Office of the Attorney General
SLIP OPINION
| AG number: 2024 | Style: Sims vs. State |
| Jurisdiction: Florida Supreme Court | Date issued: February 8, 2000 |
Public records request after death warrant A death row inmate who comes under a death warrant has no legal right to demand public records from agencies from which he did not seek public records before the death warrant was signed, the Florida Supreme Court said. While under a death warrant, Terry Sims sent public records requests to a number of agencies and individuals. The state argued that Sims' requests for production of public records was overbroad because he failed to demonstrate that he had "previously" requested public records from these agencies and individuals, as required by Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.852(h)(3). The Supreme Court agreed, concluding that Sims was not entiled to seek public records from a large number of agencies when he had not previously requested records from them. "The language of section 119.19 and of rule 3.852 clearly provides for the production of public records after the governor has signed a death warrant. However, it is equally clear that this discovery tool is not intended to be a procedure authorizing a fishing expedition for records unrelated to a colorable claim for post-conviction relief. To prevent such a fishing expedition, the statute and the rule provide for the production of public records from persons and agencies who were the recipients of a public records request at the time the defendant began his or her post-conviction odyssey," the unanimous court said in an unsigned opinion. |