Just because its a bit different and so I am on the same wave length is that the same thing as Assistant State Attorney ?
Thats what flashed up on the channel 13 video
Thank you, Redhead, this is exactly right - the presence is required at ALL evidentiary hearings. Today they held an evidentiary hearing, therefore, the defendant HAD to be present - it's the law.
(a) Presence of Defendant. In all prosecutions for crime the defendant shall be present:
(1) at first appearance;
(2) when a plea is made, unless a written plea of not guilty shall be made in writing under the provisions of rule
3.170(a);
(3) at any pretrial conference, unless waived by the defendant in writing;
(4) at the beginning of the trial during the examination, challenging, impanelling, and swearing of the jury;
(5) at all proceedings before the court when the jury is present;
(6) when evidence is addressed to the court out of the presence of the jury for the purpose of laying the
foundation for the introduction of evidence before the jury;
(7) at any view by the jury;
(8) at the rendition of the verdict; and
(9) at the pronouncement of judgment and the imposition of sentence.
(b) Presence; Definition. A defendant is present for purposes of this rule if the defendant is physically in
attendance for the courtroom proceeding, and has a meaningful opportunity to be heard through counsel on the
issues being discussed.
(c) Defendant Absenting Self.
http://www.floridabar.org/TFB/TFBResources.nsf/Attachments/BDFE1551AD291A3F85256B29004BF892/$FILE/CRIMRules.pdf?OpenElement
Page 54- great link by the way for anyone that likes to reference Fl criminal procedures.
www.wftv.com has the full hearing up in two parts, the links on home page
It is law for defendants to be present for all 'substantiative' motion hearings, unless waived in writing, within the proscribed time period (I believe 24 hours) - and it is still at the discretion of the court whether the waiver is accepted or not.
Not being a wiseass here, seriously. What determines "substantive?" I've read other posts that indicate that much of what JB was requesting could be obtained through depositions, and that today's hearing was completely unecessary. What about today's hearing was substantive require that Casey be present?
I'm not an attorney and completely clueless when it comes to the various procedures and court appearances. :waitasec:
She seemed, from what I watched, to be completely clueless as to what was even going on.
I'm not taking that as a wiseass question, at all, as I had the same thought. What is 'substantive' and who makes that call? The Judge alone, and on what basis? Does that still leave room for either side to present case law arguments?
I really don't know.
As for why it was necessary for KC to attend today, I have only guesses, none of which are legal:
1. Decision regarding remains images/photos.
2. It is just my opinion, but I think the SA might also have wanted to see KC themselves, and ensure that she was aware of how serious this is. (That may sound lame, but I think a taste of what's to come was timely, MOO)
I'll take a shot at a general answer. Think of substantive versus merely procedural. Of significance to important issues on the merits of the case rather than merely housekeeping. Since the statute refers to all pre-trial motions by its language, this distinction may be part of the case law interpreting it. Anyway, there must have been a pretty persuasive case, right on point, that the state gave to the judge to read. Probably some case where the defendant's absence was used as an appellate issue.
I really don't want to get into an argument about this - according to the Florida State Constitution and interpreted both by the Florida Supreme Court and the U.S. Supreme court, citing Illinois v. Allen and Kentucky v. Stinces and Jackson v. State of Florida appeals court decision, the constitution requires that all proceedings affecting life and liberty be conducted according to due process, Fla. R. Crim. P 3.10 defines presense as PHYSICALLY in attendance and having meaningful opportunity to heard, therefore, the defendant MUST be present at all critical hearings and must petition the court in person to be excused from the proceedings after first being sworn in, informed of her rights and obtaining affirmation that the defendant understands those rights and is indeed waiving those rights.
That is why the judge himself said he was being lax in that requirement - it is mandated by statute and by the Florida State Supreme Court rulings. NO judge wants to overturned for what is essentially negligence in his duties. He may accept a written waiver, but in a capital murder case, he MUST be absolutely certain that the defendant be in attendance at every critical proceeding and must be questioned in person as to whether she understands and waives those rights.
Believe me, I am not making this stuff up as I go along, it is the LAW.
I really don't want to get into an argument about this - according to the Florida State Constitution and interpreted both by the Florida Supreme Court and the U.S. Supreme court, citing Illinois v. Allen and Kentucky v. Stinces and Jackson v. State of Florida appeals court decision, the constitution requires that all proceedings affecting life and liberty be conducted according to due process, Fla. R. Crim. P 3.10 defines presense as PHYSICALLY in attendance and having meaningful opportunity to heard, therefore, the defendant MUST be present at all critical hearings and must petition the court in person to be excused from the proceedings after first being sworn in, informed of her rights and obtaining affirmation that the defendant understands those rights and is indeed waiving those rights.
That is why the judge himself said he was being lax in that requirement - it is mandated by statute and by the Florida State Supreme Court rulings. NO judge wants to overturned for what is essentially negligence in his duties. He may accept a written waiver, but in a capital murder case, he MUST be absolutely certain that the defendant be in attendance at every critical proceeding and must be questioned in person as to whether she understands and waives those rights.
Believe me, I am not making this stuff up as I go along, it is the LAW.
I'll take a shot at a general answer. Think of substantive versus merely procedural. Of significance to important issues on the merits of the case rather than merely housekeeping. Since the statute refers to all pre-trial motions by its language, this distinction may be part of the case law interpreting it. Anyway, there must have been a pretty persuasive case, right on point, that the state gave to the judge to read. Probably some case where the defendant's absence was used as an appellate issue.
I really don't want to get into an argument about this - according to the Florida State Constitution and interpreted both by the Florida Supreme Court and the U.S. Supreme court, citing Illinois v. Allen and Kentucky v. Stinces and Jackson v. State of Florida appeals court decision, the constitution requires that all proceedings affecting life and liberty be conducted according to due process, Fla. R. Crim. P 3.10 defines presense as PHYSICALLY in attendance and having meaningful opportunity to heard, therefore, the defendant MUST be present at all critical hearings and must petition the court in person to be excused from the proceedings after first being sworn in, informed of her rights and obtaining affirmation that the defendant understands those rights and is indeed waiving those rights.
That is why the judge himself said he was being lax in that requirement - it is mandated by statute and by the Florida State Supreme Court rulings. NO judge wants to overturned for what is essentially negligence in his duties. He may accept a written waiver, but in a capital murder case, he MUST be absolutely certain that the defendant be in attendance at every critical proceeding and must be questioned in person as to whether she understands and waives those rights.
Believe me, I am not making this stuff up as I go along, it is the LAW.