HB 1169

1
A bill to be entitled
2An act relating to custodial interrogations in cases
3involving capital felonies; creating s. 901.241, F.S.;
4providing definitions; describing circumstances in which
5an oral, written, or sign language statement made by a
6capital interrogee during a custodial interrogation is
7presumed inadmissible as evidence against such person;
8describing circumstances in which the prosecution may
9rebut such presumption; describing circumstances in which
10law enforcement officers may have good cause not to
11electronically record all or part of an interrogation;
12providing for the admissibility of certain statements of a
13capital interrogee when made in certain proceedings or
14when obtained by federal officers or officers from other
15states; providing for the preservation of electronic
16recordings; providing for admissibility of certain
17statements of a capital interrogee; providing a finding of
18important state interest; providing application; providing
19an effective date.
20
21Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
22
23     Section 1.  Section 901.241, Florida Statutes, is created
24to read:
25     901.241  Custodial interrogations in cases involving
26capital felonies.--
27     (1)  This section shall apply to custodial interrogations
28in which the capital interrogee is suspected of involvement in a
29capital felony.
30     (2)  As used in this section, the term:
31     (a)  "Capital interrogee" means a person who, at the time
32of the interrogation and concerning any topic of the
33interrogation, is:
34     1.  Charged with a capital felony; or
35     2.  Suspected by those conducting the interrogation or
36investigating the capital felony of involvement in the capital
37felony.
38     (b)  "Custodial interrogation" means questioning of a
39capital interrogee in circumstances in which a reasonable person
40placed in the same position would believe that his or her
41freedom of action was curtailed to a degree associated with
42actual arrest.
43     (c)  "Electronic recording" means a true, complete, and
44accurate reproduction of a custodial interrogation. An
45electronic recording may be created by motion picture,
46videotape, audiotape, or digital or other media.
47     (d)  "Involvement" means participation in a crime as a
48principal or an accessory.
49     (e)  "Interrogation facility" means a law enforcement
50facility, correctional facility, community correctional center,
51detention facility, law enforcement vehicle, courthouse, or
52other secure environment.
53     (3)  An oral, written, or sign language statement made by a
54capital interrogee during a custodial interrogation shall be
55presumed to be inadmissible as evidence against such person in a
56criminal proceeding unless:
57     (a)  The interrogation is reproduced in its entirety by
58means of an electronic recording.
59     (b)  Prior to the statement, but during the electronic
60recording, the capital interrogee is given all constitutionally
61 required warnings and the capital interrogee knowingly,
62intelligently, and voluntarily waives any rights set out in the
63warnings that would otherwise preclude the admission of the
64statement.
65     (c)  The electronic recording device was capable of making
66a true, complete, and accurate recording of the interrogation,
67the operator of such device was competent, and the electronic
68recording has not been altered.
69     (d)  All voices that are material to the custodial
70interrogation are identified on the electronic recording.
71     (e)  During discovery pursuant to Rule 3.220, Florida Rules
72of Criminal Procedure, but in no circumstances later than the
7320th day before the date of the proceeding in which the
74prosecution intends to offer the statement, the attorney
75representing a criminal defendant is provided with true,
76complete, and accurate copies of all electronic recordings of
77the defendant made pursuant to this section.
78     (4)(a)  In the absence of a true, complete, and accurate
79electronic recording, the prosecution may rebut a presumption of
80inadmissibility through clear and convincing evidence that:
81     1.  The statement was both voluntary and reliable.
82     2.  Law enforcement officers had good cause not to
83electronically record all or part of the interrogation.
84     (b)  For purposes of paragraph (a), "good cause" includes,
85but is not limited to, the following:
86     1.  The interrogation occurred in a location other than an
87interrogation facility under exigent circumstances where the
88requisite recording equipment was not readily available, and
89there was no reasonable opportunity to move the capital
90interrogee to an interrogation facility or to another location
91at which the requisite recording equipment was readily
92available;
93     2.  The capital interrogee refused to have the
94interrogation electronically recorded and such refusal was
95electronically recorded;
96     3.  The failure to electronically record an entire
97interrogation was the result of equipment failure and obtaining
98replacement equipment was not feasible; or
99     4.  The statement of the capital interrogee was obtained in
100the course of electronic eavesdropping that was being conducted
101pursuant to a properly obtained and issued warrant or that
102required no warrant.
103     (5)  Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, a
104written, oral, or sign language statement of the capital
105interrogee made as a result of a custodial interrogation is
106admissible in a criminal proceeding against the capital
107interrogee in this state if:
108     (a)  The statement was obtained in another state by
109investigative personnel of such state, acting independently of
110law enforcement personnel of this state, in compliance with the
111laws of such state; or
112     (b)  The statement was obtained by a federal officer in
113this state or another state during a lawful federal
114investigation and was obtained in compliance with the laws of
115the United States.
116     (6)  Every electronic recording of a custodial
117interrogation made pursuant to this section must be preserved
118until the capital interogee's conviction for any offense
119relating to the interrogation is final and all direct appeals
120and collateral challenges are exhausted, the prosecution of such
121offenses is barred by law, or the state irrevocably waives in
122writing any future prosecution of the capital interogee for any
123offense relating to the interrogation.
124     (7)  This section does not preclude the admission into
125evidence of a statement made by the capital interrogee:
126     (a)  At his or her trial or other hearing held in open
127court;
128     (b)  Before a grand jury;
129     (c)  That is the res gestae of the arrest or the offense;
130or
131     (d)  That does not arise from a custodial interrogation, as
132defined by this section.
133     Section 2.  The Legislature finds that the reputations of
134countless hard-working law enforcement officers are needlessly
135attacked by criminal suspects who falsely claim the officers
136have violated the suspects' constitutional rights, that limited
137trial court resources are squandered in hearings on motions
138seeking to suppress statements made by criminal suspects who are
139given the opportunity to make such claims because no recordings
140of their interrogations exist, and further that judicial
141resources are squandered when criminal suspects, after having
142been convicted of their crimes, file frivolous and unnecessary
143appeals. This process costs the taxpayers of this state untold
144dollars each year, dollars that could be better spent enhancing
145the administration of the criminal justice system. Low-cost
146technology is now available in every jurisdiction to record each
147and every custodial interrogation of a criminal suspect,
148eliminating this gross waste of resources and enhancing the
149reliability and reputation of law enforcement. Therefore, the
150Legislature determines and declares that this act fulfills an
151important state interest.
152     Section 3.  This act shall take effect July 1, 2005, and
153shall apply to interrogations taking place on or after that
154date.


CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions.