The Brechner Report
Volume 23, Number 10
October 1999
A monthly report:
Irina Dmitrieva, Editor
Jackie Thomas, Production Coordinator
Allyson Beutke, Production Assistant
Bill F. Chamberlin, Ph.D., Founding Director
Sandra F. Chance, J.D., Director
Brechner Center for Freedom of Information
3208 Weimer Hall
College of Journalism and Communications
University of Florida, Gainesville, 32611
Table of Contents
ACCESS
- MEETINGS
Tampa Palms board cleared of violations
Ethics Commission will not investigate
claims of violations
Suit claims sheriffs department
violates law
County postpones meeting after warning
Judge dismisses Open Meetings suit
ACCESS
- RECORDS
Man jailed for stalking his neighbor
Butterworth: school public records may
not be free
Resident sues state over pay phone line
ACCESS
- MEETINGS AND RECORDS
Court dismisses a complaint against
school board district
COURTS
Court upholds partial closure of
courtroom in a sexual abuse trial
FIRST
AMENDMENT
Nude beachgoers denied free speech
rights
Man files complaint over limited public
input
LIBEL
UF society settles suit, does not admit
fault
REPORTER'S
PRIVILEGE
Court orders newspaper to produce
records in a libel trial
THE BACK
PAGE
A First Amendment survey brings bad
news for press
Court orders newspaper to produce
records in a libel trial
VOLUSIA
COUNTY The 5th Circuit Court of Appeal ordered the Daytona Beach News-Journal
to produce documents in a libel trial, despite the newspapers attempt to invoke the
qualified reporters privilege not to disclose its sources.
The News-Journal
interviewed Kevin Kit Carson when he was running for county judge. Upon
publication of the story, Carson sued the News-Journal for libel and sought to
compel production of the documents he allegedly gave reporters during the interview. The
documents include an unemployment compensation form and a job evaluation form.
The News-Journal
asserted a statutory privilege not to disclose the information obtained while actively
gathering news.
The court
ruled the News-Journal waived its privilege by filing a copy of Carsons
unemployment compensation form in public court files. The court concluded that the second
document was protected and within the statutory privilege. However, the court
ruled, the privilege did not apply in this case because the document could become
important evidence in the libel proceedings.
According to
the court, the document could show that the News-Journal knew true
facts when it printed the allegedly libelous news story, or had a reasonable basis
not to print the story without further inquiry. (Decision on File, News-Journal
v. Carson, Case No. 99-1459, August 20, 1999)
Table of
Contents
Man jailed for stalking his neighbor
STUART A circuit court in Martin County
sentenced a man to three years in prison for using public records to harass his former
neighbor.
In June, a
jury convicted Paul Curry of stalking Jacqueline DiCarlo by performing multiple public
document searches and filing complaints on her with various state agencies. (Brechner
Report, August 1999)
Curry
accused DiCarlo of parking violations, falsifying information on her drivers
license, having dirt on her sidewalk and doing business as a psychic without an
occupational license. Curry based his complaints in part on information he gathered from
public records, ranging from DiCarlos employment records to her water bill.
Judge Larry
Schack, 19th Judicial Circuit, said the Public Records Law was not intended for a person
to place another individuals life under a microscope. Curry has appealed
the decision. (7/30/99)
Table of
Contents
Tampa Palms board cleared of violations
TAMPA PALMS
The Hillsborough County State Attorneys office will not file criminal charges
against the Tampa Palms Community Development District for violating the Open Meetings
Law. The state attorneys office reached this decision after finding that the board
closed several meetings without criminal intent.
In March,
local resident Bob Doran claimed that the development district board violated the law at
its January and February meetings. Doran alleged that board members met privately to
discuss two threatened suits by the Tampa Palms Owners Association and two
residents.
The board
avoided litigation in both cases by agreeing to fix the maintenance problems each group
complained about. Doran claimed that the board members did not give notice of the closed
sessions and discussed things other than pending suits. (8/28/99)
Table of
Contents
UF society settles suit, does not admit
fault
GAINESVILLE
Florida Blue Key agreed to pay an undisclosed settlement to a former University of
Florida student who sued the UF honorary society for damaging her reputation in its 1998
Gator Growl program.
Jen Cardon
filed a suit last fall in the Alachua County circuit court after reading the phrase,
Ive never had sex with Jen Cardon, on a page of jokes in the printed
program for the football pep rally. (Brechner Report, February 1999) The suit
claimed the joke implied that Cardon was a sexually promiscuous woman.
The
societys current president, Ashley Moody, said Blue Key settled the suit so members
could start the new school year with a clean slate, not because the organization was at
fault. (9/1/99)
Table of
Contents
Butterworth: school public records may
not be free
TALLAHASSEE
School districts are under no statutory obligation to provide copies of public
records free of charge to members of a school advisory council, according to Attorney
General Robert Butterworth. However, in his recent advisory legal opinion, he stressed
that a school district may formulate a policy for the distribution of public records.
Florida
Department of Education sought Butterworths opinion after a member of a school
advisory council in Miami-Dade County objected when the school district charged for
copying and redacting the requested public records.
Butterworth
stated the only statutorily required function performed by advisory councils is to assist
the school boards in the preparation and evaluation of the school improvement plan.
Therefore, if an advisory council needs certain school records in order to carry out this
function, such records should be provided to the council in the same manner that records
related to agenda items are provided to school board members. In Miami-Dade County, it is
the school districts policy that such records are provided at no cost.
Butterworth
also stressed that nothing in the school code authorizes the release of student personal
information requested by individual members of the school advisory council. (8/5/99)
Table of
Contents
Resident sues state over pay phone line
TALLAHASSEE
A Florida resident filed a suit in a Tallahassee circuit court claiming that the
state violates the Public Records Law by using a pay phone line for lottery players who
call to find out if theyve hit the jackpot. Ralph DeLuise of Clearwater wants to
abolish the pay line and set up fund to reimburse millions of callers.
The state
used to provide free lottery results through a toll-free number. Four years ago a new law
set up a 900 line, which raised an estimated $10 million by charging callers 77 cents per
minute. Forty percent goes to a fund that operates the line, the rest to a state education
fund.
Under state
law, public agencies may charge only the actual cost of duplication for production of
public records. (7/28/99)
Table of
Contents
Ethics Commission will not investigate
claims of violations
SANFORD
The state Ethics Commission decided that it does not have jurisdiction to
investigate complaints accusing Seminole County commissioners of breaking the Open
Meetings Law. The commission stated that
prosecution of intentional violations of the state law lies with the state attorneys
office.
The
complaint, filed by six local residents, stems from comments made by Commissioners Daryl
McLain, Dick Van Der Weide and commission Chairman Carlton Henley before a Jan. 27 County
Commission meeting. The comments were caught on videotape before the meeting began.
Residents
say the comments suggest that commissioners discussed how they planned to vote on an
important development issue involving Wekiva River prior to the public meeting. In
addition, they claim that McLain used an obscenity in referring to people at the meeting.
The
residents are members of a landowners group that objected to new developments in the
Wekiva River Protection Zone. (8/12 - 17/99)
Table of Contents
Suit claims sheriffs department
violates law
LEE COUNTY
Six current and former Lee County sheriff deputies filed a class action suit in a
circuit court claiming that the sheriffs department violates the Open Meetings Law.
The suit
alleges that the departments Civil Service Board and a committee of officers who
vote on disciplinary recommendations violated the state law by failing to open their
meetings to the public. The suit asks the court to order the two boards to open their
meetings to the public and reinstate all the deputies who have been fired since 1995.
(8/7/99)
Table of
Contents
County postpones meeting after warning
NAPLES
Collier County commissioners postponed an emergency meeting after a state
attorneys office advised them that it would violate the Open Meetings Law by failing
to provide a 24-hour advance public notice.
The meeting
was called to make appointments to an environmental advisory council.
According to
the Attorney Generals office, special emergency meetings should be announced at
least 24 hours in advance in order to comply with the laws reasonable notice
requirement. (8/7/99)
Table of
Contents
Court dismisses a complaint
against school board district
INDIAN RIVER
COUNTY A circuit court dismissed a Vero Beach residents allegations that the
Indian River County School Board District violated the Open Meetings and Public Records
laws. Judge Charles Smith, 19th Judicial Circuit, said Brian Heady, a frequent critic of
the board, did not adequately state the judicial remedy he was seeking.
In July,
Heady filed a civil complaint against the board, saying the school district denied his
request for a copy of a five-year educational plant survey. He also claimed that the board
violated the Open Meetings Law last November when it signed an addendum extending the
superintendents contract behind closed doors. (Brechner Report, September
1999)
The board
asked a state mediator to decide whether it violated the law by signing the addendum.
However, Pat
Gleason, general counsel in the office of the Attorney General, denied the request saying
the mediation program is designed for on-going issues, not for past actions. (8/28/99)
Table of
Contents
Judge dismisses Open Meetings suit
ORMOND BEACH
Judge Robert Rouse, 7th Judicial Circuit, signed an order dismissing an Open
Meetings lawsuit against three city commissioners.
A year and a
half ago, residents Jack Hunter and Melvin Stone sued three city commissioners after they
voted to give municipal firefighters a hefty raise that averaged 18.9 percent per
employee. The suit claimed that commissioners violated the state law by discussing the
firefighters raises in secret.
No trial was
held during a 19-month-old suit and no depositions were taken. All parties to the suit
agreed not to pursue further litigation. (8/18/99)
Table of
Contents
Court upholds partial closure of
courtroom in a sexual abuse trial
BREVARD
COUNTY The 5th Circuit Court of Appeal upheld the trial court s partial
closure of the courtroom during the testimony of a 14-year-old witness in a sexual abuse
trial.
The jury
found Floyd Clements guilty of sexual battery and lewd acts on a child under 12. Clements
appealed the judgment on procedural grounds, saying the trial court erred by ordering
closure of the courtroom during the child victims testimony without a prior hearing.
Clements counsel asked the court to hold a hearing to determine the necessity of
exclusion and consider alternative methods so as to preserve Clements' right to a public
trial.
The court
upheld the trial courts decision to clear the courtroom of the idly
curious during the childs testimony. The court cited the state statute, which
requires a partial closure of a courtroom during a limited time when a child under 16
testifies about a sex offense. The court ruled that Clements constitutional right to
a public trial was preserved, because the press, as the eyes and ears of the
public, was allowed to remain during the testimony. (Decision on File, Clements
v. State, Case No. 98-963, July 30, 1999)
Table of
Contents
Nude beachgoers denied free speech
rights
CLEARWATER
Judge Patrick Caddell, 6th Judicial Circuit, ruled that two nude beachgoers
couldnt escape charges of disorderly conduct by claiming their free speech rights.
John Palm
and Todd Dominik were among 15 members of Tampa Area Naturists who gathered on Fort DeSoto
beach last July for what they said was a protest against the lack of nude beaches in
Pinellas County. The protesters put up signs "Florida Needs Nude Beaches" and
hired a tow plane to fly with a banner with the same message. (7/31/99)
Table of
Contents
Man files complaint over limited public
input
TAMPA
Former East County Water Control District Supervisor Frank Lohlein filed a complaint with
the state attorneys office claiming a violation of his First Amendment rights,
reported the Lehigh Acres News Star.
Lohlein
claims the districts policy to limit public comments to two minutes violates his
constitutional right to free speech. He wrote that the policy to control the public input
should be brought to court to settle the question of what constitutes a
dictatorship. (8/10/99)
Table of Contents
THE BACK PAGE:
A
First Amendment survey brings bad news for press
By
Paul
McMasters
Most
Americans celebrate the freedoms guaranteed by the First Amendment. Yet they are not
entirely comfortable with those freedoms. That clear sense of unease permeates the second
State of the First Amendment survey, sponsored by the
First Amendment Center at Vanderbilt University.
Indeed,
some of the findings in this survey arrive as a jolt to the constitutional conscience:
More than half of the respondents believe the press has too much freedom. Half believe the
Constitution should be amended to override the First Amendment's protection of flag
burning as political protest. Nearly one-third believes the First Amendment goes too far
in the rights it guarantees.
Further,
when responses in this survey are compared to the first State of the First Amendment
survey -- conducted in 1997 -- a series of negative shifts in attitudes toward First
Amendment freedoms becomes apparent.
The
news in this survey was especially bad for the press. When respondents were asked whether
they think the press has too much freedom, 53% of them said yes. That represents an
increase of 15 percentage points from the 38% who said yes to the same question in 1997.
In
disturbing numbers, Americans said newspapers should not be allowed to publish freely
without government approval, that they should not be allowed to endorse or criticize
political candidates, that journalists should not be able to use hidden cameras for
newsgathering and that the news media should not be able to publish government secrets.
Generally,
survey respondents were more supportive of freedom of speech -- at least in principle --
than of press freedom. For instance, the percentage of those who believe we have too
little freedom of speech went from 18% in the 1997 survey to 26% in 1999. Interestingly,
those who agree that Internet speech should enjoy the same protection as printed speech
went up from 56% to 64%.
Despite
their high regard for the idea of free speech, many Americans have serious concerns about
certain kinds of speech. For example, 57% said the public display of art that some might
find offensive should not be allowed. An even larger majority, 78%, would not allow the
public use of words that racial groups might find offensive.
Not
surprisingly, this survey confirms the 1997 findings that large numbers of Americans
support restrictions on speech about sex. An interesting finding is that Americans feel
the more accessible the medium is, the less permissible sexually explicit content should
be. For example, when asked whether different media should be allowed to convey sexually
explicit material, survey respondents were much more willing to allow sexually explicit
material on rental videotapes than on the Internet.
The
results of questions about the press and privacy are intriguing. Sixty percent of those
polled said journalists should not be allowed to investigate the private lives of public
figures. But when asked whether the press should be allowed to publish factual information
about a public official's private life that may be embarrassing or sensitive, 48% said it
should. However, the public is more protective of private citizens. Only 37% agreed that
the press should be allowed to publish embarrassing or sensitive information about them.
This
apparent willingness by some Americans to consider restrictions on speech offers a glimpse
of the American psyche's majoritarian/authoritarian streak, i.e. the tendency of some to
believe that speech not approved of by the majority does not qualify for full First
Amendment protection.
Surveys
such as this one are primarily valuable as reminders of the First Amendment's importance
as a check on our natural impulse to censor and silence. Were offensive speech and
controversial press practices not protected, we might have a society that is calmer,
safer, even more civil. But without the First Amendment, our society-and our lives-would
be considerably less free.
Paul
McMasters is the First Amendment Ombudsman with the Freedom Forum foundation. His complete
analysis of the survey is available at http://www.freedomforum.org.
Table of Contents
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