Garvin Law Firm Blog Posts Tagged ‘Miami-Dade’

Are Drug Charges in Florida Really Unconstitutional?

Monday, October 17th, 2011

Cases throughout Florida may end up coming unraveled if judges take note of what courts in Miami and Manatee County have done recently with drug cases that have been ruled unconstitutional, the Sarasota Herald-Tribune reports.

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Cases of drug possession and drug sales may be dropped after Judge Mary Scriven, of the U.S. Middle District of Florida, ruled that Florida’s drug possession statute is unconstitutional because it lacks the element of intent — opponents argue that violates due process because it puts the legal burden on the defendant. Three circuit court judges have now asked the Florida Supreme Court to address the constitutionality question of Florida Statutes Section 893.13.

A Fort Lauderdale criminal defense attorney who is familiar with recent case law can often use evolving law to a client’s advantage. These precedent setting cases typically start at the trial-court level when a defendant and experienced lawyer see a legal issue that permits them to fight the charges.

In this case, the federal judge used a three-part test from the U.S. Supreme Court to analyze the statute: Whether the penalty imposed was slight, whether conviction resulted in substantial stigma, and whether the law regulates substantially dangerous or deleterious conduct. Clearly, a conviction of drug possession or drug trafficking fails this test.

The concept is simple: As the law stands, a UPS driver or U.S. Postal Service mail carrier could technically be charged with possession of prescription drugs if they are unknowingly delivering medicine to someone who doesn’t have a prescription. Obviously, that isn’t the intent of the law.

Thousands of drug cases swing in the balance as judges face the unconstitutionality of the law that currently guides them. Miami-Dade Circuit Judge Milton Hirsch has already cited the ruling in declaring the state law unconstitutional and dismissing 39 drug possession cases. In Manatee County, a judge recently dismissed charges against 42 defendants.

The Manatee judge wrote that there are many examples of a person being charged with possession of drugs, such as a roommate who has no knowledge that someone else has illegal drugs in the house. Lawmakers eliminated the intent part of the law in 2002.

Judges in other areas of the state are expected to take up the issue in the coming weeks as knowledgeable defense lawyers in Fort Lauderdale, Fort Myers use the ruling in the defense of clients facing drug charges in Florida. Meanwhile, the 2nd district court of appeal in Lakeland, Florida has sent a certified question to the Florida Supreme Court to ask the Court get involved and rule on the issue.

If you are in need of a defense lawyer, feel free to call our office to address any concerns you may have at 954.524.2424 in Fort Lauderdale or our Fort Myers office at 239.277.0005. The Garvin Law Firm has two locations to best serve the needs out clients throughout South and Southwest Florida.

Supreme Court Rules No Life Sentences for Florida Juveniles

Monday, November 1st, 2010

In May, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that juveniles who commit crimes in which no one is killed can’t be sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

In the 6-3 majority opinion, Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote that the Eighth Amendment, which bans cruel and unusual punishment, forbids such sentences. The state must give youths “some meaningful opportunity to obtain release based on demonstrated maturity and rehabilitation,” Justice Kennedy wrote.

Fort Lauderdale Florida Juvenile Crime LawyerThe case, Graham v. Florida, involved Terrance Graham, who in 2003 robbed a Jacksonville restaurant at age 16 with an accomplice. Sentenced to probation, Graham was arrested a year later for a home invasion robbery and sentenced in 2005 to life in prison for violating probation. The case was argued before the high court in November 2009.

According to California Sen. Leland Yee, also trained as a child psychologist: “The high court has consistently recognized that children have a greater capacity for rehabilitation than adults. The neuroscience is clear; brain maturation continues well through adolescence and thus impulse control, planning, and critical thinking skills are still not yet fully developed.”

In 2005, the U.S. Supreme Court barred death sentences for crimes committed by juveniles under the age of 18.

Because of the ruling, 23 juvenile offenders in Miami-Dade and Broward counties alone must now be resentenced, and more than 100 statewide — the most in the nation.

This leaves Florida in a dilemma: it has no parole system. It was eliminated in 1983, on the reasoning that too many former inmates were committing serious crimes after being released early. Now, the state reviews only cases before 1983.

State prosecutors and legislators are scrambling for ways to meet the new court mandate, while preventing violent offenders from being released.

Florida Rep. Mike Weinstein, R-Jacksonville, says he plans to introduce a bill next year to create a parole system for violent juvenile offenders, who would be eligible after 25 years in prison. They would get a hearing every seven years, providing they have “demonstrated maturity and reform,” he says.

The Florida Prosecuting Attorneys Association (FPAA) has petitioned the state’s Executive Clemency Board to commute the sentences in question to life with the possibility of parole, with each case reviewed after 20 years. But Gov. Charlie Crist, in the middle of a tough U.S. Senate election campaign, is opposed, fearing offenders “not posing an imminent threat to Floridians, will receive parole and be released sooner, returning to our cities and streets,” spokesman Sterling Ivey recently told The Miami Herald.

But that leaves the issue unsolved, and because of the court decision, inaction is not an option.

For the time being, it’s left up to trial judges to decide how to resentence each defendant. FPAA president Bill Cervone, of Gainesville, says he’s concerned that will lead to “a mish-mash of results all over the state.”

Nancy Daniels, Leon County Public Defender and president of the Florida Public Defender Association. says, “There is a lot of fear right now. What if a judge just says, ‘OK, they’re not going to get a life sentence,’ but gives a 60-year sentence? That’s the functional equivalent of a life sentence.”

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