The
Brechner Report
Volume 22, Number 4
April 1998
A monthly report:
- Michele D. Bush, Editor
- Jackie Thomas, Production Coordinator
- Sarah Rabin, Production Assistant
- Stacey Silver, Production Assistant
- Bill F. Chamberlin, Ph.D., Director
- Sandra F. Chance, J.D., Asst. Director
Brechner Center for Freedom of Information
3208 Weimer Hall
College of Journalism and Communications
University of Florida, Gainesville, 32611
ACCESS MEETINGS
State
attorney will file no charges for "town business" lunches
City of Boca
Raton settles with paper out of court
City interviews twice to
avoid violation
AGO
determines advisory boards should be open to public
FIRST AMENDMENT
Nine
students jailed, not charged, under state hate crimes law
REPORTER'S PRIVILEGE
Appeals
court: Subpoena stands, reporter required to testify
Judge
quashes reporters subpoena and cautions excessive use
COURTS
Jurors
identities shielded to protect from harassment
Judge rules
TV station must release tourists video
Executed
search warrants can be exempt from disclosure
Lawsuit
against school district administrators dismissed
ACCESS RECORDS
Judge orders child abuse
records released
OBSCENITY
Library board votes to
limit Internet access
Jury rules
mans T-shirt not illegally obscene
THE BACK PAGE
"Chicken
soup" laws undermine the public trust
State attorney will file no charges for "town business" lunches
PALM BEACH The Palm Beach County State Attorneys Office
dropped charges against Highland Beach Mayor Arlin G. Voress, who was accused of violating
Floridas Open Meetings Law by meeting with county commissioners for lunch to discuss
"town business."
Voress, who charged the meals to the town credit card and wrote on the
receipts that the discussion focused on town business, said he was discussing the aspects
of a proposed water contract.
The state Open Meetings Law allows exemptions for
"fact-finding" meetings. Prosecutors dropped the charges against Voress because
they could not prove he was doing anything more than fact finding. (2/10/98)
City
of Boca Raton settles with paper out of court
BOCA RATON The city of Boca Raton agreed to pay The Palm Beach
Post $27, 836.45 to settle an open meetings lawsuit out of court.
The Post sued the city in July 1997, contending that the
citys policy of settling claims between $10,000 and $50,000 is illegal. The city
changed its policy in January 1998. It now requires that all settlements of $5,000 or more
go to a public hearing and require a vote.
The settlement the city agreed to pay the Post is for half of the
papers legal fees. The city used in-house attorneys, and therefore it did not incur
additional legal fees. (2/11/98)
City
interviews twice to avoid violation
DANIA City Commissioners reinterviewed candidates for the city
attorney position because of possible violations to Floridas Open Meetings Law.
Candidates for the position complained to the vice mayor that they were
required to leave the room for each attorneys interview, but Interim City Attorney
Tim Ryan was allowed to stay. Ryan was also interviewing for the position.
After discussing the issue with independent counsel, the city
commissioners decided that each of the seven attorneys vying for the position be given the
chance to interview again with each attorney allowed to stay in the room for the
other presentations. (2/1/98)
AGO determines advisory boards should be open to public
TITUSVILLE Community advisory committees established to encourage
citizen involvement are subject to state Open Records and Public Meetings laws, according
to a recent opinion from Floridas Attorney General Bob Butterworth.
The city of Titusville considered establishing a community advisory
committee made up of residents appointed by city council. The committee would make
recommendations for city improvements to the council based on input from other city
residents.
Butterworth determined that such a committee would be subject to the
requirements of the Open Records and Public Meetings laws because Florida courts have held
that advisory boards that make recommendations to a public agency and possess no authority
to bind the agency should make their meetings accessible to the public. The entire
decision-making process must be available for public access, Butterworth wrote in AGO
98-13.
However, citizen groups that meet to discuss common concerns and develop
issues to be presented to another committee for consideration are not open to the public
because they are not governmental boards or commissions as defined by law, Butterworth
wrote. (2/16/98)
Nine
students jailed, not charged, under state hate crimes law
MIAMI Nine high school students were arrested and jailed under Floridas
hate crime law, but they were never charged. The state attorney in Miami decided not to
charge the students because she said the statute was probably unconstitutional and
unenforceable.
The students, five girls and four boys aged 16 to 18, were arrested for publishing a
20-page booklet depicting rape and assault on people of color. They spent a night in the
Miami-Dade county jail, and all nine were suspended from school for 10 days.
State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle released a statement supporting the arrests,
but explaining that she dropped the charges against the students because recent Supreme
Court decisions interpret similar statutes to violate rights guaranteed by the First
Amendment.
Floridas hate crime law is a misdemeanor that forbids the anonymous publication
of material containing evidence of prejudice based on race, color, ancestry, ethnicity,
religion, sexual orientation or national origin. (2/28/98)
Appeals
court: Subpoena stands, reporter required to testify
TALLAHASSEE The First District Court of Appeal denied a motion to quash a
subpoena requiring a reporter to testify about information from a nonconfidential source.
The appellate court affirmed a lower court ruling, which held that Mike Bianchi, a
reporter for the Florida Times-Union, must testify because Florida law does not
recognize a privilege for a reporters nonconfidential sources. The information
sought from Bianchi came from a nonconfidential source, for which no qualified privilege
exists.
Attorneys for Bianchi argued that their client should not have to testify because under
the First Amendment, Bianchi was entitled to a qualified privilege. (1/30/98)
Judge
quashes reporters subpoena and cautions excessive use
FORT LAUDERDALE Judge John Miller, 17th Judicial Circuit, quashed a
reporters subpoena because, he said, reporters need some degree of protection from
the "annoyance and harassment" of subpoenas from parties in civil suits.
Judge Millers order quashed a subpoena from Coastline Business Corporation to Sun-Sentinel
sports reporter Jason Cole. The judge said he did not order Cole to testify because his
testimony would have been irrelevant to the suit.
Judge Miller cautioned that excessive subpoenas could harm the process of
newsgathering, which is essential to the dissemination of public information. Using
excessive subpoenas in private litigation can have a chilling effect on the press, Miller
wrote.
The Florida Supreme Court is considering a case that would limit the reporters
privilege to situations involving confidential sources. (1/12/98)
Jurors
identities shielded to protect from harassment
MIAMI Judge Marc Schumacher, 11th Judicial Circuit, ordered the identities of
potential jurors in a high-profile murder case to be kept private to protect them from
possible community pressure, reprisals or harassment.
Defense attorneys requested the move in the wake of intense publicity about Juan Carlos
Chavez, 30, a farm worker accused of kidnapping, raping and murdering a nine-year-old boy
in September 1995. Schumaker agreed with the defense attorneys request to keep
private jurors identifying information, which includes names, addresses, phone
numbers and names of spouses. He also prohibited television cameras and still
photographers from showing potential jurors faces. (1/16/98)
Judge rules
TV station must release tourists video
FORT LAUDERDALE An appeals judge upheld a lower courts ruling that a Miami
television station must release to authorities unbroadcast footage the station obtained
from confidential sources.
WPLG-TV received the tape from two tourists from Poland. The vacation tape showed an
altercation between two Fort Lauderdale police officers and a man that they were
arresting. The tourists gave the tape to the television station on the condition that they
remained unidentified.
The television station resisted a subpoena for the tape, arguing that the footage would
be used to identify the sources. Judge Mark Polen, 4th District Court of Appeal, agreed
with the lower courts determination that the state proved the footage was relevant
and crucial to its investigation into the altercation, and that it had exhausted all
alternative sources for the information. (1/14/98)
Executed
search warrants can be exempt from disclosure
JACKSONVILLE Executed search warrants can be exempt from public disclosure,
according to an appeals court ruling.
The First District Court of Appeal upheld a lower court ruling that determined that
executed search warrants can be exempt from public disclosure because they can constitute
active criminal investigative material as defined by Floridas Public Records Law.
In Florida Publishing Company v. State of Florida, the Florida Times-Union
appealed the lower courts decision, arguing that rule 2.051 of the Florida Rules of
Judicial Administration could make the search warrants open to public inspection. The rule
states that unexecuted search warrants are confidential, and that all other matters
relating to search warrants are only confidential if there is an applicable statutory
exemption. The court held that Floridas exemption for active criminal investigation
information would make the executed search warrants exempt from disclosure. (1/27/98)
Lawsuit
against school district administrators dismissed
WEST PALM BEACH A federal judge dismissed a lawsuit brought against a school
districts superintendent and district attorney by an ex-administrator alleging
violations of Floridas Open Meetings Law.
Art Johnson, former principal of Boca Ratons Spanish River High School, contended
that the school districts attorney Glen Torcivia and Superintendent Joan Kowal
polled Palm Beach County School Board members to find out how they would vote about
Johnsons termination.
U.S. District Judge Kenneth L. Ryskamp of the Southern District of Florida dismissed
Johnsons case, ruling that the superintendent, district attorney and board members
did not conspire against him.
Just days before Judge Ryskamps verdict, the Palm Beach State Attorneys
Office refused to file charges against Kowal and Torcivia. (Brechner Report, March
1998). (2/7/98)
Judge orders child abuse
records released
NEW PORT RICHEY A circuit judge ordered the state Department of Children and
Families to release child abuse investigative records to the St. Petersburg Times.
The records are part of the investigation into the death of 20-month-old Travis Crouch,
who died Jan. 17 of severe head injuries.
Judge William Webb, 13th Judicial Circuit, will protect the ongoing investigation into
the childs death by reviewing the records first to decide if anything should remain
sealed. Records that will not hamper the investigation if released will be forwarded to
the St. Petersburg Times.
Floridas Public Records Law allows the release of otherwise confidential
Department of Children and Families records if the court finds there is a legitimate
public interest in disclosure. (2/11/98)
Library board votes to
limit Internet access
JACKSONVILLE The Jacksonville Public Library board voted to limit access to the
Internet on the library computer to protect patrons from what the library deems offensive
materials.
The board divided the materials into three categories of offensiveness: illegal,
pornographic and lifestyle. The illegal category includes sites that pertain to illegal
activity such as drug dealing, prostitution or murder. The pornographic category includes
sites that pertain to heterosexual activity with one or two people and hard-core adult
humor and literature. The lifestyle category includes those sites that pertain to
homosexual acts, bisexual acts, orgies, swinging, sadomasochism or bestiality.
The board decided to extend the policy to all libraries in its system. The libraries
will use an Internet filter system to prohibit access. (12/16/98)
Jury rules
mans T-shirt not illegally obscene
OCALA A jury determined a 22-year-old man did not violate Floridas
obscenity law by wearing a T-shirt bearing the image of a topless nun masturbating.
Andrew Love was arrested in the parking lot of the Paddock Mall and charged with
violating the obscenity law. The T-shirt promoted an English band called Cradle of Filth.
Loves defense team argued that the shirt was protected speech because it was a
political comment on religion. Assistant State Attorney Steve Rogers, who prosecuted the
case, said the shirt was purely salacious, and therefore illegal.
According to Florida law, obscenity is defined as what the average person would find to
appeal to a morbid, prurient or shameful interest. To be illegal, it must depict sexual
material in a patently offensive way, and when taken as a whole, be devoid of any serious
literary, artistic, political or scientific value. (2/19/98).
"Chicken
soup" laws undermine the public trust
By Sandra F. Chance
Laws that make people, particularly legislators and special interest groups, feel
better but accomplish very little are "chicken soup" laws. All too often these
laws are unconstitutional.
Florida has more than its share of "chicken soup" laws. When our legislators
pass these laws, they undermine our confidence in the legislative and democratic process.
Legislators are considering a number of "chicken soup" laws, including adding
another exemption to Floridas Public Records Law. The proposed law exempts the name,
address and telephone number of animal owners contained in rabies vaccination certificates
from the public. The bill would make it nearly impossible for people to tell if
theyve been bitten by a rabid dog.
The rabies certificates are on file with the county animal control departments and are
covered by the Florida Public Records Law. The legislation is being pushed by the
states Veterinary Association to protect client lists from direct marketers who sell
pet care product cheaper than the local vets.
Supporters of the bill concede the exemption is motivated by economic interests. They
also insist its necessary, in part, to protect "doctor-patient"
confidentiality similar to that enjoyed by people and protect pet privacy.
Unfortunately, Im not kidding. This is a perfect example of a "chicken soup"
law. It makes a few people feel better yet undermines the openness of government and our
faith in the legislative process.
Floridas "veggie libel" law is another example. A similar law comforted
the Texas cattlemen who sued Oprah Winfrey.
They must have been feeling pretty good until 12 jurors in Amarillo restored common
sense to the process. The jurors recognized the First Amendment is alive and well and
protects someones right to express an opinion and question the safety of
agricultural products.
While these laws make farmers feel better, "veggie libel" laws are
unconstitutional and threaten free speech. Thirteen other states protect this important
special interest group with similar laws. Unfortunately, those state legislators forgot
about the First Amendment somewhere along the way, too.
Floridas "Son of Sam" bill is yet another example. "Son of
Sam" laws prevent criminals from profiting from their crimes. New York passed the
first one in 1977 to prevent David Berkowitz, known as the Son of Sam killer, from selling
his story to the tabloids.
Florida, like 33 other states, followed suit. These laws make us feel better. They
prevent heinous criminals, like Gainesville student murderer Danny Harold Rolling, from
making money off his victims.
In 1991, however, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that states may not prevent criminals
and their publishers from profiting from books and movies about the criminals
activities. Laws which discriminate based on the content of the speech are
unconstitutional, according to the Court. Our legislators would be well-advised to
remember that the First Amendment applies even to criminals and their publishers and
redraft this law to prohibit all money making activities.
The "chicken soup" phenomenon is prevalent in Washington, D.C., too. Congress
continues to pass unconstitutional laws that make people feel better.
For example, in response to the senseless murder of actress Rebecca Schaeffer, Congress
passed the Drivers Privacy Protection Act in 1994. The actress was gunned down by a crazed
fan. The fan hired a private investigator to find her home address from the public
records.
The new federal law requires states to shroud drivers license information in
secrecy or face huge federal penalties. Ironically, private investigators retain the
ability to get these records. The federal statute has recently been declared
unconstitutional in several states.
More recently, Sens. Diane Feinstein and Orrin Hatch introduced the Personal Privacy
Protection Act. The proposed law was a response to Princess Dianas death. It would
certainly make many celebrities feel better.
The bill makes it a federal crime to use zoom lenses, even if the photographer remains
on public grounds. Trespassing, assault and stalking are against state laws. Do we need
another "chicken soup" law?
Legislators must act in the publics best interest. They must stand up to pressure
from special interest groups requesting "chicken soup" laws that restrict free
speech, freedom of the press or access to governmental information. The First Amendment
and our state constitution demand it and so it should be.
Sandra F. Chance is the assistant director of the Brechner Center for Freedom of
Information and an assistant professor of journalism at the University of Florida
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