Golden v. State

429 So. 2d 45
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedMarch 22, 1983
DocketAF-322, AF-312
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 429 So. 2d 45 (Golden v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Golden v. State, 429 So. 2d 45 (Fla. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

429 So.2d 45 (1983)

Ronnie Luke GOLDEN, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Florida, Appellee.
Harrison PORTERFIELD, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Florida, Appellee.

Nos. AF-322, AF-312.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.

March 22, 1983.

*46 Michael E. Allen, Public Defender, and Steven L. Bolotin, Asst. Public Defender, Tallahassee, for appellant Golden.

William Eddins of Hosner, Taylor, Van Matre & Eddins, P.A., Pensacola, for appellant Porterfield.

Jim Smith, Atty. Gen., and Gregory C. Smith, Asst. Atty. Gen., Tallahassee, for appellee.

ROBERT P. SMITH, Jr., Chief Judge.

Golden and Porterfield appeal from their convictions of attempted first degree murder of Jack Kenneth Roberts, aggravated assault, and robbery. Golden also appeals his conviction for later soliciting the murder of Frank Roberts.

*47 According to the State's version of the evidence, a disgruntled business competitor of Frank Roberts prevailed on appellant Ronnie Luke Golden to have Frank Roberts shot. Golden hired Lee who, in turn, subcontracted the job to Porterfield and Glenn. On the afternoon of September 4, 1980, the assailants attempted to carry out the contract, but Glenn shot and seriously wounded Jack Kenneth Roberts instead of the targeted victim, and robbed them both.

After Lee was arrested and jailed, he turned police informant. With Lee's consent, agents of the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE) electronically intercepted, listened to and recorded on cassette tapes the several conversations Lee then had with Golden between September 11 and 26, 1980. Certain of the conversations were in telephone calls placed by Lee, at the sheriff's office in Pensacola, to the telephone in Golden's office trailer, listed to Big Four Mobile Homes. Other conversations, intercepted by transmitting devices concealed on Lee's person and in his automobile, took place in Lee's automobile parked outside the trailer and in a convenience store parking lot. In the most incriminating of these, on September 26 in Lee's automobile, Golden discussed with Lee the failure of the September 4 attack on Frank Roberts and gave Lee $1,000 and a handgun for the murder of Frank Roberts.

Golden was thus charged with the September 26 solicitation and, jointly with Porterfield, for the September 4 offenses as well. Both Lee and Glenn pleaded guilty to the September 4 offenses and testified for the State at the trial of Golden and Porterfield in June 1981.

GOLDEN

Golden's lesser arguments are quickly disposed of. He urges that the trial court erred in permitting attorney Leo Thomas to withdraw as Golden's counsel on June 1, 1981, due to a conflict of interest arising from his firm's representation of a claimant against Golden on some civil debts, and in refusing to continue the trial from June 15, when the jury was selected, or from June 17, when the presentation of evidence began. We find no abuse of discretion in the court's excusing attorney Thomas. Nor did the court err in not continuing the trial. Neither attorney Thomas nor his successor, attorney Joseph Crowell, filed a motion for continuance of the scheduled trial. Indeed, attorney Crowell announced to the court on June 4, 1981, even before he and defendant Golden completed final arrangements for the representation, that he was available for the scheduled trial. Despite the trial court's expressed and understandable desire to begin the trial as scheduled on June 15, it previously having been continued repeatedly, nothing in the transcripts of hearings on the subject indicates that it would have been futile for Golden's new counsel to move for a continuance, should he have thought that necessary. We therefore find no merit in Golden's contention, urged for the first time in his motion for new trial, that the trial should have been continued.

We next consider Golden's argument the trial court should have suppressed, on constitutional grounds, all use of the electronically intercepted conversations, especially those of September 22 and 26 in personal meetings of Lee and Golden outside the trailer. The conversation in the convenience store parking lot was not arguably protected from electronic surveillance, and it is now clear that Golden had no constitutionally recognized expectation of privacy in conversations with Lee within an automobile parked outside Golden's trailer, whether or not the trailer was in any sense Golden's home as well as his office. Morningstar v. State, 428 So.2d 220 (Fla. 1982); Hill v. State, 422 So.2d 816 (Fla. 1982). As for Lee's telephone calls to Golden inside the trailer, from a remote telephone, there is potential support for Golden's privacy claim in Williams v. State, 420 So.2d 404 (Fla. 1st DCA 1982). But here the trial court rejected Golden's claim that his trailer was also his home, and found on substantial competent evidence that the trailer office of Big Four Mobile Homes was that alone. We find no error in *48 the trial court's denial of Golden's motion to suppress the recordings on constitutional grounds.

Golden's more substantial argument concerning the tape recordings is that his September 22 conversation with Lee, in which Lee asked for bond money, and the more incriminating September 26 conversation were improperly evidenced to the jury by recording copies of the original tapes and by a visual display, using a projector and screen, of fragments of written transcripts of those copies. The recording copies were received over Golden's single and regretably vague objection, "we object," directed to the less consequential September 22 recording only. Golden's appellate brief makes glancing reference to the copied recordings as not being the "best evidence," and more thoroughly criticizes the copies, not as copies per se, but as "altered" and "inaudible" copies. Golden argues further that the transcripts of those copies were hearsay and were yet another step removed from the "best evidence" and that displaying the transcripts to the jury by projector and screen overemphasized visually the probative value of the copied recordings.

Despite Golden's failure at trial to articulate some of the objections now argued here with respect to the auditory evidence, we think it appropriate to deal comprehensively with those objections, for Golden rather more clearly objected at trial to any use of transcripts, and particularly to their visual display by projector and screen.[1] The arguments made here in pursuit of those objections fairly call for a decision upon the evidentiary integrity of the original recordings, as well as upon the admissibility of recording copies of those originals, because any use of the transcripts plainly depended upon those antecedents. Golden argues, not without some superficial support in the authorities, that even those antecedents are insufficient — that the transcripts could not properly be used for any purpose at trial without authentication by a witness who personally overheard the conversations between Golden and Lee.

The premise of Golden's argument on this subject is that FDLE agent West, who authenticated the transcripts as accurately reproducing in written form the tape recordings, did not overhear the conversations themselves as they were recorded. There is some support for that premise in the trial testimony of the several FDLE agents,[2] although *49 agent West testified at the pretrial suppression hearing that he participated in "monitoring" the conversations as well as in recording them.

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Bluebook (online)
429 So. 2d 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/golden-v-state-fladistctapp-1983.