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upreme Court of oliortba
No. SC07-128
DONALD DEAN KASISCHICE,
Petitioner,
vs.
STATE OF FLORIDA,
Respondent.
[July 10, 2008]
CANTERO, J.
We review a statute that requires judges to impose conditions of probation
on sexual offenders. At issue is whether the statute prohibits sexual offenders
serving probation or community control from possessing any pornographic
material at all or only such material relevant to the offender's deviant behavior. In
the decision below, Kasischke v. State, 946 So. 2d 1155, 1159 (Fla. 3d DCA
2006), the Third District Court of Appeal held that offenders cannot possess any
such material. Its decision expressly and directly conflicts with the Second District
Court of Appeal's decision in Taylor v. State, 821 So. 2d 404, 405-06 (Fla. 2d
DCA 2002), which held that a condition prohibiting the defendant from "viewing,
EFTA00731431
owning, or possessing obscene, pornographic, or sexually explicit material," must
relate to the defendant's "particular deviant behavior pattern." We have
jurisdiction to resolve the conflict. See art. V, § 3(b)(3), Fla. Const. Because, as
the Third District acknowledged, the statute "is undeniably susceptible to multiple
and irreconcilable interpretations," 946 So. 2d at 1157-58, we apply the rule of
lenity. We therefore quash the decision below and approve the Second District's
decision in Taylor.
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
The facts on which the underlying convictions are based are explained in the
district court's opinion. Leg Kasischke, 946 So. 2d 1156. For our purposes,
suffice it to say that the Petitioner, Donald Kasischke, pled guilty to three counts
each of lewd or lascivious battery and exhibition on a child under age sixteen. He
was sentenced to 364 days in prison, followed by two years of community control
and eight years of probation. Section 948.03(5)(a), Florida Statutes (1999),
requires that courts impose several conditions on sexual offenders receiving
probation or community control. For example, defendants are subject to a curfew;
they cannot live within 1000 feet of certain places, such as schools, where children
congregate; and they must successfully complete a sexual offender treatment
program. Another condition that must be imposed—the one relevant here—is the
following:
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Unless otherwise indicated in the treatment plan provided by the
sexual offender treatment program, a prohibition on viewing, owning,
or possessing any obscene, pornographic, or sexually stimulating
visual or auditory material, including telephone, electronic media,
computer programs, or computer services that are relevant to the
offender's deviant behavior pattern.
§ 948.03(5)(a)(7), Fla. Stat. (1999).' The Petitioner's plea agreement included
such a condition.2 After he had been released from prison, and while he was
serving his community control, a search of his home revealed allegedly "obscene,
pornographic, or sexually stimulating" photographs, as well as a pornographic
videotape. His community control was revoked and he was ordered incarcerated.
The parties do not dispute the pornographic nature of the videotape. They
disagree, however, about whether the Petitioner's possession of these materials
violated his community control. The State argues that his conditions forbid
possession of any obscene or pornographic material, while the Petitioner argues
that they only prohibit possession of such material relevant to his particular deviant
1. This statute has been renumbered as section 948.30(1)(g), Florida
Statutes (2007) ("Unless otherwise indicated in the treatment plan provided by the
sexual offender treatment program, a prohibition on viewing, accessing, owning, or
possessing any obscene, pornographic, or sexually stimulating visual or auditory
material, including telephone, electronic media, computer programs, or computer
services that are relevant to the offender's deviant behavior pattern.").
2. Specifically, the condition stated: "The Defendant is prohibited from
viewing, owning or possessing any obscene, pornographic or sexually stimulating
visual or auditory material, including telephone, electronic media, computer
programs or computer services that are relevant to the offender's deviant behavior
pattern, unless otherwise indicated in the offender's treatment plan."
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behavior (in his case, paying a fifteen-year-old boy to allow him to perform oral
sex on the boy and masturbating in the boy's presence).
On appeal, the Third District concluded that the statute was ambiguous.
However, it analyzed the statute's legislative history, including a staff analysis
explaining a 1997 amendment, and concluded that the Legislature intended to ban
possession of all pornographic materials. Kasischke 946 So. 2d at 1159. In
contrast, in a similar case, the Second District interpreted the same condition, albeit
superficially, to prohibit only possession of materials relevant to the defendant's
"particular deviant behavior pattern." Taylor, 821 So. 2d at 405-06. We granted
review to resolve the conflict. agg Kasischke v. State, 954 So. 2d 1156 (Fla. 2007)
(granting review).
II. ANALYSIS
The issue we consider is whether the statute prohibits possession of all
pornographic materials, or only those "relevant to the offender's deviant behavior
pattern." Although we quoted the statute above, because its language is central to
our analysis, it bears repeating. It requires that any order imposing probation or
community control include "a prohibition on viewing, owning, or possessing any
obscene, pornographic, or sexually stimulating visual or auditory material,
including telephone, electronic media, computer programs, or computer services
that are relevant to the offender's deviant behavior pattern." § 948.03(5)(a)(7),
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Fla. Stat. (1999). The specific question is which part of the sentence is modified
by the phrase "relevant to the offender's deviant behavior pattern"? The State
argues that the phrase modifies "sexually stimulating visual or auditory material,"
which would mean that the statute prohibits possession of all obscene and
pornographic material, as well as "sexually stimulating visual or auditory
material. . . relevant to the offender's deviant behavior pattern." The Petitioner,
on the other hand, argues that the phrase modifies "obscene, pornographic, or
sexually stimulating visual or auditory material," so that the statute prohibits
possession only of such material that is relevant to his deviant behavior. The
dissents take a third view (one not advanced by either party here),3 suggesting that
"relevant to the offender's deviant behavior pattern" relates only to "telephone,
electronic media, computer programs, or computer services." Lewis, J., dissenting
op. at 28; Bell, J., dissenting op. at 53.
For the reasons explained below, we find section 948.03(5)(a)(7), Florida
Statutes (1999), ambiguous. We therefore apply the rule of lenity and hold that the
phrase "relevant to the offender's deviant behavior pattern" modifies each of the
statutory prohibitions.
3. Although Justice Lewis suggests otherwise, Lewis, J., dissenting op. at 37
note 21, in response to questioning at oral argument, the State clarified that its
argument was that "relevant to the offender's deviant behavior pattern" modifies
"sexually stimulating visual or auditory material." We also note that the State
conceded at oral argument that the language of the statute is ambiguous.
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A. Plain Language
"The interpretation of a statute is a purely legal matter and therefore subject
to the de novo standard of review." Kephart v. Hadi, 932 So. 2d 1086, 1089 (Fla.
2006), cert. denied, 127 S. Ct. 1268 (2007). When construing a statute, we strive
to effectuate the Legislature's intent. See, e.g., Borden v. East-European Ins. Co.,
921 So. 2d 587, 595 (Fla. 2006) ("We endeavor to construe statutes to effectuate
the intent of the Legislature."). To determine that intent, we look first to the
statute's plain language. Id. at 595. "[W]hen the statute is clear and unambiguous,
courts will not look behind the statute's plain language for legislative intent or
resort to rules of statutory construction to ascertain intent." Id. (quoting Daniels v.
Fla. Dep't of Health, 898 So. 2d 61, 64 (Fla. 2005)).
We agree with the district court that this statute "is undeniably susceptible to
multiple and irreconcilable interpretations." Kasischke, 946 So. 2d at 1157-58.
The plain language of the statute could be construed in at least four ways: (1) as
prohibiting all obscene, pornographic, or sexually stimulating material, as well as
any telephone, electronic media, computer programs, or computer services that are
relevant to the offender's deviant behavior pattern, see Bell, J., dissenting op. at
53; (2) as clarifying that "telephone, electronic media, computer programs, or
computer services that are relevant to the offender's deviant behavior pattern" are
within the ban on "obscene, pornographic, or sexually stimulating" material, see
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Lewis, J., dissenting op. at 28; (3) as prohibiting only such material relevant to the
offender's deviant behavior pattern; and (4) as prohibiting all obscene and
pornographic material, but prohibiting sexually stimulating visual or auditory
material only when relevant to the offender's deviant behavior pattern. Therefore,
as did the district court, see 946 So. 2d at 1158, we find the statute ambiguous. We
cannot rely solely on its plain language to discover the legislative intent.
Justice Lewis concludes that the plain language of the statute demonstrates
that the Legislature intended the entire clause "including telephone, electronic
media, computer programs, or computer services that are relevant to the offender's
deviant behavior pattern" as merely illustrating a category of materials within the
ban on "any obscene, pornographic, or sexually stimulating material." Lewis, J.,
dissenting op. at 28. In other words, Justice Lewis argues that the Legislature
intended to clarify that "Internet-based and other forms of electronic obscenity and
pornography" were within the prohibition. Id. at 36. If this were the case,
however, the Legislature could have ended the sentence after the phrase,
"including telephone, electronic media, computer programs, or computer services."
Under Justice
interpretation, these materials would be prohibited whether
or not relevant to the offender's deviant behavior. But the Legislature did not end
there; it added the phrase "that are relevant to the offender's deviant behavior
pattern." This phrase must modify something. See, e.g., Martinez v. State, 981
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So. 2d 449, 452 (Fla. 2008) ("It is a basic rule of statutory construction that `the
Legislature does not intend to enact useless provisions, and courts should avoid
readings that would render part of a statute meaningless.'" (quoting State v.
Bodden, 877 So. 2d 680, 686 (Fla. 2004))). We cannot construe the plain language
of the statute in a manner that renders this language superfluous.
B. Exploring Legislative History
The State argues that in determining the Legislature's intent, we should also
review the statute's legislative history, and that the history supports the State's
interpretation. Although not advanced by the parties, the dissents suggest that the
bill title clarifies the Legislature's intent. Lewis, J., dissenting op. at 41-42; Bell,
J., dissenting op. at 54-56. We now address these arguments.
Before 1997, the prohibition on obscene or pornographic materials read:
Unless otherwise indicated in the treatment plan provided by the
sexual offender treatment program, a prohibition on viewing, owning,
or possessing any obscene, pornographic, or sexually explicit
material.
§ 948.03(5)(g), Ha. Stat. (1995). Clearly, under this provision, the Legislature
intended a total ban on obscene, pornographic, or sexually explicit material. In
1997, the Legislature amended this language as follows:
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Unless otherwise indicated in the treatment plan provided by the
sexual offender treatment program, a prohibition on viewing, owning,
or possessing any obscene, pornographic, or sexually stimulating
visual or auditory explieit-material including telephone, electronic
media, computer programs, or computer services that are relevant to
the offender's deviant behavior pattern.
Ch. 97-308, § 3, at 5520, Laws of Fla. (1997).4 Given that the previous version of
the statute already prohibited the possession of sa
"obscene, pornographic, or
sexually explicit material," the 1997 amendment seems intended to narrow the
prohibition's scope.5 This is consistent with Kasischke's proffered reading of the
statute.
4. Words stricken are deletions and words underlined are additions.
5. Justice Bell notes that "[o]ther jurisdictions frequently condition a sex
offender's ability to live in the community on total abstinence from sexual
materials as well as the Internet and other computerized/telephonic equipment that
facilitate one's access to prohibited materials." Bell, J., dissenting op. at 59 note
34 (citing United States v. Ristine, 335 F.3d 692 (8th Cir. 2
United States v.
Taylor, 338 F.3d 1280 (11th Cir. 2003), State v. Ehli, 681
.2d 808
2004), and People v. Harrisson 36 Cal. Rptr. 3d 264 (Cal. Dist. Ct. App. 2005)).
However, the cases cited involve language much broader than the language in this
statute. Sgs Ristine 335 F.3d at 694 (upholding under a plain error standard,
among others, special conditions prohibiting the defendant from "owning or
possessing `any pornographic materials,'" and from having Internet service at his
house); Taylor, 338 F.3d at 1285 (upholding a special condition of probation
prohibiting the defendant from "using or possessing a computer with Internet
access"); Ehli, 681
.2d at 810 (upholding a condition prohibiting the defendant
from using the Internet); Harrisson, 36 Cal Rptr. 3d at 266, 271 (upholding a
condition prohibiting use of the Internet "in any way whatsoever"). Thus, they do
not inform our analysis.
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The dissenting justices cite the bill title as indicating that the Legislature
intended to keep the broad ban on obscene and pornographic materials and either
clarify that "telephone, electronic media, computer programs, or computer
services" are within the ban, Lewis, J., dissenting op. at 41-42, or add to it a ban on
"telephone, electronic media, computer programs, or computer services" relevant
to the offender's deviant behavior, Bell, J. dissenting op. at 54-56. We certainly
agree that the bill title may be helpful in determining legislative intent. See, e.g.,
Aramark Uniform & Career Apparel, Inc. v. Easton, 894 So. 2d 20, 25 (Fla. 2004)
(quoting State v. Webb, 398 So. 2d 820, 824-25 (Fla. 1981)). We disagree,
however, that in this case the bill title reveals the Legislature's intent one way or
the other.
The title to chapter 97-308, Laws of Florida, states in pertinent part:
An act relating to sex offenders; . . . amending section 948.03, F.S.;
requiring a curfew between specified hours; providing alternatives;
revising requirements for treatment for sex offenders; revising a
provision that prohibits a sex offender from viewing, owning or
possessing certain materials; prohibiting a sex offender from
possessing telephone, electronic media, or computer programs or
services that are relevant to the offender's behavior pattern; . . . .
Ch. 97-308, Laws of Fla. The dissents suggest that the clause "prohibiting a sex
offender from possessing telephone, electronic media, or computer programs or
services that are relevant to the offender's behavior pattern" in the bill title
demonstrates that the phrase "relevant to the offender's deviant behavior pattern"
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is limited to "telephone, electronic media, or computer programs or services."
Lewis, J., dissenting op. at 41-42; Bell, J., dissenting op. at 54-56. We disagree.
This language in the bill title merely tracks the amendment to the statute; it does
not clarify how that language is to be interpreted in relation to the remainder of the
subsection. This ambiguity is further highlighted by the immediately preceding
clause in the bill title, which states that it "revis[es] a provision that prohibits a sex
offender from viewing, owning or possessing certain materials." Ch. 97-308, Laws
of Ha. (emphasis added). If anything, this suggests that the Legislature did not
intend to leave the broad ban intact, but instead intended to revise the entire
provision. In short, the bill title simply does not clarify the ambiguities in the
statute.
Justice Bell argues that the bill title demonstrates the Legislature's intent to
keep the total ban on obscene and pornographic materials and add to it a ban on
"telephone, electronic media, or computer programs or services that are relevant to
the offender's behavior pattern." Bell, J., dissenting op. at 56. This interpretation,
however, would require us to replace "including" in the statute with "as well as" or
"and." To illustrate, if the Legislature intended to simply add a prohibition on
relevant telephone, electronic media, and computer programs or services to the
total ban on obscene and pornographic materials, it would have amended the
provision to read as follows:
EFTA00731441
Unless otherwise indicated in the treatment plan provided by the
sexual offender treatment program, a prohibition on viewing, owning,
or possessing any obscene, pornographic, or sexually stimulating
visual or auditory material, including-as well as telephone, electronic
media, computer program, or computer services that are relevant to
the offender's deviant behavior.
The Legislature did not include such language, and we cannot add it on our
own. See, e.g., State v. City of Fort Pierce, 88 So. 2d 135, 137 (Fla. 1956)
("It is not the province of this Court to rewrite the acts of the Legislature.").
The State asks us to dive even deeper into the legislative history. It argues
that a Senate Staff Analysis addressing the amendment, and the results of study by
the National Institute of Justice (NIJ) cited there, demonstrate that the Legislature
did not intend to narrow the broad ban on pornographic and obscene materials.
See Fla. S. Comm. on Crim. J., CS/SB 1930 (1997) Staff Analysis (April 8, 1997)
(on file with the Florida State Archives) [Staff Analysis] (citing Kim English, et
al., Managing Adult Sex Offenders in the Community—A Containment Approach,
Nat'l Inst. Just. 1 (Jan. 1997) [NIJ report]).
As we recently noted, "[t]his Court is not unified in its view of the use of
legislative staff analyses to determine legislative intent." GTC, Inc. v. Edgar, 967
So. 2d 781, 789 n.4 (Fla. 2007); see also White v. State, 714 So. 2d 440, 443 n.5
(Fla. 1998) (recognizing that staff analyses are not determinative of legislative
intent, but are only "one touchstone of the collective legislative will" (quoting
SunBank/South Fla.,
. v. Baker, 632 So. 2d 669, 671 (Fla. 4th DCA 1994)));
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American Home Assur. Co. v. Plaza Materials Corp., 908 So. 2d 360, 376 (Fla.
2005) (Cantero, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part) (proposing that
"legislative staff analyses add nothing to an investigation of legislative intent"). In
any event, a defendant on probation or community control cannot be expected to
research staff analyses to determine whether particular conduct is permitted. The
language of the statute should be enough.
Assuming that staff analyses can ever assist in determining legislative intent,
in this case it is at best inconclusive. For example, the Staff Analysis states that
the amendment would "clarify the condition of probation, community control, and
conditional release that prohibits the possession, viewing, or use of sexually
`explicit' material to be sexually stimulating visual or auditory material that would
include telephone, electronic media, computer programs, or computer services that
are relevant to the offender's deviant behavior pattern." Staff Analysis at 8. This
sentence supports the State's argument that the Legislature intended to retain the
total ban on pornographic or obscene material, and also to prohibit sexually
stimulating material to the extent "relevant to the offender's deviant behavior
pattern." The Staff Analysis also indicates, however, that the amendment was
based, at least in part, on the NIJ report. See Staff Analysis at 6-7 (detailing the
NIJ report). That report proposed a five-part model containment process for
managing adult sex offenders. NIJ report at 3. The Staff Analysis notes that one
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of the components of managing adult sex offenders is "utilizing sex offender-
specific containment strategies," "focus[ing] on a containment approach to case
processing and case management that can be tailored to the individual sex offender
and his or her deviant sexual history." Staff Analysis at 7-8 (emphasis added)
(quoting NIJ report at 3). The NIJ report also indicates that priorities include
"individualized treatment, supervision, and surveillance," with "sex offender-
specific probation or parole conditions." NIJ report at 5. One of the recommended
offender-specific conditions is strikingly similar to that at issue here: "You shall
not possess any pornographic, sexually oriented, or sexually stimulating visual,
auditory, telephonic, or electronic media and computer programs or services that
are relevant to your deviant behavior pattern." Id. at 5, 9 (suggesting
"individualized supervision plans for adult sex offenders according to their
particular risk factors"). This passage supports the Petitioner's argument that the
Legislature intended to focus on the particular offender's deviant behavior and
tailor the prohibitions accordingly.
Thus, some language from the Staff Analysis suggests an intent to retain the
total ban on pornographic and obscene material and add a prohibition on
possessing "sexually stimulating material" that is "relevant to the offender's
deviant behavior pattern"; while other language suggests an intent to focus all
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prohibitions on the offender's specific deviant behavior. 6 Therefore, even if staff
analyses may sometimes help in determining legislative intent, and even if we
could expect defendants to review them to determine what conduct was permitted,
the Staff Analysis here fails to clarify the Legislature's intent.
C. Applying the Canons of Statutory Construction
Where legislative intent is unclear from the plain language of the statute, we
look to canons of statutory construction. Joshua v. City of Gainesville 768 So. 2d
432, 435 (Fla. 2000) ("[I]f the language of the statute is unclear, then rules of
statutory construction control."). One such canon is the doctrine of the last
antecedent, under which "relative and qualifying words, phrases and clauses are to
be applied to the words or phrase immediately preceding, and are not to be
construed as extending to, or including, others more remote." City of St.
Petersburg v. Nasworthy, 751 So. 2d 772, 774 (Fla. 1st DCA 2000). The last
antecedent is "the last word, phrase, or clause that can be made an antecedent
without impairing the meaning of the sentence." 2A Norman J. Singer &
Shambie Singer, Statutes and Statutory Construction § 47.33 (7th ed. 2007).
6. Justice Lewis suggests that the Legislature amended the statute in 1997 in
response to the growth of Internet-based and other forms of electronic
pornography. Lewis, J., dissenting op. at 36-37. While it is plausible that some
legislators had this concern, the Staff Analysis does not mention Internet growth,
and the NIJ report specifically recommended a condition similar to that at issue
here without mentioning concerns regarding growth of the Internet. See ND
Report at 5.
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Commentators have questioned the doctrine's utility. See Terri LeClercq,
Doctrine of the Last Antecedent: The Mystifying Morass of Ambiguous Modifiers,
2 J. Legal Writing Inst. 81, 89 (1996) ("[R]ather than becoming `one more aid' in
interpretation as Sutherland hoped, the Doctrine of Last Antecedent has, in its
hundred-plus year history, created as much confusion and disagreement as the
ambiguous modifiers its drafter set out to clarify."). The very formulation of the
doctrine recognizes its application only where "no contrary intention appears."
Singer & Singer, supra, § 47:33 ("Referential and qualifying words and phrases,
where no contrary intention appears, refer solely to the last antecedent."). As
Statutes and Statutory Construction explains, "[t]he rule is another aid to discovery
of intent or meaning and is not inflexible and uniformly binding. Where the sense
of the entire act requires that a qualifying word or phrase apply to several
preceding or even succeeding sections, the word or phrase will not be restricted to
its immediate antecedent." Id.; see also Barnhart v. Thomas, 540 U.S. 20, 26
(2003) ("While [the doctrine of last antecedent] is not an absolute and can
assuredly be overcome by other indicia of meaning, we have said that construing a
statute in accord with the rule is `quite sensible as a matter of grammar.' (quoting
Nobelman v. Am. Savings Bank, 508 U.S. 324, 330 (1993))); Porto Rico Ry.,
Light & Power Co. v. Mor, 253 U.S. 345, 348 (1920) ("When several words are
followed by a clause which is applicable as much to the first and other words as to
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the last, the natural construction of the language demands that the clause be read as
applicable to all."). One commentator has explained that the doctrine itself
requires interpretation:
Sutherland begins with what seems the fall-back rule of statutory
interpretation and concludes with his specific point. He begins with a
qualifier, that interpreters should use the Doctrine of Last Antecedent
"where no contrary intention appears." Appears where? Within the
phrase or within the document as a whole? In the notes of the
committee that wrote the original rule? If the language offers no
"contrary intention," then the meaning is already "plain." If the
contrary intent shows up within the sentence itself, then there is no
need for the rule. And legislative intent or the drafter's intent is
usually in question to begin with, so that search rarely clarifies the
sentence in question. . . . Thus the Sutherland rule is a jumble.
LeClercq, supra at 92-93 (footnotes omitted).
In any event, applying the doctrine here does not result in the State's
suggested construction, which is that the phrase, "that are relevant to the offender's
deviant behavior pattern" qualifies "sexually stimulating visual or auditory
material." To reach this construction, we would have to insert a comma at the end
of the intervening phrase "including telephone, electronic media, computer
programs, or computer services." To explain, "commas are used to set off
expressions that provide additional but nonessential information about a noun or
pronoun immediately preceding. Such expressions serve to further identify or
explain the word they refer to." William A. Sabin, The Gregg Reference Manual
34 (10th ed. 2005). These expressions are parenthetical, meaning that the sentence
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can stand alone without them. When an expression is essential to the sentence,
however, it is not separated with commas. Id. at 35; see also State v. Tunney, 895
P.2d 13, 16 (Wash. Ct. App. 1995) ("Under the rules of punctuation, appositives
which serve a nonrestrictive (parenthetic) function are set off by commas;
appositives which serve a restrictive (necessary) function are not."),
917 P.2d
95 (Wash. 1996); Xcel Corp. v. Dir., Div. of Taxation, 4 M. Tax 85, 89 (E. Tax
Ct.) ("It is an elementary rule of grammar that commas are used to set off
nonrestrictive appositives, which are nouns that immediately follow and provide
additional but nonessential information about another noun in the sentence."),
M, 5 M. Tax 480
.
Super. Ct. App. Div. 1982). "Evidence that a qualifying
phrase is supposed to apply to all antecedents instead of only to the immediately
preceding one may be found in the fact that it is separated from the antecedents by
a comma." Singer & Singer, supra, § 47:33. Thus, to reach the State's proffered
construction, we would have to read the phrase "including telephone, electronic
media, computer programs, or computer services" as an appositive phrase that
provides nonessential explanatory information about the immediately preceding
phrase—"sexually stimulating visual or auditory material." So construed,
removing the phrase would make the sentence read, "or sexually stimulating visual
or auditory material. . . that are relevant to the offender's deviant behavior
pattern."
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The problem with such a construction is that the Legislature did not isolate
with commas the phrase "including telephone, electronic media, computer
programs, or computer services." We cannot read it as a parenthetical phrase by
inserting a comma ourselves. See Wagner v. Botts, 88 So. 2d 611, 613 (Fla. 1956)
("We have no authority to insert punctuation marks which are not there in order to
engraft upon the Act our notion of what the Legislature intended or should have
intended.").7
Instead, under the doctrine of last antecedent, the last phrase would qualify
the immediately preceding phrase, so that "relevant to the offender's deviant
behavior pattern" would modify only "electronic media, computer programs, or
computer services." See State ex rel. Owens v. Pearson, 156 So. 2d 4, 6 (Fla.
1963) ("[F]ollowing an enumeration in a series, a qualifying phrase will be read as
limited to the last of the series when it follows that item without a comma or other
indication that it relates as well to those items preceding the conjunction."); 48A
7. We note that even inserting a comma would not necessarily eliminate the
ambiguity. The statute would then require "a prohibition on viewing . . . any
obscene, pornographic, or sexually stimulating . . . material, including telephone,
electronic media, computer programs, or computer services[,] that are relevant to
the offender's deviant behavior." The statute could still be interpreted to prohibit
only materials relevant to the offender's deviant behavior. If the Legislature
intended to prohibit possession of all obscene or pornographic materials, as well as
prohibit sexually stimulating material relevant to the offender's deviant behavior, it
could have phrased the statute as follows: "a prohibition on . . . possessing any
obscene or pornographic material, or any sexually stimulating . . . material that are
relevant to the offender's deviant behavior, including telephone, electronic media,
computer programs, or computer services."
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Fla. Jur. 2d Statutes § 133 (2007) (recognizing that under the doctrine of last
antecedent, "a qualifying phrase in a statute is read as limited to the last item in a
series when the phrase follows that item without a comma"). That interpretation,
however, would lead to the absurd result that an offender would be prohibited from
"viewing, owning, or possessing" all "obscene, pornographic, or sexually
stimulating visual or auditory material" in print form, but not the same material in
"telephone, electronic media, computer programs, or computer services" unless it
was "relevant to the offender's deviant behavior pattern." Possession of a
"sexually stimulating" photograph would violate the statute, but possession of a
computer image of that photograph would not unless it was relevant to the
particular offender's deviant behavior pattern. We cannot apply the doctrine of last
antecedent in a manner that leads to such a result. See, e.g., Warner v. City of
Boca Raton, 887 So. 2d 1023, 1033 n.9 (Fla. 2004) ("[A] statutory provision
should not be construed in such a way that it renders the statute meaningless or
leads to absurd results."); City of St. Petersburg v. Siebold, 48 So. 2d 291, 294
(Fla. 1950) ("The courts will not ascribe to the Legislature an intent to create
absurd . . . consequences, and so an interpretation avoiding absurdity is always
preferred."); Haworth v. Chapman, 152 So. 663, 665 (Fla. 1933) ("There is a
strong presumption against absurdity in a statutory provision; it being unreasonable
to suppose that the Legislature intended their own stultification . . . .").
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The final possible interpretation of the last phrase is that it modifies the
entire sentence so that defendants are prohibited from possessing any obscene,
pornographic, or sexually stimulating material, but only to the extent the material
is relevant to the offender's deviant behavior pattern. This interpretation seems at
least as faithful an interpretation of the text as the others, if not more so. It has the
benefit of prohibiting obscene, pornographic, and sexually stimulating material to
the same extent and gives a logical meaning to the last phrase.
Such an interpretation is also supported by another canon of statutory
construction: the rule of lenity. In Florida, the rule is not just an interpretive tool,
but a statutory directive. agg § 775.021(1), Fla. Stat. (2007) ("The provisions of
this code and offenses defined by other statutes shall be strictly construed; when
the language is susceptible of differing constructions, it shall be construed most
favorably to the accused."). The rule requires that "[a]ny ambiguity or situations in
which statutory language is susceptible to differing constructions must be resolved
in favor of the person charged with an offense." State v. Byars, 823 So. 2d 740,
742 (Fla. 2002) (emphasis added). As we have emphasized before, "lo]ne of the
most fundamental principles of Florida law is that penal statutes must be strictly
construed according to their letter."' Id. (quoting Perkins v. State, 576 So. 2d
1310, 1312 (Fla. 1991)). "Indeed, our system of jurisprudence is founded on a
belief that everyone must be given sufficient notice of those matters that may result
- 21 -
EFTA00731451
in a deprivation of life, liberty, or property." Perkins, 576 So. 2d at 1312; see also
United States v. Santos, 128 S. Ct. 2020, 2025 (2008) (plurality opinion) ("Under a
long line of our decisions, the tie must go to the defendant. The rule of lenity
requires ambiguous criminal laws to be interpreted in favor of the defendants
subjected to them."); State v. Winters, 346 So. 2d 991, 993 (Fla. 1977) ("Penal
statutes must be strictly construed in favor of the accused where there is doubt as to
their meaning and must be sufficiently explicit so that men of common intelligence
may ascertain whether a contemplated act is within or without the law, and so that
the ordinary man may determine what conduct is proscribed by the statute.").
We recognize that the rule of lenity is a canon of last resort. See, e.g.,
United States v. Shabani, 513 U.S. 10, 17 (1994) ("The rule of lenity, however,
applies only when, after consulting traditional canons of statutory construction, we
are left with an ambiguous statute."); cf. Bautista v. State, 863 So. 2d 1180, 1185
n.4 (Fla. 2003) (recognizing that the rule of lenity does not apply where legislative
intent to the contrary is clear). As discussed above, however, and as the Third
District acknowledged in this case, the statute "is undeniably susceptible to
multiple and irreconcilable interpretations." 946 So. 2d at 1157. The dissenting
justices have presented two of many possible interpretations of the statute. Their
lengthy dissents to this opinion only highlight the difficulty in interpreting this
hopelessly ambiguous statute. We have been unable otherwise to resolve this
- 22 -
EFTA00731452
ambiguity and cannot simply choose our preferred construction. We therefore
apply the rule of lenity and hold that the limiting phrase "relevant to the offender's
deviant behavior pattern" must be interpreted as qualifying each of the prohibitions
in section 948.03(5)(a)(7).8 See Clines v. State, 912 So. 2d 550, 560 (Fla. 2005)
(applying the rule of lenity to an ambiguous statute that "generate[d] differing
reasonable constructions"). In other words, the Petitioner violated the statute only
if the "obscene, pornographic, or sexually stimulating" material recovered from his
home was relevant to his "deviant behavior pattern." That issue has not been
addressed in this case and is outside the scope of the conflict. See. e.g.,
McEnderfer v. Keefe, 921 So. 2d 597, 597 n.1 (Fla. 2006) (declining to reach
issues "that were either not directly addressed by the district court . . . or were
merely implied or cursory, at best"); Gaines v. Sayne, 764 So. 2d 578, 586 (Fla.
8. Justice Bell argues that our decision leaves Florida courts and law
enforcement with a "vague" restriction because it requires a determination as to
what materials are relevant to the offender's "deviant behavior pattern." Bell, J.,
dissenting op. at 63-67. However, his argument ignores that the condition at issue
is not required where the treatment plan provided by the sexual offender treatment
program provides otherwise. § 948.03(5)(a)(7), Ha. Stat. (1999) (prefacing the
condition at issue with "[u]nless otherwise indicated in the treatment plan provided
by the sexual offender treatment program"). Further, any problem determining
what materials are "relevant to the offender's deviant behavior pattern" is a
function of the language used by the Legislature, not our decision today. We note
that even under Justice Bell's view, Florida courts would be required to determine
what "telephone, electronic media, computer programs, or computer services" are
"relevant to the offender's deviant behavior pattern."
- 23 -
EFTA00731453
2000) (declining to address an issue outside the scope of the conflict). We
therefore leave it for resolution on remand.
III. CONCLUSION
We hold that the phrase "relevant to the offender's deviant behavior pattern"
qualifies each of the prohibitions in section 948.03(5)(a)(7), Florida Statutes
(1999). An offender does not violate this condition unless the "obscene,
pornographic, or sexually stimulating" material at issue is relevant to the "deviant
behavior pattern." We therefore approve the Second District's decision in Taylor
and quash the Third District's decision in Kasischke. We remand this case to the
district court with instructions that it be returned to the trial court for further
proceedings consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
QUINCE, C.J., and WELLS, ANSTEAD, and PARIENTE, JJ., concur.
LEWIS, J., dissents with an opinion.
BELL, J., dissents with an opinion.
NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING MOTION, AND
IF FILED, DETERMINED.
LEWIS, J., dissenting.
This case involves interpretation of section 948.03(5)(a)(7), Florida Statutes
(1999), which is a default term of probation and community control for Florida's
convicted sexual offenders. This question of statutory interpretation is subject to
- 24 -
EFTA00731454
de novo review. See, e.g., Daniels v. Fla. Dep't of Health, 898 So. 2d 61,64 (Fla.
2005). The 1999 version of section 948.03(5)(a)(7),9 reads as follows:
Unless otherwise indicated in the treatment plan provided by the
sexual offender treatment program, a prohibition on viewing, owning,
or possessing any obscene, pornographic, or sexually stimulating
visual or auditory material, including telephone, electronic media,
computer programs, or computer services that are relevant to the
offender's deviant behavior pattern.
(Emphasis supplied.) The majority opinion does not adequately address the
presence or significance of (1) the adjective "any," m (2) the participle
"including," II (3) the comma preceding "including," which further indicates that
9. In 2004, the Legislature transferred the language contained in the 1999
version of section 948.03(5)(a)(7) to section 948.30(1)(g), Florida Statutes. See
ch. 2004-373, § 18, at 2826-27, Laws of Fla. In 2005, the Legislature amended
section 948.30(1)(g) by adding "accessing" to the total prohibition against
convicted sexual offenders "viewing, accessing, owning, or possessing any
obscene, pornographic, or sexually stimulating visual or auditory material." Ch.
2005-67, § 4, at 467, Laws of Fla.; § 948.30(1)(g), Fla. Stat. (2005) (emphasis
supplied).
10. See Webster's Collegiate Dictionary 53 (10th ed. 1996) ("any . . . adj. . .
. unmeasured or unlimited in amount, number, or extent" (emphasis supplied)).
11. ate Fed. Land Bank of St. Paul v. Bismarck Lumber Co., 314 U.S. 95,
100 (1941) ("[T]he term `including' is not one of all-embracing definition, but
connotes simply an illustrative application of the general principle." (emphasis
supplied)); see also Phelps Dodge Corp. v. NLRB, 313 U.S. 177, 189 (1941)
(substantially similar); Black's Law Dictionary 777-78 (8th ed. 2004) ("The
participle including typically indicates a partial list .
. But some drafters use
phrases such as including without limitation and including but not limited to—
which mean the same thing." (emphasis supplied)).
- 25 -
EFTA00731455
the entire clause introduced by "including" is illustrative,'2 or (4) a series of
intervening nouns.13
When one reads section 948.03(5)(a)(7) it is apparent that the clause
"including telephone, electronic media, computer programs, or computer services
that are relevant to the offender's deviant behavior pattern," is merely illustrative
and indicates that these materials fall within the general ambit of the total
prohibition against the sexual offender "viewing, owning, or possessing any
obscene, pornographic, or sexually stimulating visual or auditory material." Cf.
Wagner v. Botts, 88 So. 2d 611 (Fla. 1956).14 The grammatical structure and
phrasing of this default term of sexual-offender probation and community control
12. State v. Bodden, 877 So. 2d 680, 685 (Fla. 2004) ("[T]he legislature is
presumed to know the meaning of words and the rules of grammar, and the only
way the court is advised of what the legislature intends is by giving the generally
accepted construction, not only to the phraseology of an act but to the manner in
which it is punctuated." (quoting Fla. State Racing
v. Bourquardez 42
So. 2d 87, 88 (Fla. 1949)) (emphasis supplied)).
13. ee State ex rel. Owens v. Pearson, 156 So. 2d 4, 5 (Fla. 1963)
(describing the rule of the last antecedent).
14. In Wanner, this Court interpreted the following language of chapter
27537, Laws of Florida (1951), as "clear and unambiguous": "The Civil Service is
hereby divided into the unclassified and classified service. The unclassified
service shall comprise: .
(g) Persons of highly technical or professional training
including registered nurses employed by Escambia General Hospital." 88 So. 2d at
612-13 (emphasis supplied). Specifically, the Court held that the clear language of
the law mandated that a cartographer employed by Escambia County fell within
the ambit of the descriptive clause "[p]ersons of highly technical or professional
training," and that the language "including registered nurses employed by
Escambia General Hospital," was purely illustrative. Id. (emphasis supplied).
- 26 -
EFTA00731456
simply does not admit of any other reasonable interpretation; therefore, the rule of
lenity does not apply. See, e.g., Clines v. State, 912 So. 2d 550, 560 (Fla. 2005)
("[T]he rule [of lenity] `is applicable to sentencing provisions' if they `create
ambiguity or generate differing reasonable constructions.' " (quoting Nettles v.
State, 850 So. 2d 487, 494 (Fla. 2003) (emphasis supplied)); Wallace v. State, 860
So. 2d 494, 497-98 (Fla. 4th DCA 2003) ("Application of [the] rule [of lenity]
means that if there is a reasonable construction of a penal statute favorable to the
accused, the court must employ that construction." (emphasis supplied)).
The majority spurns the intent of the Legislature, as expressed through the
plain text of the statute, and similarly runs afoul of several canons of statutory
construction. For these reasons, I must respectfully dissent.
I. ANALYSIS
A. The Plain Text of Section 948.03(5)(a)(7)
The plain text of section 948.03(5)(a)(7) clearly conveys the intent of the
Legislature. Further, "the statute's plain and ordinary meaning must control,
unless this leads to an unreasonable result or a result clearly contrary to legislative
intent." Daniels, 898 So. 2d at 64. Here, the plain text neither leads to an absurd
outcome nor results in the creation or perpetuation of an unintended evil.
Therefore, the analysis of the majority should have concluded with the plain text of
the statute without applying such doctrines as the rule of lenity.
- 27 -
EFTA00731457
The Legislature has not in any way indicated an intent to abandon the total
prohibition against sexual offenders "viewing, owning, or possessing any obscene,
pornographic, or sexually stimulating visual or auditory material." §
948.03(5)(a)(7), Fla. Stat. (1999) (emphasis supplied). Rather, the Legislature
simply clarified that this broad prohibition "includ es telephone, electronic media,
computer programs, or computer services that are relevant to the offender's deviant
behavior pattern." Id. (emphasis supplied). This is an illustrative clause separated
by a comma and introduced by the participle "including"; therefore, under the rules
of grammar and the rule of the last antecedent, the relative clause "that are relevant
to the offender's deviant behavior pattern" modifies the grouping of nouns
"including telephone, electronic media, computer programs, or computer services,"
and does not modify the noun "material" contained in the separate, preceding
clause "any obscene, pornographic, or sexually stimulating visual or auditory
material." Id.;15 see Owens, 156 So. 2d at 6 ("[T]he established rules of
grammatical construction [dictate] that, following an enumeration in series, a
15. This is the same plain-text interpretation that the State offered the Third
District below. See Kasischke v. State, 946 So. 2d 1155, 1157 (Fla. 3d DCA
2006); Answer Brief of the Respondent on the Merits at 8, 11. In contrast, the
Third District erroneously adopted the State's alternative argument, which applied
the "relevant to the offender's deviant behavior pattern" language to "sexually
stimulating . . . material," while ignoring the fact that the adjectives "obscene" and
"pornographic" modify the same noun (i.e., "material"). See Kasischke, 946 So.
2d at 1159-61.
- 28 -
EFTA00731458
qualifying phrase will be read as limited to the last of the series when it follows
that item without a comma or other indication that it relates as well to those items
preceding the conjunction."); Bodden, 877 So. 2d at 685 ("[T]he legislature is
presumed to know the meaning of words and the rules of grammar[.]"); see also
Gaffney v. Riverboat Servs. of Ind., Inc., 451 F.3d 424, 459 (7th Cir. 2006) (stating
that use of the participle "including" generally implies an illustrative application)
(citing Black's Law Dictionary 687 (5th ed. 1979)); In re Glunk, 342 B.R. 717, 729
(Sankt M. Pa. 2006) (holding that the use of the participle "including" in 11
U.S.C. § 707(a) indicates that "the three enumerated grounds for dismissal [for
lack of a good-faith filing] are illustrative and not exhaustive").
In this context, the reliance of Kasischke and the majority upon Porto Rico
Railway, Light & Power Co. v. Mor, 253 U.S. 345 (1920), for a contrary rule of
construction is misplaced and improper. See Initial Brief of the Petitioner on the
Merits at 19-20; majority op. at 16-17. In Mor, the High Court stated that "[w]hen
several words are followed by a clause which is applicable as much to the first and
other words as to the last, the natural construction of the language demands that the
clause be read as applicable to all." 253 U.S. at 348. However, the Court applied
this rule of construction to section 41 of the Jones Act of March 2, 1917, to avoid a
potentially absurd result: "Congress could not have intended to give the District
Court [of Puerto Rico] jurisdiction of any controversy to which a domiciled alien is
- 29 -
EFTA00731459
a party while denying under similar circumstances jurisdiction where a domiciled
American is a party." Id. at 349.
However, in contrast to Mor, an absurd result will not occur based upon a
plain-text interpretation of section 948.03(5)(a)(7). Further, a "natural construction
of the languages16 of section 948.03(5)(a)(7) demonstrates the grammatical
incongruity of reading "relevant to the offender's deviant behavior pattern" as
modifying a preceding clause which is separated from the former clause by (1) a
comma, (2) an illustrative participle, and (3) a string of several nouns. Kasischke
and the majority contend that a logical, grammatical reading of section
948.03(5)(a)(7)'s plain text (i.e., interpreting the clause "relevant to the offender's
deviant behavior pattern" as modifying "telephone, electronic media, computer
programs, or computer services") would lead to an absurd or unreasonable result.
See Initial Brief of the Petitioner on the Merits at 19-20; majority op. at 7-8, 19-20.
This is entirely incorrect based upon the language and organization of the statute.
The Legislature intended to prohibit the "viewing, owning, or possessing" by
convicted sexual offenders of "any obscene, pornographic, or sexually stimulating
visual or auditory material," and simply clarified that this prohibition "includfesT
telephone, electronic media, computer programs, or computer services that are
16. Mor, 253 U.S. at 348 (emphasis supplied).
- 30 -
EFTA00731460
relevant to the offender's deviant behavior pattern." § 948.03(5)(a)(7), Fla. Stat.
(1999) (emphasis supplied).
The majority is conspicuously silent with regard to much of this plain-text
analysis. In my view, this silence represents an example of the "dog that didn't
bark." See Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Silver Blaze, in The Memoirs of Sherlock
Holmes (1894).17 An absurd or unreasonable result does not occur based on the
plain text of the statute because the "including" clause is illustrative18 and clarifies
the fact that the total-prohibition clause "includes" otherwise innocuous electronic,
telephonic, and computer-based materials. The modifying language "relevant to
the offender's deviant behavior pattern" merely relates these otherwise innocuous
materials back to the total-prohibition clause (i.e., it clarifies that the only
"telephone, electronic media, computer programs, or computer services" that
convicted sexual offenders are prohibited from "viewing, owning, or possessing"
are those that are "obscene, pornographic, or sexually stimulating" as a matter of
17. In Silver Blaze, Inspector Gregory believed that a stranger had stolen a
race horse from the owner's stable during the night. However, Sherlock Holmes
wondered how Gregory could account for the "curious incident" of the silence of
the stable's guard dog. Holmes later explained that the dog did not bark because
the thief was the horse's trainer (John Straker), whom the dog recognized as a
familiar person. Thus, the dog's silence portended some significance.
18. See note 11, supra, at 25; see also Merriam Webster's Collegiate
Dictionary 578 (10th ed. 1996) ("illustrative . . . adj.. . : serving, tending, or
designed to illustrate <[illustrative] examples>").
- 31 -
EFTA00731461
law). § 948.03(5)(a)(7), Fla. Stat. (1999) (emphasis supplied). According to the
evident language, punctuation, and syntactic organization of the statute, there is no
difference between an offender's possession of a tangible photograph and the same
image stored as a file on the offender's computer or, for that matter, presented as
an image on the offender's television. If the photograph is "obscene,
pornographic, or sexually stimulating" as a matter of law," then ICasischke—and
19. "Obscenity" is a well-defined legal term of art. See. e.g., Miller v.
California, 413 U.S. 15, 24-25 (1973). In contrast, "pornography" and "sexually
stimulating material" may not be so well-defined. However, the Second and Third
federal Circuits appear to have crafted a solution to this potential due-process
issue. See United States v. Loy, 237 F.3d 251, 267 (3d Cir. 2001) ("[T]he
Constitution would not forbid a more tightly defined restriction on legal, adult
pornography, perhaps one that . . . borrowed applicable language from the federal
statutory definition of child pornography located at 18 U.S.C. § 2256(8)."
(emphasis supplied)); United States v. Cabot, 325 F.3d 384, 385-86 (2d Cir. 2003);
United States v. Simmons, 343 F.3d 72, 81-82 (2d Cir. 2003). These courts have
drawn a distinction between the legally established definition of "obscenity," as
recognized by the United States Supreme Court in Miller and the terms
"pornography" and "pornographic materials." These courts have also recognized
that prohibitions against convicted sexual offenders possessing "pornography" may
be cabined through selective incorporation of the definitions supplied in 18 U.S.C.
§ 2256. See. e.g., Simmons, 343 F.3d at 82 ("When the references to minors are
omitted [from 18 U.S.C. § 2256], what remains is the definition of the broader
category of pornography[.]").
A similar cabining of section 948.03(5)(a)(7), Florida Statutes (1999), and
sections 948.30(1)(g), and 947.1405(7)(a)(7), Florida Statutes (2007), is possible
through selective reference to the definitions contained in section 847.001, Florida
Statutes. Such a cabining could be utilized to construe the terms "pornographic
material" and "sexually stimulating visual or auditory material" to remove
questions with regard to the constitutional requirements of due process. See §
847.001, Fla. Stat. (2007) (this statute contains detailed definitions of "child
pornography" and "sexual conduct," which when appropriately redacted provide
an equally detailed definition of "pornography"; further, the statute defines
- 32 -
EFTA00731462
others subject to the same default term of probation and community control—
would be prohibited from "viewing, owning, or possessing" the photo regardless of
whether it is in print, electronic, or televisual form. This is so because the total-
prohibition clause, which bans "any obscene, pornographic, or sexually stimulating
visual or auditory material," "includfes1 telephone, electronic media, computer
programs, or computer services that are relevant to the offender's deviant behavior
pattern." § 948.03(5)(a)(7), Fla. Stat. (1999) (emphasis supplied).
As stated in the statute, the total-prohibition clause applies "[u]nless
otherwise indicated in the treatment plan provided by the sexual offender treatment
program." § 948.03(5)(a)(7), Fla. Stat. (1999). However, here, the record does not
indicate that any qualified decision-maker ever individually tailored Kasischke's
treatment plan by altering his default conditions of probation and community
control with the approval of the appropriate court. Cf. § 948.03(6), Fla. Stat.
(1999) (affording the appropriate court continuing jurisdiction to modify the
offender's release conditions in proper circumstances). On the contrary,
"sexually oriented material," which is sufficiently analogous to "sexually
stimulating visual or auditory material" because the statutory term includes "any
drawing, etching, painting, photograph, motion picture film, or sound recording
that depicts sexual activity" (emphasis supplied)).
To avoid any due-process vagueness issues, reference to these statutory
definitions could be utilized when construing this default term of sexual-offender
probation, community control, and conditional release. I would leave for another
day the question of whether these sufficiently definite classifications raise any
overbreadth concerns.
- 33 -
EFTA00731463
Kasischke's community-control officers advised him that the default total
prohibition applied and that, consequently, he was prohibited from "viewing,
owning, or possessing any obscene, pornographic, or sexually stimulating visual or
auditory material." § 948.03(5)(a)(7), Ha. Stat. (1999) (emphasis supplied).
The majority also offers suspect reasoning with regard to its claim that there
are at least four acceptable interpretations of the statute. See majority op. at 6-8.
The only grammatically acceptable reading of the statute requires that the clause
"relevant to the offender's deviant behavior pattern" modify "telephone, electronic
media, computer programs, or computer services," which is the same interpretative
result reached in the other dissent. The majority's disjunctive listing of my
interpretation of the statute and that offered in the other dissent is totally
misleading. Both dissents have correctly interpreted the plain text of the statute;
we simply arrive at that interpretation through different rationales.
The number of "interpretations" advanced by the majority is overly
generous. One proffered interpretation, which was the interpretation adopted by
the Third District below, is incorrect as a matter of grammar. The Third District
erroneously adopted the State's alternative, secondary argument,70 which applied
20. The State has consistently argued in the alternative by proffering (1) the
correct plain-text interpretation of the statute and (2) the erroneous, grammatically
incorrect interpretation adopted by the Third District. See Answer Brief of the
Respondent on the Merits at 8, 11; Kasischke, 946 So. 2d at 1157. The State has
- 34 -
EFTA00731464
the clause "relevant to the offender's deviant behavior pattern" to "sexually
stimulating . . . material," despite the fact that the adjectives "obscene" and
"pornographic" also modify "material." See Kasischke, 946 So. 2d at 1159-61. As
explained above, "relevant to the offender's deviant behavior pattern" cannot
modify "material" due to the syntax and punctuation of the statute. Further, even if
this language could somehow modify "material," which it cannot, it would
necessarily modify "material" in all of its applications (i.e., "obscene material,"
"pornographic material," and "sexually stimulating visual or auditory material").
Hence, the majority is really reduced to two of its "acceptable" interpretations of
the statute. However, the majority's adopted reading is inconsistent with the
statute as written; therefore, it is not an "acceptable" interpretation. See, e.g., Fla.
Dep't of Revenue v. Fla. Mun. Power Agency, 789 So. 2d 320, 324 (Fla. 2001)
("Under fundamental principles of separation of powers, courts cannot judicially
alter the wording of statutes where the Legislature clearly has not done so.");
Hawkins v. Ford Motor Co., 748 So. 2d 993, 1000 (Fla. 1999) ("[T]his Court may
not rewrite statutes contrary to their plain language."). "[R]elevant to the
offender's deviant behavior pattern" cannot modify the total-prohibition clause
because of (1) the adjective "any," (2) the illustrative participle "including," (3) the
not abandoned this alternative stance; rather, before this Court, it understandably
sought to sustain the interpretation established by the lower court.
- 35 -
EFTA00731465
comma preceding "including," and (4) a series of intervening nouns. §
948.03(5)(a)(7), Fla. Stat. (1999); see also Bismarck Lumber, 314 U.S. at 100;
Bodden, 877 So. 2d at 685; Owens, 156 So. 2d at 5; Wagner, 88 So. 2d 612-13. In
sum, there is only one acceptable, grammatically sound interpretation of the
statute—the plain-text interpretation outlined in this dissent as intended and written
by the Legislature.
The error of Kasischke and the majority exists in their conflation of the
purely illustrative "including" clause with the ban created in the primary total-
prohibition clause. That the Legislature felt compelled to add this illustrative
clause in 1997 makes perfect sense. agg ch. 97-308, § 3, at 5520, Laws of Fla.
During the mid-to-late 1990s, Internet-based and other forms of electronic
obscenity and pornography were steadily increasing. Some commentators viewed
these new materials as qualitatively different from traditional print-based or
otherwise tangible obscene or pornographic materials. For example, as two
commentators have explained:
The rapid, worldwide growth of the Internet leads to
unprecedented opportunities in applications in business,
communication, education, and entertainment. Commercial interests
act as a driving force behind these applications, but one of the
byproducts is sex—lots of it. Sex is one of the most researched words
on the Internet. Pornographic web sites have shown tremendous
growth in the past few years, increasing by nearly 300 [sites] a day
and [generating] $700 million in a year. [As of March 2002,] [t]hey
total[ed] approximately 170,000. "Cybersex" or "cyber-porn" came
hand-in-glove with global interconnectivity.
- 36 -
EFTA00731466
Pornography on the Internet is unique because sexually explicit
materials posted on the Internet differ from traditional forms of
pornographic materials, such as magazines and videos, in several
important ways: (a) it is widely available through Bulletin Board
Services (BBS) groups and via the World Wide Web through database
accesses, interactive services, e-mail, Internet Relay Chat (IRC), and
real-time data feeds; (b) it is active and interactive through the
presentation of materials in multimedia formats such as digitized
moving images, animated sequences, sexually explicit texts, hot chats,
and interactive sexual games; and (c) consumers also are producers of
pornographic materials. . . . "Pornography in cyberspace is
pornography in society—just broader, deeper, worse, and more of it."
Ven-hwei Lo & Ran Wei, Third-Person Effect, Gender, and Pornography on the
Internet, 46 J. Broad. & Elec. Media 13, 13-14 (2002) (some emphasis supplied)
(citations omitted) (quoting Catherine A. MacKinnon, Vindication and Resistance:
A Response to the Carnegie Mellon Study of Pornography in Cyberspace, 83 Geo.
L.J. 1959, 1959 (1995)).21 Hence, the purely illustrative "including" clause is not
21. In support of this analysis, the authors cite the following books, articles,
and studies: John Hagel III & Arthur G. Armstrong, Net Gain: Expanding
Markets Through Virtual Communities (1997); Steven R. Johnson, Interface
Culture: How New Technology Transforms the Way We Create and Communicate
(1997); Evan I. Schwartz, Webonomics: Nine Essential Principles for Growing
Your Business on the World Wide Web (1998); Tapscott et al., Blueprint to the
Digital Economy: Creating Wealth in the Era of E-Business (1998); W. Chen, Web
547 is Launched to Combat Pornography in Cyberspace, China Times, July 22,
1999, at 7; Fred Hapgood, Sex Sells, Inc. Tech., at 4, 45-51 (1996); Alvin Cooper,
Sexuality and the Internet: Surfing into the new Millennium, Cyberpsychol. &
Behay., 1(2), at 1987-93 (1997); Martin Rimm, Marketing Pornography on the
Information Superhighway: A Survey of 917,410 Images, Descriptions, Short
Stories, and Animations Downloaded 8.5 Million Times by Consumers in Over
2000 Cities in Forty Countries, Provinces, and Territories, 83 Geo. L.J. 1849
(1995).
- 37 -
EFTA00731467
surplusage because it clarifies that the total-prohibition clause includes (but is not
limited to or by) the potentially qualitatively different electronic and telephonic
materials contained within the "including" clause. The modifier "relevant to the
offender's deviant behavior pattern" merely relates the otherwise innocuous
materials outlined in the "including" clause back to the total-prohibition clause's
outright ban of "ate obscene, pornographic, or sexually stimulating visual or
auditory material." § 948.03(5)(a)(7), Fla. Stat. (1999) (emphasis supplied).
The construction advanced by Kasischke and the majority is simply
unreasonable based upon the plain text of section 948.03(5)(a)(7) because such a
construction is inconsistent with the language, punctuation, and syntax of the
statute. Moreover, as I explain below, even if we move beyond the plain text of
the statute, the relevant legislative history of section 948.03(5)(a)(7) confirms my
interpretation of this subsection. 22
22. The majority "explores legislative history" before applying the doctrines
of statutory interpretation and canons of construction that may aid us in
interpreting the text of the relevant statute. leg majority op. at 8-15. However, we
generally examine the statutory text, which may include the application of canons
of construction and interpretive doctrines (such as our adherence to the established
rules of grammar), and then consult relevant legislative history if further
clarification is necessary or probative. See, e.g., State v. Sousa, 903 So. 2d 923,
928 (Fla. 2005) ("The fundamental rule of construction in determining legislative
intent is to first give effect to the plain and ordinary meaning of the language used
by the Legislature. Courts are not to change the plain meaning of a statute by
turning to legislative history if the meaning of the statute can be discerned from the
language in the statute.").
- 38 -
EFTA00731468
B. The Relevant Legislative History
In 1995, the Legislature amended section "948.03, F.S., relating to terms or
conditions of probation or community control" by "requiring mandatory special
conditions of release for sexual predators and other specified offenders, under
certain circumstances." Ch. 95-283, title, at 2651, Laws of Ha. As part of that
amendment, the Legislature added what was then numbered section 948.03(5)(g).
Ch. 95-283, § 59, at 2690, Laws of Ha. That subsection provided the following
mandatory special condition of sexual-offender probation and community control:
Unless otherwise indicated in the treatment plan provided by the
sexual offender treatment program, a prohibition on viewing, owning,
or possessing gal obscene, pornographic, or sexually explicit
material.
Id. (emphasis supplied). Thus, the statutory section began as a total ban against
sex offenders "viewing, owning, or possessing any obscene, pornographic, or
sexually explicit material." Id (emphasis supplied).23 From 1995 until 1996,
section 948.03(5)(g) remained unchanged.
In 1997, the Legislature amended section 948.03 inter alia to "prohibit[] a
sex offender from possessing telephone, electronic media, or computer programs
or services that are relevant to the offender's deviant behavior pattern." Ch. 97-
308, title, at 5515, Laws of Fla. In the same law, the Legislature also imposed the
23. As part of the same law, the Legislature added a parallel mandatory
provision of sexual-offender conditional release. See ch. 95-283, § 57, at 2687,
Laws of Fla.; § 947.1405(7)(a)(7), Ha. Stat. (2007).
- 39 -
EFTA00731469
following mandatory conditions of sexual-offender probation and community
control: (1) an offender curfew; (2) a requirement that offenders submit to
specified warrantless searches; (3) "at least" annual polygraph examinations of
offenders; (4) offender maintenance of a driving log and a prohibition against
offenders driving alone without prior permission; (5) a prohibition against
offenders obtaining or using a post office box without prior approval; (6) HIV
testing of offenders with the results released to the victims and their parents or
guardians; and (7) electronic monitoring of offenders "when deemed necessary."
Ch. 97-308, § 3, at 5519-21, Laws of Fla.
What is particularly relevant for our purposes is that the Legislature
renumbered section 948.03(5)(g) as section 948.03(5)(a)(7) and provided the
following revised language:
Unless otherwise indicated in the treatment plan provided by the
sexual offender treatment program, a prohibition on viewing, owning,
or possessing any obscene, pornographic, or sexually stimulating
visual or auditory explicit material, including telephone, electronic
media, computer programs, or computer services that are relevant to
the offender's deviant behavior pattern.
Ch. 97-308, § 3, at 5520, Laws of Fla.''; Consistent with the analysis in subpart A
of my dissent, all that the Legislature accomplished—and intended to
accomplish—through this amendment was an expansion of "sexually explicit
24. Additions appear in underlined text; deletions appear in strike-through
text.
- 40 -
EFTA00731470
material" to "sexually stimulating visual or auditory material" and the addition of
the illustrative "including" clause. Fla. S. Comm. on Crim. J., CS for SB 1930
(1997) Staff Analysis (Apr. 8, 1997) at 8 (on file with the Florida State Archives),
at 8 ["SB 1930 Staff Analysis"]. The amended language did not alter the total ban
against sexual offenders "viewing, owning, or possessing any obscene,
pornographic, or sexually stimulating visual or auditory explicit material." Ch. 97-
308, § 3, at 5520, Laws of Fla. As the title of the session law states, the
Legislature additionally intended to "prohibit[] a sex offender from possessing
telephone, electronic media, or computer programs or services that are relevant to
the offender's deviant behavior pattern." Ch. 97-308, title, at 5515, Laws of Fla.25
25. The majority attempts to group this statement with a separate statement
of legislative intent (i.e., "revising a provision that prohibits a sex offender from
viewing, owning, or possessing certain materials"). Ch. 97-308, title, at 5515,
Laws of Ha.; see majority op. at 10-11. The majority fails to explain the
significance of the fact that each statement of legislative intent is separated by a
semicolon.
ee ch. 97-308, title, at 5515, Laws of Fla.; see also Merriam
Webster's Collegiate Dictionary 1063 (10th ed. 1996) ("semicolon .
n .
: a
punctuation mark; used chiefly in a coordinating function between major sentence
elements (as independent clauses of a compound sentence)" (emphasis supplied)).
Moreover, from the context of the session law and the relevant staff analysis, it is
clear that these independent title clauses describe the two separate changes affected
by the session law with regard to this default condition of sexual-offender
probation and community control: (1) the title language "revising a provision that
prohibits a sex offender from viewing, owning, or possessing certain materials,"
refers to the deletion of "sexually explieit material," and its replacement with
"sexually stimulating visual or auditory material"; whereas, (2) the title language
"prohibiting a sex offender from possessing telephone, electronic media, or
computer programs or services that are relevant to the offender's behavior pattern,"
refers to the addition of the illustrative "including" clause. Ch. 97-308, title, at
- 41 -
EFTA00731471
The session law does not contain any language supporting the grammatically
strained reading of the majority, which applies the "including" clause's "relevant
to the offender's deviant behavior pattern" language to the total-prohibition clause
by ignoring a preceding comma, an illustrative participle, and a string of
intervening nouns.
The relevant staff analysis, which the majority half-heartedly consults,
likewise does not support its labored reading of section 948.03(5)(a)(7).26 Cf., e.g.,
5515, Laws of Fla.; SB 1930 Staff Analysis, at 8 (emphasis supplied).
Consequently, it is not surprising that the relevant independent clause of the
session law title "tracks the amendment to the statute," because this is, in fact, the
illustrative language present in the statute, which lends further support to the
correct plain-text interpretation described in this dissent.
26. The "backhanded" claim of the majority that Florida's citizens should
not be required to consult staff analyses may be witty and cute but it is not
analytically sound given that courts charged with the duty of interpreting statutes
often utilize and reference many interpretive "tools" and canons of construction,
which are quite understandably unknown and esoteric for lay members of the
public. ee majority op. at 12-13. These tools are generally not outlined in the
statutes themselves; nevertheless, they remain well-recognized pillars of Florida
and federal precedent. Cf.. e.g. Johnson v. State 602 So. 2d 1288, 1290 (Fla.
1992) (referring to the legislative history of section 893.13(1)(c)(1), Florida
Statutes (1989), a criminal statute, to conclude "that the legislative history does not
show a manifest intent to use the word `delivery' in the context of criminally
prosecuting mothers for delivery of a controlled substance to a minor by way of the
umbilical cord"); Muscarello v. United States, 524 U.S. 125, 132-39 (1998)
(relying upon the "basic purpose" and "legislative history" of 18 U.S.C. §
924(c)(1) (which included a Senate report) to determine the intent of Congress in
using the word "carry" with regard to carrying "firearms" "during and in relation
to" a "drug trafficking crime"; further, the High Court stated that "[t]he simple
existence of some statutory ambiguity . . . is not sufficient to warrant application of
[the] rule [of lenity], for most statutes are ambiguous to some degree," and "[t]he
- 42 -
EFTA00731472
White v. State, 714 So. 2d 440, 443 n. 5 (Fla.1998) ("[W]e recognize that staff
analyses are not determinative of final legislative intent, they are, nevertheless,
`one touchstone of the collective legislative will.' " (quoting Sun Bank/S. Fla.,
v. Baker, 632 So.2d 669, 671 (Fla. 4th DCA 1994)); Reno v. Koray, 515 U.S.
50 (1995) ("The rule of lenity applies only if, `after seizing everything from which
aid can be derived,' we can make `no more than a guess as to what Congress
intended.' " (emphasis supplied) (quoting Smith v. United States, 508 U.S. 223,
239 (1993); Ladner v. United States, 358 U.S. 169, 178 (1958))).27 The majority
problem of statutory interpretation in these cases is indeed no different from that in
many of the criminal cases that confront us. Yet, this Court has never held that the
rule of lenity automatically permits a defendant to win." (emphasis supplied)).
27. I also disagree with the majority's contextual mischaracterization of
dicta contained within our opinion in GTC, Inc. v. Edgar, 967 So. 2d 781 (Ha.
2007). See majority op. at 12. In Edgar, this Court consulted a staff analysis as
relevant legislative history to confirm its interpretation of section 364.051(4)(b),
Florida Statutes (2005). See 967 So. 2d at 789. After confirming that reading of
the statute, the Court then stated in a footnote that "Jtlhis Court is not unified in its
view of the use of legislative staff analyses to determine legislative intent. See
Am. Home Assurance Co. v. Plaza Materials Corp., 908 So. 2d 360, 375-76 (Fla.
2005) (Cantero, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part)." Id. at 789 n.4
(emphasis supplied).
The "this Court" dicta contained within Edgar does not refer to this Court in
an institutional. precedential sense. Rather, the dicta refers only to the seven
individuals who currently sit as justices on "this Court." As a judicial institution,
this tribunal has never permitted a series of special concurrences and dissents to
undermine the clear law and precedent of Florida. Under binding precedent,
legislative history—and specifically staff analyses—remain appropriate tools to
assist in discerning the intent of the Legislature. See, e.g., Edgar, 967 So. 2d at
789; Fla. Dep't of Fin. Servs. v. Freeman, 921 So. 2d 598, 600-01 (Fla. 2006); Am.
Home Assurance Co. v. Plaza Materials Corp., 908 So. 2d 360, 368-69 (Fla. 2005);
- 43 -
EFTA00731473
focuses upon those portions of the staff analysis that propose "an individualized
treatment plan" for sexual offenders, which would be "administered by specialized
correctional probation officers with limited caseloads." SB 1930 Staff Analysis, at
1, 8; see majority op. at 13-14.28 While this is true in an abstract sense, a selective
Reform Party of Fla. v. Black, 885 So. 2d 303, 309 n.4 (Fla. 2004); N. Ha.
Women's Health & Counseling Servs., Inc. v. State, 866 So. 2d 612, 622-24 (Fla.
2003); In re Amendments to the Fla. Evid. Code, 825 So. 2d 339, 340, 340 n.1
(Ha. 2002); Francis v. State 808 So. 2d 110, 139 (Fla. 2001); May v. I11. Nat'l Ins.
Co., 771 So. 2d 1143, 1152-53 (Fla. 2000); Chiles v. State Employees Attorneys
Guild, 734 So. 2d 1030, 1032 (Fla. 1999); Mays v. State, 717 So. 2d 515, 518 n.9
(Fla. 1998); White v. State, 714 So. 2d 440, 443-44 (Fla. 1998); Leon Count
Educ. Facilities Auth. v. Hartsfield, 698 So. 2d 526, 530 (Fla. 1997);
. v.
State, 682 So. 2d 79, 82 (Ha. 1996); Via v. Putnam, 656 So. 2d 460, 463 (Fla.
1995); Eller v. Shova, 630 So. 2d 537, 541-42 (Fla. 1993); Fla. League of Cities v.
Smith, 607 So. 2d 397, 398-99 (Fla. 1992); Haven Fed. Say. & Loan
v.
Kirian, 579 So. 2d 730, 733 (Fla. 1991); Citizens of the State of Fla. v. Wilson, 568
So. 2d 904, 908 n.6 (Fla. 1990); Magaw v. State, 537 So. 2d 564, 566-67 (Ha.
1989); Coon v. Cont'l Ins. Co., 511 So. 2d 971, 974 (Fla. 1987); Ivey v. Chicago
Ins. Co., 410 So. 2d 494, 497 (Fla. 1982).
Each District Court of Appeal also uses staff analyses. See, e.g., B.B. v.
M,
933 So. 2d 57, 65 n.8 (Fla. 1st DCA 2006); Burke v. Esposito, 972 So. 2d
1024, 1027-28 (Fla. 2d DCA 2008); State v. Calderon, 951 So. 2d 1031, 1033-34
(Ha. 3d DCA 2007); Sun Bank/S. Fla.,.. v. Baker, 632 So. 2d 669, 671 (Fla.
4th DCA 1994); Childers v. Cape Canaveral Hosp., Inc., 898 So. 2d 973, 975-77
(Ha. 5th DCA 2005). The current majority opinion attempts to alter this precedent
through gradual subterfuge. I cannot take such a stance with regard to stare decisis
unless and until the existing precedent is overruled. I am surprised that a majority
opinion contains such language.
28. The majority also places great reliance upon a model provision of
sexual-offender conditional release outlined in the NH report. See majority op. at
14. However, the language of that model provision reflects the majority's desired
judicial rewrite of section 948.03(5)(a)(7), rather than the statute that the
Legislature actually adopted. If the Legislature truly intended for that model
provision to govern in Florida then it would have simply adopted that language;
- 44 -
EFTA00731474
focus on this portion of the staff analysis ignores a fact of which the Legislature
was well aware: section 948.03(5)(a)(7) is a default condition that applies to all
convicted sexual offenders under their terms of probation and community control
so long as they committed their relevant offenses "on or after October 1, 1995." §
948.03(5)(a), Fla. Stat. (1999). This section itself does not represent any type of
"individualized treatment" or individualized tailoring of the offender's treatment
plan. That tailoring, if any, occurs through the modification of the default
prohibition in light of the offender's treatment plan. CI § 948.03(6), Fla. Stat.
(1999) ("The court may rescind or modify at any time the terms and conditions
theretofore imposed by it upon the probationer or offender in community
control."); § 948.03(2), Ha. Stat. (2007) (substantially similar). If no modification
occurs, then the default prohibition applies and individual tailoring has not
occurred.
The introductory clause of section 948.03(5)(a)(7) could not make this point
any clearer: "Unless otherwise indicated in the treatment plan provided by the
sexual offender treatment program," the default total prohibition applies. §
however, it did not do so. Furthermore, the language, grammatical organization,
and punctuation of the model provision and that of section 948.03(5)(a)(7), Florida
Statutes (1999), are materially different, not "strikingly similar." Majority op. at
14, 15 n.6. The majority has thus redrafted the statute, but this is a power we lack
under these circumstances. Cf., e.g., Hawkins, 748 So. at 1000 ("[T]his Court may
not rewrite statutes contrary to their plain language.").
- 45 -
EFTA00731475
948.03(5)(a)(7), Fla. Stat. (1999) (emphasis supplied). It is the duty of the sexual-
offender treatment program and the offender's "triangle" of supervisors (i.e., "the
treatment provider, the correctional probation officer, and the polygraph
examiner") to craft, implement, and enforce—with the approval of the court—any
"individualized treatment plan." SB 1930 Staff Analysis, at 6-8. Individual
tailoring is simply not accomplished through the plain text of the statute, which
erects a broad default prohibition against "amy obscene, pornographic, or sexually
stimulating visual or auditory material." § 948.03(5)(a)(7), Fla. Stat. (1999)
(emphasis supplied); see also Woodson v. State, 864 So. 2d 512, 515 (Fla. 5th
DCA 2004) (describing the default nature of the standard terms of probation and
community control contained in section 948.03(5), Florida Statutes (2000)).
That the staff analysis explains the "five-part containment process" outlined
in the NIJ report merely bolsters the understanding that individualized tailoring
occurs through the treatment plan, not through the plain text of the statute. SB
1930 Staff Analysis, at 6-8. In particular, the staff analysis explains that the NIJ-
inspired "sex offender-specific containment strategies," occur through: (1) the
internal-control mechanisms that a trained therapist can hopefully instill in the
offender; (2) the "[o]fficial supervision and monitoring" of the offender by the
correctional probation officer; and (3) the promotion of "vital management and
compliance feedback to the treatment provider and correctional probation office?'
- 46 -
EFTA00731476
through the use of polygraph examinations of the offender. Id. As stated in the
staff analysis, "the treatment provider, the correctional probation officer, and the
polygraph examiner form a triangle of supervision around the sex offender." Id. at
7. It is this group, rather than the plain text of section 948.03(5)(a)(7), that may
lead to an individualized treatment plan. However, if such individualized tailoring
and a corresponding modification of the offender's standard terms of probation and
community control do not occur, then the default total prohibition remains in
effect. This is the only logical, grammatically sound reading of the standard
condition:
Unless otherwise indicated in the treatment plan provided by the
sexual offender treatment program, a prohibition on viewing, owning,
or possessing my obscene, pornographic, or sexually stimulating
visual or auditory material, including telephone, electronic media,
computer programs, or computer services that are relevant to the
offender's deviant behavior pattern.
§ 948.03(5)(a)(7), Fla. Stat. (1999) (emphasis supplied). This plain-text reading of
the statute is also consistent with the staff analysis, which explains that:
CS/SB 1930 would . . . clarify the condition of probation, community
control, and conditional release that prohibits the possession, viewing,
or use of sexually `explicit' material to be sexually stimulating visual
or auditory material that would include telephone, electronic media,
computer programs. or computer services that are relevant to the
offender's deviant behavior pattern.
SB 1930 Staff Analysis, at 8 (emphasis supplied).
- 47 -
EFTA00731477
The analysis of the majority is simply inconsistent with the plain text of the
statute, the rules of grammar, and with legislative history, which includes the
relevant staff analysis. This Court exists to interpret statutes, not rewrite them.29 I
would enforce the statute as written instead of creating a mirage of ambiguity.
II. CONCLUSION
I cannot agree with the reading of nonexistent ambiguity into a clearly
worded statute. Simply because the Third District and the majority have stated that
section 948.03(5)(a)(7) "is undeniably susceptible to multiple and irreconcilable
interpretations" does not make it so. Majority op. at 2, 6, 22 (quoting Kasischke
29. The construction of the majority rewrites the statutory language in the
following manner:
Unless-ethemkise-indieated-in-the-treatment-plan-previded-by-the
semtal-offendec-tfeatment-pregram; A prohibition on viewing, owning,
or possessing any obscene, pornographic, or sexually stimulating
visual or auditory material—including telephone, electronic media,
computer programs, or computer services—that are relevant to the
offender's deviant behavior pattern.
§ 948.03(5)(a)(7), Fla. Stat. (1999) (as judicially rewritten by the majority).
However, this Court lacks the power to alter legislation that is clear on its face and
which leads to neither an absurd result nor an unintended evil. See, e.g., Clines v.
State, 912 So. 2d 550, 558 (Fla. 2005) ("A court's function is to interpret statutes
as they are written and give effect to each word in the statute." (quoting Fla. Dep't
of Revenue v. Fla. Mun. Power Agency, 789 So. 2d 320, 324 (Fla. 2001))); State v.
Byars, 823 So. 2d 740, 772, 744-45 (Fla. 2002); Wagner, 88 So. 2d at 613 ("The
Act, as enacted, did not contain the commas that the appellants would insert. By
re-arranging the words or inserting commas which the Legislature itself did not
employ, we would change entirely the meaning of the section in dispute.").
- 48 -
EFTA00731478
946 So. 2d at 1157). A simple, grammatical, plain-text reading of the statute
makes it abundantly clear that the Legislature has maintained the total prohibition
against convicted sex offenders "viewing, owning, or possessing any obscene,
pornographic, or sexually stimulating visual or auditory material" during the term
of their probation or community control. § 948.03(5)(a)(7), Fla. Stat. (1999)
(emphasis supplied). Further, the Legislature clarified that this prohibition
"includ es telephone, electronic media, computer programs, or computer services
that are relevant to the offender's deviant behavior pattern." Id. (emphasis
supplied). Any tailoring of this default prohibition to the characteristics of the
individual sexual offender occurs exclusively through the offender's treatment plan
and a corresponding judicial modification of the default prohibition—not through
the statute itself. See id. ("Unless otherwise indicated in the treatment plan
provided by the sexual offender treatment program," the default prohibition
applies. (emphasis supplied)). The majority creates ambiguity where none exists
and "interprets" the statute contrary to the intent of the Legislature. The
Legislature needs to address this statutory provision unless the judicially rewritten
statute of the majority truly reflects a heretofore unexpressed legislative intent.
For these reasons, I respectfully dissent.
BELL, J., dissenting.
- 49 -
EFTA00731479
I dissent for two reasons. First, this Court has no jurisdiction over this case.
Second, the majority's holding is contrary to readily discernible legislative intent.
As I will show, the Legislature intended section 948.03(5)(a)(7) to prohibit
supervised sex offenders from accessing obscene, pornographic, or sexually
stimulating visual or auditory material. In addition to this broad antipornography
ban, the Legislature intended section 948.03(5)(a)(7) to prohibit these offenders
from utilizing telephone, electronic media, computer programs, and computer
services that are relevant to their deviant behavior pattern.
I will first address jurisdiction. I will then show that there is clear legislative
intent that resolves the statutory ambiguity. Finally, I will contextualize the issue
by looking at the facts of the case before us.
L THE LACK OF JURISDICTION
The majority cites article V, section 3(b)(3) of the Florida Constitution as the
basis for exercising jurisdiction. Article V, section 3(b)(3) provides that this Court
may review any decision of a district court of appeal that "expressly and directly
conflicts with a decision of another district court of appeal or of the supreme court
on the same question of law." (Emphasis added.)
The Third District decision in Kasischke v. State, 946 So. 2d 1155 (Fla. 3d
DCA 2006), does not expressly and directly conflict with the Second District
decision in Taylor v. State, 821 So. 2d 404 (Fla. 2d DCA 2002). As the Third
- 50 -
EFTA00731480
District correctly noted, the Second District's decision in Taylor did not expressly
address the same question of law the Third District addressed in Kasischke. 946
So. 2d at 1161. Specifically, the Second District in Taylor "only required that the
probationary condition track the statutory language of section 948.03(5)(a)(7)" but
"did not address whether or not the phrase `relevant to the offender's deviant
behavior pattern' modified the ban on viewing or possessing pornographic
material." Kasischke, 946 So. 2d at 1161. Given the absence of express and direct
conflict on the same question of law, this Court should discharge the case.
II. THE DISCERNIBLE LEGISLATIVE INTENT
On the merits, I first present the interpretive approach this Court customarily
uses to determine legislative intent. I then apply this approach to the statute. This
customary approach reveals that the majority has prematurely and, therefore,
inappropriately applied the rule of lenity.
A. Our Customary Interpretive Approach
Our customary approach to statutory interpretation views legislative intent as
the polestar that guides a court's statutory construction analysis. State v.
824
So. 2d 105, 109 (Fla. 2002). The search for legislative intent starts with the actual
language of the statute. See Joshua v. City of Gainesville, 768 So. 2d 432, 435
(Ha. 2000). If the statutory language is clear, the plain textual meaning indicates
the legislative intent. See Cherry v. State, 959 So. 2d 702, 713 (Fla. 2007).
- 51 -
EFTA00731481
However, if the statutory language is unclear, we continue our search for
legislative intent. See Joshua, 768 So. 2d at 435.
In discerning the legislative intent of an unclear statute, we "consider the
statute as a whole, including the evil to be corrected, the language, title, and history
of its enactment, and the state of law already in existence on the statute." State v.
Anderson, 764 So. 2d 848, 849 (Fla. 3d DCA 2000) (citing McKibben v. Mallory,
293 So. 2d 48, 52 (Fla. 1974)) (emphasis added). In a criminal case, if our
legislative intent analysis fails to reveal a single, clear, and unambiguous meaning,
the rule of lenity applies, and we must adopt a reasonable construction most
favorable to the accused. att Clines v. State, 912 So. 2d 550, 560 (Fla. 2005).
However, as the majority recognizes, the rule of lenity is a canon of last resort. It
applies only if we have completed our customary legislative intent exploration and
are still left without a clear understanding of the Legislature's intent. See State v.
Rubio, 967 So. 2d 768, 778 n.9 (Fla. 2007) (citing Bautista v. State, 863 So. 2d at
1180, 1188 n.9 (Fla. 2003)) (rule of lenity does not apply before a court engages in
a search of legislative intent using traditional tools).
B. Applying This Customary Approach to the Statute
Considered as a whole, including (1) the title, (2) the existing status of the
law and the history of the statutory change, and (3) the evil to be corrected, section
948.03(5)(a)(7) unambiguously reveals the Legislature's intent that, unless the
- 52 -
EFTA00731482
offender's treatment plan provides otherwise, a sex offender probationer or
community controllee is prohibited from viewing, owning, or possessing any
obscene, pornographic, or sexually stimulating visual or auditory material. In
addition to this broad antipornography prohibition, a sex offender is specifically
precluded from telephone, electronic media, computer programs, and computer
services that are relevant to the offender's deviant behavior pattern.
At this point, it is important to set forth the statute, the 1997 session law,
and, most importantly, the 1997 session law title. The statute provides:
Unless otherwise indicated in the treatment plan provided by the
sexual offender treatment program, a prohibition on viewing, owning,
or possessing any obscene, pornographic, or sexually stimulating
visual or auditory material, including telephone, electronic media,
computer programs, or computer services that are relevant to the
offender's deviant behavior pattern.
§ 948.03(5)(a)(7), Fla. Stat. (1999). The 1997 session law enacting section
948.03(5)(a)(7) reveals the changes made to the 1995 statute. It reads, in relevant
part:
Unless otherwise indicated in the treatment plan provided by the
sexual offender treatment program, a prohibition on viewing, owning,
or possessing any obscene, pornographic, or sexually stimulating
visual or auditory explicit material, including telephone, electronic
media, computer programs, or computer services that are relevant to
the offender's deviant behavior pattern.
- 53 -
EFTA00731483
Ch. 97-308, § 3, at 5520, Laws of Fla.3° Finally, and most important to the proper
resolution of this case, the title to chapter 97-308, Laws of Florida, reads:
An act relating to sex offenders; amending s. 947.1405, F.S.;
clarifying legislative intent regarding sentences that are eligible for
conditional release supervision; requiring a curfew between specified
hours; providing alternatives; revising requirements for treatment for
sex offenders; revising a provision that prohibits a sex offender from
viewing, owning, or possessing certain materials; prohibiting a sex
offender from possessing telephone electronic media or computer
programs or services that are relevant to the offender's behavior
pattern; requiring that a sex offender submit to certain warrantless
searches; requiring a sex offender whose crime was committed on or
after a specified date to undergo polygraph examinations; requiring
that such offender maintain a driving log and not drive a motor
vehicle alone without prior approval; prohibiting such offender from
obtaining or using a post office box without prior approval; amending
s. 948.001, F.S.; defining the terms "sex offender probation" and "sex
offender community control"; amending s. 948.03, F.S.; requiring a
curfew between specified hours; providing alternatives; revising
requirements for treatment for sex offenders; revising a provision that
prohibits a sex offender from viewing, owning, or possessing certain
materials; prohibiting a sex offender from possessing telephone,
electronic media, or computer programs or services that are relevant
to the offender's behavior pattern; requiring that a sex offender submit
to certain warrantless searches; requiring a sex offender whose crime
was committed on or after a specified date to undergo polygraph
examinations; requiring that such offender maintain a driving log and
not drive a motor vehicle alone without prior approval; prohibiting
such offender from obtaining or using a post office box without prior
approval; requiring such offender to submit to HIV testing; requiring
such offender to submit to electronic monitoring; providing an
effective date.
Ch. 97-308, Laws of Fla. (emphasis added).3I
30. Words &thekefk are deletions and words underlined are additions.
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1. The Title
"The title is more than an index to what the section is about or has reference
to; it is a direct statement by the legislature of its intent." State v. Webb, 398 So.
2d 820, 825 (Fla. 1981)) (citing Berger v. Jackson, 23 So. 2d 265 (Fla. 1945)); see
also Parker v. State, 406 So. 2d 1089, 1092 (Fla. 1981); Foley v. State, ex rel.
Gordon, 50 So. 2d 179, 184 (Fla. 1951). In this case, the title to chapter 97-328
answers the question the majority says is dispositive, namely "which part of
[section 948.03(5)(a)(7)] is modified by the phrase `relevant to the offender's
deviant behavior pattern.' " Majority op. at 5.
The title to chapter 97-308 states in its relevant part that the Legislature
amended section 948.03(5)(g) (postamendment section 948.03(5)(a)(7)) to
"[revise] a provision that prohibits a sex offender from viewing, owning, or
possessing certain materials; [prohibit] a sex offender from possessing telephone,
electronic media, or computer programs or services that are relevant to the
offender's behavior pattern." Ch. 97-328, Laws of Fla.32 This title clearly shows
31. The title to the enrolled senate bill that resulted in chapter 97-328 is
identical to the title to the session law. CS for SB 1930, 1997 Leg., Reg. Sess.
(Fla. 1997).
32. Using the exact same language, the Legislature also amended section
947.1405(7)(g) (postamendment section 947.1045(7)(a)(7)), which relates to
conditional release of sex offenders.
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EFTA00731485
that the Legislature intended the clause "that are relevant to the offender's deviant
behavior pattern" in the postamendment statute to modify only "telephone,
electronic media, computer programs, or computer services." Thus, as a result of
the amendment, sex offenders are prohibited from utilizing telephone, electronic
media, or computer programs or services that are relevant to the offender's
behavior pattern in addition to the materials that had already been prohibited. This
clear intent is consistent with the state of the law and the amendment's history.
2. The Existing State of the Law and the History of the Statutory Amendment
The previous version of the statute read:
Unless otherwise indicated in the treatment plan provided by the
sexual offender treatment program, a prohibition on viewing, owning,
or possessing any obscene, pornographic, or sexually explicit
material.
§ 948.03(5)(g), Ha. Stat. (1995). And the majority concludes that "[g]iven that
the previous version of the statute already prohibited the possession of any
`obscene, pornographic, or sexually explicit material,' the 1997 amendment seems
intended to narrow the prohibition's scope." Majority op. at 9.
The majority's supposition is unfounded. Not only is it contrary to what the
session law title unambiguously reveals, there is also absolutely nothing in the
1997 amendment's history to suggest any intention to relax the preexisting blanket
ban on obscene, pornographic, or sexually stimulating material. Indeed, the
opposite is true: The Legislature amended section 948.03(5)(g) (postamendment
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EFTA00731486
948.03(5)(a)(7)) to improve the effectiveness of supervising sex offenders in the
community by (1) retaining the broad prohibition against obscene or pornographic
materials by leaving that language unchanged; (2) changing the phrase "sexually
explicit materials" to "sexually stimulating visual or auditory materials" in order to
clarify the breadth of the prohibition; and (3) adding a prohibition of "telephone,
electronic media, computer programs, or computer services that are relevant to the
offender's deviant behavior pattern." Ch. 97-328, Laws of Fla. The effect of this
change is an expansion, rather than a limitation, of the prohibition regarding
obscene, pornographic, and sexually stimulating materials.
The overall scheme the Legislature enacted in 1997 evinces an intent to
fortify control of sex offenders. Specifically, the Legislature enacted the following
new restrictions:
[P]rohibiting a sex offender from possessing telephone, electronic
media, or computer programs or services that are relevant to the
offender's behavior pattern; requiring that a sex offender submit to
certain warrantless searches; requiring a sex offender whose crime
was committed on or after a specified date to undergo polygraph
examinations; requiring that such offender maintain a driving log and
not drive a motor vehicle alone without prior approval; prohibiting
such offender from obtaining or using a post office box without prior
approval; requiring such offender to submit to HIV testing; requiring
such offender to submit to electronic monitoring . . . .
Ch. 97-308, Laws of Fla. The Legislature also tightened the following existing
restrictions: (1) changing the discretionary curfew into a mandatory curfew; (2)
requiring a sex offender treatment program to be conducted by specifically trained
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EFTA00731487
therapists, unless such a trained therapist is not available; (3) requiring the
additional approval from the victim and the therapist in addition to the sentencing
court in order for a sex offender to contact the victim; and (4) requiring approval
by the sentencing court in order for an offender to engage in unsupervised contact
with a child, if certain other conditions are met. Id. Together with section
948.03(5)(a)(7), these measures constitute a comprehensive scheme to fortify
community containment of sex offenders.
Read in this context, it is apparent that the Legislature amended section
948.03(5)(g) (postamendment 948.03(5)(a)(7)) to expand, rather than limit, the
existing prohibition. Specifically, the clause regarding telephonic, electronic, or
computerized materials was added to target otherwise benign services or materials
that are used by some sex offenders as part of their particular deviancy.33
33. Other jurisdictions frequently condition a sex offender's ability to live in
the community on total abstinence from sexual materials as well as the Internet and
other computerized or telephonic equipment that facilitate one's access to
prohibited materials. See United States v. Taylor, 338 F.3d 1280, 1285 (11th Cir.
2003) (holding that special condition on defendant's supervised release prohibiting
him from using or possessing computer with Internet access is not unreasonable or
overbroad); United States v. Ristine, 335 F.3d 692 (8th Cir. 2003) (affirming
Ristine's supervised-release conditions that restricted his possession of
pornography, his use of photographic equipment and computers, and his access to
the Internet); People v. Harrison, 134 Cal. App. 4th 637 (Cal. Dist. Ct. App. 2005)
(holding that probation condition that prohibited defendant from accessahe
Internet was not unconstitutional); State v. Ehli, 681
.2d 808, 809
. 2004)
(finding no constitutional violation where defendant, who pleaded guilty to
continuous sexual abuse of a minor, was prohibited from accessing the Internet).
- 58 -
EFTA00731488
Examples of how this new restriction applies is the case of a sex offender whose
deviant behavior pattern includes either luring children to meet him by trolling
Internet services like
or one who uses these media to trade in child
pornography. This reasoning that the 1997 change was intended to expand the
scope of prohibition, not to retract it as the majority holds, is even more
compelling when one considers the evil to be corrected.
3. The Evil to be Corrected
As I will explain, the 1997 amendments to section 948.03(5)(a)(7) seek to
minimize reoffense by improving the statutory "containment process."
Specifically, according to the sponsor of the senate bill that resulted in the session
law, the purpose of the changes was to "implement the recommendations of the
National Institute of Justice regarding a new type of supervision for convicted sex
offenders." Fla. S., tape recording of proceedings (April 25, 1997) (on file with
Florida State Archives) (Senator Burt). The "new type of supervision for
convicted sex offenders" to which Senator Burt referred, which was also cited in
the Staff Analysis,34 was a five-part model containment process recommended in
34. As the majority points out, the Staff Analysis did note that one of the
components of managing adult sex offenders is "utilizing sex offender-specific
containment strategies . . . focus[ing] on a containment approach to case
processing and case management that can be tailored to the individual sex offender
and his or her deviant sexual history." Majority op. at 13-14. However, the Staff
Analysis also clarifies that this "sex offender-specific containment strategy"
consists of three elements that work together: (1) providing offender-specific
- 59 -
EFTA00731489
the NU Research. Kim English, et al., Managing Adult Sex Offenders in the
Community—A Containment Approach, Nat'l Inst. Just. (Jan. 1997).
The NIJ research recognizes that offender-specific probation or parole
conditions play a crucial role in implementing its strategy and recommended
fourteen sample conditions. Id. at 5. The top priority of these conditions is to
"eliminate opportunities for reoffense—to protect victims and the general public."
Id. The research specifically noted that the recommended strategy targeted
"thoughts and feelings . . . as a starting point for risk management," because
"deviant thoughts and fantasies by sex offenders are precursors to sexual assault,
and, therefore, are an integral part of the assault pattern." Id. Accordingly,
treatment providers and supervising officers should instill in offenders "the dictum
that deviant attitudes and fantasies are not acceptable." Id.
In light of the purpose of section 948.03, and especially of the critical role
thoughts and fantasies play in preventing reoffense, the majority's supposition that
"the 1997 amendment seems intended [by the Legislature] to narrow the
treatment to help offenders learn to develop internal control; (2) official
supervision and monitoring to exert external control; and (3) prompting vital
management and compliance feedback to the treatment provider and the
correctional probation officer. See Staff Analysis at 7 (emphasis added) (citing
NIJ report at 4). So it is the offender-specific treatment that makes the whole
strategy "offender-specific." The Staff Analysis never mentions that an offender-
specific strategy requires permitting an offender to view "non-relevant"
pornography.
- 60 -
EFTA00731490
prohibition's scope" is clearly erroneous. Majority op. at 9. Instead, as first
revealed in the session law title, the Legislature supplemented the existing
antipornography ban with new restrictions to prevent recidivism and protect the
community, especially potential victims. Because the session law title, the existing
status of the law and the history of the statutory change, and the evil to be
corrected all reveal an unambiguous legislative intent to expand the prohibition to
include "telephone, electronic media, computer programs, or computer services
that are relevant to the offender's deviant behavior pattern," this Court is obligated
to interpret the statute to help achieve that intent, not frustrate it.
III. THE ISSUE IN CONTEXT
Now, because of the majority's unnecessary and unfortunate decision,
Florida courts and law enforcement are left with a vague restriction on a sex
offender's access to sexually stimulating material. This absurdity is illustrated by
the facts of the case before us.
Dr. Kasischke was put on community control for lewd and lascivious
assaults on a child under sixteen years of age. As stated by the Third District:
The defendant, who has a
degree, was fifty-four years old at the
time of the underlying offense. He was convicted of three counts of
lewd and lascivious assault on a child under sixteen years of age.
Specifically, the defendant solicited a fifteen year-old boy and offered
him forty dollars so that he could perform oral sex on the boy. The
defendant took the boy to a park where, behind the bushes, he
unzipped the boy's pants and performed oral sex on the victim until
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EFTA00731491
the boy ejaculated in the defendant's mouth. Additionally, the
defendant masturbated in the boy's presence.
Kasischke v. State, 946 So. 2d 1155, 1156 (Fla. 3d DCA 2006). Dr. Kasischke
agreed to plead guilty. His plea agreement included section 948.03(5)(a)(7) as a
standard condition of his two years of community control and eight years of
probation that would follow his 364 days in jail.
Dr. Kasischke violated his community control by possessing pornographic
and obscene materials. Specifically,
[w]hile the defendant was under community control, officers executed
a search of his home and found several photographs of nude young
males and of males performing various sexual acts. Also recovered
was a videotape in a kitchen drawer that was kept apart from other
videotapes that the defendant kept near his television. The parties do
not dispute that the videotape shows pornographic and obscene
images. Among other things, the videotape depicts a young-looking
male engaging in oral and anal sex with other males.
Id.
As the Third District noted, Dr. Kasischke does not dispute that the video he
possessed was pornographic and obscene and that the video showed a young male
having oral and anal sex with other males. Instead, Dr. Kasischke disputes
whether his possession of this videotape violated section 948.03(5)(a)(7). As the
Third District succinctly stated his argument:
Defendant argues that the phrase "relevant to the offender's
deviant behavior pattern" should modify all aspects of the community
control condition and, as such, only prohibits defendant from viewing
or possessing material which is specifically related to his prior deviant
- 62 -
EFTA00731492
acts. Under this view, the community control condition would be
strictly limited to obscene and pornographic material that depicts
fellatio or masturbation with an underage boy, similar to defendant's
previous victim. Thus, the defendant contends that, since the
defendant was convicted of a sexual offense on a minor under sixteen
years of age, the State must prove that the pornographic material
involved a minor under sixteen for a community control violation to
be found.
Id. at 1157.
The majority agrees with Dr. Kasischke that section 948.03(5)(a)(7) only
prohibits a community supervised sex offender from viewing or possessing
obscene, pornographic, or sexually stimulating material that is relevant to his
"deviant behavior pattern.s35 In other words, to prove that Dr. Kasischke violated
his community control condition imposed under section 948.03(5)(a)(7), the State
has to establish that the pornographic material he possessed was relevant to his
"deviant behavior pattern." What does this mean in practical terms? Does the
State now have to establish the existence of a particular "deviant behavior pattern"
35. Unfortunately, the majority declines to address Dr. Kasischke's
argument below that the State has to prove his material depicted fellatio or
masturbation by an adult male with a fifteen-year-old boy and, thereby, bypasses
the opportunity to provide some much-needed parameters for its decision. Instead,
the majority leaves this new relevancy question open for determination by the
lower court. In doing so, the relevancy question remains open not only in this case
but also in the supervision of untold thousands of community supervised sex
offenders across this state. Opening up these sensitive cases to such vague
"relevancy" questions is not the only problem. Narrowing the scope of prohibited
materials to that which is "relevant" to the offender's deviant behavior pattern
substantially increases the risk of supervised sex offenders accessing material that
will stimulate them to commit new crimes. This risk is wholly unnecessary
because section 948.03(5)(a)(7) clearly was never intended to apply so narrowly.
- 63 -
EFTA00731493
for each supervised sex offender? Would the crimes Dr. Kasischke committed on
one adolescent male be sufficient to establish such a pattern? If so, does the State,
as Dr. Kasischke argues, also have to prove his material is related to the specific
acts he committed? In other words, does the State have to prove that this material
depicted fellatio or masturbation by an adult male with a fifteen-year-old boy?
Unfortunately, the majority leaves this new relevancy question open for
determination not only in this case, but in untold thousands of other cases
involving community supervised sex offenders across this state.
As I have shown, disrupting the effective supervision of sex offenders and
creating such uncertainty is unnecessary. The statute is intended to prohibit
offenders like Dr. Kasischke from possessing any pornography.36 And if Dr.
36. Prohibiting sex offenders from accessing pornography is the normative
practice in federal and state jurisdictions. See, e.g., United States v. Locke, 482
F.3d 764 (5th Cir. 2007) (upholding the federal district court's special probation
condition that prohibited the defendant, who pleaded guilty to one count of
possessing child pornography, from having access to the Internet and from
viewing, possessing, or obtaining pornography in any form); Farrell v. Burke, 449
F.3d 470 (2d Cir. 2006) (upholding the special condition prohibiting the defendant,
who paid four boys between the ages of thirteen and sixteen for sex with him, from
possessing pornographic material); Fernandez v. State No. A-8484, (Alaska Ct.
App. Mar. 31, 2004) (affirming the lower court imposition of a probation condition
that bars the appellant, who pleaded guilty to two counts of first-degree sexual
abuse of a minor, from possessing adult pornography); People v. Huber, 139 P.3d
628 (Colo. 2006) (holding that defendant, who was charged with sexual assault on
a child by one in a position of trust and indecent exposure, violated the conditions
of his deferred judgment by, among other things, possessing pornographic images);
State v. Murphy, No. CR9688132 (Conn. Super. Ct. Jan. 23, 2007) (holding
- 64 -
EFTA00731494
Kasischke's use of any "telephone, electronic media, or computer programs or
services" is relevant to his deviant behavior pattern, as of 1997, section
948.03(5)(a)(7) prohibits any such usage.
IV. CONCLUSION
After considering the statute as a whole, including the title, the state of the
existing law and the history of the statutory change, and the evil to be addressed, it
is clear that the 1997 amendments to section 948.03(5)(a)(7) were never intended
to narrow the preexisting ban on sex offenders' "viewing, owning, or possessing
any obscene, pornographic, or sexually stimulating material." Instead, these
amendments were clearly intended to (1) revise the broad antipornography
prohibition to clarify that it encompassed "any obscene, pornographic, or sexually
stimulating visual or auditory materials," and (2) add a prohibition of "telephone,
electronic media, computer programs, or computer services that are relevant to the
offender's deviant behavior pattern." As I have said, the majority's contrary
holding is more than unfortunate; it is absurd. The facial ambiguity of this statute
is clearly reconcilable. Therefore, there is no basis to apply the rule of lenity,
especially to reach the incredible conclusion that the Legislature intended that
community supervised sex offenders like Dr. Kasischke are only precluded from
defendant violated his probation conditions by, among other things, possessing
pornography while a sex offender).
- 65 -
EFTA00731495
possessing or viewing obscene, pornographic, or sexually stimulating material that
is narrowly relevant to an ill-defined "particular deviant behavior pattern."
Accordingly, if jurisdiction is retained, I would approve the result of the
Third District decision in Kasischke and disapprove the Second District's decision
in Taylor to the extent it interprets section 948.03(5)(a)(7) as not imposing a
blanket ban.
Application for Review of the Decision of the District Court of Appeal - Direct
Conflict of Decisions
Third District - Case No. 3D04-2149
(Dade County)
Bennett H. Brummer, Public Defender, and Thomas Regnier, Assistant Public
Defender, Eleventh Judicial Circuit, Miami, Florida,
for Petitioner
Bill McCollum, Attorney General, Tallahassee, Florida, and Richard L. Polin,
Assistant Attorney General, Bureau Chief, Linda S. Katz and Paulette R. Taylor,
Assistant Attorneys General, Miami, Florida,
for Respondent
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