1 | A bill to be entitled |
2 | An act relating to custodial interrogations in cases |
3 | involving capital felonies; creating s. 901.241, F.S.; |
4 | providing definitions; describing circumstances in which |
5 | an oral, written, or sign language statement made by a |
6 | capital interrogee during a custodial interrogation is |
7 | presumed inadmissible as evidence against such person; |
8 | describing circumstances in which the prosecution may |
9 | rebut such presumption; describing circumstances in which |
10 | law enforcement officers may have good cause not to |
11 | electronically record all or part of an interrogation; |
12 | providing for the admissibility of certain statements of a |
13 | capital interrogee when made in certain proceedings or |
14 | when obtained by federal officers or officers from other |
15 | states; providing for the preservation of electronic |
16 | recordings; providing for admissibility of certain |
17 | statements of a capital interrogee; providing a finding of |
18 | important state interest; providing application; providing |
19 | an effective date. |
20 |
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21 | Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: |
22 |
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23 | Section 1. Section 901.241, Florida Statutes, is created |
24 | to read: |
25 | 901.241 Custodial interrogations in cases involving |
26 | capital felonies.-- |
27 | (1) This section shall apply to custodial interrogations |
28 | in which the capital interrogee is suspected of involvement in a |
29 | capital felony. |
30 | (2) As used in this section, the term: |
31 | (a) "Capital interrogee" means a person who, at the time |
32 | of the interrogation and concerning any topic of the |
33 | interrogation, is: |
34 | 1. Charged with a capital felony; or |
35 | 2. Suspected by those conducting the interrogation or |
36 | investigating the capital felony of involvement in the capital |
37 | felony. |
38 | (b) "Custodial interrogation" means questioning of a |
39 | capital interrogee in circumstances in which a reasonable person |
40 | placed in the same position would believe that his or her |
41 | freedom of action was curtailed to a degree associated with |
42 | actual arrest. |
43 | (c) "Electronic recording" means a true, complete, and |
44 | accurate reproduction of a custodial interrogation. An |
45 | electronic recording may be created by motion picture, |
46 | videotape, audiotape, or digital or other media. |
47 | (d) "Involvement" means participation in a crime as a |
48 | principal or an accessory. |
49 | (e) "Interrogation facility" means a law enforcement |
50 | facility, correctional facility, community correctional center, |
51 | detention facility, law enforcement vehicle, courthouse, or |
52 | other secure environment. |
53 | (3) An oral, written, or sign language statement made by a |
54 | capital interrogee during a custodial interrogation shall be |
55 | presumed to be inadmissible as evidence against such person in a |
56 | criminal proceeding unless: |
57 | (a) The interrogation is reproduced in its entirety by |
58 | means of an electronic recording. |
59 | (b) Prior to the statement, but during the electronic |
60 | recording, the capital interrogee is given all constitutionally |
61 | required warnings and the capital interrogee knowingly, |
62 | intelligently, and voluntarily waives any rights set out in the |
63 | warnings that would otherwise preclude the admission of the |
64 | statement. |
65 | (c) The electronic recording device was capable of making |
66 | a true, complete, and accurate recording of the interrogation, |
67 | the operator of such device was competent, and the electronic |
68 | recording has not been altered. |
69 | (d) All voices that are material to the custodial |
70 | interrogation are identified on the electronic recording. |
71 | (e) During discovery pursuant to Rule 3.220, Florida Rules |
72 | of Criminal Procedure, but in no circumstances later than the |
73 | 20th day before the date of the proceeding in which the |
74 | prosecution intends to offer the statement, the attorney |
75 | representing a criminal defendant is provided with true, |
76 | complete, and accurate copies of all electronic recordings of |
77 | the defendant made pursuant to this section. |
78 | (4)(a) In the absence of a true, complete, and accurate |
79 | electronic recording, the prosecution may rebut a presumption of |
80 | inadmissibility 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 |
83 | electronically record all or part of the interrogation. |
84 | (b) For purposes of paragraph (a), "good cause" includes, |
85 | but is not limited to, the following: |
86 | 1. The interrogation occurred in a location other than an |
87 | interrogation facility under exigent circumstances where the |
88 | requisite recording equipment was not readily available, and |
89 | there was no reasonable opportunity to move the capital |
90 | interrogee to an interrogation facility or to another location |
91 | at which the requisite recording equipment was readily |
92 | available; |
93 | 2. The capital interrogee refused to have the |
94 | interrogation electronically recorded and such refusal was |
95 | electronically recorded; |
96 | 3. The failure to electronically record an entire |
97 | interrogation was the result of equipment failure and obtaining |
98 | replacement equipment was not feasible; or |
99 | 4. The statement of the capital interrogee was obtained in |
100 | the course of electronic eavesdropping that was being conducted |
101 | pursuant to a properly obtained and issued warrant or that |
102 | required no warrant. |
103 | (5) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, a |
104 | written, oral, or sign language statement of the capital |
105 | interrogee made as a result of a custodial interrogation is |
106 | admissible in a criminal proceeding against the capital |
107 | interrogee in this state if: |
108 | (a) The statement was obtained in another state by |
109 | investigative personnel of such state, acting independently of |
110 | law enforcement personnel of this state, in compliance with the |
111 | laws of such state; or |
112 | (b) The statement was obtained by a federal officer in |
113 | this state or another state during a lawful federal |
114 | investigation and was obtained in compliance with the laws of |
115 | the United States. |
116 | (6) Every electronic recording of a custodial |
117 | interrogation made pursuant to this section must be preserved |
118 | until the capital interogee's conviction for any offense |
119 | relating to the interrogation is final and all direct appeals |
120 | and collateral challenges are exhausted, the prosecution of such |
121 | offenses is barred by law, or the state irrevocably waives in |
122 | writing any future prosecution of the capital interogee for any |
123 | offense relating to the interrogation. |
124 | (7) This section does not preclude the admission into |
125 | evidence of a statement made by the capital interrogee: |
126 | (a) At his or her trial or other hearing held in open |
127 | court; |
128 | (b) Before a grand jury; |
129 | (c) That is the res gestae of the arrest or the offense; |
130 | or |
131 | (d) That does not arise from a custodial interrogation, as |
132 | defined by this section. |
133 | Section 2. The Legislature finds that the reputations of |
134 | countless hard-working law enforcement officers are needlessly |
135 | attacked by criminal suspects who falsely claim the officers |
136 | have violated the suspects' constitutional rights, that limited |
137 | trial court resources are squandered in hearings on motions |
138 | seeking to suppress statements made by criminal suspects who are |
139 | given the opportunity to make such claims because no recordings |
140 | of their interrogations exist, and further that judicial |
141 | resources are squandered when criminal suspects, after having |
142 | been convicted of their crimes, file frivolous and unnecessary |
143 | appeals. This process costs the taxpayers of this state untold |
144 | dollars each year, dollars that could be better spent enhancing |
145 | the administration of the criminal justice system. Low-cost |
146 | technology is now available in every jurisdiction to record each |
147 | and every custodial interrogation of a criminal suspect, |
148 | eliminating this gross waste of resources and enhancing the |
149 | reliability and reputation of law enforcement. Therefore, the |
150 | Legislature determines and declares that this act fulfills an |
151 | important state interest. |
152 | Section 3. This act shall take effect July 1, 2005, and |
153 | shall apply to interrogations taking place on or after that |
154 | date. |