endanger the public. Becky Rivero corruption to state senators. The suit was tiled by Linda Dunlap who named as' defendants the prisons director Jon Ozmint and the director of health services, Russell Campbell. TX- A state judge agreed on August 26, 2008, not to send a woman charged in the death of her 2-yearold' nephew to jail provided she wear a tracking device until her trial. Mayra Rosales weighs nearly 1,000 pounds and the county jail lacks a large enough cell and the' medical resources, said prosecutors. TX- A Dallas appeals court dismissed the ease against Michael Blair on September 18, 2008, after DNA evidencecl~ared him. Blair was convicted and sentenced to death for the 1993 molesting and strangling of 7-year-old Ashley Estell. DNA test show that another man, now deceased, is a plausible suspect, said prosec~tors. TX- A prisoner who escaped on ,September 9, 2008 from the String Fellow Unit in Rosharon was recaptured on September 28, 2008. Authorities say that Marlow Reynolds climbed 'a fence at the prison recreation yard in the path of Hurricane Ike days before the storm slammed the Texas coast. Reynolds was found in the woods near the Gulf Coast town Brazoria about 25 miles from the prison. TX- A state wide prison shakedown which started on October 20, 2008 has yielded 13 ~ell phones. Prison officials say that' all the prisoners were locked down after the disclosure that a death row prisoner, Richard Tabler, used a smuggled cell phone to threaten a state senator and shared the phone with nine prisoners. A phone and a charger were found in the ceiling of a shower area in the death row building at the Polunsky Unit, said officials. The Texas prison astern has about 155,000 prisoners. 15 Florida Prison Legai Perspectives CONFRONTING SUMMARY JUDGMENT IN EXCESSIVE FORCE CLAIMS UNDER 42 u. S. C. §1983 CML RIGHTS ACTIONS AND ITS RELEVANCE IN RELATION TO QUALIFIED IMMUNITY LEGAL STANDARD In connection with a Rule 56 motion, Fed. R. Civ. P. "Sw.'nmary Judgment is proper it: viewing all the filets ofthe record in a light most favorable to the non·moving party, no genuine issue of ~terial fact remains fC?r adjudication". Anderson v. Liberty Lobby. Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 247·250, 106 S.Ct 2505, 91 L. Ed, 2d 202 (1986). ' The role of the court in ruling on such a motion "is not to resol,*:e disputed issues of fact but to assess whether there are any factual'issues to be tried, while resolving ambiguities and drawing reasonable inferences against the moving p~~' . . The moving party bears the burden of proving that no genuine issue ofmaterial fact =;tists or that by reason ofthe Pllucity ofevidence presented by the non·movant. no rational jury eQuld find in favor ofthe non-moving party. In the case of a: pro selitig~t a court is instructed to read the pleadings "liberally and interpret them to raise the strongest arguments that they suggest." Mc Pherson v. Cogmbe, 174 F.3d 276, 280 (2ad Cir. 1999)., However "application of this different standard does no relieve the plaintiff (prisoner) ofhis duty to meet the requirements necessmy to defeat a motion for summmy judgment." , EXCESSIVE FORCE A l,ikely counter ,by Defendants in this type of claim is that'any force, allegedly used was directly related to maintain order, discipline and security within the prison, and that the alleged acts do not raise to the level of a constitutional violatiOn because they involve nothing more than de minimus use offorce. ' , Such counter can however be overcom~ .. ''The cOre judicial inquiIy" for claims of excessive force is "whether force was applied in a good-faith-effort to maintain and restore ~scipline, or maliciously and sadistically applied to cause bann". Hudspn v. Me Miltiam. S03 U.S. 1,7.s, 112 S.Ct. 995, 117 L. Ed. 2d 156 (1992). ' To establish a eOnstitud.orial claim of excessiv~ force, "two conditions", one subjective and the other objective, must be met. Hudson. 503 U. S. at 20. The subjective condition is satisfied if the defendant has a "sufficiently culpable' state of mind... shown by action characterized by wantonness". In detennining whether the use of force was wanton, a court evaluates " the need' for application of force, the relationship between that need and the amoUDt,of f~ used,· the threat reasonably perceived by the responsible officials, and any efforts made to temper the severity of a forceful response". Hudson 503 U. S. at 7. A prisoner can satisfy the subjective condition by proffering sufficient evidence showing that a reasonable juror could conclude that the officials' conduct was wanton and malicious because there was no "need for the application of force used" and no "threat reasonably perceived by officials". Therefore, a rational jury coUld find that the physical abuse ,allegedly inflicted was des:fned, and not reasonably related to a security need, but to harass and intimidate. See Harris y. Chapman. 97 F.3d 499 (11 Cir. 1996). The objective condition is satisfied ifit is "shown that the deprivation alleged is objeqively sufficiently serious or harmful enough", Hudson; S03 U.S. at 8: This condition is satisfied "even if the victim does not suffer serious or significant injury provided that the amount offorce used is more than de minimis, or 'involves force that is repllsnlnt to the . conscience ofmankind." A prisoner can satisfY the objective condition when viewing all the facts of the record in a light most favorabl,e to ' the Plaintiff (Prisoner) 'that a reasonable juror could conclude that being repeatedly struck by prison guards without· , provocation with such force to ~use bruising, bleeding, broken bones or other significant injuries. that such actions were "sufficiently serious or harmful enough", to satisfy the objective condition. Hudson, 503 U. S. at 8, Therefore, when there are genuine issues of material filcts existing, regarding the amount of force used and the severity ofinjuries suffered, the gninting ofsummary judgment is inappropriate, FAILURE TO INTERVENE Law enforcement officials can be held liable under Section 1983 for not intervening in a situation where excessive, , force is being used by another officer. See Velazgues v, City of Hialeah. 480 F.3d 1232 (11 lit Cir~ 2007). Liability may attaclt only when (1) the officer had a realistic opportunity to interVene and prevent the hann; (2) a reasonable person in 16 " . Florida Prison Legal PerSpectives the ~fficer's position would know th~t the victim~s constitutional rights were being',violated; £3) the officer does not take . reasonable steps to intervene. McLaurin v. New RochellePolicc Officers. '373 F. Supp 2d 385. 395 (S .D. N.Y. 2005). Ifthere is no reasonable opportunity for a correctional officer'to intervene because the episode of excessive force is not of sufficient duration a court may not impose liability under Section 1983. Therefore. the pleadings must, adequately demonstrate that the duration was of sufficient duration that officers who aro present had the opportunity to intervene. ' discretio~ ~etions ?UALIf!==ified immunity shields goveriunent officials performing from liability for civil damages insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights ofwhich a reasonable person would have known. Wilson v. Lavne. 526 U. S. 603. 609. 119 S.Ct 1692, 143 L. Ed. 2d 818 (1999). "A right is clearly established if (1) the law is defined with reasonable clarity. (2) the Supreme Court has recognized the right, and (~) ~ reasonable, defendant (prison official) would bave understood from the existing law that his conduct was unlawful." Anderson y. Creighton, 483 U. S. 635. 640. 107 S.Ct. 3034, 97 L. Ed. 2d 523 (1987). , Summary judgment may b~granted on this grolqld if the defendant (prison of;ticial) sufficiently shows that (I) the asserted right was not clearly established, or (2) it was nonetheless objectively reasonable for the official to believe the conduct did not violate it. ' ,. . , Qualified imrilunity is an affinnative def~e. thus the "defendants bear the burden ofshowing that the ch8Uenged acts were ~bjeetively reasonable in light ofthe law existing at that time." , Since the right of the prisoner to be free from unreasonable use of excessive force is clearly established. Defendants must show that it was'''objeetively reasonable" for them to believe their conduct did not violate the prisoner.'s· , ' .' , , constitutional rights.. However, dismissal on the basis of Ii qualified immunity defense is not appropriate where there are facts in dispute that are material to a determination ofreasonableness. Thomas y. RoACh, 165 F.3d 137, 143 (2ad Cir. 1999).. F.D.O.C. Rule on Use of Force is contained in Cbapter 33-602.210 Fla. Admin. Co.de. The foregoing is merely one _ I part ~o consider-when filing a Civil Rights Action under Section 1983~ There are many more principles of law a litigant must contemplate and researcli. . . EXPERIENCED CRIMINAL DEFENSE ATtORNEY AVAILABLE FOR STATE AND FEBERAL .POST-CONVICTION MATTERS • Admitted to the Florida Bar in \ 973 • Over thirty years experience in the practice of criminal Law • Providing representation iD Direct Appeals, Belated.Appeal$) 3.850 motions, 3.800 ,~otions, 2255 motions, State and Federal Habeas Corpus Petitions, Detainer Iss':!es, and other Postconvictioh Matters. Inquiries to: taw Offices of 'Danie{'D. 2vt.azar 2153 tee 'Road' Winter Pari, :F£ 32789 ''ro{{:Free 'ret 1-888-645-5352 ,'Tet'(407) 645-5352 :Fax: (407) 645-3224 'fh8 hiring of a lawyor ill an important decision that lIhould not 1)0 blUJed lIo101y upon aclvortj,oOllGnta. you doc1d.o, ask WI to send you free infozmatj,on about ow: quaU,ficatj,ons and oxpori:em:o. ~oro 17 . Florida Prison Legal Perspectives Loren D.· Rhoton 'I Postconviction· Attorney I ~---------- . • Direct Appeals • Belated Appeals • Rule 3.850 Motions , • Sentence Corrections • New Trials • Federal. H'abeas Corpus'Petitions .' 412 East Madison Street, Suite' 1111 Tampa, Florida 33602 (813) 226-3138 . Fax (813) 221-2182 . . Email: lorenrhoton@rhotonpostconviction.c~m Website: www.rhotonpostconviction.C:om The hiring of a lawyer is "an irgportant decision that should not be based solely on advertisements. B~fore yo!.! decide, ask us to send you free written· information about our qualifications. . BUY 'THE BOOK - ON SALE NOW POSTCONVICTION RELiEF FOR THE FLORIDA PRISONER A Compilation ofSelected Postconviction Corner Articles A collection ofLQren Rhoton's Postconviction Corner articles is now available in one convenient book geared towards Florida inmates seekingjustice·in their cases. Insights base on professiona~ experience, case citations, and references to the relevant rules of procedure are provided. This book is specifically directed toward those pursuing postconviction relief. a To order, send $20.00 in the form of a money order, cashier's check or inmate bank check (no stamps, cash or personal che~ks please) to the address above, or order online ~t www.rhotonpostconviction.com. ·18 . \ Florida Prison Legal Perspectives . The proper title of a post-ju'dginent motion is a Motion for a new trial, a Motio!1 to Alter or Amend ora Motion to 'Amend (or make additional findings). Depending on the type and origin' of the case (i.e. state or federal) and the Circumstances _ involved ,up to this stage of the ' proceedings, this course ofaction may be preferred. A notice of appeal tiled by a prisoner confined at a correctional institution ,is timely tiled when it is placed in by Dana Meranda ' the hands of the institution's mail officials for mailing on or before the last day it is due to be tiled. Rule 4(c), FRAP (2008). Timely tiling may be shown bya declaration in ' ,. Timing Form and Content compliance with 28 U.S.C. section 1746 or byanotarized A final order by a District Court Judge in a section statement, either of which must set forth the date the' 2254 Habeas Corpus proceeding is subject to review by prisoner delivered the notice of appeal to prison officials the Circuit Court of Appeals.' .' for mailing and state that first-class postage has been The Circuit Court of Appeals has jurisdiction of all Houston v. Lack, '487 U.s; 266, 108 S.ct. 2379 prepaid. final decisions of the District Courts under 28 U;S.C. (1988). ' " section 1291. , The Petitioner should be' particularly aware that a Since Habeas Corpus proceedings are characterized as timely objection to the Magistrate's Report and civil in nature, Fisher v. Baker, 203 U.S. 174,/181 (1906), Recommendation .is generally required to avoid short and Habeas Corpus Rule If permits application of the Federal cpnsequences. 28 U.S.C. section long term waiver Rules of Civil Procedure in habeas corpus cases to the 636(b)(I)(c). See: FHC PP section 18.2 (slh ed. 2005) extent that the [civil rules] are not inconsistent with any (discussing the failure to fil~ a timely objection to the statutory provisions or the habeas rules: See: 8 I(a)(4), Magistrates Report .and Recomm~ndation may preclude .. Fed. R. Civ.P. (2008). the District Judge and the 'Circuit Court of Appeals from The Notice of Appeal is required to be filed with'the reviewing 'certain issues and pointing out the difference DistrIct 'Court within 30 days after the final order being between findings of fa.ct and legal conclusions in this· appealed is entered. In accordance with Rule 58 Fed. R. situation). , Civ. P. (2008), the 30-day period for filing Notice of The Circuit Courts however, appear to be divided on Appeal begins on the date the District Court enters of this application of law. See: Nara v. Frank, the limits judgment, not the date the memorandum decision was 1h 488 FJd 187, 194-196 (3d Cir. 2007) citing Henley v. signed. Williams v. Borg, 139 F.3d 737.. 739 (9 Cir.) cert. Johnson, 885 F.2d 790 (111~Cir.1989). . denied 525 U.S. 937 (1998). appeal when reviewing the decision of the District On In Bowles v. Russell, 127 S.ct. 2360 (2007),. the Court Court the Circuit Court reviews a District Colirt's addressed the application of Fed. R. App. P. 4(a)(6) and , Resolution oflegal questions and mixed questions of law 28 U.S.C. section 2107(c) concerning extensions of time and fact de novo and the factual conclusions for clear to file Notice of Appeal. The Court held "that the taking of error. Arther v. Allen, 452 F.3d 1234, 1243 (11 th Cir. an appeal in a civil case within the time prescribed by Z006). . statute is mandatory, an~ jurisdictional and may not be The contents required in a Notice of Appeal are set extended by either the District Court or the Circuit Court forth in Rule' 3(c), FRAP (2008). A form for Notice of of Appeals except in the limited circumstances permitted Appeal may be available in your law library. If not, the by Rule 4(a)(5), FRAP." The Court further explained "that in the "Appendix of Form's" of proper format can be found there is a 'significant difference between the time either the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure (FRAP) or limitations set forth in a statute such as section 2107 th 11 Circult Rules. the which limit the court's jurisdiction, and thos~ ba~d on . , An appeal must not be dismissed for informality of court rules which do not. Bowles v. Russell, 127 S.ct. id. ct form or title of the Notice of Appeal, or for· failure to 2366 There are ,five limited exceptions to' Appellate Rule, name a party' whose intent is otherwise clear from the notice. Rule 3)c)(4), FRAP (2008). 4{a)'s strict 30-day time limit. See Hert2/Liebman FHLPP Prisoners who cannot afford to pay the filing and . section 35.2(a) nn. 25_44 (5 th ed. 2005). docket fees must secure leave to proceed in fonna . The Running of time' for filing a Notice of Appeal may pauperis (ifp) from the f?istrict Court, and if denied then ,b,e tolled according to the terms of Rule 4(a), FRAP, by a from the Circuit Court of Apeals. See FHL PP section timely reconsideration motion pursuant to Civil Rules th ed. 200S), and Rule 24(8), FRAP (2008). , 35.3 (5 52{b}, 59, and 60. Browder v. Director, 434 U.S. 257, A party who was permitted to proceed in forma 264,-65,98 S.ct. 556, 56,1 (1978);'Jac~on v. Crosby, 437 pauperis in the District Court may proceed on appeal in . , F.3d 1290,1292 (Il lh Cir. 2006). forma pauperis without further authorization unless the Starting The Appeal' Process And The Certificate of Appealability In Section 2254 Habeas Corpus ~ . Proceedings 19 Florida Prison Legal Perspectives . District Court certifies the appeal is not taken in good faithor that the party is not otherwise entitled to proceed in forma pauperis. 'Rule 24(a)(3).FRAP (2008). Certificate of Appealability : The AEDPArepiaced the "Certificate of Probable Cause" with a new procedural device called "Certificate of Appealability". A state prisoner seeking relief under 28 U.S.C. section 2254 has no absolute right to appeal a district courfs denial or dismissal of the petition. Instead. a petitioner must. first seek and obtain a (COA) Certificate of Appealability by mak'ing ,a substantial· showing of a denial of a constitutiC?nal right AEDPS's substantial showing of the denial of a constitutional right standard has been interpreted to codify the Barefoot standard. Barefoot v. Estelle. 463 U.S. 880. 103 S.ct 3383 (1983). Miller EL v. Cockrell 123 s.ct. i 029. 1039 (2003). A petitioner satisfies' this standard by demonstrating that reasonable juristS could debate whether (or. f9r that matter. agree that) the petition should have been resolved in a different manner or that the issues presented were adequate to deserve encouragement to proceed furthe~. A petitioner need not convince a judge. or. for that matter. three judges. that the appeal will prevail. but must demonstrate that reasonable jurists would find the district courfs' assessment of the constitutiollal claims debatable or wrong. . A state prisoner must obtain a COA to appeal the denial or dismissal of a habeas petition. whether such petition was filed pursuant to section 2254 or section 2241. whenever the detention complained of in the petition arises out of a process issued by a state court. Medberry v. Crosby. 351 F.3dI049. 1063 (lilb Cir. 2003). A COA determination under section 2253(c) requires an overview of the claims in the habeas petition and a general assessment of their merits. This inquiry does not require "futl consideration of the factual or legal bases supporting the claims. In other words. the examination into the underlying merits should be limited. Miller-EL·v. Cockrell, 123 S.ct. id. at 1039: In Slack v. McDaniel, 12.0 S.ct. 1595, 1604 (2000). the court decided whether a. COA ,should issue where the petition was dismissed on procedural grourl'ds. The Court determined that an assessment of two components were thus required. one directed at the underlying constitutional claims and one directed at the District Courfs procedural holding, reasoning that s~tion 2253 mandates that both showings be made before the Court of Appeals 'may entertain the appeal. ' . . A Notice of Appeal is treated as an application for a COAt Gamble v. Sec'y. FDOC. 450 F.3d 1245~.1247(11th Cir. "2006), following Edwards v. U.S.• 114 F.3d 1083, 1084 (11 th Cir. 1997). ' 20 Unlike the pre-AEDPA Certificate of Probable Cause to appeal ~ COA must specify each claim that meets the ' substantial showing standard. . If the applicant files a Notice of Appeal. the District Judge who Rendered the judgment must either issue a COA or state why a Certificate should not issue. The District Court Clerk must transmit the Certificate or statement to the Circuit Court of Appeals along with the Notice of Appeal arid the file or the District Court proceedings. According to Illb Cir. Rule' 27-2 (Motion For 1b Reconsideration) "except as .otherwise provided in 11 .Cir. Rule 40-4. a motion' to reconsider. vacate or modifY an order'must be filed within 21 days of the entry of the order subject to reconsideration." . Rule 22(b) of the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure provides that the District Judge is required to rule on the certificate application in the first instance and in the event of a denial by the Qistrict Judge. and then the certificate application goes to the·Circ~it judie for a ru'ling.Hunter v. U.S.• 101 F.3d 1565. 1575 (I I Cir. 1996) (en banc) (under the plain language of the 'rule. an applicant gets two bites of the appeal certificate. apple. on~ before the District Judge and if that one is unsuccessful. then one before a CircuitJudge). . A Circuit Judge is also required to treat the Notice of Appeal as an application for COA. "If no express request for a Certificate of. Appealability if filed, the Notice of Appeal constitutes a request addressed to the judges of the Court of Appeals." Slack v. McDaniel, 120 S.ct. id. 'Ilt 1603. . Despite this standard treatment of' the Notice of Appeal. and since the Circuit Judge is not familiar with the case as the District Judge. an .express 'application for a .COA at this stage in the Circuit Court is an option that warrants due consideration. If the Ci~uit Judge only issues a partial COAan Appellant·can move for reconsideration asking the Court to expand the COA to include' the grounds which have been denied. See: II tb Cir. Rule 22-1 (d). Such motion will' go .before a three-judge panel. 11 th Cir. Rule 27-1 (d). Hodges v. Attorney General, State of Florida. 506 FJd 1337. 1339 (11 th Cir. 2007). A 'denial'ofa COAt whether by a single circuit judge or . by a panel. may be the subject of a Motion For Reconsiderat,ion but may not be the subject of a Motion for panel rehearing or rehearing en bank. See: 11 1b Cir. Rule 22-1. As a threshold matter of 'whether to expand review' beyond the issues certified for appeal by the District Court, the I i lb Circuit in Jones v. U.S. 224 F.3d 1251. 1256 (1l lh Cir. 2000). clearly expressed that the motion panel's denial does not bind the panel ~earing the caSe on the merits. Illb Cir. Rule 27-1 (g) (a ruling on a motion or other interlocutory matter... is not binding upon the panel as -._._----_. -----. Florida 'Prison Legal Perspectives to which the appeal is assigned on the merits, and the merits panel may alter, amend, or vacate it). And in HOM v.' U.S., 524 U.S. 236, 238, 118 S.ct. 1996, 1971 (1998). consistent with the majority opinion, the Court overruled House v. Mayo, 324 U.S. 42 (1945), holding that it has jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. section 1254(1) to review denials of an application for a COA by a circuitjudge or panel. . An affirmative example generated by the Court's explicit holding is reflected in Apker v. U.S.• 524 U.S. 935. 118 s.ct. 2339 (1998) (mem) case below 101 FJd 75 (SdJ Cir. 1996). where the Supreme Court issued a GVRlLO Order (Grant, Vacate and Remand in Light ot) HOM. See: FHLPP section 39.2(d) n.42 (5 1h ed. 2005). The above summary offers some of the basic, fundamental principles necessary to initiate the appeal proces!> in section 2254 cases. Specific areas of interest beyond the scope of this article will require extended research on a case by case basis. _ THE DALEY LAW OFFICE, P.A. Post Conviction Parole Appeals Biennial . Extraordinary Writs Credit State & Federal Habeas Revocation Score Sheet Issues Clemency Dedicated to Aggressive CrimJna' Defense 901 Nonh Gadsden Street Tallahassee, FL·J2303 (850) 1201-5823 . w_.daleyla\V-office.com FLORIDA CLEMENCY SPECIALIST Far Iafo. 00 ~ Racfuclioa 1'IIrouab I!xecwive CIcaIc=y NATiONAL CLEMENCY PROJECT 8624 CAMP COLUMBUS ROAD HIXSON, TENNESsEE 37343 (423) 843-1235 CoU-VEARS 0' CLEMENCY .. PAROLE ASSISTANCE) I Cary F. Rada Board Certified Criminal Trial Lawyer Former State Prosecutor I· • t 'POST-CONVICTION' SERVICES • .• • • • • 3.850 Motions. Sentence Corrections Federal Habeas Corpus State Habeas Corpus Appeals New Trials 616 - CERTIFIED The Florida Bar CRIMIHAL TRIAL LAW ~ Cary F. Rada, P.A. 318 North Texas Avenue Tavares,FL 32778 352-742-2778 E-Mail: info@CaryRada.com The hiring of a lawyer is an important decision th~t ·~hOUI.d not be. based solely on a.dve~sements. Before you decide, ask us to send you free wntten informatIon about our qualifications. 21 o ·S3I.1.111:>Y:I :nVW:I:l3J.VAllId S3LU1I:>Y:I :UVARId SH31N3:l .llGWJ.v:nu. anHO SdWvO~O:l SdWVO >llIOM , SNOSllJd O'tOlJ SlI3.lN30 "N'NOl1OalIlIOO A.UNnWWOO awwa:l ~ -rYNOIJ.:)3WOO .umnwwoo • SNO~NI~:I:I dWY:> )tHOM·' x:lNNV ~JM SNOWl.LUSNlllOr"VW dW\fO )tHOM lUtM SNOWUUSNlllOrvW xeuuy tplM SNOwuu.sNJ lIOrvw SNOwuu.SNJ HOI"VW S3pmaUa IUUOp~a.I.lo:>. SNOlLJ3IDlO:) :10 .I.N3W.UlVd3Q 'VCIDlcn~ .,.1lnlIIft'W ~ 7M."'~ ~.= ~ DlIll'1W T:lll1ml .,.~ e.u=~ -r.IAd ~AmWImIW ~unonrwJ· "O~~ .,..nNOrtYM " ' " n:t:WINU Florida Prison Legal Perspectives ( Florida Prisoners' Legal Aid Organization Inc. BECOME A MEMBER I YES ! I wish to become a member ofFlorida Prisoners' Legal Aid Organization. Inc. 1. piease Check C] 0/ One: Membership Renewal 3. Your Name and Address (pLEASE PRINT) DC# ~~ _ Name C] New Membership . AgencylLibrarylInstitution IOrgl , 2: Select 0/ Category o o o Address $15 Family/AdvocateJIndividual . $10 Prisoner City State Zip $30 AttomeysIProfes'sionals CJ $60 Gov't AgenciesILibrarieslqrgsJete. r:Ir Please make aU checks ormonc:y orders Email Adjress and lor Phone Number . payable to Florida Prisoners' Legal Aid Org., Inc. Please complete the above form and send it along with the indicated membership dues to: FPLAO, Inc., P.O. 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To obtain advertising and rate information write or email us at: FPLP Attn: Advertising P.O. Box 1069 .Marion. NC 28752 Or PRISON LEGAL NEWS PnSOtt l.qpl Nnn IS _ 4& pace monmty mIpZlnc ~ilkh haS bo::n published smc:c 1990. Eoch tSSuc I.) packed ~.lh eummarics and ..w)'Sis of recent coul1 detisions from :u'OUnd lhc country dc.atin& with prnoncr ri&f'trs and wnt1C::\ !iom • prisonct pmpct1i,,'C.. The mapzinc oikn C3nlc:S :&nldd from anomc)'$ giving OO\ll.(O IUlpion. :advICe. Also induckd to each issue '" news Irtidc:s dcalinl W1dI prison-mlatCd saugk and lCfivtsm from the ondlnl<lO<l til< world. Annual subscripdon riles In: SIS fot prisoners. Ir you can 'f alford S1111 once. send aI lase S9 InlJ PL\' will ptORtc the iuua al: SI.jQ c:acb tor. six monIh subsaiplion. New and tRtSCd poslI&t: swnps or embossed cavdopcs may be usaf IS Florida Prison Legal Perspectives PO Box 1069 Marion. NC 28752 If so, plcnsc complete the below information and mail it tciFPLP so that Ihe mailing Iisl can be updated: u.s. P'lmmL FOl' non-j~ individuals, the: )'l:lIl' subsaiplion r.l[C is SlS. Insdrudonal or profcssionaJ (""""'l'- la.n.n.s. ..."""""" ~ orpniDcKlns) subsc:npcion t1Ilc:s #e: S60 .:II )Qf. A sample cop)' of Pl.N II NlJIbk fUr SI. To subsalbt 10 PLN c:onlId: I'mon I.<pI N"" 2400 N)Y ,0* ST. M," Seattle. WA 98117 (206\246-1022 fplp@aol.com HAVE YOU MOVED OR BEEN TRANSFERRED? ~"'-w pnn-I~O'; (O<dcn _ by P'- or..."",) NEW ADDRESS (pLEASE PRINT CLEARLY) Name IJlst. Address City St..tc PO Box lO69 @M.i110: FPLP. Marion. NC 28752 VOLUME 14 ISSUE 6 NOVIDEC 2008 Zip