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State v. Pelham
OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE
Pamela Jo Bondi, Attorney General, Tallahassee, and Pamela J. Koller, Assistant Attorney General, Daytona Beach, for Appellant.
James S. Purdy, Public Defender, and Allison A. Havens, Assistant Public Defender, Daytona Beach, for Appellee.
The State appeals an order discharging Domonique Pelham from charges of burglary of a conveyance and petit theft based upon the trial court's finding that the charges were filed beyond the speedy trial period set forth in Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.191. Finding no speedy trial violation, we reverse.
At 4:30 a.m. on June 30, 2010, police were dispatched to the Village Lake Apartments in Orange County, Florida, in response to a vehicle burglary complaint. They met with a Mr. Helms, who reported his discovery that someone had broken a window of his car, activating his car alarm. Mr. Helms could not identify any property taken from his vehicle, but did describe two males whom he saw walking away from his vehicle when he exited his apartment to check on the car. While the first two responding officers were talking with Mr. Helms and processing the scene,1 another responding officer observed two males exiting the apartment complex. When the two males saw the patrol car, they fled on foot. This officer pursued, detaining only Pelham. After being advised of his Miranda rights, Pelham claimed that he was just walking around by himself in the area. He denied knowing the other man who he had been seen with before fleeing, could not explain why he had fled, and denied any involvement in the vehicle burglary. Although Pelham's pockets were filled with items not normally associated with an innocent evening stroll—including a face plate from a car radio, a cellular phone charging cord and a Garmin GPS device—Pelham claimed to have no knowledge of where those items came from or how they had ended up in his pockets.
Police showed the items recovered from Pelham's pockets to Mr. Helms, but he did not recognize any of those items as coming from his vehicle. As a result, the officers elected not to arrest Pelham for the burglary (instead, presumably, deciding to wait for an analysis and comparison of the latent prints lifted from Mr. Helm's car). The officers did, however, arrest Pelham for loitering and prowling.
About five hours later, at 9:30 a.m., law enforcement received another vehicle burglary complaint from a Mr. Boyer, who also lived in the Village Lake Apartments, on a different street from Mr. Helms. Mr. Boyer had secured his vehicle in a parking space at around 5:30 p.m. the night before, and found that his vehicle had been burglarized the next morning when leaving for work. When shown the items found in Pelham's pockets, Mr. Boyer positively identified them as having been stolen from his vehicle. He could readily confirm this with respect to the Garmin GPS, as he had programmed his home address and other information into the device.
Pelham reported being given a time-served jail sentence in 2010 on the loitering and prowling charge. However, it was not until more than a year later, on January 4, 2012, that the State filed an information charging Pelham with burglarizing Mr. Boyer's vehicle and stealing items from it. Pelham was arrested on these charges the next day, on January 5, 2012.2
Shortly thereafter, Pelham's appointed counsel filed a motion for discharge, arguing that the 175–day speedy trial period for the crimes involving Mr. Boyer's property began to run when Pelham was arrested for loitering and prowling on June 30, 2010. The trial court agreed, and granted the motion. This appeal followed.
“Rule 3.191, Florida Rules of Criminal Procedure, governs the speedy trial provisions in criminal trials, requiring that ‘every person charged with a crime shall be brought to trial within ... 175 days of arrest if the crime charged is a felony.’ ” State v. Baynham, 72 So.3d 796, 798 (Fla. 4th DCA 2011) (quoting Fla. R. Crim. P. 3.191(a)). “For purposes of this rule, a person is taken into custody ... when the person is arrested as a result of the conduct or criminal episode that gave rise to the crime charged.” Fla. R. Crim. P. 3.191(d) (emphasis added). State v. Williams, 791 So.2d 1088, 1091 (Fla.2001).
The issue in this case is whether the burglary and theft for which the State filed charges against Pelham in 2012 arose from the same “conduct or criminal episode” as the loitering and prowling for which police arrested him in 2010. It is first important to emphasize, as the State argued below and on appeal, that Pelham was charged in 2012 with a different crime than he was arrested for in 2010. As our court has previously explained, “even when the temporal separation [between separate crimes] is not significant, when different crimes are involved, they are not deemed a part of the same criminal episode [for speedy trial purposes] unless they are based on substantially the same acts.” State v. Hanna, 858 So.2d 1248, 1250 (Fla. 5th DCA 2003) (emphasis added) (citations omitted). Or, as stated by the Fourth District, to be considered part of the “same conduct or criminal episode” in this context, “the conduct needs to be more than ‘merely related’—it should be ‘the same conduct.’ ” Baynham, 72 So.3d at 798 (quoting Walker v. State, 390 So.2d 411, 412 (Fla. 4th DCA 1980)). The question, then, is whether Pelham was arrested in 2010 based upon the “same conduct” or “same act” that forms the basis for the 2012 charges. Clearly, he was not. This is made even more obvious by the fact that at the time of Pelham's arrest for loitering and prowling, the conduct that formed the basis for the 2012 charges (the burglary and theft from Mr. Boyer's car) had not even been reported to police. See also Jones v. State, 450 So.2d 605 (Fla. 2d DCA 1984) (); State v. Floyd, 639 So.2d 128 (Fla. 2d DCA 1994) ().
Our court has consistently applied this “same act” or “same conduct” test in more recent years. Hanna, 858 So.2d at 1250;Cummings v. State, 64 So.3d 712 (Fla. 5th DCA 2011); State v. Banks, 50 So.3d 730 (Fla. 5th DCA 2010); Clevenger v. State, 967 So.2d 1039 (Fla. 5th DCA 2007); State v. Deratany, 410 So.2d 977 (Fla. 5th DCA 1982). However, as pointed out by Pelham, this was not the test that we applied in Deiches v. Kaney, 375 So.2d 584 (Fla. 5th DCA 1979), the primary case upon which Pelham relies in his argument on appeal. In Deiches, law enforcement was dispatched to a local drug store when store employees reported suspecting that a customer was attempting to pass a forged prescription. Id. at 585. The officers ended up arresting the suspect that day for loitering and prowling and possession of a concealed weapon, but not for prescription forgery. Id. When the state filed an information more than 175 days later charging the defendant with attempting to fill a forged prescription, our court held that the prescription charge arose from the same episode as the charges for which the defendant had earlier been arrested, explaining only that officers had pursued the defendant from the scene of the prescription forgery crime and “might well have arrested him for the crime” at that time. Id. Based upon this much broader view of the “same conduct or criminal episode” language in the speedy trial rule, we held that the speedy trial period had expired before the information was filed and that the defendant could not be prosecuted for the crime. Id.
Both the Second District and the Fourth District have expressly disagreed with Deiches and criticized the...
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