Bill Text: FL S0668 | 2022 | Regular Session | Comm Sub


Bill Title: Custodial Interrogations of Minors

Spectrum: Bipartisan Bill

Status: (Failed) 2022-03-14 - Died in Rules [S0668 Detail]

Download: Florida-2022-S0668-Comm_Sub.html
       Florida Senate - 2022                              CS for SB 668
       
       
        
       By the Committee on Criminal Justice; and Senator Cruz
       
       
       
       
       
       591-01937-22                                           2022668c1
    1                        A bill to be entitled                      
    2         An act relating to custodial interrogations of minors;
    3         creating s. 900.06, F.S.; defining terms; providing a
    4         presumption of inadmissibility for confessions of
    5         certain minors which are made as a result of a
    6         custodial interrogation at a place of detention if
    7         deceptive tactics are used; specifying circumstances
    8         under which the presumption may be rebutted; providing
    9         that the state attorney has the burden of proving that
   10         such confessions were voluntary; requiring that
   11         certain objections be made in the trial court;
   12         providing an effective date.
   13          
   14  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
   15  
   16         Section 1. Section 900.06, Florida Statutes, is created to
   17  read:
   18         900.06Deceptive tactics during custodial interrogations of
   19  minors prohibited; presumption of inadmissibility.—
   20         (1)As used in this section, the term:
   21         (a)“Custodial interrogation” means questioning or other
   22  conduct by a law enforcement officer which is reasonably likely
   23  to elicit an incriminating response from an individual and which
   24  occurs under circumstances in which a reasonable individual in
   25  the same circumstances would consider himself or herself to be
   26  in the custody of a law enforcement agency.
   27         (b)“Deception” means the knowing communication by a law
   28  enforcement officer to a subject of a custodial interrogation of
   29  false facts about evidence or unauthorized statements regarding
   30  leniency.
   31         (c)“Place of detention” means a police station, sheriff’s
   32  office, correctional facility, prisoner holding facility, county
   33  detention facility, or other governmental facility where a minor
   34  may be held in connection with a criminal charge or a petition
   35  for delinquency that has been or may be filed against the minor.
   36         (2)An oral, written, or sign language confession of an
   37  individual who, at the time of the commission of the offense,
   38  was younger than 18 years of age, which is made as a result of a
   39  custodial interrogation conducted at a place of detention is
   40  presumed to be inadmissible as evidence against the minor making
   41  the confession in any criminal proceeding or any juvenile court
   42  proceeding if, during the custodial interrogation, a law
   43  enforcement officer engages in deception.
   44         (3)The presumption of inadmissibility of a confession
   45  under subsection (2) may be overcome by a preponderance of the
   46  evidence that the confession was voluntarily given, based on the
   47  totality of the circumstances.
   48         (4)The state attorney has the burden of proving that a
   49  confession was voluntary. Any objection to the failure of the
   50  state to call all material witnesses on the issue of whether the
   51  confession was voluntary must be made in the trial court.
   52         Section 2. This act shall take effect July 1, 2022.

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