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FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL ers ectives • ISSNfI 1091-8094 VOLUME 9. ISSUE 5 Lockup Hotel:' , Florida's.Growing Prison Complex by Oscar ijanson All the hype about prison overcrowding and early release for Florida's prisoners has been smothered by a recently passed stale budget that e8nnarks funding for over 4,000 new prison beds. In a time when the state's education and health care woes continue to plague the state, the move to incarcerate Florida citizens intensifies. As part of the 1.7 million dollar DOC budget. the Legislature appropriated funds to complete a 1,200-bed close management annex adjacent to Columbia Correctional Institution, build a work camp at Wakulla Correctional Institution and construct a brand new I,SOObed prison in Franklin County. ' And there's more. During the special legislative session called to untangle Florida's medical malpractice quagmire, Gov. Bush requested an additional $66 million for more prison beds and for the hiring of additional prison guards. Bush cited' the need' to counter the rising number of prison admissions that has- caught administration officials offguard. Bush vowed to acquire the funding "one way' or another" in order to avoid releasing prisoners early. . Ironically, at the time DOC's budget was approved, no one in the Bush administration said anything about a looming prison overcrowding crisis. In the SEP/OCT 2003 months leading up to the special session, lawmakers constantly haggled over .the details of a medical malpractice "reform" package that may neither lower malpractice insurance. nor protect victims of bad medicine. On the other hand, in just two short days, the governor requests and the Legislature delivers, an additional $66 million to furthet expand the state's prison complex. Bush clicks his heels and poor, more prisons. Just like that. Here's how the $66 million will be spent: • $30.2 million to hire more than 500 prison \\ \ \ guards. • $1.3 million to renovate and reopen HendryC.I. $4.9 million to build 14 new dorms across the state. $27.5 million to begin construction of a 1AOO-bed prison annex at Santa Rosa Correctional Institution. • • The bill also included a unique provision that allows the DOC to bypass normal state bidding laws in choosing the contractor to build the Santa Rosa Annex and perform renovations at Hendry C.I. _ Obviously lawmakers believe that 2,000 or so new prison beds must' be built quickly - there's simply no time to follow proper procedures and make sure that taxpayers' 4 I ON THE INSIDE Judicial Discretion Under Attack .3 . Ex-Felons' Civil.Rights••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.••••••••••••.••••••.••..•5 Post Conviction Comer 10 Former FPC Chairman Arrested 16 FPC Commission Replacement Sparks <;:riticism 20 Flashback: Florida 'Prisons Yesteryear 30 ( - - - - - -.......- . . - - - - - - - - - FLORIDA PRISON lEGAL Perspectives - - - - - - - - - : - 1'.0. BOX 6flO-:187 OInJJ.UO'l'A, Fl. :12766 Publishing Division of: FLORIDA PRISONERS' LEGAL AID ORGANIZATION. INC. A 501 (c) (3) Non-profil Organizalion Fax (407) 568-<1200 EmlIil: folpj'ci'aoJ C"Q! Websile: \\WW'tj!laQOrc I I I I • I I I FPLAO DIRECTORS Teresa Bums Posey Bob Posey, CLA David W. Bauer, Esq. Loren D. Rhoton. Esq. Oscar A. Hanson, CLA Linda E. Han~on ,t I I I I 1'1 1.1 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I' I FPLPSTAFF Publisher Editor Associate Editor Research Administrative Assistant Teresa Bums Posey Bob.Posey Oscar A. Hanson Sherri Johnson ADVISORY. BOARD Wilfiam Van Poyck Philip Bagley Michael Lambrix Susan Manning Gene Salser Mark SherwOod Elizabeth Grcen I I I James Quigley John Hudson •Terry Vaughn Enrique Diaz David Reutter Linda Gottieb Anthony Stuart • I I _ dollars are being well spent'and not given to Bush cronies. But don't worry, Bush administration officials crossed their hearts and absolutely' promised there would be no back door deals. Honestly. . Not everyone is convinced. Senator Rod Smith said, '~lt'sdangerous to let a state agency say 'we screwed up and now we have acris,is' then 'allow them to circumvent safeguards for bidding, These numbers didn't just pop up yesterday."" . Cer:tainly there were some early , Warning signs. . The question that begs an answer is: How did this crisis sneak up on the Bush administration? Apparently DOC Secretary James Crosby made the "astounding revelation" after months of increased admissions, 3,000, in the month of June, the, most in any month since 1992. Crosby advised Gov, Bush that he needed more money or . he 'would begin releasing dangerous drug offenders and other criminals. . So what led to this crisis?' We need not look beyond Gov. Bush and Florida lawmakers. For the past few years they have passed tough new sentencing laws that will undoubtedly lead to prison overcrowding. And never mind that admissions into state prison have surpassed expectations for seven of the past ten ·months. Yet, it wasn't until that dramatic jump in admissions in June that alanns" sounded that the DOC may have, an . emergiDg no-vacancy problem. I must be candid and admit that I find the timing of this new-found crisis to be very disingenuous. After aU" ~ it would. have been very bad timing had the DOC discovered it's overcrowding crisis last year during an election year when lawmakers were busy cutting taxes as' party favors.. , J can't help but wonder why it is a crisis that demands emergency funding to build more prisons. Isn't it just as much an emergency or crisis when funding shortages are forcing schools to fare educational staff and when our children are failing the FCAT? Representative Ed Jennings made a valid poin~ when he said it was wrong to use the state's Reserve Fund to add more prison beds at a time when community colleges, universities and public schools did not get enough money in this year's state budget. And let's not forget the crunch on social services, child welfare and juvenile,rehabilitation programs, and the raiding of other state trust funds like. the Inmate Welfare Fund. Perhaps this was a ruse to pay for their years-long orgy of tax cutting. This latekt act of legislation sends the obvious message that it is permissible to cram thousands of additional students into state universities and community colleges, but when it crimes to warehousing prisoners. it's a cash-and-Carry proposition. ' . Let's analyze this under the reductio ad absurdum argument. In the coming years the state will certainly have to continue to play catch up, building more and more FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL PERSPECTIVES I --:' • FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL PERSPECTIVES (FPLP) Is published up 10 si.times a year by Florida Prisoners' Legal Aid Orsonizalion,lnc•• P.O. Bo~ 660-387, ChulUOlI, FL32766 FPLP is a non-profit publicalion focurins on the Florida priSOtl and crimjnal jllSlicc syllcms. FPLP provides a whicle for _ , infonnation,and resoun:cs affecting prisolle~ their families, lliends,lowd ones and the Il"neral public of Florida, Reduction ofcrime and lCCidivism, maini_ of family ties, civil rights, improving conditions ofconlinement, promolinglkilled COlII1 access for prisoners, I1I1d promoting accountability ofprison officials are all issues FPLP is designed to acIdras. FPLP's non-anolMY volunt.... staffcannOl respond to requesls fllf legal advice. Due' to 1M volume ofllUIillhat is recei~ and voIunleer staff limitationS, all correspondence . that is lCCCi~ csnnOl be respOnded 10, bul all mail does receiw individual anCRtion. Pennissio. is granted.to reprint maleria' appearing in FPLP lhat does not indicat. il is copyrishted provided thai FPLP and any indicated aUlh....... idenlified in Ihe reprint and a copy oflhe publication in which the material i, published is provided 10 Ihe FPLP ~~Wa. . . This ~blicalion is 110I meant to be a substitute' for legal or other professional advice. The material in FPLP should not be relied on lI$ authoritative and may not contain SIImcient infonnalion to deal wilh a lepl problem. FPLP is alllomstica1ly sent 10 all memben of FPLAO, Inc., lIS • membership benefit. Membenhip dues for FPLAO. Inc., oporale yearly and :Ire 59 for prisoners; SIS fllf family membmlindividllllS; S30 for allomeys; I1I1d S60 for agencies, libtaries. and institutions. Family mcmbers or lo~ ones ofprisoneR who .... unable 10 afford the baic membenhip dues may lCCCivo membership for l1I1y size cIonstion they can offord, Prisonen may Jl3Y membership dues wilh new unUled po$ll1se SIIII1p1. Prisone" on dealh nl\\o or eM \\ho \:aunul afford rnembership dues may rcqUdl 3 wai\'er of dues. "hich will be granred I$linances pennit. 2 FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL prison beds for more and more prisoners, many of which will be drug offenders. Last year drug offense sentencing rose 13.4 percent under Florida's Dranconian drug laws. Looking ahead, Florida's spendthrift past will surface to haunt future lawmakers when thousands of prisonerS incarcerated under the life without parole laws . will begin to enter .into their golden years. - past the age when they are likely to commit further crimes. Inevitably, the DOC will fmd itself operating the largest chain of retirement homes in Florida, and the cost of housing and caring for an ageing inmate population will explode exponentially. Jason Ziedenberg of the Justice Policy Institute, a non-profit· group that advocates alternatives to prison, states that funneling more people to prisons is wrong, especially at a time when legislators are struggling to fund education, health care, and stave offspending cuts. Other states. faced with budget shortfalls have exercised sound judgment for their taxpayers and have made tactical decisions to release non-violent offender:s in . order to downsize their· out-of-control prison budgets. States like Kentucky, California and Texas have implemented early release mechanisms to deal with swelling prison populations. Many states. like Louisiana, Connecticut· and Utah have taken legislative action to repeal tough. sentencing laws such as mandatory minimums and 85 percent statutes. States have found the corrections animal simply too gluttonous to.maintain. Yet Florida remains committed to building a prison state instead of providing better education and health care. Florida's determination to erect more prisons comes as the U.S. Justice Department issued a report that shows the nation's prison population increased 2.6 percent as the crime rate continued to decline. The report reveals the prison population increase pushed the inmate total over 2 million for the first time in U.S. history, costing the federal government and states an estimated $40 billion a year. Among other findings by the Bureau or Justice Statistics: The inmate population has grown an average of 3.6 percent annually since 1995. That means one in 143 U.S. residents were behind bars on December 31, 2002. LoCally, Florida had 75,210 prisoners under the custody of correctional authorities. at the end of 2002, compared to 72,404 at the end of 2001, a 3.9 percent increase. New estimates indicate Florida will have 81,266 prisoners by the summer of 2004. But don't fret. Rest assured, like Motel 6, Lock Up Hotel will leave the light on. • Judicial Discretion Under ·.Attack Earlier this year, new federal legislation was added to a popular child protection bill at the last minute • Perspecttves - - - - - - - - - - - - - - that is going to have an unprecedented effect on how judges are' allowed to sentence defendants. The legislation, known as the Feeney Amendment, for its author, Rep. Thomas Feeney (R-FIa), restricts the ability of federal judges to depart from sentencing guidelines in certain cases. Especially troubling is" a provision in the amendment that mandates that the' U.S. Sentencing Commission review downward departures by judges and, within six month, amend federal guidelines to "ensure that the incidence of' downward departures [is] substantially reduced." The amendment was quietly and without hearings or much debate "Iogrolled" onto the Child Abduction Prevention Act, also known as the Amber Alert bill, that was rushed into law earlier this year. President George W. Bush, among much fanfare following a couple of highly__"publicized incidents purportedly showing ~e efficiency of the Amber Alert system, signed the entire package, with the Feeney Amendment rider attached, into law on April 30.. . Fortunately, although an overwhelming majority of the House and Senate voted for the packaged biJ~ there was some quickly organized opposition to the wideencompassing provisions of the Feeney Amendment that resulted in limits b~ing placed on its provisions. As originally introduced, the Feeney Amendment would have essentially gutted judges' discretion to depart from mandatory guideline sentences, even where circumstances warrant a downward departure. Under the original amendment all grounds for judicial departure would have been eliminated except for those expressly permitted by the U.S. Sentencing Commission, which, as noted, is mandated under another provision to ensure substantial reductions in downward departures by changing the guidelines. A conference committee in the Senate modified the amendment to strip away some of the more egregious provisions but added some new provisions to limit judicial discretion in other ways. Feeney's amendment, not coincidently, fit well into the Bush administration's obvious goal of getting legislation enacted to more tightly control and cabin the federal judiciary. Increasingly, as the full impact, and what has become to be viewed as assembly-line justice, of mandatory. guideline sentences is being felt, more judges are stepping forward to criticize discretionless mandatory sentences. Over two-thirds of federal judges have spoken out in recent years against the unfairness of the sentencing system that essentially dehumanizes the ,process. This is seen by conservatives in the Bush administration and in political offices, who are banking on prisons and inc8rceration continuing to increase as an economic factor in the U.S., as a rebellion by the judiciary. Bush's highly controversial appointee as attorney genera~ John Ashcroft, who has been highly critical of judicial discretion, and who seeks to even further increase the power of federal prosecutors by decreasing the power ofjudges, supported the Feeney Amendment. As a further 3------------_---- - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL indication of the intent to bring judges to heel, in a recent memo Ashcroft, head of the U.S. Department of Justice, ; directed U.S. prosecutors to begin "monitoring" federal judges who impose lighter sentences than suggested by the guidelines. This is viewed as a threat by most judges. In August, John .Martin, a federal district court judge in New York, quit his lifetime job as a judge after 13 years on the bench. Martin, who was appointed to the federal bench by former President George H.W. Bush, said he was quitting because of the Feeney Amendment. He considers the changes to federal sentencing laws so unjust he no longer Wanted to work inside the criminal justice system. Though extreme, Martin's reaction is part of a rare rebellion among federal judges to the new strictures on therr discretion. And its not just disgruntled . liberal judges who are speaking out. In April, U.S. Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy, certainly one of the high courts' conservative justices, spoke out against mandatory minimum sentences and limiting judicial discretion any further when testifYing , before a Congressional hearing about his courts' budget. When asked what he thou8ht about the recent statistic showing that more than 2 million Americans are now incarcerated, Kennedy said, 'Two million people in prison is just unacceptable." Continuing, he observed, "Mandatory minimums are harsh and in many cases unjust." Justice Clarence Thomas, another conservative also at the hearing, was reported to be nodding in apparent agreement to Kennedy's remarks. Amazingly, William Rehnquist, chief justice of the Supreme Court, has said be believes the changes go to far, stating they are "a good example of the law of unintended consequences." " . . Again, in August, Justice Kennedy in a speech before the American Bar Association, urged lawyers to lobby Congress to change the onerous federal sentencing guidelines that have led to "unjust punishments;" Kennedy told the ABA conference attendees, "Our resources are misspent, our punishments too severe, our sentences too long." Before he rl<Signed, Judge John Martin, a former federal prosecutor, in a published opinion article commented on the continuing threat posed by politicians . vying with each other to appear tougher-than-you on crime, saying "Every sentence involves human life, and its just absurd what we're doing with people." As long as the neoconservatives remain in power in Washington, we can expect to see a struggle between them and the judiciary whose job it is to protect the constitution. Whatever the outcome, just as sentencing. guidelines originated back in the early 80's with the' federal government and then spread to the states, the impact will determine the future direction of criminal justice policies at the localleveI. Perspectives [Sources: FAMMGRAM, Summer 2003; Christian Science Monitor, 7/8/03, 7/30/03; USA Today 8/11/03, 3A] [Editor: More info about state and federal minimum mandatory 'sentencing,. and what you can do to get involved in the struggle to change them, can be found at Fiunilies .Against Mandatory' Minimums' (FAMM) website: www.farnm.org. or by writing them at: FAMM, 1612 K Street NW, Ste. 700, Washington DC 20006, (202} 822-6700]- FDOC Shutlles Public Records In Potential Cover-Up Scandal Under Florida law it is the policy of the state that aU state, county, and municipal records shall be open for personal inspection by any person. However, recently, the DOC has taken evasive action to make inspection of such recOrds problematic. . ' This past June, the Indian River Press Journal reported the allegations of four male juveniles housed at Indian River Correctional Institution that they were forced to have sex with teachers over a two-year period. A fellow educator at the institution was allegedly fued because he tried to report the incidents. And, in a twist of irony, the educator's diary lands in the lap of the husband of one of the accused. The husband happens to be a retired Vero Beach police captain. . As the' Press Journal attempted to learn the truth about this sensational story, the DOC removed all the records out of Indian River County. The personnel files of the 'two accused teachers were shipped to Fort Lauderdale. The personnel file for .the whistleblower was shipped to Orlando. And the files relating to the case itself are in, you guessed it, Tallahassee. . The DOC, in accordance with Florida's openrecords law, says the voluminous files are available - just not in Indian River County. To view the materia~ the newspaper must either send reporters to the three other cities, or send a check for over $300 to get copies mailed. Redacted, of course. The costs logistics and delays in this particular case are unreasonable and fail to honor the spirit of the open-records law, according..to the newspapers. . DOC officials maintain that they are following standard procedure. They say their use of four satellite service centers and a central repository in the capital is the most ~fficient deployment of resoI;Jrces. Whether this policy is the .most efficient is questio~ble, b~t notwithstanding the DOC policy, the fact remams that thIS case involveS a facility in Indian River County - not Fort Lauderdale or Orlando or Tallahassee. Why were the documents relating to this case removed from the county' where they were generated in the frrst place? 4-------------- - - - - . - - - - - - - - - - FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL When. questioned. about the shuffling of the documents in this case; DOC officials say they· cannot return the case files to the scene of the alleged crimes because of the need to maintain the. "chain of evidence." While this could be a valid claim, it begs the question: Was the chain of evidence broken when investigative reports left thiscounty in the first place?- Presumably, that chain runs both ways. This problem is not. new. Complaints have echoed actoss the state for some time as a host of state agencies use regional centers to keep vital public information at arm's length from taxpayers. Barbara Petersen, president of the First . Amendment Foundation, says this is wrong. She asserts that the right to view government records is effectively compromised when the press, or John Q. Public. encounters higher hurdles due to location. "Access shouldn't be any less of a right in Vero Beach than in Tal~see:'; says' Stan Mayfield, a Florida Legislator from Vero Beach, acknowledges that bureaucracies sometimes "hide behind the costs" when asked to· tum over sensitive documents. These types of problems aren't what taxpayers bargained for when they voted to put openrecords guarantees into the state constitution. It· is axiomatic that the essential job description 'of public agencies is to serve the ·taxpaying public. Requiring the media or the public to travel a hUJidred miles or more to a' "service center" 9r sending them a bill for photocopied documents. sight unseen, ,isn't fulfilling the spirit of the open-records law.• Peterson. .' . " .FDOC Targets First Amendment During August 2003 two new rules adopted by the Florida Department of Corrections (FDOC), designed to further restrict Florida prisoners' First Amendment rights, became effective. Where few prisoners in Florida are stepping forward to protect their rights anymore; the FDOC is engaged in, steadily rolling back the gains that prisoners fought for over the past 30 years. On August Sib. Routine Mail Rule 33-210.101(8), F.A.C., was amended and became effective to prohibit prisoners from using correspondence to commercially solicit or advertise for money: goods or services. Included in the prohibition is adveJ1ising for pen-pals. According to the new rule, Florida prisoners are now prohibited from receiving mail from people or businesses that. sell advertisirig space and any prisoner who places ads or has someone on the outside place an ad for them shall be subject to disciplinary action. In a recent news release the FDOC announced that it will have employees regularly search publications and websites that carry ads for prisoners seeking pen-pals and Perspectives disciplinary. action will be taken against any Florida prisoners who are found to have ads posted. A few days later, on August 10, a new section of rules at 33-602.207, F.A.C., became effective that prohibit Florida prisoners from establishing or engaging in a business or professIon while incarcerated. The new rules in that section defme a 'business or profession as any revenue or profit making activity or any activity with the potential to generate revenue or profit. Included in the defmition is writing for publication when the prisoner may obtain revenue or profit from the writing. Such writing may be allowed in some circumstances, if approved by the warden. . The new rules in that section also require all new prisoners who are engaged in a business or profession to tum .same over to someone on the outside to operate within 90, days of being sentenced to prison. Prisoners now, under the new rul~, are prohibited from sending or receiving mail concerning the operation· of their business or profession and shall be subject to disciplinary action if they .attempt to use the mail, telephone, or. any other means of communication to direct t~e operation of a business or profession. Prisoners can review the above new rules at their .institutional law libraries. or they can be found on-line at www.dc.state.f1.us/secretarvnegaVch33 • Some Ex-Felons' Civil Rights To Be Restored, Law Still Archaic by Anthony Stuart • . ' Almost· 125,000 felons did not receive proper advice and assistance from the Florida Departritent of Corrections (FDOC) in the rights restoration proces~ upon their release from the state's prisons between the years of 1992 and 2001. On July 24, 2003, the FDOC acknowledged this during a suit that was brought against them by civil rights groups. In an attempt for a settlement in the suit action. FDOC agreed to help those felons in restoring their civil rights. Before July 2003 ended, Circuit Court Judge P. Kevin Davey of TalJahassee signed the final judgment in the action. . The ruling handed several thousand former prisoners a significant victory. Even though the order is retroactive, it does not affect those leaving prison after 200 I. As a result, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) is appealing the order saying that it should apply to those released after 200 I as well. According to Randy' Berg, lead counsel for the Florida Justice Institute on behalf of the ex-prisoners, about 30',000 ex-felons will qualitY for the restoration without a hearing. The others, who generalJy have been arrested for more offenses' or. have committed more serious crimes, will have to seek their restoration ofrights 5-------------"'----- FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL Perspectlves --~------------ by a clemency hearing brought before the governor and . Felon disenfranchisement opponents maintain that the independently elected Florida Cabinet, who will the disenfranchisement laws· are archaic, inhumane, and a waste of human capital. The laws impose second-class choose which felons gets a rights restoration hearing. However, as Berg stated, "Ifs a drop in the bucket." For citizenship on ex-felons struggling to become law-abiding citiZens and exact a toll long the debt to societY has an ex-felon to get his or her civil rights restored, he or she been paid Civil rights disenfranchisement bars ex-felons is· required to navigate a process. riddled with conditions not only from voting, but from serving on a jury and and loopholes. Thus, about 95 percent of ex-felons who .getting certain. jobs, such as x-ray technicians, building request clemency are denied. Certainly, further reform is contractors, air conditioner installation, and the list goes needed. "The state needs to get rid of this antiquated, Jim Crow system," said Berg. . on. "Now they [ex-felons with restored rights] have to· In Florida, lawmakers further stacked the deck take that extra· step and exercise their right to citizenship against ex~felons recently by almost eliminating substance and exercise their right to vote," said Howard Simon, abuse treatment in tbe. prisons and slashing already minimal education and job-training programs for executive director of the ACLU of Florida. prisoners, making those who'll be released in the future Sterling Ivey, a spokesman for FDOC, claims that eVen less employable. eight employees are working to contact the nearly 125,000 In sum, while the FDOC should advise prisoners ex-prisoners to advise them how' to seek restoration of ' being ,released about civil rights restoration, as the law their civil rights and expects notices. to be mailed out to them within a year. • requires, as a practical matter prisoners about.to be rel~d and ex-prisoners should take more responsibility to inform The law that is used to strip ex-felons of their civil themselves about the' restoration process, pursue rights was enacted in 1868 and was meant to disfranchise restoration when released and exercise their precious civil black slaves freed after the Civil War and weaken the exrights when they are restored Even more effective, slaves' new found political voice. The law continues, Florida should reinstate civil rights once criminal more than 130 years later, to punish ex-offenders long sentences are completed and stop punishing ex-prisoners after they have served their prison terms by stripping them for the rest of their lives. of their civil rights - for life. In Florida there are an estimated 625,000 ex-felons, of [Sources: Tampa Tribune, 7125/03; USA Today, 7125/03; whom 38 percent are black. That's nearly three times the Miami Herald, 7/30/03] proportion of blacks in the general population (13 percent). Thus, according to critics of the law, a [Editor: A federal case challenging Florida's ex-felon disproportionate share of black residents cannot vote. . disenfranchisement law is pending before the II Ib Circuit Nationwide, the numbers are even more staggering: Court of Appeals in Atlanta. See.FPLP, Vol. 9, Iss. 4, for a report on that case - bp] • • Approximately 13.9 million peopl~ - one in fifty - are disenfranchised due to a felony conviction. America '5 Race • ,Fully 13 percent of the African-America adult to Incarcerate male population - 1.4 million men - is unable to vote. More than 5.6 million Americans are in prison or • Given current incarceration rates, three in 10 in prison and are now on the streets, according 'have been African-American men, will be . to a new U.S. Justice Department report that was released disenfranchised at some point in their lives. August 17, 2003. That means I of every 37 adults living in .the United States is either in prison or has been, giving With so many people being sent to prison now the U.S. the distinction of having the highest rate of and the huge number 'of ex-felons being released from imprisonment in the world. prison each year (approximately 625,000), the impact of This new report is the rust time the U.S. felon disenfranchisement on the political process· has Government has released statistics on the extent 'of grown too large to ignore. Earlier this year U.S. Rep. America's race to incarcerate large numbers of the public. Charles Rangel (D-NY) introduced a bill entitled the ExIf the trend of the past two decades. continues, as it is . Offenders Voting Rights Act of 2003 into the U.S. House expected to, it means that an American black male has of Representatives., That Act would provide automatic in 3 chance of going to prison in his lifetime. about a 1 restoration of voting rights in federal elections to all mal~ have a 1 in 6 chance of going to prison, Hispanic persons convicted of a crime' once they complete their and white males have a 1 in 17 chance of becoming prison and jail sentence and any· probation or parole in the American prison-industrial complex. caught up superyision. The report noted that by the end of year 2001, some 1,319,000 adults were in state or federal prisons and after 6----------,-~--_--- FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL [Sources: Christian Science Monitor, 8/18/03; USA Today,8118/03]•• _ Crime Rates Drop, Incarceration Rate CHmbs j ., . prosecutor. /Prosecutors are accountable to no one and they are shielded by the doctrine of absolute immunity for their actions, even misconduct. Recently a study entitled Harmless Error was released by the Center for Public Integrity. an ethics watchdog, which report~ that more than 2,000 cases over the past three decades have had convictions overturned or reduced because ofabuses by prosecutors. To punctuate this finding, during June twelve men and women were freed from a· Texas prison after serving as many as four years in prison on bogus drug-selling charges. In the town of Tulia, Texas, 38 people were exonerated after. it was discovered an undercover investigator lied repeatedly on the witness stand at criminal trials. A special investigation ordered by a Texas appeals court determined that the prosecutor knew the cop was lying yet did nothing about it. The miscarriage. of JUStice in Tulia was so outrageous, it might seem like an aberration. But other' instances of blatant injustice have surfaced with troubling frequency all across our nation. Newly· compiled reports such as the one from the Center for Public Integrity show that thousands of people have been wrongfully incarcerated over the years because of rogue law enforcement officers, poor lab· work and overzealous prosecutors. Such abuses of the judicial system are allowed to continue because those who commit them are rarely punished. As long as this type of behavior is tolerated, the , number of criminal prosecutions that undermine an individual's constitutional right to a fair trial will remain unacceptably high. In the past few years, DNA has been used to exonerate over 100 men and women. many on death row. The Innocence Project, which uses DNA testing to overturn dubious convictions, found that 34 of the first 70 defendants it exonerated had been victimized by prosecutorial misconduct. Within the past year. crime labs in Florida, Arizona and Texas have been exposed for issuing false reports on DNA, blood samples, and other critical •evidence. As a result, many wrongful convictions in rape and murder cases have been overturned. Prosecutors claim defendants receive fair trials in the vast majority of criminal trials. Yet recent decisions by Florida appellate courts show prosecutorial misconduct is on the rise. The dOcumented cases involving mistakes and .misconduct are too common. Perhaps part of the reason for the misconduct can be attributed to public pressure to solve crimes. But .those officials sworn to uphold the law should never succumb to such pressure because the result will often force the prosecutor to take action to convict without ensuring they have convicted the actual culprits. Steps must be taken to tame the wily prosecutor. The immediate ouster of prosecutors who engage in an estimated 4,299.000 former prisoners are alive in the U.S. The report did not include figures for the several hundred thousand people in local jails. (See article in this issue on combined total in prisons and jails). According to the new report, the prison population has quadrupled since 1980, with much of the increase attributable to,the (so-called) war on drugs and mandatory miniJ!1um sentences. New drug policies have especially affected incarceration rates for women, which have increased at nearly double the rate for men since 1980. By 2010, the number of Americans in prison or who have been in prison is expected to be 7.7 million, equaling 3.4 percent of all adults, according to the report. • I Perspectlv~ / • According to a new report released by the Justice Department in July 2003. last year the nations' prison population increased 2.6 percent even though crime rates continued their decade long drop and states sought to balance their budgets with lower cost alternatives to incarceration. The report presented statistics showing more than 2 million Americans are in state or federal prisons or in local or privately operated jails. During the same period, preliminary FBI numbers show a 0.2 percent drop in overall crime last year. . Since 1995, . the number of Americans incarcerated in prisons and jails has grown an average of 3.6 percent each year, according to the report. On Dec. 31, 2002, one of every 143 people in the U.S. was behind bars. Out of the 1.3 million of them in state or federal prisons, 45 percent were black, 34 percent were white, and 21 percent were Hispanic or another ethnicit}i. Approximately 10 percent of all black males between 25 and 29 yrs. old were in state or federal prisons last year.• . Blatant Injustice: A Look at Prosecutorial Misconduct by Oscar Hanson . If I were to ask what bnmch of our government held the most power. the more likely answer would be the judiciary, especially in light of the recent landmark decisions by the Supreme Court. After al~ they singlehandedly determined our current president, who is the chief officer of the Executive branch of America's government. But if I were to ask what public officer held the most power. that answer may not be as readily apparent. Without a doubt, the single most powerful official of both state and federal government is thBt of the 7 misconduct is' a tougher sanction than what most now face:· th~ next election. And as. a sidebar, overcoming police union resistance to harsh punishment is necessary when police abuse their powers. Those who violate the charge of public trust - not the people they wrongfully convict - deserve tough .sentences. ~.- ,J .:' :~. ALL KINDS OF TYPING Computer· Typewriter t"., Including but not Umited to: Legal Briefs, Articles, Books, Manuscripts, Text Documents such as letters; newsletters, Resume., etc. :;_! Other [Sources: Harmless Error, Center for Public Integrity. 6/26/03; USA Today. 7/14/031 For further information go to publicintegrity.org. " ,,l.,, '~: ,."t " serv~ces Incl~de but not limited to. , l.\ . Black I White &Color Printing & (Including . ~D"~"'.:' Copying attachments, etc.) exhibits, t ~ \,'.: . -A.,."". .. j ',1- ''';' '. ~,\ AND MORE INFORMATION CONTACT: " LET MY FINGERS DO YOUR TYPING .~ne: 407-2!~09~1 ,4 * Attention * • Veterans i. X ~~.~;ox~~.~~~A« Prison Perspectives... Prison Populations From 1996-2003 11.... . Sandra Z, Thomas 1911 Marcia Drive Orlando FL 32807-6357 l i i FOR A "FREE"·PRlCE liST . _. " ,. Anew study found prosecutors engaged in misconduct in about 2,000 cases since 1970. some involving innocent people senl tenced to death. Examples of the abuses: ~ Introducing inadmissible or inflamma· tory evidence. ) ~ Mischaraeterizing evidence or facts. , ~ Hiding. destroying or tampering with " evidence. case files or court records. " ~ Failing to dlsdose evidence that might J exonerate defendants. ( ~ Threatening. badgering or tampering with witnesses. Making inappropriate comments in J front ofa jury. x: ~ Making improper dosing arguments. . '. Have you ever been in the U.S. Military? Do ' you have a service-related disability? Are you in . prison? If your answer is yes to those questions you may very well be eligible to receive. disability benefits while you are incarcerated, as well as benefits for your spouse. children or parents. For more information about benefits for . imprisoned disabled veterans contact or have someone contact: Department of Veteran Affairs P.o. Box 1437 St. Petersburg,FL 33731 1--------- or call Toll-free' 1-800-827-1000 'I,cao I'" I'" .9" .,,, 2000 20;1 1002 uu or on the web at: www.vba.va.gov • 8--------- _ - - - - - - - - - - FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL Perspectives - - - - - - - - - - 0 /1 ~'·1 "I :.::l ;~ ;I} li~ ~:j ;' ;' ; bi I-----:-------------I 'RHOTON &,HAYM.AN, P.A.. (, ," ~!j LOREN D. RHOTON Attomey At Law I~ .r:; l".:1 " F~ rl H fm., ~; "I .~ .. ~ ,<' ~ .. .', ~.~ j f,t~ to' ;j-:' ~'~i l;; ,-' :y.'~ ':::'~ .. ~; &,,,;j 'f.1 '~~; , ,:.." h~ ~~:~ :: ,:~; " {!.: . DIRECT APPEALS \!; STATE POST CONVICTION {;) SENTENCE CORRECTIONS {;) FEDERAL PETITIONS FOR WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS {;) NEW TRIALS " , , {!.: . , INSTITUTIONAL TRANSFERS '. < " "~ , , f.'~; " " " i,;~. -/' \'~~ .":I~ :t· ~" .~ I ".. " .~ . ~ (, " , 412 East Madison Street Suite 1111 Tampa Florida 33602 , (813) 226-3138 j;·>;.~,fff~(~~'~~(~~~;~~.~:,' :,;~:i ,;,j: ~\ ~ 9-------------- FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL PerspectIves POST CONVICTION CORNER by Loren Rhoton, Esq. Due to the applicable periods of limitation (both state and federal) for filing postconviction motions, many inmates are time barred from filing what may have at one point. been meritorious postconviction issues. As a re~ult they assume that there is nothing else.that can be done to reduce their sentences. However, even with very old cases there are sometimes still'options which may help to reduce a sentence. For example, there are provisions under Florida Law which provide for a commutation ofa life sentence to a term of y~ars for certain persons with life.sentences. . . A procedure for commutation of a life sentence was enacted by the Florida Legislature in 1975. Florida Statutes §944.30 provides that any prisoner who is sentenced to lite imprisonment, who has actually served ten years and has not received any charges of misconduct (DRs) and has a good institutional record shall be recommended by the Department of Corrections for a reasonable commutation of his sentence. The recommendation shall be made to the Office of Executive Clemency. And, should the life sentence be co~uted to a term ofyears, the inmate's sentence shall be treated as ifit were originally sentenced as a term ofyears. §944.30 applies to inmates with capital offenses that resulted in life sentences where the offense occurred prior to July 1, 1987. From July' 1,1987 through July I, 1988, §944.30 only . applies to persons with sentences rimging from 40 yearS up to life and said convictions must have .been for non-capital felonies. One who qualines for a commutation ofsentence recommendation must pursue said action through the Office of Executive Clemency. A qualifying inmate is one who has an offense which was committed within the above addressed time periods and who has had any ten year period of incarceration under a current sentence with no Disciplinary Reports. A recommendation for commutation will need to be made by the Department of Corrections. Such a recommendation should be requested at the institution where the qualifying person is incarcerated. If the Department ofCorrections fails to,recommend an eligible person for a commutation of a life sentence to a term ofyear.s, the DOC can be compelled to do so via a petition for writ ofmandamus. Once a recommendation for a commutation of sentence has been given by DOC, the qualifying person must then pursue the commutation through the Office of Executive Clemency. Pursuant to Rule 8 of the Rules of Executive Clemency, the person requesting a commutation of sentence must request ~ waiver of the Rules of Executive Clemency. Clemency waiver forms, clemency applications forms, and the rules and instructions for said forms can be obtained at www.state.t1.usIfpc/execlem/html or by writing the Office of Executive Clemency at 2601 Blair Stone Road, Building C, Tallahassee, Florida 32399-~450. Once the request for a waiver of the rules is filed with the Office of Executive Clemency the Florida Parole Commission will be asked to review the case and furnish an advisory , recommendation for consideration of the Executive Clemency Board. Once the Commission has madeits recommendation, the Clemency Board has 90 days to make a decision as to whether·or . not to grant a waiver of the rules. Thereafter, the Clemency Board (which is comprised of the 10--------------- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FLORIDA PRISON'LEGAL PerspectIves -------~------- Governor and cabinet members)will decide whether or not to grant a waiver of the rules. Ifa waiver is granted then the Clemency Board will actually consider the recommendation for a commutation of sentence It is important to present all relevant information in a request for clemency and a request for a waiver of the rules. If a person with a life sentence is denied a waiver of the Rules of Executive Clemency, then that person may not apply for another waiver of the Rules of E~ecutive Clemency for at least five years from the date that the waiver was denied. Therefore, all relevant information to the applicant should be provided to the Office of Executive Clemency. Obviously evidence of efforts at self-betterment will be persuasive in a request for a commutation ofsentence and all applications which relate thereto. The Parole Commission and Office of Executive Clemency will also be interested in what type of release plan (Le., residence, employment, etc.) an applicant has. Therefore, it is recommended that any favomble information that may pertain to a request for a commutation of sentence be presented with said request. . While a commutation of a life sentence is not easy to obtain, it is still worth the effort if §944.30 applies to your case. Often persons who qualify for a commutation of sentence have not been recommended for such a commutation by DOC. Said persons often are not even aware that they potentially qualify for such a commutation of sentence. I recommend to qualifying inmates that they determine if they have previously been recommended for a commutation ofa life sentence. If not, then it would be advisable to request such a recommendation from DOC and to obtain the necessary applications from the Office of Executive Clemency. , , Loren Rhoton is a member in good standing with the Florida Bar and a member 0/the Florida Bar Appel/ate Practice Section. Mr. Rhoton practices almost exclusively in the postconviction/appellate area a/the law. both at the State and Federal Level. He has assisted hundredS a/incarceratedpersons with their cases and has numerous written appel/ate opinions. • A Memoir AMut The BocW In this sweeping, pare-bJ~' ~biography, Miami native. W'dliam Van Poyde - car dUef, buraIar. bank robb,r, ~ a11itt, jailhouse .wi awUd winning writer - pes readers through ~ a v!vidly iketdted tour, from p~barefoot you to reform schoolJ, prisons and death row, an ',A. ' ; unfcqcaable, fOUMlccade ~ an ~ life seemingly befond reconaIiation. Providing a I blUWly authauic look. ~jeCted che lens of raw experimce, IDCO the ----.-.----------------_••-.__.-_._••__ ~ 1wdsc:rabb1e WlderbelJy of America.. c:rimiDaI justice system, Van Payck paints a Order Ponn I ImJad ponrait of the human condition, by tumap'im. hurnorolll, ~t, I haunting and ~irln,. yet always compdling. Thi. no-bolds-bamd, eye-opening A Ch«Imwl iohback, 6 It 9, 324 pages I • of human fallibility cuts close to me bone while resonating with life', ume1ess You c:aa order ftom Tune For Preedom, P.O" Box 819, . . . of dapaiJ; hope and redemption. Ocala, FL 3.f.f78 or by caIlillg 352-351·1280. 'al . ....- - - . How To Orden A'C1s«:Uml p." soltbads, 6z 9, 324 pages You CUt order &om Tame Por Preedom, P.O. Bolt 819, Ocala, PL 34478 or by ~ 352-351-1280. Cost is $14.so. plus $2.50 shippiDg and hiuldling: , ...,. About1'he Authon Sauenced to death for bispan in the 1987 botdIcd attempt to fr~ his best friend from a prison tranJjXJ" van in downrown West Palm Beach, duri~ which a guard was =~,::et~Teh:r~':tWiulo~::: ~~~ transfemcl ill 1999, after florida Stite Prison 8uania munImd hiuo·clch1rda nt• ~e a&rmIdy resides on V'qinia's death row where he was Frank VaJda. ill his death row, ceO. =ng: I 0uanUty: $14.50 oach .1ildft " u..... $-- I $2.50 Name: AddI'GS8: Clty: Phone: ,State: ~ -- E-malI: ----- Plaase lI8nd 8 chec:k or a money onfar 10 Ih9 ' address aboVo. 11--------------- FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL Perspectives - - - - - - - - - ~,LEGISLATIVEWATCH _ :. . , ' ~ By John Hudson " The information contained in this section is compiledfrom published Session Laws and may be useful to or impact Floridd prisoners, This section is an information source designed to provide accurate information concerning the late,\'t in Florida law, Occasionally, Legislative Watch will publish other items of interest related to Florida's legislature such as upcoming bills, legislative history and bios on current legislators, New Imv and pending bills will be clearly identified /0 avoid confusion as /0 what is lmv and what is not, NEW LAWS, SESSION 2003 LEGISLAliVE HEALTH CARE - PRISONERS Governor Bush approved an act of legislation relating to complaints against healthcare practitioners who provide health Care services within the Department of Corrections (DOC). Resulting from House Bill number 1553, Florida Statues section 456.073 is amended and now provides that a state prisoner must exhaust all available remedies administratively within the DOC before filing a complaint with the Department of Hea.lth (DOH). There is one exception. If the DOH determines after a preliminary inquiry of a state prisoner's complaint that the practitioner may present a serious threat to the health and safety of any individual who is not a state prisoner, the DOH may determine the legal sufficiency of the complaint and proceed with discipline against the practitioner. Chapter 2003-84, Laws of Florida. [Comment: This law seems to give broader power to the DOC in handling matters dealing with discipline of those practitioners treating prisoners. One would think such matters should be left to the professionals at DOH. In addition, it seems a double standard for the POH to review a complaint by a state prisoner that may effect a non-prisoner more expediently than that of the prisoner himself.] CRIMES AND OFFENSES Burglary - The criminal offense of impairing or impeding the telephone or power to a dwelling to facilitate or further a burglary is created. As a result of 'House Bill number 1675, Florida Statutes section 810.061 was created as part of an act relating to the crimes of facilitating or furthering a burglary contained in Chapter 2003-84, Laws of Florida. The law became effective July 1, 2003, and provides a third degree felony for the offense. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 12 Controlled Substances - Florida Statutes section 893.13 has been amended adding state, county, or municipal' parks, community centers, or publicly owned recreational facilities to the list of real property that penalizes persons for committing. drug offenses within 1,000 feet of same; Effective July I, 2003, it is unlawful to sell, manufacture, or deliver or possess with intent to sell, manufacture, or deliver a controUed substance in, on, or within 1,000 feet of the abov~named property along with educational property and parks, which were previously named within the statute. For the purpose of this law, the term "community center" means a facility operated by a nonprofit community-based organization for the provision of recreational, social, or educational services to the public. Chapter 2003-95, Laws of Florida. Stalking - The criminal offense of stalking in violation of Florida Statutes section 784.048 is amended to include cyberstalking. The law enacted by the Florida legislature results from House Bill number 479 and dermes "cyberstalk" to mean communication by means of electronic mail or electronic communications which causes substantial emotional distress directed at· a specific person and does not serve a legitimate puipose. The amendment also revised the elements of the offense of aggravated stalking for placing a person in fear of death or bodily injury to include the person's child, sibling, spouse, parent, or dependant. Chapter 2003-23, Laws of Florida. Sexual Battery - Florida Statutes section 775.15 is reenacted and subsection (7) is amended to provide that there is no statute of limitations to prosecute on firstdegree felony sexual battery if the victim was under 18 at the time the offense was committed. Chapter 2003-116, Laws of Florida. Dangerous Sexual Felony Offender Act - Senate Bill 2172 passed amending Florida Statutes section - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL 794.0115, which deals with repeat sexual Perspectives - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - programs that would benefit prisoners and families. For the FDOC to continue the programs beneficial to prisoners, versus utilizing millions of dollars for some other self-serving purpose, is very doubtful.] • batterers. The law took effect July I, 2003, and substantially rewords section 794.0115, Florida Statutes. The new law provides for certain individuals deemed dangerous $eXU81 felony offenders to be sentenced to a mandatory minimum term of25 years, up to and including life imprisonment. This new change in law should be read in its entirety for proper determination of its applicable provision. In short, it defmes dangerous sexual felony offender as one who is a repeat sexual batterer and is also convicted of a violation which causes serious person injury, uses or threatens' to use a deadly weapon, victimizes more than one person, or was under the jurisdiction of a court at the time the offense was committed. Chapter 2003-115, Laws of Florida. Florida Supreme Court Suspends DNA Deadline ·Molor Vehicles - Tesl For Alcohol, Chemical Substances - Motor vehicle provisions are amended in Florida Statutes 327.352 to provide that all operators of motor vehicles or vessels 'are deemed to have given consent to urine tests for chemical substances or controlled substances in the event of a lawful arrest. Chapter 2003-54, Laws ofFlorida. Leaving Scene of Accident - Resulting from House Bill 1683, Florida Statues, section 921.0022, is amended enhancing penalties for the offense of leaving the scene of an accident involving a fatality. The offense, leaving the scene, is contained in Florida Statutes, section 316.027(1)(b). The offense is now deemed as a level 7 . versus a level 6 as previously set forth in the statutes. Chapter 2003-176, Laws of Florida. On September 30, 2003, the state Supreme Court .suspended the DNA deadline that was to expire on October 1,2003. The decision to suspend the deadline comes as attorneys and several dozen law students at two universities struggle with a . backlog of about 600 requests from inmates who say DNA evidence will exonerate them. Jenny Greenberg, director of the Innocent Initiative at Florida State 'University in' Tallahassee, and Craig Trocino, .co-director .. of ~e Florida Innocence Project at Nova Southeastern University in Fort Lauderdale say the requests are continuing to corne in daily. Bya 4-3 vote. the Supreme Court agreed to suspend the deadline indefinitely· to give them more time to consid~r arguments that the deadline is .W1conStitutional. The court set oral arguments for November 7, 2003. FPLP will continue to monitor this development and report any and all actions in future issues. INMATE WELFARE TRUST FUND (IWTF) As a result of Senate Bill 954, the IWTF has been completely eliminated. Effective July I, 2003, revenues which would have previously been deposited in the IWfF to fund benefit and welfare programs for state prisoners are now placed in the General Revenue Fund. This new law was unanimously approved by both the Senate and House and signed into law by Governor Bush on June 23, 2003. Chapter 2003-179, Laws of Florida. [Comment: This law could mean the end of programs for prisoners. The IWfF consisted of funds generated by prisoners and their families in the form of profits from canteen purchases, visitation vending machines, and the commissions collected off collect telephone rates charged to prisoner families. It was a trust fund administered by the Florida Department of Corrections (FDOC) for the sole purpose to disperse net profits made from revenues generated from prisoners and their families to be. in a sense, given back to them in the form of legitimate ADVERTISING NOTICE Due to a concern for oui members. the FPLP staff tries to ensun: that advcrnseR inthcse pages an: reputable and qualified to provide the services being offen:d. We cannot meet every advertiser. however. so members an: advised to always pcnonally contact advertiserS for further infonnation on their qualifications and experience befon: making a decision to hin: an attorney or other professional service provider. You should never send Icga/ or other documents to an advertiser befon: contacting them and receiving directions to send such material. For those wishing to advertise in FPLP. please write for rate infonnati!ln. Address such mail to: Florida Prison Legal Pctspcctivcs Attn: Advertising P.O. Box 660-387 Chuluota,.FL 32766 Or Elllail: FPLP@aol.com 13 - - - - ; - - _ FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL Perspectives - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - IOTABLECASES .... < ....•.••.•...• &YOSCAR HANSON' ",. mllO~~1tJ~.~ The following are slimmaries o/recent state andfederal cases that may be IISeflllto or have a significant impact on Florida prisoners. Readers should always read the full opinion as published in the Florida Law Weekly (Fla.L. Weekly); Florida Law Weekly Federal (FiaL Weekly Federal); Southern Reporter 2d Series (So.2d); Federal Supplement 2d Series (F.Supp.2d); Federal Reporter 3d Series (F.3d); or the Supreme Court Reporter (S.Ct.), since these summaries are for general information only. u.s. SUPREME COURT limitations governing prosecutions at the time the crimes were allegedly committed had set forth a 3-year Stogner v. California, 16 Fla.L. limitations period. That period had Weekly Fed. S437 (6/26/03) run 22 years or more before In 1993, California enacted a Stogner's prosecution. new criminal statute of limitations Stogner had moved from the governing sex-related child abuse complaint's dismissal. He argued crimes. The new statute pennitted Federal Constitution's Ex that the prosecution for those crimes where Art. I, section 10, Post Facto Clause, "the limitation period specified in clause I, forbids revival of a prior statutes of limitations has previously tim~barred prosecution. expired" - provided that (I) a victim The trial court agreed that such a had reported an allegation of abuse to revival is unconstitutional. But the the police, (2) there was independent California Court of Appeal reversed, evidence that clearly and citing a recent, contrary decision by convincingly corroborates the Supreme Court. the California victim's allegation, and (3) the then moved to dismiss his Stogner prosecution was begun within one indictment, arguing that his year of the victim's report. A related prosecution is unconstitutional under provision, added to the statute in both the Ex Post Facto Clause and 1996, makes clear that a prosecution the Due Process Clause, Arndt. 14, satisfying these three conditions section I. The' trial 'court denied "shall revive any cause of action Stogner's motion, and the Court of barred by prior statutes of Appeal upheld that denial. limitations." The statute thus The U.S. Supreme Court authorized prosecution for· criminal agreed that the State's interest in acts committeJ many years prosecuting child abuse cases is an beforehand - and where the original one. But there is also a important limitations period has expired - as predominating constitutional interest long as prosecution began within a in forbidding the State to revive a year of a victim's first complaint to long-forbidden prosecution. the police. . The Supreme Court ruled In 1998, a California grand that the statute is unfairly retroactive jury indicted Marion Reynolds . to Stogner. A long line of as applied Stogner, the petitioner of the writ of . judicial authority supports certiorari to the Court of Appeal of of this law as ex post . characterization California, charging him with sexfacto. related child abuse CQIlUIlitted It was further concluded that decades earlier - between 1955 and law enacted after expiration of a a 1973. Without the new statute limitations previously applicable· allowing revival of the State's cause period violates the Ex Post Facto of action, California could not have when it is applied to revive a Clause prosecuted Stogner. The statute of previously tim~barred prosecution. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 14 u.s. COURT OF APPEALS Siebert v. Campbell, 16 Fla.L.Weekly Fed. C756 (1IthCir. 6123/03) . Daniel Siebert appealed from the dismissal of his petitions for. habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. section 2254. This case reached the II th Circuit eleven years after he first sought collateral review of his convictions and sentences of death where the courts had determined only that he is subject to procedural bars and· therefore have never allowed the merits of his claims to control. The district courts dismissed Siebert's petitions on the ground that they were untimely under the on~ year statute of limitations established by the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA), now codified at 28 U.S.C. section 2244(d)(1). Siebert had argued that the on~year deadline did not bar his petitions because a separate AEDPA provision, 28 U.S.C. section 2244(dX2), tolled the limitations ·period for the time during which his "properly filed" applications for postconviction relief were pending in the Alabama courts. Because state courts had held in these proceedings that Siebert had missed the expiration of Alabama's own post-conviction statute of limitations, the district courts concluded that Siebert's state petitions were not "properly filed" and that AEDPA's tolling provision thus did not apply. So the question brought to the J1111 Circuit Court of _ - - -.......- - - - - - - - - - - FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL Appeals is whether Siebert's Alabama petitions, which were . accepted by the courts but ultimately found to have been filed late, should be considered properly filed within the meaning of AEOPA's tolling provision and the Supreme Court's interpretation of that tenn in Artuz v. Bennen, 531 U.S. 4 (2000). The 11 th Circuit goes into quite an ex,tensive· discussion regarding the tenn "properly filed" which intum led into discussions of discretionary application- of the State's post-conviction time bar and discretionary time bars as "conditions to obtaining relief." Highlighted in this discussion is where the U.S. Supreme Court in Artuz v. Bennett held that an· application is properly filed "when its delivery and acceptance are in compliance with the applicable laws and rules governing filing." Contrasting a "condition to filing" with a "condition to obtaining relief," the Court concluded that noncompliance with conditions to obtaining relief does oot prevent a habeas petitioner's state application from being "properly filed." It was also pointed out in this discussion, Weekley v. Moore, 244 F3d 874 (11 th Cir. 2001), where it was held that a Florida prisoner's post-conviction motions were "properly filed" even though the Florida courts had dismissed them as successive. Since timeliness is the only issued raised by the state in arguing that Siebert failed to comply with the laws and rules governing filings under the state rule, the II th Circuit concluded that his petitions were properly filed within the meaning of section 2244(dX2). DISTRICT COURT OF· APPEAL Boatwright v. State, 28 Fla.L.WeeJdY 01476 (F1a.3d DCA 6125/03) Boatwright was on community control when he obtained PerspectIves - - - - - - - - - - - - - - pennission to attend church services on Sunday .between _8:00 a.m. and 12:00 p.m. A church bus picked up Boatwright and drove him to the Church. At the conclusion of the services, Boatwright decided to attend a group counseling at the bishop's home until 5:30 p.m. when he wasretumed home by the church bus. Boatwright's community cOntrol supervisor initiated a violation _notice and the trial court conducted a revocation hearing and imposed a IS-year- sentence for the underlying charges on the ground that Boatwright had an unauthorized absence from his residence. The Third DCA reversed and held that while the decision was worthy of Draco, an Athenian of the 7th century B.C. who drew up a code of laws noted for their severity, but oot in this case. The Court correctly noted that to support a violation of community control, the violation must be "willful and substantial." The Court reversed and noted their decision would take effect immediately without regard to the ftling of a motion for rehearing. [Note: This case is being pointed out for those who wish to be sure that their motion, whatever it may be, will be 'considered and able to prove it was timely within the rules that govern it When delivering your legal documents to prison officials: (I) Always be sure you attach a certificate of service (if applicable) al}d include any required oath with the date you delivered the documents to prison officials for mailing. (2) Always photocopy legal documents you are filing and keep that photocopy in your personal files. (3) Deliver your legal documents to the proper mail representative- and make sure they date stamp the documents and that you initial and date it. (4)00 not place your legal document in mail drop boxes, you have no guarantee how your legal mail will be processed, which _could , be important later. Besides, according to FAC 33-210. 102 (8) (b), prisoners are prohibited from ·placing legal mail in routine mail drop boxes.-as] • Correction In the last issue (Vol. 9 Issue 4), there was a misstatement regarding the case of Johnson v. Florida Parole Commission, 841 So. 2d 615 (Fla. 1st DCA 2003). The summary should have read that the circuit court in Gulf County improperly denied Johnson's petition for writ of habeas corpus challenging the factual basis for his parole revocation on the ground that it was a successive petition to a writ of mandamus filed in Leon County challenging his PPRD date established by the Parole Commission. The First DCA granted the petition for writ of certiorari and remanded back to Gulf County for further proceedings. The full text ofthe opinion can be read at the cite listed above. We apologize for the printed error.• Valencia v. State, 28 FIa.L.Weekly 01637 (4th OCA 7/16/03) Jeffrey Valencia appealed the denial order of his Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.850 motion for postconviction relief as untimely. In this case the district court of appeal affirmed the denial~ finding that Valencia failed to establish any proot i.e., documents, affidavits, or even an actual copy of the motion that he alleged he delivered to prison authorities in February 2001, within the time period for filing the motion. Instead, Valencia relied only on his own statement that he did so. - Because Valencia did not keep an actual copy of his motion filed in 2001, the district court had no way of substantiating that his 2002 redrawn motion was the same motion or that it raised the same issues as the 200I motion. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 5 - - - - -. - - - _ PerspectIves - - - - - - - - - ; . . . . . . _ . audit noted that records concerning earlier spending by *FPLAO ParQle Project* Henry, who was chairman of the FPC since 1998, were Former FPC Chairman Arrested, missing from the agency's files. The preliminary audit also describes a Parole Investigation Continues Commission where accountability for major managerial by Bob Posey functions - spending, sexual-harassment investigations, pay raises, bonuses, criminal-background checks of "I believe you have a warrant for my arrest," employees and monitoring nepotism and du~l fonner Florida Parole Commission (FPC) Chairman employment :was out of control from at least July 2001 Ji~ie ~ Henry, 53, stiffly said as he stepped up to the' through February 2003. (FPLP, Volume 9, Issue 3, booking wmdow at the ~n County Jail on the morning accurately reported that the corruption can be documented of August 21, 2003. He was released a few hours later on back to at least 1998). h!s own recognizance, after being fingerprinted, having Within a couple of weeks of the preliminary audit his mug shot taken, and being booked and charged with report being released the FDLE wrapped up its three felony counts, of grand theft and 21 misdemeanor investigation of Henry in a 71-page arrest affidavit and counts of e~account, salary and records issued a warrant for his arrest. That affidavit, prepared by falsification, and using taxpayer monies for personal Mark· Perez, an inspector in the FDLE's Office of purchases. Executive Investigations, details in page after page a trail Henry refused to comment when asked questions of lies, deceit and overt theft from Florida tax-payers. ' in the waiting area of the jail. His attorney, Stephen The affidavit says that Henry is documented using Dob~n, who has. successfully defended several public his state P-Card to make personal purchases, including offiCIals and promment Tallahasseeans in criminal eases, buying' airline tickets for a friend, and buying more than accompanied him to the jail to turn himself in and later $5,000 in merchandise from Sears, Wal-Mart, Home that day entered a not-guilty plea before the court on the Depot, Lowe's, a video store and Comeast Cable charges. television. He also used the P-Card to pay personal Henry resigned as the Parole Commission attorney fees and to pay personal cell phone bills. The Chairman on May 9, 2003, citing "personal reasons" for affidavit, which cites ,the AG Office's preliminary audit,· quitting as head of the'agency that makes the decisions on , also alleges numerous instances where Henry padded his ' parole for Florida's remaining 5,aOO-plus parole eligible claimed expenses for business trips to other Parole prisoners and on those prisoners placed on conditional Commission field offices, meetings and other official ~Ieas~ s~pervision. The FPC also does pre-clemency appointments. Perez notes that between April 2002 and mvestigations, but has been under increasing ftre in recent March 2003 it was determined. that Henry submitted 21 years as most of what the agency does is duplicative of fraudulent travel vouchers, most of which contained work already done by the Department ofCorrections. fraudulent eXpense items. Three days after Henry resigned the Florida Perez's affidavit accuses, Henry of receiving a Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE) announced it while not perfo~g state business by turning in salary had started an investigation on Henry and the Parole false time sheets amounting to $14,959.73. Actions Commission involving possible crimes. ' questioned in the affidavit include Henry using his state credit card to purchase airline tickets for a friend, Frances Penonal Piggy Bank Cox, to accompany him on a supposedly official trip to As the FDLE pursued its investigation, the state Cincinnati in September 2002. Allegedly, the trip was for Auditor General's Office was also continuing to audit FPC a meeting.with Jbe board of a residential center for young records following infonnation provided earlier this year offend':l's. However, "from witness testimony, it was pointing to misuse of 'tax-payer money and thefts that detennmed that Jimmie Henry spent the majority of this were occurring at the Parole Commission. time with the individual (Cox) visiting friends and sightOn August I, the AG's Office' released a seeing in the Cincinnati area," Perez wrote. preliminary audit that showed that Henry, as head of the The affidavit describes how cell phone records FPC, was using the agency's funds as his own Personal were painstakingly compared to Henry's travel vouchers piggy bank. According to that audit Henry used his state- ' to determine -that he frequently was not even in the city purchasing card - known as a "P-Card" - for personal where he obtained reimbursement for being. purchases at variouS stores, for a private attorney and for In addition to the Cincinnati "vacation," Henry cell-phone and cable-TV services, used his state cell also paid himself a salary and expenseS to go to Atlanta to phone for personal business without reimbursement, and attend his daughter's college graduation, during the same falsified attendance records and travel vouchers. "These week in which he upgraded from a $99-a-night hotel room questioned and improper expenditures exceeded $22,500," to a $159-a-night "crown suite" at the downtown Hyatt' and occurred beginning April 2002, said the audit. The ,Regency. During one trip where he 'claimed he went to FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL ' ----------.-----16---- _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL Tampa and Orlando on parole business he actually went to the Florida Classic football game betWeen. Florida A&M University (Henry's alma mater) and Bethune-Cookman College. According to the affidavit, other records and witness accounts show that Henry filed for and received reimbursement for a four-day trip to Miami to visit a commission office when he was really in Greenville, S.C., . visiting his female friend Cox. On other occasions he received reimbursements for supposedly official parole trips to Jacksonville, Tampa and Houston, TIC, when he was in South Carolina. He was also reimbursed for travel to Pensacola - a trip that neVer occurred. The more than $14,000 in false travel vouchers is the basis of one of the grand theft charges against Henry. The other two felony charges are based on over $1,600 he used to pay for personal phone calls from state funds and over $8,000' in personal purchases that he made with the state P-Card. With a more detailed accounting than the Auditor General's preliminary audit, the FDLE accuses' Henry of stealing more than $25,000 in just the one-year periOd from April 2002 to March 2003. The affidavit also notes that recQrds on Henry's spending before April 2002 are missing from the FPC's offices and presumptively have been destroyed. . 1'lp oftbe Iceberg Although the FDLE's affidavit focused primarily on Henry's wrongdoing at· the Parole Commission, the story doesn't end with his arrest - as apparently is the intention of some. During August, between the time when the Auditor General's office release its preliminary audit and when Henry was charged, top officials at the Parole Commission initiated a CYA strategy. . Although Henry's fraudulent trips and personal expenditures were observed by and known to numerous Parole Commission employees and top officials, who never reported them to the police, they now claim that at least some subordinates questioned him about the legality of his actions. However, when issues of impropriety were raised, Henry brushed them aside and defended his actions, they claim. '" don't see these (employees) as buddies of his. , think they thought they had to do this because he was boss," commented Monica David, appointed May 13 to be Henry's successor as ch8irman of the Parole Conuilission. "Hd was told by two or three different people he shouldn't do these personal purchases, and his response was, " know the rules. 1 can do this,~" David said. She had nothing to say about what knowledge she had of Henry's activities or what action she took to stop same. "People felt he was the chairman; he knows· what he's doing," Fred Schuknecht lamely said. Schuknecht was hired by David in May to be the FPC's new director of administration, a move seen by some as an attempt to Perspectives - - - - - - - - - - - - - - clean up any remaining incriminating records or evidence of wrongdoing at the Commission. Schukn~ht fonnerly worked at the FPC's next-door neighbor, the Department of Corrections, wh~ he was the Inspector General in charge of internal investigations and cover-ups. "Any records that were overlooked by or hidden from the auditor's investigators, are certainly gone by now," said Sherri Johnson, a research specialist at Florida Prisoners' Legal Aid· Organization based in Orlando, Florida. Johnson, working. with other researchers at FPLAO, surreptitiously documented corruption at the FPC for two years before turning their findings over to state officials . earlier this year. Johnson also noted that there are other serious problems that have occurred at the Parole Commission that are not under the purview of the Auditor Genera~ and so have not been addressed yet. She says those problems will be exposed and addressed by the Parole Project started by the organization. After Henry was charged and arrested, a final audit report was released by the Auditor General. It reiterates and expands on the preliminary report and contradicts Monica David's claims that Henry didn't have "buddieS" at the commission. In fact, several employees and top FPC officials were working with Henry to cover up his activities and sharing in the fraud on Florida taxpayers. Hands in the Cookie Jar , Included in the findings of the Auditor General's preliminary and fmal reports is the following: Jimmie Henry's Personal Assistant: ~ Made travel arrangements using State resources for Henry and his traveling companions knowing the travel was not business related. ~ Completed travel vouchers for Henry (including reimbursement for mileage and departure and return times) before Henry made the trips. ~ lnfonned the Finance and Accounting .Administrator when travel vouchers needed to be revised to cover Hemy's personal P-Card purchases. ~ Prepared travel reimbursement vouchers for Henry with knowledge that Henry never made the claimed trips. The Finance and Accounting Administrator: ~ Approved Henry's personal P-Card purchases. ----.;-------------17--- _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL ) Knowingly coded Henry's· personal P-Card charges as travel expenditures when they were not travel-related. ' ) Worked with Henry's Personal Assistallt to inanipulate travel vouchers to cover. up Henry's personal , P-Card purchases. ) Obtained almost $2.000 reimbursement from FPC funds to pay for personal college tuition in violation ofFlorida laws. ) Was working a second job unrelated to the FPC while using FPC equipment and computers to do the second job on FPC time. > Received large salary increases, bonuses and financial awards from Henry while he was chairman that auditors found to be unjustified and questionable. Perspect1ves - - - - - - . . , . - - - - - - - - > Other FPC Employees: ) Auditors found that between 2001 and 2003, other FPC erilp,loyees made over $80.000 in P-Card purchases for which no documentation exists showing what was purchased or if it was ever received by the Commission. > A prior audit report (No.02-09S) shows that in 2000 instead of turning unused FPC budget money back over to the general. revenue fund at the end of the year. Henry gave every FPC emploYee bonuses out of the surplus and then failed to report same as required by law. (See: FPLP. Volume 9, Issue 3.) >. Were allowed to use FPC equipment at their homes for personal purposes. > Were allowed to dispose of FPC property without following required procedures to verifY that pro~ should be disposed of. . The Director ofAdministration: > Gave hiS approval for personaJ P-Card purchases made by Henry. > Approved falsified travel vouchers for Henry including deductions for personal P~ard chaiges. > Received large salary increases, bonuses and financial awards from Henry that auditors found to be unjustified and questionable. The Human Resources Administrator: > Hired his brother-in-law as an FPC employee then promoted him to being Purchasing Agent , > Failed to perform criminal background checks on employment 'applicants resulting in employees being'hired with, in at least one case, extensive criminal histories. . ) . Had a sexual harassment/attempted sexual battery complaint filed against him by another male FPC employee that resulted in a secret settlement being made to the employee of $S3.964 in taxpayer monies. (FPLP reported on that incident in Volume 9, Issue 4. ·Since then the Leon County Sherifrs Department has said it will not charge former Human Resources Administrator Frank Trueblood with a crime because the victim refuses to cooperate.) Received large salBIy increases and bonuses from Henry that auditors found were not justified .and were questionable. • • > The daugbter-in-Iaw of the Vice Chair of the FPC. Frederick Dunphy.' was hired as an Executive Secretary in apparent contradiction to Fla. nepotism laws. She has been asked to resign. lDvestJgation Continues None of the other FPC employees who were found to have been helping cover for Henry or committing possibly illegal acts themselves have been charged with a . crime. Quietly. however. they h8ve been getting the ax. The Director of Administration, Shirley A Miller, was forced to resign June 30. The Finance and Accounting administrator. Lee Baldwin, resigned August 7. The Human Resources Administrator. Frank Trueblood, resigned July 3. and the Information Services Administrator, Michael Francis, resigned July 24. Monica David, the new FPC chairman, who so far has avoided allegations .of wrongdoing, has vowed to clean up the agency. "The audit was very helpful to me as the new administrator of the agency to have this management tool to assist me in making the changC!i I had to make." said David. She may come to regret her promotion. FPLAO has vowed that the corruption at the FPC has gone on long enough. When the FPLAO Parole Project was launched May I of this year, the commitment was made to parolo-eligible prisoners and their families to expose the FPC's corruption and seek relief for those prisoners the Commission has been holding hostage to 18--------------- -------------~ FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL Perspectlves - - - - - - - - - - - - - - continue its corrupt existence. There are still those at the Commission, including Commissioners David and' Dunphy, who believe they have weathered the stonn and survived. and that the agency can continue to operate as it has been. They've only seen the tip of the iceberg. As the Parole Project continues, further revelations about the FPC are going to come to light. So far, several hundred parole-eligible prisoners and their families have joined the FPLAO Parole Project. The support provided so far has allowed the Project to expand its investigation of the FPC, resulting in more valuable infonnation being obtained for the struggle. Those parole-eligible prisoners who have not joined the Project are called on to do so now. Much important work remains to be done; everyone's involvement and support is needed. The time is now. To obtain infonnation about how you can join the Parole Project, contact: FPLAO, Inc. Parole Project P.O. Box 660-387 Chuluota, FL 32766 • COrrectiODS & Clarificatioos , , FPLP is committedto accurate reporting . Contaqt our stqffto report pei:ceived e11l0rs.. In the last issue of FPLP, Vol.9,lss. 4, "Florida Parole Commission:' A ' Culture of Corruption," relying' on mainstream media reports, it was eiToneously reported that fonner FPC' Human Resources director Frank Trueblood had, been , ~used.by a feUow FPC employee of rape, resulting in a payoff of SSO,()OO to silence the victim. According to official docgmentsrecently obtained by the FPLAO ~arole Projec4.which mainstream media obviously did· not have access to,:·the victim actually accused Trueblood of attempted rape, exposing h~lf to the victim, and sexually harassing him ·in August 200.1, res~lting in the victim quittinghisjob with the FPC.. Further, documents show' the' total payoff to the victim was $53,964. The Leon County . Sheriff's Office has now said it will nQt ch~ge Trueblood with any crime as a result of his conduct becau!ie the victim refuses to coope~ with police. Ironically, The contract settlement ~ment requires the victim to, not cooperate or assistant in any .actions r:egardingthis'incident. whatsoever. Attention Parole-Eligible Prisoners . On ,M~y' 1, 2003, FPLAO launched the Parole Project to expose the corruptionwithm the .Florida Parole Commission and to work towards increasing the number of parole releases and to reduce the number of technical violation·s. Since the Project started, fonner Chairman Jimmy Heiny has been forced to resign and he has been charged with numerous criminal offenses. In addition, four other top officials in the FPC have· been forCed to resign and corruption has been exposed throughout the system. As the Parole Project continues there is much more that is g()ing to come to light about the FPC, if 'the Project receives the support it needs from paroleeligible prisoners and their families and friends. So ~, .several hundred parole-eligible prisoners have joined the Project and sent in the minimal financial support . requested. Those prisoners' outside supporters have been' contacted and many have joined the Project and made donations. However, many letters. to outside supporters have gone unanswered arid those people need to be ~minded ' how'importantthisproject is and how their support is needed.- right now. There are also a few thousand parole-eligible prisoners remaining who have not joined or sent support to the Project. Those are the ones who have given up, or think they will miraculously receive parole, if they continue to act like a mouse in their holes, or those who IP'e so negative they don't believe ;" :iit,.y.thi~ganymore~or who are so institutionalized ; ·th~ iarelift8id to evensupportso~ethingthat will benefit them. Before the·Parole Project started, few, if any, parole-eligible prisoners would have .believed the corruption Within the FPC could ever be exposed, much less that the very chairman would be charged with criminal'offenses~ And there is much more to, , come,' ohanges will be made, but it cannot be done . wi~out the p~cip~ionand support of all paroleeligible prisoners and their families and friends. Now is the time. All we need 'is YOUR minimal support. You can either be part of the solution or part of the problem. There is a lot r~m~inin8 to be done; you are invited to be a· part of ::it'Fojoin tho·Parole Project, contact: , ; FPLAO, Ine. . Parole:proJeet . Post Offic~Box 66,0-387 , · Cbulu~ta, FL 31766 , . ----------------19---- " _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL Parole Commission Replacement Sparks Criticism by Teresa Bums Posey On August 26, 2003, Gov. Jeb Bush cast the pivotal vote to reject Robert Woody, an African American finalist, for the vacancy. on the three-member Florida Parole Commission created when former Commission Chairman Jimmie Henry was forced to resign in May amid allegations of criminal misconduct Much to the dismay of the black .community, black legislators and civil rights activists, Bush voted to appoint his victim services coordinator, Tena Pate, to the Commission, breaking a tie vote between the other four Executive Cabinet members. Pate, 45, has been the state's victim rights coordinator in the governor's office since 1993, serving under three governors. She also served as clemency assistant to Gov. Lawton Chiles, Gov. Buddy MacKay and Bush from 1993 to 200I and previously worked· as a victim rights coordinator in the First Judicial Circuit. Part of her duties in the governor's office has been' consoling the families of crime victims during the execution process. Her appointment as a parole commissioner came only five days after' Henry was arrested and charged with three felony counts of grand theft and 21 misdemeanors for crimes allegedly committed when he was the chief parole commissioner. The position pays $85,355 a year and Pate will have to have her appointment confirmed by the Florida Senate during the 2004 legislative.session. Pate's selection to serve with the two other current white parole commissioners, Monica David, who took over as chairman after Hemy resigned, and Frederick Dunphy, revealed a split between Bush and Chief Financial Officer Tom Gallagher, a fellow Republicim who said Robert Woody was more qualified. Gallagher, a Cabinet member, along with Agriculture Commissioner Charles Bronson, voted for Woody over Pate. Gallagher pointed out that a majority of state prisoners are black and Woody's selection would acknowledge that "disparity." Otherwise, he said, "We would be lacking for the first time in many, many years African American representation on the Parole Commission, and that, I think, would be a mistake," adding that 66 percent of prisoners are black. Attorney General· Charlie "Chain Gang" Crist (as he likes to be called) voted along with ~ush for Pate, rejecting the argument that a mostly black prison system should not have an all-white parole board. The parole board decides hundreds of parole cases and thousands of conditional release and clemency cases of state prisoners each year. Bush pointed to Pate's more than two decades of victim advocacy work for' his decision in het favor. . Gallagher pointed out that Woody has more experience in criminal justice and is more qualified, to no avail. PerspectIves - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Woody, 50, is the head of the Department of Corrections' victim assistance program, has been a parole officer and probation supervisor and received a master's degree in criminal justice from Rollins College in 1979. Pate has no experience in the parole or probation fields and only has a bachelor's degree from Florida State that she received last summer. State Representative Arthenia Joyner denounced the governor's decision. "This is an injustice to the state correctional system...This is a sad day in Florida when 66 percent of the controlled release population and 48 percent of parol~eligible inmates are African American and there is nQ minority representation on the board that evaluates these prisoners," said Joyner. Senator Les Miller said that not having an African American on the parole board sends a bad message. He said it's significant because the board is responsible for evaluating clemency, civil rights restoration and other important prisoner issues. State Senator Mandy Dawson said Pate's appointtnent was a setback for African Americans in Florida. "It's frightening to me to think we may be going backwards," Dawson said. "I guess we're back on the plantation." Betty Reed, chairperson for the NAACP Political 'Action Committee, called Bush's decision "awful." She is encouraging a letter-writing campaign to all state senators since they will have to confmn Pate's appointment when they go into session March 2004. Reed said the NAACP will help people write letters to senators if they will call 813/234-8683 and leave their name and number. Someone will return their call. [Sources: Gov. Office Press Release, 8/26/03; St. Petersburg Times, 8/27/03; Florida Star Banner, 8/27/03; Tallahassee Democrat, 8/27/03; AP 8/27/03] • .....------ ----_ Attention Reader: Mr. Hansch is specifically looking for All inmates that were persons that remember a convicted in Orange large support column County, FL, after a jury which obstructed their trial during the time view during their trial frame of January 1991 - proceedings. December 1996 in Court Room P, Room 215, All correspondence will (Alice Blackwell White's be kept confidential, and Court Room) are all inmates that respond encouraged to write !"r. wDl be kept informed of Peter K. H. Hansch, P.O. any possible future Box 76249, Ocala, FL litigation regarding this 34481-0249. matter. 20--------------- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FLORiDA PRISON.LE~PersjJect1ves -------------- MICHAEL V. GIORDANO AGGRESSIVE POST-CONVICTION REPRESENTATION The Law Offices of Michael V. Giordano 412 E. Madison Street, Ste. 824 Tampa, Florida 33602 (813) 228-0070 A STATEWIDE practice specializing in Post-Conviction Relief on both the State' and Federal levels: **EXECUTIVE CLEMENCY**' **PAROLE** **DIRECT APPEALS** **HABEAS CORPUS** **POST-CONVICTION RELIEF** *INEFFECTIVE COUNSEL *WITHDRAWAL OF PLEA *ILLEGAL SENTENCES *ACTUALINNOCENCE *I.N.S. DEPORTATION I am a fonner Assistant State Attorney (Felony Division Chief), Assistant Public Defender (Lead Trial Attorney), and member of the faculty at the University of Florida College of Law. I have devoted over 25 years to the teaching and praciice of criminal defense law, and I am an author of a 1,250 page text on federal practice in the Eleventh Circuit The major thrust of my practice has been postconviction oriented. There is approximately 70 years of combined experience in my office. I do not believe you can find more experienced representation in the State of Florida or elsewhere. The hiring ofa lawyer is an importanl decision Ihal should I10l be based solely em ad~. Before you decide. ask us 10 Sflld you fi'cc ~ncn infonnation aboul our qlllllifiClllions. ____________ ~--21---____:'----------- - - : - - - - - - - - - - - - - FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL Perspectives - - - - - - - - : . . - . . , . - - _ Membenhip Drive ChccJc it out. For the next six months., until Jan. 31, 2004, Florida Prisoners' Legal Aid Organization, Inc. (FPLAO) is engaging in a drive to increase memberships. During that period we hope to gain 1,000 new members. To do that your help is needed. Those who help will not only be helping the organization togrow and become more effective. but will also be benefiting themselves. Here's how it will work: ,For every person who gets three people to become ,an FPLAO member between now and Jan. 31 a, whether prisoners or free citizens, that person will receive either a free one-year membership, or if they are already a'member, then their membership will be extended for a year with no dues owed. This is a great and easy way to either become a member of FPLAO or. to get a1iee membership extension. All members receive ~ organization's news magazine Florida Prison Legal Penpectives, of course. You don't have to stop at getting three new members. Ifyou get six people to join, your membership dues will be covered for two years; get nine to join and you will not have to pay any membership dues for three years being a member of Florida's largest and most effective organization that works to help Florida prisoners and their families and loved ones. Don't delay; start signing up new members today! . Simply have new members complete the below membership fonn, putting your name on the "spo~sored by" line so you get credit for signing them up, and have them send in the f~~ with their indicated membership dues. We'll let you know every time three new people sign up that you sponsored Prisoners: Been hesitating to become an FPLAO member because your fUnds are tight, but want to receive FPLP? You can't get it any easier than this. Ifyou aren't interested, teU someone else about it Let's build up FPLAO! Yes, I want to become a member of Florida Prisonen' Legal Aid Org. 1. Check type membenhip: o $ I S per year Family member/friend/individual o S9 per year Prisoner 3.. Sponsored by (name & DC##) 1. Please Print: Name: Address: City: _ _ ,State_ _Zip, 4. Send this completed form plus indicated yearly membership dues made payable to: Florida Prisoners' Legal Aid Org. Inc. _ Membenhlp'Dept PO BOx 660-387 ·Chuluota. FL32766 Yes, I wantlo become a member of Florida Prlsonen' Legal Aid Org. 1. Check type membenblp: 3. Sponsored by (name & DC##) o SIS per year Family member/friend/individual . o S9 per year Prisoner 2. Please Print: Name: Address:, Clty:, _ ~1, _ ,State_ _Zip. ---: 4. Send this completed form plus Indicated yearly membership dues made Payable to: . Florida Prisoners' Legal Aid Org. Inc. Membenhip Dept. . POBox 660-387 Chuluota, FL 32766 Yes, I want to become a member of Florida Prisonen' Legal Aid Org. 1. Check type membenhlp: , 3•.Sponsored by (name & DC#) o SIS per year Family member/friend/individual . _ c S9 per year Prisoner . 2. Please Print: Name:, Address:, City: _ _ -:--State Zip. 4. Send this completed fonn plus _ indicated yearly membership dues made payable to: Florida Prisoners' Legal Aid Org. Inc. Membership Dept PO Box 660-387 Chuluota. FL 32766 ---------;.....-..-----22---- _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL Perspectives - - - - - - - - - - Judicial Alert!!! A recent ruling in the Second Judicial Circuit Court for Leon County has created a" major shift in the traditional jurisprudence with regard to filing petitions for writ of mandamus challenging disciplin~ actions within the DOC. On August 19, ·2003, Circuit Judge Charles A. Francis issued an order dismissing a petition for writ of mandamus filed by state prisoner Peter Babala in case' number 2003-CA-1409. The landmark order terminates the long-standing home venue privilege enjoyed by the Florida Department of Corrections. In reaching this conclusion, Judge Francis construed the Florida Supreme Court's opinion in Schmidt v. Crusoe, 28 FIa.L.Weekly S 367 (Fla. 5/1103) as the controlling authority for his premise that petitions challenging the loss of gain time in disciplinary proceedings must be filed in the county where the· petitioner was convicted. The Schmidt decision resolved the much debated question of whether the provisions of the prisoner Indigency Statute found in section 57.085, Fia. Stat was applicable to quasi-judicial disciplinary proceedings where the loss of gain time directly affects the prisoner's sentence. The Supreme Court held that this type of action was a collateral criminal proceeding to the judgment and sentence, which resulted in the petitioner's incarceration. Thus, section 57.085 was not applicable. In the case above, Judge Francis mterpreted the supreme court's decision to require Florida prisoners to file their mandamus actions challenging the loss of gain in disciplinary proceedings in the county of "their judgment and conviction. All Florida prisoners need to be mindful of this potential Catch-22. In Babala's case, the judge issued the order dismissing his mandamus action after. the time period for refiling in his home ~unty had expired. This is significant as Babala is now procedurally barred from refiling. A motion for rehearing has been filed. asking the court to reconsider its decision to dismiss in lieu of transferring the action under rule 1.060, Fla. R. Civ. P. To deny Babala the opportunity to seek judicial review .of the disciplinary action against him would be arbitrary and capricious. To add to this legal quagmire, the Secon" DCA recently issued an en banc decision on the home venue privilege that is diametrically opposed to the circuit When preparing to file your court's ruling above, mandamus action it would be wise to fully research the law in your district to see what the proper filing procedure is for your case. "Undoubtedly, this will be placed on the supreme courts' aocket for defmitive resolution. But until then, it's a crapshoot. _ [Note: The 2d DCA case referred to above is Stovall v. Cooper, Case No. 2D02-4606 (8/27/03). It has not appeared in the FLW as of this writing.] • Phone Information Needed Recently FPLAO staff has received some letters stating that family members of prisoners are being contacted by MCI or local phone companies requiring them to make advance deposits to continue receiving collect phone calls from Florida state prisoners. If you or your family has received such a letter from MCI or a local phone company, FPLAO would like a photocopy of that letter. Please send only a copy of the letter that does not have to be returned. If FPLAO can establish that MCI or local phone companies (subcontracted to MCI) are requiring such advance deposits, we will file an administrative complaint with the Fla. Public Service Commission (PSC). Such advance deposits have been previously prohibited by the PSC. Please send any copies of deposit-requiring letters to: FPLAO,Inc. FAIR Campaign PO Box 660-387 Chuluota, FI 32766 • Where's My Mail? Fairly often FPLAO staff receive letters from prisoners complaining that they are having problems with the mail at their institutions. The alleged problems may be ,with incoming or outgoing mail not being received" or sent, or with not receiving publications or receiving them late, or with mail simply disappearing, or requests or grievances to prison officials never being responded to, etc. Occasionally. when several letters are received from the same institution making similar complaints, FPLAO staff will contact the institution mailroom or other officials to try to straighten out the problem for prisoners. Sometimes we can correct the problem, and sometimes we just get blown off ~ claims there is no p~biem, or if a problem exists itS with the" post office. Sometimes the staff has to go to the FDOC central office or other officials to get a problem resolved with mail issues. Recently we received a copy of an email from a vigilent FPLAO member (Thanks) concerning an institution's mailroom earlier this year that exhibits just how bad mail problems can get sometimes. It's printed verbatim below. The email below was sent by an FQOC employee, conducting an audit on the mailroom at Martin Corr. Inst. to an FDOC employee at the FDOC Region IV office on Jan. 29, 2003: 23 - - - - _ ------------~- FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL On January 28, 2003, l Pat Lindsay upon request from Pele Defosses wenl 10 Ihe mailroom 01 Martin C.L to perform an audit. While Ihere I observed the following ilems thaI were not in compliance with the DC rules. Perspectives - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Unconventional Wisdom: Slash Prisoner Education by Linda Hanson 1. Mail is not being dislributed in the 48-hour timeframe. 2. Inmate request are not answered in 10 days. 3. Magazines are not handled in 15 days. 4. Inmatemail is notforwarded in 10 days. 5. Inmate mail that contains contraband is not being returned to sender in a timely manner. 6. Inmates are not being notified when mail is rejected The mailroom was no organization [sic] at all. There· were at least 15 mail tubs on the floor located in different spots with bits and pieces of mail. There was no way to know what days the mail arrives because of the way the tubs are just thrown in the mallroom. There were inmate request placed in several different locations in the mailroom. I pulled out tubs that contained inmate mail.. that was rejected that had not been wrote up with postmarks ofAugust and September 2002. In these same boxes was inmate mail that had been transfe"ed to other institutions that had not been forwarded There are two tubs that contain inmate-rejected mail that dates 2001. I foUnd a tub of inmate request that date back to December 2002 that had request for all departments that had not been forwarded to them. I found stamps that inmates had sent to have mail sent home that dated June 2002 that had not been sent. When I left Mr. Richard Barker, who is filling in for the GSS, has already answered the largest part of the inmate request. He is working on trying to bring the mailroom in compliance. Pat Lindsay, GSS DesotoC.L While many of the institutional mailrooms do a good job of keeping up with what is after all a lot of mail, the above examples are an extreme example of just how bad things can get out of wack. Of course, prisoners or their correspondents or magazine publishers would never be informed by the FDOC that such problems occurred for fear of lawsuits, and without such admission (or access to such inside information as above) prisOners and their correspondents would likely Dever be aware what happened to their mail, or the post office or the prisoner I mail sender I publisher would be blamed by FDOC staff to cover up the problem. We muSt all remain vigilant to such problems and protective ofour First Amendment rights. FPLA9 will continue to help with these problems where it can. • 24 - - - - - - - - - - - - - _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FLORIDAPRISO~LEGAL Perspectives - - - - - - - - - - - - - _ Education programs have been proven to save the . An anthology of thought-provoking articles by investigative reporters, social commentators, scholars, prison system money, too. A 2001 report found inmates legal professionals and prisoners who are activists and who get a GED are 8.7 percent less likely to reoffend Inmates who get vocational diplomas are 14.6 percent less journalists, this book makes convincing the connection between incarceration and poverty, and is 8' convincing likely. For every 2,000 inmates who earn GED's, Florida indictment of the class aspect of America's criminal taxpayers save SI.9-million a year by keePing them out of prison. The savings was $3.2-million for vocational justice / prison systems. Articles are included on issues program graduates. ranging from the inadequate resources provided to public defenders, .the often ineffective and incompetent Ivey claims prisons will not abandon their educational programs, and said GED classes, for example, representation ,in capital cases, the politics and profits of prison privatization and prison slave labor, to prisoner win continue. But they will offer fewer sections. rape and abuse and medical neglect. This writer is unsure what the .phrase "fewer sections" actually means, but a flash survey shows that The well written and documented stories in Prison many prisons throughout Florida have absolutely no , Nation .provide a compendium of the "rest-of-the-story" educational programs. Walton, Zephyrhills, and Lawty behind our country's prison-industrial complex that most Americans know little or nothing about. are only a few of many institutions statewide that have terminated education programs. And for the few The articles' authors, many recognized as authorities 'on the subject, including Stephen Bright,' Naom institutiods that continue to offer education programs, Chomsky, Nell Bernstein, Christian Parenti, Willie their classrooms will undoubtedly resemble a mosh pit. Wisely, Mumia Abu-Jumal, and (FPLP's. own) Bob Posey, Wooley pointed to the state class-size amendment, don't pull any punches with their hard-hittin,g, gritty, and passed by voters who believe Florida's school children can't learn with more than 25 students in a class. "Can' sometimes shocking reports. you imagine having 45 or 50 inmates in a class?" he asked . This book will appeal to prison activists, professionals and students .of law and criminology, [Sources: Miami Herald, 8/30/03; St. Petersburg Times, prisoners and their families, and anyone else concerned 913/03] • about the direction our country is going in, the growing separation between the haves and the have-nots, and the use of ilnprisonment and ostracism for social control. The - Book Review - , images generated by this book will last long after the last page is turned. • PRISONNATION: The Warehousing ofAmerica's Poor. Tara Berival and Paul Wright, Editors. Routledge. 2003. sof/cover. 264 pages. $19.95 + $5 shipping. Orderfrom: Prison Legal News, 2400 NW 8(1" St. #148, Seattle. WA 98117. Review by Sherri Johnson Every once in awhile a book comes along that demands to be read - Prison Nation is one ofthose books. With more than 2 million people now incarcerated in America's prisons and jails, one in every 143 U.S. residents, and with the rate of imprisonment steadily escalating, no longer can a blind eye be turned on the impact such mass incarceration is having on the very fabric ofour nation. This important book, in more than 40 essays arranged in seven chapters, looks beyond the numbers to the reasons behind and effects of America's race to incarcerate more of its own citizens than any other country in the world. frison Na/ion explores the political factors underlying the imprisonment trend, the cost to our society - especially to the poor, the profits being made by the greedy, the often hom'ble and chilling conditions behind the jail walls and prison fences, and why the courts are unwilling and often helpless to prevent such .conditions. Now AVAILABLEI PrIsOn 'NatIon Is Prtson legal News' new book. In forty one chapters by over two dozen social a1tics, academics, InvesU- gatlve reporters and prisoners, PrIson Nation mvers many of the Important Issues related to how over 2 mIlDon peoPle are Imprtsoned In the United States .at any given .Ume and how they , are treated whDe In 0JSt:0dy. MAD atraordbwy coIIecdoa or essays by some of·our most astute observers of the AmerlCllD prisoa I)'lltem." Hawani Zinn, lWIhor of A PeopIe:r History ofthe UniJedSttrIes. M. . . . . &prbIgboolr, btfa&IDg tIgiIIer ane fI tbe most Impoitaat wmc by .... fI cIeIIcsfed miIn lDlaaI\&.... R BnKlC Fr8nkIiD, lIlIlhcrofPriDt ~in 2OthCmUy.4merltn Ott( $19.95 Pus $5!t'h (264 pgs. paper) Prtson Legal News 2400 NW lOh St. #148 5ealIIe, WA 98117 Or order with a \lisa or MasterCard by calDng206-781-6524 25-~~~~~~~~_ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL Perspectives - - - - - - - - - : - - - - - - - CA - During early Sept., the Federal Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco overturned 100 death sentences in Arizona, Montana, and Idaho because they were imposed by judges, not juries. The court relied on a 2002 US Supreme Court ruling in commuting the sentences to life in prison. When the Supreme Court ruled it did not specify whether its decision applied to prisoners already on death row, but the Ninth Circuit appeals court held the 2002 decision must be applied retroactively. However, two other federal circuit courts have made an opposite ruling. The high court may now have to declare whether its 2002 decision apply·. retroactively. should Arizona's attorney general says his . state will ask the Supreme Court to review the Ninth Circuits' decision. CUrrently, America has about 3,500 prisoners on death row. Last year 71 prisoners were executed nationwide. As of Sept. 5, 53 prisoners had been executed so far this year. CT Connecticut's . prison population, has grown from 4,800 in 1982 to 19,500 in 2003. Faced with a budget crunch, the state has reduced drug' penalties for nonviolent drug offenders to divert them to treatment instead of inCarceration,' which is seen as a more effective and cost-saving approach. CT State Rep. Mike Lawler, co-chair of the House Judiciary Committee, noted, "We now spend more on our prisons than our colleges." GA - State officials are considering releasing sick prison inmates whose medical bills can become a burden to taxpayers. With a prison population of 47,000 and faced with budget cuts, the Department of Corrections and the Board of Pardons and Paroles are working on ways to remove some inmates, particularly nonviolent offenders. FL - Earlier this .year the Fla. Department of Corrections began moving younger prisoners out of the general population at Union Correctional Institution (formerly known as' The Rock) and transferring in prisoners aged 50 or older from ' other prisons around the state.. Then, in August, the FDOC began ~ing the same at Zephyrhills Corr. Inst., with the age criteria for going there being 60 or older. Both UCI and ZCI have more extensive medical facilities than average institutions, so the moves may' be a cost saving measure by concentrating elderly prisoners closer to' medical care. Already, in 2001, Florida had' changed New River CI, located on the grounds of the state mental hospital at· Chattahoochee, into a work camp for 378 able-bodied prisoners mostly older than 50. As of May 31, 2003, Florida had 7,636 prisoners 50 yrs. old or older, an increase of 12% from the year before. [Sources: AP repOrts; Lakeland Ledger, 4/30103; FDOC records; FPLAO members] FL - Beginning Oct. 1, 2003, Florida state prisoners at community work release centers will no longer be driven to or from their jobs by permanent party prisoner drivers. Starting that date it will be the prisoners' responsibility to get to their jobs,· classes, or training by walking, bicycling, riding public transportation, or getting a ride .with a family member or employer. The new policy was ~itiated by the FIa. DOC following several major accidents when prisoners were driving other prisoners to or from work. Some.of the prisoner drivers did not have a valid driver license. The .DOC appealed to the Legislature, which amended sec. 945.0913, Fla. Statutes, during this year's session ,to prohibit prisoners from transporting other prisoners on work release to their jobs and prohibit the DOC itself from providing them transportation. There is a provision for those totally unable to obtain transportation, but it is contingent on specific appropriations from the Legislature. Happy pedaling, Guys. .FL - During Aug. a Fort Lauderdale man, Bruce Silverman, 39, appeared. before Broward Circuit Judge Stanton Kaplan seeking an early release from his one-year probation sentence for aggravated stalking of a co-worker. Silverman told the judge that he likes poppy seed bagels every day but hasn't been able to eat them for the .past 8 months for fear they will give him a positive on his routine drug tests. Because he's been forced to eat plain bagels for months, he argued that his probation should be cut short. Judge Kaplan politely asked Silverman if he was crazy and then told him and his .attorneY to leave the courtroom. [Source: Day/ona Bch. News Journal, 8115103] FL - Continuing its trend of the past decade, last year (FY 2001-02) the Florida Parole Commission only releasoo a few Florida parole-eligible prisoners on parole while revoking .an approximately equal number off parole - mostly for petty technical violations that did not amount· to a crime. Less than one-half of one percent of the 26,299 prisoners released from Florida prisons last year, or 62 people, were released on parole. During the same period, 87 parolees had their parole revoked and returned to prison (8 for committing a new crime, 79 for technical violations). were 26--------------- - - - - - - - - FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL Perspectives - - - - - - - - DutuJ~ May, former FL televangelist-turned pizza deliveryman, George Crossley, 62, who was convicted five years ago in a failed murder-for-hire plot, was rearrested on a probation violation concerning a dispute with a c0worker over an ink pen. Allegedly, Crossley told the co-worker he would kill him, which was reported to the police. Crossley was fU'ed from his job and was held in jail without bail. [Source: Daytona Bch. News Journal,.5/1 9/03] facility for girls. State officials have given the facility 60 days to overhaul their protocol for dealing with unruly inmates. In one incident, Serai Moreland punched one young girl in the face as they struggled. More than two dozen times between April 2000 and February 2003 workers have been accused ofusing their authority to cross the sexual abuse line,' according the Florida Juvenile Justice records. Since February IS workers have been disciplined and .two criminally charged for sexual offenses. FL - W.O. Childers, who once controlled politics in Northwest Florida, ,was sentenced to 3 %-years in prison during May. Childers, a former dean of the Florida Senate, was convicted on Sunshine Law violations earlier this year after he had joined the Escambia County Commission and became embroiled in charges of corruption and scandal.. Childers will have I year of 'probation to do after serving his prison time, 250 hours of community service, and have to pay prosecution costs ofupwards to $30,000. [Source: Pensacola News Journal, 5/19/03] FL - An autopsy. report said that Ruth Hubbs, who died May 16 at the Leon County Jail, was killed by an overdose of prescription drugs likely administered by the jail's infmnary. She is one of three people to die in the Leon County jail since March. Prison Health Services, which has been under scrutiny since the deaths, has more than . 1,000 lawsuits pending against it. FL - A Fort La'\derdale judge has denied a request from a drug offender dying of AIDS to be released early from jail to spend his last months with his family. . Jean Felix, 4I, was sent to jail until Sept. 5 for violating probation in a drug possession case. But jail doctors say he will die before his sentence expires. Medical experts testified before Judge Cheryl Aleman that Felix has a very short time to live and that the humane thing to do would be to send him home to his family. Judge Aleman denied that request. FL - Staff members at the Florida Institute for Girls' are using force and restraints too quickly and too often, according to a recent review of the only maximum-security state's _ television, but under a new programming change called the "Correctional Learning Network," by Corrections initiated Commissioner Devon Brown, prisoners are limited to watching mostly educational TV. Of the eight hours of television available a day, six hours are devoted to instructional shows about hepatiti~ HIV, AIDS, and fmding employment, and documentaries. The other two hours are limited to news and sports shows. "It's a brilliant idea," said Richard Moran, a criminologist and sociology professor at Mt. Holyoke College in Massachusetts. "For most prisoners, their intellectual sense has been neglected. If they learn to think more deeply and learn to be more culturally aware, that is an excellent thing." New Jersey's systemwide approach is unique. Maryland and Ohio have educational programming on a smaller scale and the Co. jail in Hillsborough County, Fla., bas only allowed prisoners to watch educational TV for eight years. IL - During March a coalition of criminal defendants represented by the People's Law Office of Chicago, petitioned that all Cook County judges .be disqualified from hearing the SO pending cases that allege that Chicago Police Commander· Jon Burge and his officers routinely tortured confessions out of suspects. The petition argued that of the 61 judges assigned to the county's felony courts, .. 8 had material involvement in the torture cases. Forty-one of the 61 judges are former' prosecutors. Michael Deutch of the People's Law Office said no courtroom in the county is free of the . prejudice inflicted by police torture practices. [Source: National Law Journal, 3/3/03] NY - Starting August 2003, all iDeals consumed by prisoners will be prepared at the Oneida Correctional facility and then sent to individual prisons around the state. Officials say meals made at individual prisons cost 14 cents more a day to produce. The new arrangement is expected to save taxpayers more than $3 million annually. vr - Vermont prisoners being held in Virginia to ease overcrowding are likely to be moved this fall. The Vermont Corrections Department said it has received lower bids from private companies in other states to house the prisoners. The VT Legislature ordered prison officials to reduce the budget for out-of-state prisoners up to $200,000.• NJ - For the past year, since Sept. '02, state prisoners in New Jersey haven't been watching sit-coms, soap operas, or trashy, violent shows like Jerry Springer. Now the NJ prison population, all 27,000, can still watch 27 - - - ~ _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL Perspectives - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - David Wi'Collins, Attorney at Law Former state prosecutor with more than 15 years ofcriminal law experience "AV" rated by Martindale-Hubbell Bar Register ofPreeminent Lawyers. Yo", voice lit TtI1Wrtmee repmetrltllg prisoners lit till flretU o/pDlktmvldlD" u&f • Appeals .3.800 motions .3.850 motions .State &. Federal Habeas Corpus .Writs of Mandamus • Parole Hearings .Clemency .Plea Baigain Rights . .Sentencing &. Scoresheet Errors .Green, Tripp, Karchesky. Heggs cases .lail time Credit Issues .Oaintlme Eligibility Issues .Habitualization Issues . .Probation Revocation issues .. DID YOU KNOW•• •Many cases contain sentencing and scoresheet errors that result in defendants - serving extra time on their sentences. Often these errors can be corrected dec:ades after sentencing. Write - for infonnalion about a low cost review of your sentencing papers. Let 10,000+ hours ofexperience in .. sentencing and sc:oresheet errors go to work for you. Wrlle me todDy abolll your easel P.O. Box 541 Monticello, FL 32345 (850) 997-8111 "The birlna ofa lawyer is an important decision that should not be based solely upon advatiscmalts. . Before you decide, ask me to send you free wriUcn information about my qualifications and experience." FLORIDA PRISONER'S LITIGATION MANUAL Legal Information on Prison Discipline, Mandamus and Appellate Review A MUST HAVE LEGAL GUIDE FOR ALL FLORIDA PRISONERS "1 highly recommend theFPLM for any prisoner living under the FDOC." Paul Hamwi, Certified Law Clerk "OutstandingI The first comprehensive self-help legal guide for Florida prisoners." Sherri Johnson, FPLAO "An easy to understand, valuable and important book for Florida prisoners." Oscar Hanson, FPLP ORDER YOUR COPY NOW! To order send, only $24.95, plus $3.95 S&H to FPLP, P.O.Box 660-387, C~uluota FL 32766 Softcover - 330 pages - 8 ~ x 11 - Published by Albert Publishing Co: - allow 4 - 6 weeks 28 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FLORIDA PRISON LE~ .Perspectives - - - - - - - - - _ Mail Rule Cball~nge Update On Aug. 14, 2003, Administrative Judge Michael Ruff, of the Fla. Division of Administrative Hearings (DOAH), dismissed FPLAO Chairman Teresa Bums" Posey's fonnal rule challenge to Fla. Department of Correction's mail rules implemented Dec. 5,2002. Judge Ruff, who failed to rule on any of Ms. Bums Posey's . motions, and relying on an untimely-filed Motion to Dismiss filed by the Department, relied on an invalid legal test to detennine that Bums Posey did not have standing to challenge rules that restrict the amount and content of routine, legal or privileged mail that she sends to prisoners in various capacities. Judge Ruff, ignoring Bums Posey's showing that non-prisoners have an established constitutionally protected right to send mail to prisoners, sided with the Department's position that the rules at issue only impact the rights or privileges of prisoners. Judge Ruff also ignored Bums Posey's repeated motions and letters seeking authorization to allow her qualified representative to appear on her behalf, thus violating Florida Statutes and the DOAH's own rules. Ms. Bums Posey filed an appeal of the dismissal with the First District Court of Appeal on Sept. 11,2003. Burns v. DOC, DOAH Case No. 02-4604RP; OCA Case No. 1003-3894 (2003). ' The rules at issue in this case involves restrictions on the amount and content of mail that may be sent to prisoners by family members and friends, and by attorneys/legal aid organizations and media representative~. The rules include a prohibition on more than 5 pages of general reading or entertainment materials, and tail to establish a legally sufficient mail rejection review process for non-prisoners. This case will continue to be updated in FPLP as it proceeds. [Editor's Note: In FPLP Vol. 9, Iss. 2, an update to t~e above case was provided that noted only 15 prisoners out of the 75,000 prison population filed written objections to the FDOC concerning the rules at issue in the above case. Subsequently, two prisoners wrote asserting that. they also had filed written objections but did not appear on the FPLP list. A review of the letters and documents provided by those prisoners revealed they had filed objections to a different set of legal mail rules, adopted and implemented at a different time, involving prisoners' outgoing \egal mail. The list published in FPLP was, sadly, accurate. . Florida prisoners are reminded that they may file written objections to any rule proposed by the FDOC. Sec. 120.81 (3)(b), Florida Statutes. They may also file formal Petitions to Adopt, Amend or Repeal Rules with the FDOC. Sees. 120.81 (3)(a) and \20.54(7), Florida Statutes. But they may not challenge proposed or existing FDOC rules in a proceeding before the Division of Administrative Hearings (DOAH) as non-prisoners may. Sec. 120.81 (3)(a), Florida Statutes. The proper vehicle for prisoners to use to challenge proposed or existing rules or denials of their Petitions to Adopt, Amend or Repeal Rules is with a Petition for Declaratory . Judgment filed in the circuit court. Sec. 120.73, Florida .Statutes.... bp]- * Success * Modular Office Obtained by Teresa Bums Posey In the last two issues of FPLP, donations were requested from FPLAO members and supporters to allow a modular-type office building to be purchased to provide more office space for volunteers in the ·Orlando area to .help work on FPLP and.FPLAO projectS. We are very pleased to announce that such a' building has been obtained by FPLAO. Wltile only approximately $1,000 in' donations have been received so far, we were able to locate a larger than expected office building owned by an individual who wished to sell it, and FPLAO member Charles . Morgan Kindly loaned us the .remaining money needed to purchase the building. Everyone who made a donation for the building is thanked very much, as is Charles. We still need donations to pay off the loan, any amount will help, but we'll be able to get the new office set-up and open to volunteers much sooner than expected now. This new office space is going to make a lot ofdifference. We expect to have it open in the next month or so and invite anyone in the Orlando area' who wishes to help out to contact us. Working together, weare going to make a difference. Again, Thank you' to those who made this possible. - Past Perspectives... From the J902 DOC Annual Report The annual report for 1902 included an expenditure of $4,000 for bloodhounds. According to the report: "These dogs bring to bear a two fold benefit. They are trained each week under the full knowledge of the prisoners and this tends to deter prisoners from making an effort· to escape. Recaptures made with the assistance of these bloodhounds has made them an indispcmsable acquisition to our work." 29 - - - - - - - - _ - - - - - - - - - - . . . : . . . - - - flORIDA PRISON~GAL' Perspectives - - - - - - - - Flashback: Florida Prisons Yesteryear by Oscar Hanson Following the article on Lock Up Hotel thai described the current state of affairs for the Department of Corrections, J decided to look into the history of the department. What I found was rather interesting: Florida's tirst prison did not appear until after the Civil War. In 1868, Governor Harrison Reed obtained the U.S. Arsenal property at Chattahoochee near Tallahassee and converted it i.nto a prison; it remained a prison· for almost a decade. That same year, the prison received its first prisoner, Calvin Williams, who had been convicted oT larceny and sentenced to 12 months incarceration. Chattahoochee opened with 14 officers and nine inmates. Six months later the population had swelled to 42 prisoners. Those prisoners shared the same space with the Insane. The first commander of the prison system held the rank of colonel and received $3 per day, a lieutenant earned $2 per day, sergeants $12 per month and a "private of the guard" $10 per month. The state provided. em~loyees with living quarters, rations, clothing and equipment. In 1876, the Florida State Hospital acquired Chattahoochee and patients started making mattresses, giving it the nickname, "the mattress factory." During this period the people elected George Drew as governor to preside over a state heavily in debt from Civil War Reconstruction. Drew determined that prisoners could become an economic asset for the state, and successfully pushed for a prisoner labor lease system. On December I, 1900, twenty-two years after Calvin Williams arrived to serve his sentence, the population of prisoners had grown to 778 divided into 13 labor camps. Seven camps mined phosphate and six manufactured naval products such as turpentine. Prisoners ate bacon, meal, flour, grits, rice, dried beans, peas, syrup, and in the summer, fresh beef onCe a week. In winter they ate fresh pork once a week, a:. well as tish. At each camp the local manager cultivated one to three acres ofgarden vegetables. All cells had water, and i~ates were required to bathe and put on .clean clothes every Sunday morning. . The system began leasing prisoners to private contractors who clothed and cared for them in exchange for their labor. In some cases· the conditions turned harsh. The brutal side of the leasing system led to its downfall. In 1921, Martin Tabert was beaten to death while on the lease program. Tabert was arrested for riding a train without a ticket and because he could not pay the· $25 tine, he was placed in the custody of Leon County Sheriff J.R. Jones. Tabert had wired for the money and while he awaited its arrival, Jones leased him as a laborer to the Putnam Lumber Company where Tabert died. The sheriff returned Tabert's payment unclaimed. The case attracted nationwide attention and set the stage for abolishing the convict lease system.· . Prior to these eve~ts, Florida began building its oldest and largest correctional institution. The new State Prison Farm occupied an 18, OOQ-acre tract. purchased for $5.00 an acre. In 1912, the first bUildings'served as temporary stockades to house intirm inmates who could not be leased to private businesses. In early 1919, the State Prison Farm _ property consisted of 4,000 acres under cultivation extensive pastures, a garment factory, a shoe factory which made 10 pairs of shoes a day, and 40 prison guards who were paid $35 per month and room and board. In 1917 the Legislature created the' State Road Department and State Convict Road Force. Inmates continued to work on roads' in chain gangs. Florida discontinued the convict-leasing program in 1923 and as a result. the number of convicts in prison increased. In 1927 prison industries also expanded, opening a shirt factory and an auto tag plant. The main housing unit (called "The Rock") was l)Uilt in 1928, and the guards there worked 12hour days, in return for $720 yearly plus quarters and meals. During the twenties and t~irties, the State Prison Farm grew rapidly under the direction of Superintendent lS. Blitch. He was recognized by the Legislature as being an outstanding Superintendent because· he reduced expenses ~y 50 percent, even though the prison population had Increased 100 percent. This explosion in numbers now required compliance to a strict regimen. Discipline .included the use of leg-irons, shotgun squads, chain gangs ?nd sweatboxes. Sweatboxes were Small buildings where lIl~ates were placed to stand for hours, even days, often With two of three others. Another common punishment device, called an AmeriCan Collar, pressed a metal thong against the prisoner's neck. Hanging carried out Captial punishment. Prisoners were hanged in the county seats, usually in the y!U'd of the courthouse. Contrary to how it is depicted in the movies hanging ~ a complex procedure. An error in determinin~ the condemned person's weight, or the use of an incorrect length of rope, could result in decapitation. Sometimes the public sold souvenirs and cotton candy at executtons. Many families attended these executions and according to one reporter, the whole thing took on a festival-like quality. However, the Legislature found it inappropriate. The electric chair was seen as a humane alternative to the gallows and in 1922 lawmakers approved its use. One year later, state prisoners, ironically, built Florida's electric chair from oak. Condemned murderer Frank Johnson becl!Jlle the firstman to die by electrocution in 1924 in the execution chamber at Raiford. In the early twenties' approximately 40 prison guards worked at Raiford, each earning $35 per month plus board. The inmate population was 485. By 1932, Raiford's prison population numbered more that 2,000 men and women. There were 85 employees on the payroll, including officials, prison guards, matrons and other employees. Florida expanded its prison system by building Glades Correctional Institution in Belle Glade. That same year Leonard Chapman became Raiford's new warden and he qUickly discovered things weren't as orderly'as they appeared. He served 25 ye8fs at Raiford, imple":lenting a strong philosophy about good health, educatIon, work habits and positive contact with the community. He prohibited the use of the word "convict," encouraging "inmate" instead. He offered prisoners school classes, vocational programs, and even replaced old solid barriers with chain link fences so prisoners would see the world beyond. To be continued.... [Source: 1999-2000 DOC Archival Study) 30--- _ - - - - - - - - - - - - FLORIDA PRISON LEGAL PerSpectives • ------------- . , Florida Prisoners' Legal Aid Organization Inc. I BECOME A MEMBER YES ! I wish to become a member of Florida Prisoners' Legal Aid Organization, Inc. 3.Yoar NfDe and Address (PLEASE PRINT) 1. Please Check '" One: [J Membership Renewal [J New Membership ,DC# ~~ _ Name AgencylLibrarylInstitution 1Org/ 2. Select 0/ Category Address ,SIS FamiIy/AdvocatelIndividual C] c:J 59 Prisoner City Zip State c:J $30 AuomeYs/Profession81s Email Address and lor Phone Number 560 Gov't AgenciesILibrarieslOrgsJetc. [J er Please make aU c:becIcs or money orders payable to: Florida ~ers' Legal Aid Orpnizadon. Inc. Please complete the above form and send it with the indicated mcmbcrsbfp dues or subscription amount to: Floridlz PrbDlUU'S •Legal Aid OrganlztIIIolllnc•• P.O. Box 660-387. ChtdIlOla.; FL 32766. For family membcrsor loved ODeS ofFlorida prisoners who IInl unable to afford the basic ~p dues, any contribution is acceptable for membership. New, unused , US postage stamps are acceptable fiom prisoners for membership dues. Mcmbcrsbfps run one year. -, :_,~,~/SW$~~N\~~;':';:,'"" , :~... .• ,-.. .;.::." =" .":. ~.. :::: . ,.. .' .: \ '. . " Past Perspectives... _"""~""Gi _lJC " '~ , ~" ".:; i iWRW_,3! !" '!Jth l . •.t.t.t"""',.<""',e.--,= 31 , _n"",,, . ~~:,\:\:~:.:(.; ":. ".::. ".' From the 1900 DOC Annual Report: "Punishments are inflicted with a leather stnq); two inches wide and about twenty inches long for disobedie~ce, quarreling,figbting, -using profane or obscene language...usually three to fifteen licks according to the offense." .... , """$ : MClNewsOash On August 1'0, 2003, FPLAO director Linda Hanson sent DOC Secretary James Crosby a formal request for him to terminate the contract with MCI in .light of the recent fraud and . l'8Cketeering charges pending against . the cominunicatioQS giQllt. The letter cIted Article VI, Section A of" the lviCI contract, which allthorizes the termination of the contract at any time. Linda reminded- the DOC Secretary of the multiple instances of overcharging by Mel that resulted in the "payment of" over $2 million dollars in fines and restitution to families and "friends,of-;Plorid8 prisoners. Currently, MCI has -a moriopoly on the prison contract that has prisoners' family and friends in a financial stranglehold.' FPLAO's F.A.I.R. campaign is moving forward in an effort to bring reasonable ra~ back to the families and friends of Florida's ."Jprisoners. -~------------ T~. " .,ll..J'II&i!%$ii_"""':'-&.,0,_n .b iC· ·.!l_ ", _,_,_osoo"""'eo# ,_ _ . . . ; ! t o : , ; ' ~ " _ _ O; ; ~_.,.,~ jil li toi;O·~,·:- - '.__.:_ ~. ,,-+ PRISON LEGAL-Ivc.~~ ';'; SUBMISSION OF MATERIAL TO FPLP Because of the IlIJ8C volume of mail being received. fincmcilll considerations.. and Ihc inability to provide individual legnJ assistance, members should not send copies of legal documents of pendi.ns or potential cases to FPLP without having rust conl4CtCd the stl1tT and receiving directions to send same. Neilhcr FPLP. nor its staff, are responsible for any unsoliciled material sent Members. are requested to <:onbnUC sending neWs information, newspaper clippings (please include name of paper lUtd date). memorandums. photocopies of fmal decisions in unpublished cases, and potential articles for publication. 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