Bill Amendment: FL S0360 | 2016 | Regular Session
NOTE: For additional amemendments please see the Bill Drafting List
Bill Title: Criminal Justice
Status: 2016-03-11 - Died on Calendar [S0360 Detail]
Download: Florida-2016-S0360-Senate_Committee_Amendment_832832.html
Bill Title: Criminal Justice
Status: 2016-03-11 - Died on Calendar [S0360 Detail]
Download: Florida-2016-S0360-Senate_Committee_Amendment_832832.html
Florida Senate - 2016 COMMITTEE AMENDMENT Bill No. CS for SB 360 Ì832832$Î832832 LEGISLATIVE ACTION Senate . House . . . . . ————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————— ————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————— The Committee on Fiscal Policy (Clemens) recommended the following: 1 Senate Amendment (with title amendment) 2 3 Delete everything after the enacting clause 4 and insert: 5 Section 1. Paragraph (b) of subsection (2) of section 6 784.078, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 7 784.078 Battery of facility employee by throwing, tossing, 8 or expelling certain fluids or materials.— 9 (2) 10 (b) “Employee” includes any person who is a commission 11 investigatorparole examinerwith the Florida Commission on 12 Offender Review. 13 Section 2. Paragraph (a) of subsection (1) of section 14 800.09, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 15 800.09 Lewd or lascivious exhibition in the presence of an 16 employee.— 17 (1) As used in this section, the term: 18 (a) “Employee” means any person employed by or performing 19 contractual services for a public or private entity operating a 20 facility or any person employed by or performing contractual 21 services for the corporation operating the prison industry 22 enhancement programs or the correctional work programs under 23 part II of chapter 946. The term also includes any person who is 24 a commission investigatorparole examinerwith the Florida 25 Commission on Offender Review. 26 Section 3. Subsection (4) of section 947.002, Florida 27 Statutes, is amended to read: 28 947.002 Intent.— 29 (4) Commission investigatorsHearing examinersare assigned 30 on the basis of caseload needs as determined by the chair. 31 Section 4. Section 947.02, Florida Statutes, is amended to 32 read: 33 947.02 Florida Commission on Offender Review; members, 34 appointment.— 35 (1)Except as provided in s. 947.021,The members of the 36 Florida Commission on Offender Review shall be appointed by the 37 Governor and Cabinet from a list of eligible applicants 38 submitted by a commissionerparolequalifications committee. The 39 appointments of members of the commission shall be certified to 40 the Senate by the Governor and Cabinet for confirmation, and the 41 membership of the commission shall include representation from 42 minority persons as defined in s. 288.703. 43 (2) A commissionerparolequalifications committee shall 44 consist of five persons who are appointed by the Governor and 45 Cabinet. One member shall be designated as chair by the Governor 46 and Cabinet. The committee shall provide for statewide 47 advertisement and the receiving of applications for any position 48 or positions on the commission and shall devise a plan for the 49 determination of the qualifications of the applicants by 50 investigations and comprehensive evaluations, including, but not 51 limited to, investigation and evaluation of the character, 52 habits, and philosophy of each applicant. Each commissioner 53parolequalifications committee shall exist for 2 years. If 54 additional vacancies on the commission occur during this 2-year 55 period, the committee may advertise and accept additional 56 applications; however, all previously submitted applications 57 shall be considered along with the new applications according to 58 the previously established plan for the evaluation of the 59 qualifications of applicants. 60 (3) Within 90 days before an anticipated vacancy by 61 expiration of term pursuant to s. 947.03 or upon any other 62 vacancy, the Governor and Cabinet shall appoint a commissioner 63parolequalifications committee if one has not been appointed 64 during the previous 2 years. The committee shall consider 65 applications for the commission seat, including the application 66 of an incumbent commissioner if he or she applies, according to 67 subsection (2). The committee shall submit a list of three 68 eligible applicants, which may include the incumbent if the 69 committee so decides, without recommendation, to the Governor 70 and Cabinet for appointment to the commission. In the case of an 71 unexpired term, the appointment must be for the remainder of the 72 unexpired term and until a successor is appointed and qualified. 73 If more than one seat is vacant, the committee shall submit a 74 list of eligible applicants, without recommendation, containing 75 a number of names equal to three times the number of vacant 76 seats; however, the names submitted may not be distinguished by 77 seat, and each submitted applicant shall be considered eligible 78 for each vacancy. 79 (4) Upon receiving a list of eligible persons from the 80 commissionerparolequalifications committee, the Governor and 81 Cabinet may reject the list. If the list is rejected, the 82 committee shall reinitiate the application and examination 83 procedure according to subsection (2). 84 (5) Section 120.525 and chapters 119 and 286 apply to all 85 activities and proceedings of a commissionerparole86 qualifications committee. 87 Section 5. Section 947.021, Florida Statutes, is repealed. 88 Section 6. Section 947.10, Florida Statutes, is amended to 89 read: 90 947.10 Business and political activity upon part of members 91 and full-time employees of commission.—No member of the 92 commission and no full-time employee thereof shall, during her 93 or his service upon or under the commission, engage in any other 94 business or profession or hold any other public office, nor 95 shall she or he serve as the representative of any political 96 party, or any political executive committee or other political 97 governing body thereof, or as an executive officer or employee 98 of any political committee, organization, or association or be 99 engaged on the behalf of any candidate for public office in the 100 solicitation of votes or otherwise.However, this shall not be101deemed to exclude the appointment of the Secretary of102Corrections to the commission under the terms and conditions set103forth in this chapter.104 Section 7. Subsections (1) and (2) of section 947.172, 105 Florida Statutes, are amended to read: 106 947.172 Establishment of presumptive parole release date.— 107 (1) The commission investigatorhearing examinershall 108 conduct an initial interview in accordance with the provisions 109 of s. 947.16. This interview shall include introduction and 110 explanation of the objective parole guidelines as they relate to 111 presumptive and effective parole release dates and an 112 explanation of the institutional conduct record and satisfactory 113 release plan for parole supervision as each relates to parole 114 release. 115 (2) Based on the objective parole guidelines and any other 116 competent evidence relevant to aggravating and mitigating 117 circumstances, the commission investigatorhearing examiner118 shall, within 10 days after the interview, recommend in writing 119 to a panel of no fewer than two commissioners appointed by the 120 chair a presumptive parole release date for the inmate.The121chair shall assign cases to such panels on a random basis,122without regard to the inmate or to the commissioners sitting on123the panel.If the recommended presumptive parole release date 124 falls outside the matrix time ranges as determined by the 125 objective parole guidelines, the commission investigatorhearing126examinershall include with the recommendation a statement in 127 writing as to the reasons for the decision, specifying 128 individual particularities. If a panel fails to reach a decision 129 on a recommended presumptive parole release date, the chair or 130 any other commissioner designated by the chair shall cast the 131 deciding vote. Within 90 days after the date of the initial 132 interview, the inmate shall be notified in writing of the 133 decision as to the inmate’s presumptive parole release date. 134 Section 8. Subsection (1) and paragraph (e) of subsection 135 (4) of section 947.16, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 136 947.16 Eligibility for parole; initial parole interviews; 137 powers and duties of commission.— 138 (1) Every person who has been convicted of a felony or who 139 has been convicted of one or more misdemeanors and whose 140 sentence or cumulative sentences total 12 months or more, who is 141 confined in execution of the judgment of the court, and whose 142 record during confinement or while under supervision is good, 143 shall, unless otherwise provided by law, be eligible for 144 interview for parole consideration of her or his cumulative 145 sentence structure as follows: 146 (a) An inmate who has been sentenced for an indeterminate 147 term or a term of 3 years or less shall have an initial 148 interview conducted by a commission investigatorhearing149examinerwithin 8 months after the initial date of confinement 150 in execution of the judgment. 151 (b) An inmate who has been sentenced for a minimum term in 152 excess of 3 years but of less than 6 years shall have an initial 153 interview conducted by a commission investigatorhearing154examinerwithin 14 months after the initial date of confinement 155 in execution of the judgment. 156 (c) An inmate who has been sentenced for a minimum term of 157 6 or more years but other than for a life term shall have an 158 initial interview conducted by a commission investigatorhearing159examinerwithin 24 months after the initial date of confinement 160 in execution of the judgment. 161 (d) An inmate who has been sentenced for a term of life 162 shall have an initial interview conducted by a commission 163 investigatorhearing examinerwithin 5 years after the initial 164 date of confinement in execution of the judgment. 165 (e) An inmate who has been convicted and sentenced under 166 ss. 958.011-958.15, or any other inmate who has been determined 167 by the department to be a youthful offender, shall be 168 interviewed by a commission investigatorparole examinerwithin 169 8 months after the initial date of confinement in execution of 170 the judgment. 171 (4) A person who has become eligible for an initial parole 172 interview and who may, according to the objective parole 173 guidelines of the commission, be granted parole shall be placed 174 on parole in accordance with the provisions of this law; except 175 that, in any case of a person convicted of murder, robbery, 176 burglary of a dwelling or burglary of a structure or conveyance 177 in which a human being is present, aggravated assault, 178 aggravated battery, kidnapping, sexual battery or attempted 179 sexual battery, incest or attempted incest, an unnatural and 180 lascivious act or an attempted unnatural and lascivious act, 181 lewd and lascivious behavior, assault or aggravated assault when 182 a sexual act is completed or attempted, battery or aggravated 183 battery when a sexual act is completed or attempted, arson, or 184 any felony involving the use of a firearm or other deadly weapon 185 or the use of intentional violence, at the time of sentencing 186 the judge may enter an order retaining jurisdiction over the 187 offender for review of a commission release order. This 188 jurisdiction of the trial court judge is limited to the first 189 one-third of the maximum sentence imposed. When any person is 190 convicted of two or more felonies and concurrent sentences are 191 imposed, then the jurisdiction of the trial court judge as 192 provided herein applies to the first one-third of the maximum 193 sentence imposed for the highest felony of which the person was 194 convicted. When any person is convicted of two or more felonies 195 and consecutive sentences are imposed, then the jurisdiction of 196 the trial court judge as provided herein applies to one-third of 197 the total consecutive sentences imposed. 198 (e) Upon receipt of notice of intent to retain jurisdiction 199 from the original sentencing judge or her or his replacement, 200 the commission shall, within 10 days, forward to the court its 201 release order, the findings of fact, the commission 202 investigator’sparole hearing examiner’sreport and 203 recommendation, and all supporting information upon which its 204 release order was based. 205 Section 9. Subsections (1), (2), and (4) of section 206 947.174, Florida Statutes, are amended to read: 207 947.174 Subsequent interviews.— 208 (1)(a) For any inmate, except an inmate convicted of an 209 offense enumerated in paragraph (b), whose presumptive parole 210 release date falls more than 2 years after the date of the 211 initial interview, a commission investigatorhearing examiner212 shall schedule an interview for review of the presumptive parole 213 release date. Such interview shall take place within 2 years 214 after the initial interview and every 2 years thereafter. 215 (b) For any inmate convicted of murder or attempted murder; 216 sexual battery or attempted sexual battery; kidnapping or 217 attempted kidnapping; or robbery, burglary of a dwelling, 218 burglary of a structure or conveyance, or breaking and entering, 219 or the attempt thereof of any of these crimes, in which a human 220 being is present and a sexual act is attempted or completed, or 221 any inmate who has been sentenced to a 25-year minimum mandatory 222 sentence previously provided in s. 775.082, and whose 223 presumptive parole release date is more than 7 years after the 224 date of the initial interview, a commission investigatorhearing225examinershall schedule an interview for review of the 226 presumptive parole release date. The interview shall take place 227 once within 7 years after the initial interview and once every 7 228 years thereafter if the commission finds that it is not 229 reasonable to expect that parole will be granted at a hearing 230 during the following years and states the bases for the finding 231 in writing. For an inmate who is within 7 years of his or her 232 tentative release date, the commission may establish an 233 interview date before the 7-year schedule. 234 (c) Such interviews shall be limited to determining whether 235 or not information has been gathered which might affect the 236 presumptive parole release date. The provisions of this 237 subsection shall not apply to an inmate serving a concurrent 238 sentence in another jurisdiction pursuant to s. 921.16(2). 239 (2) The commission, for good cause, may at any time request 240 that a commission investigatorhearing examinerconduct a 241 subsequent hearing according to the procedures outlined in this 242 section. Such request shall specify in writing the reasons for 243 such review. 244 (4) The department or a commission investigatorhearing245examinermay recommend that an inmate be placed in a work 246 release program prior to the last 18 months of her or his 247 confinement before the presumptive parole release date. If the 248 commission does not deny the recommendation within 30 days of 249 the receipt of the recommendation, the inmate may be placed in 250 such a program, and the department shall advise the commission 251 of the fact prior to such placement. 252 Section 10. Subsection (1) of section 947.1745, Florida 253 Statutes, is amended to read: 254 947.1745 Establishment of effective parole release date.—If 255 the inmate’s institutional conduct has been satisfactory, the 256 presumptive parole release date shall become the effective 257 parole release date as follows: 258 (1) Within 90 days before the presumptive parole release 259 date, a commission investigatorhearing examinershall conduct a 260 final interview with the inmate in order to establish an 261 effective parole release date and parole release plan. If it is 262 determined that the inmate’s institutional conduct has been 263 unsatisfactory, a statement to this effect shall be made in 264 writing with particularity and shall be forwarded to a panel of 265 no fewer than two commissioners appointed by the chair. 266 Section 11. Subsection (1) of section 947.22, Florida 267 Statutes, is amended to read: 268 947.22 Authority to arrest parole violators with or without 269 warrant.— 270 (1) If a member of the commission or a duly authorized 271 representative of the commission has reasonable grounds to 272 believe that a parolee has violated the terms and conditions of 273 her or his parole in a material respect, such member or 274 representative may issue a warrant for the arrest of such 275 parolee. The warrant shall be returnable before a member of the 276 commission or a duly authorized representative of the 277 commission. The commission, a commissioner, or a commission 278 investigatorparole examinerwith approval of the commission 279paroleexaminer supervisor,may release the parolee on bail or 280 her or his own recognizance, conditioned upon her or his 281 appearance at any hearings noticed by the commission. If not 282 released on bail or her or his own recognizance, the parolee 283 shall be committed to jail pending hearings pursuant to s. 284 947.23. The commission, at its election, may have the hearing 285 conducted by one or more commissioners or by a duly authorized 286 representative of the commission. Any parole and probation 287 officer, any officer authorized to serve criminal process, or 288 any peace officer of this state is authorized to execute the 289 warrant. 290 Section 12. Effective July 1, 2016, paragraph (h) of 291 subsection (1) of section 960.001, Florida Statutes, is amended 292 to read: 293 960.001 Guidelines for fair treatment of victims and 294 witnesses in the criminal justice and juvenile justice systems.— 295 (1) The Department of Legal Affairs, the state attorneys, 296 the Department of Corrections, the Department of Juvenile 297 Justice, the Florida Commission on Offender Review, the State 298 Courts Administrator and circuit court administrators, the 299 Department of Law Enforcement, and every sheriff’s department, 300 police department, or other law enforcement agency as defined in 301 s. 943.10(4) shall develop and implement guidelines for the use 302 of their respective agencies, which guidelines are consistent 303 with the purposes of this act and s. 16(b), Art. I of the State 304 Constitution and are designed to implement s. 16(b), Art. I of 305 the State Constitution and to achieve the following objectives: 306 (h) Return of property to victim.— 307 1. A law enforcement agencyagenciesand the state attorney 308 shall promptly return a victim’s property held for evidentiary 309 purposes unless there is a compelling law enforcement reason for 310 retaining it. The trial or juvenile court exercising 311 jurisdiction over the criminal or juvenile proceeding may enter 312 appropriate orders to implement this subsection, including 313 allowing photographs of the victim’s property to be used as 314 evidence at the criminal trial or the juvenile proceeding in 315 place of the victim’s property if no related substantial 316 evidentiary issuerelated theretois in dispute. 317 2. A law enforcement agency shall give a victim 318 instructions that outline the process for a replevin action and 319 the procedures specified in s. 539.001(15) for obtaining 320 possession of the victim’s property located in a pawnshop. If a 321 law enforcement agency locates the property in the possession of 322 a pawnbroker, the law enforcement agency shall promptly make 323 reasonable efforts to provide the victim with the name and 324 location of the pawnshop. 325 Section 13. Subsection (2) of section 20.32, Florida 326 Statutes, is amended to read: 327 20.32 Florida Commission on Offender Review.— 328 (2) All powers, duties, and functions relating to the 329 appointment of the Florida Commission on Offender Review as 330 provided in s. 947.02or s. 947.021shall be exercised and 331 performed by the Governor and Cabinet.Except as provided in s.332947.021,Each appointment shall be made from among the first 333 three eligible persons on the list of the persons eligible for 334 said position. 335 Section 14. Except as otherwise expressly provided in this 336 act, this act shall take effect upon becoming a law. 337 338 ================= T I T L E A M E N D M E N T ================ 339 And the title is amended as follows: 340 Delete everything before the enacting clause 341 and insert: 342 A bill to be entitled 343 An act relating to criminal justice; amending ss. 344 784.078, 800.09, 947.002, and 947.02, F.S.; conforming 345 provisions to changes made by chapter 2014-191, Laws 346 of Florida; repealing s. 947.021, F.S., relating to 347 expedited appointments to the Florida Commission on 348 Offender Review; amending s. 947.10, F.S.; conforming 349 provisions to changes made by chapter 2014-191, Laws 350 of Florida; deleting an applicability provision; 351 amending s. 947.172, F.S.; conforming provisions to 352 changes made by chapter 2014-191, Laws of Florida; 353 deleting a provision requiring the assigning of cases 354 on a random basis; amending ss. 947.16, 947.174, 355 947.1745, and 947.22, F.S.; conforming provisions to 356 changes made by chapter 2014-191, Laws of Florida; 357 amending s. 960.001, F.S.; requiring a law enforcement 358 agency to provide specified instructions to a victim; 359 requiring a law enforcement agency to promptly make 360 reasonable efforts to provide the victim with 361 specified information under certain circumstances; 362 amending s. 20.32, F.S.; conforming provisions to 363 changes made by the act; providing effective dates.