Florida Senate - 2011                              CS for SB 416
       
       
       
       By the Committee on Criminal Justice; and Senator Bogdanoff
       
       
       
       
       591-03237-11                                           2011416c1
    1                        A bill to be entitled                      
    2         An act relating to public records; providing a
    3         definition; providing an exemption from public-records
    4         requirements for photographs and video and audio
    5         recordings that depict or record the killing of a
    6         person; authorizing access to such photographs or
    7         video or audio recordings by specified members of the
    8         immediate family of the deceased subject of the
    9         photographs or video or audio recordings; providing
   10         for access to such records by local governmental
   11         entities or state or federal agencies in furtherance
   12         of official duties; providing for access pursuant to
   13         court order; providing guidelines of the court in
   14         issuing an order authorizing such photographs or video
   15         or audio recordings to be viewed, copied, or heard;
   16         requiring specified notice of a court petition to view
   17         or copy such records; providing penalties; exempting
   18         criminal or administrative proceedings from the act;
   19         providing for retroactive application; providing for
   20         future legislative review and repeal of the exemption;
   21         providing a finding of public necessity; providing an
   22         effective date.
   23  
   24  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
   25  
   26         Section 1. (1) As used in this section, the term “killing
   27  of a person” means all acts or events that cause or otherwise
   28  relate to the death of any human being, including any related
   29  acts or events immediately preceding or subsequent to the acts
   30  or events that were the proximate cause of death.
   31         (2) A photograph or video or audio recording that depicts
   32  or records the killing of a person is confidential and exempt
   33  from s. 119.07(1), Florida Statutes, and s. 24(a), Article I of
   34  the State Constitution, except that a surviving spouse of the
   35  decedent may view and copy any such photograph or video
   36  recording or listen to or copy any such audio recording. If
   37  there is no surviving spouse, the surviving parents shall have
   38  access to such records. If there is no surviving spouse or
   39  parent, an adult child shall have access to such records.
   40         (3)(a) The deceased’s surviving relative, with whom
   41  authority rests to obtain such records, may designate in writing
   42  any other person to view, copy, or publish such records.
   43         (b) A local governmental entity, or a state or federal
   44  agency, in furtherance of its official duties, pursuant to a
   45  written request, may view or copy a photograph or video
   46  recording or may listen to or copy an audio recording of the
   47  killing of a person and, unless otherwise required in the
   48  performance of their duties, the identity of the deceased shall
   49  remain confidential and exempt.
   50         (c) The custodian of the record, or his or her designee,
   51  may not permit any other person to view or copy such photograph
   52  or video recording or listen to or copy such audio recording
   53  without a court order.
   54         (4)(a) The court, upon a showing of good cause, may issue
   55  an order authorizing any person to view or copy a photograph or
   56  video recording that depicts or records the killing of a person
   57  or to listen to or copy an audio recording that depicts or
   58  records the killing of a person and may prescribe any
   59  restrictions or stipulations that the court deems appropriate.
   60         (b) In determining good cause, the court shall consider:
   61         1. Whether such disclosure is necessary for the public
   62  evaluation of governmental performance;
   63         2. The seriousness of the intrusion into the family’s right
   64  to privacy and whether such disclosure is the least intrusive
   65  means available; and
   66         3. The availability of similar information in other public
   67  records, regardless of form.
   68         (c) In all cases, the viewing, copying, listening to, or
   69  other handling of a photograph or video or audio recording that
   70  depicts or records the killing of a person must be under the
   71  direct supervision of the custodian of the record or his or her
   72  designee.
   73         (5) A surviving spouse shall be given reasonable notice of
   74  a petition filed with the court to view or copy a photograph or
   75  video recording that depicts or records the killing of a person
   76  or to listen to or copy any such audio recording, a copy of such
   77  petition, and reasonable notice of the opportunity to be present
   78  and heard at any hearing on the matter. If there is no surviving
   79  spouse, such notice must be given to the parents of the deceased
   80  and, if the deceased has no living parent, notice must be given
   81  to the adult children of the deceased.
   82         (6)(a) Any custodian of a photograph or video or audio
   83  recording that depicts or records the killing of a person who
   84  willfully and knowingly violates this section commits a felony
   85  of the third degree, punishable as provided in s. 775.082, s.
   86  775.083, or s. 775.084, Florida Statutes.
   87         (b) Any person who willfully and knowingly violates a court
   88  order issued pursuant to this section commits a felony of the
   89  third degree, punishable as provided in s. 775.082, s. 775.083,
   90  or s. 775.084, Florida Statutes.
   91         (c) A criminal or administrative proceeding is exempt from
   92  this section but, unless otherwise exempted, is subject to all
   93  other provisions of chapter 119, Florida Statutes; however, this
   94  section does not prohibit a court in a criminal or
   95  administrative proceeding upon good cause shown from restricting
   96  or otherwise controlling the disclosure of a killing, crime
   97  scene, or similar photograph or video or audio recordings in the
   98  manner prescribed herein.
   99         (7) This exemption shall be given retroactive application
  100  and applies to all photographs or video or audio recordings that
  101  depict or record the killing of a person, regardless of whether
  102  the killing of the person occurred before, on, or after July 1,
  103  2011.
  104         (8) This section is subject to the Open Government Sunset
  105  Review Act in accordance with s. 119.15, Florida Statutes, and
  106  shall stand repealed on October 2, 2016, unless reviewed and
  107  saved from repeal through reenactment by the Legislature.
  108         Section 2. The Legislature finds that is a public necessity
  109  that photographs and video and audio recordings that depict or
  110  record the killing of any person be made confidential and exempt
  111  from the requirements of s. 119.07(1), Florida Statutes, and s.
  112  24(a), Article I of the State Constitution. The Legislature
  113  finds that photographs or video or audio recordings that depict
  114  or record the killing of any person render a visual or aural
  115  representation of the deceased in graphic and often disturbing
  116  fashion. Such photographs or video or audio recordings provide a
  117  view of the deceased in the final moments of life, often
  118  bruised, bloodied, broken, with bullet wounds or other wounds,
  119  cut open, dismembered, or decapitated. As such, photographs or
  120  video or audio recordings that depict or record the killing of
  121  any person are highly sensitive representations of the deceased
  122  which, if heard, viewed, copied, or publicized, could result in
  123  trauma, sorrow, humiliation, or emotional injury to the
  124  immediate family of the deceased, as well as injury to the
  125  memory of the deceased. The Legislature recognizes that the
  126  existence of the World Wide Web and the proliferation of
  127  personal computers throughout the world encourages and promotes
  128  the wide dissemination of such photographs and video and audio
  129  recordings 24 hours a day and that widespread unauthorized
  130  dissemination of photographs and video and audio recordings
  131  would subject the immediate family of the deceased to continuous
  132  injury. The Legislature further recognizes that there continue
  133  to be other types of available information, such as crime scene
  134  reports, which are less intrusive and injurious to the immediate
  135  family members of the deceased and which continue to provide for
  136  public oversight. The Legislature further finds that the
  137  exemption provided in this act should be given retroactive
  138  application because it is remedial in nature.
  139         Section 3. This act shall take effect July 1, 2011.