Hentz v. State

62 So. 3d 1184, 2011 Fla. App. LEXIS 8418, 2011 WL 2200628
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJune 8, 2011
Docket4D08-5160
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 62 So. 3d 1184 (Hentz 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
Hentz v. State, 62 So. 3d 1184, 2011 Fla. App. LEXIS 8418, 2011 WL 2200628 (Fla. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

*1186 On Motion for Rehearing.

POLEN, J.

We deny the State’s motion for rehearing, but withdraw our slip opinion, dated March 16, 2011, and issue the following to correct a factual misstatement in our slip opinion. This correction has no bearing on our analysis or the result reached.

Appellant, Richard Hentz, appeals the trial court’s order adjudicating him guilty of battery and sentencing him to 365 days imprisonment. Specifically, Hentz argues the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress evidence because his phone conversation was tape recorded in violation of Florida’s wiretap statute. We hold that the trial court erred in denying Hentz’s motion to suppress and reverse the trial court’s order.

Hentz was charged with sexual battery while victim was physically helpless to resist (Count I) and simple battery (Count II) and entered a negotiated plea agreement whereby the State agreed to nolle pros Count I and Hentz agreed to plead no contest to Count II. Following the trial court’s denial of Hentz’s motion to suppress evidence, 1 Hentz pled no contest to the battery charge. The State stipulated that the suppression of the photographic and video evidence at issue was dispositive.

On March 6, 2008, Detective Jeremy Shepherd of the Indian River County Sheriffs Department took Hentz’s co-defendant, John Menzel, to the Sheriffs office to interview him regarding an alleged sexual battery which occurred at Menzel’s home and which involved the alleged victim, Menzel, and Hentz. Both Menzel and Hentz were asked if they would voluntarily come with the officers to be interviewed; Menzel agreed to go and Hentz refused.

The audio and video recording equipment in the interview room were turned on approximately five or six minutes before Shepherd took Menzel into the room. This was standard procedure implemented to ensure that activating the recording devices would not be overlooked. About ten minutes elapsed between Menzel being seated in the interview room and Shepherd accompanying him. In the interim, Shepherd was in the tech room collaborating with other officers regarding the evidence already obtained and how the interview should be conducted. There were TV monitors in the tech room, and Shepherd noticed Menzel making a couple of phone calls. Shepherd and the other officers could not hear what was being said because the speakers in the tech room did not allow them to.

Shepherd testified regarding the interview room Menzel was seated in when the video footage of his phone conversation was recorded. Shepherd described the room as pretty small and typically able to fit two or three chairs/individuals. No audio or video equipment is readily visible to the occupants of the room, and no one ever informed Menzel that there was recording equipment in the room or that his conversations would be recorded while he was awaiting his interview. Shepherd made sure that Menzel felt comfortable and knew he was not under arrest — he reiterated that Menzel could use the bathroom, got Menzel a glass of water to drink, and told Menzel that the door was unlocked. Shepherd wanted to ensure that Menzel knew he was not in custody so he would be comfortable speaking openly and honestly. Thus, this was not a custodial situation.

Detective Parrish of the Indian River County Sheriffs Office testified that the microphone in the interview room is cam *1187 ouflaged to look like a light switch and that it is inconspicuous. Parrish also stated that the video camera in the room is about the size of a tape cassette cover and is camouflaged to look like a motion sensor. Parrish knew from previous experiences that the recording equipment in the interview room is sensitive enough to record both sides of a phone conversation taking place between an individual in the interview room and someone on the other end of the phone. Still, Parrish did not warn Menzel of that fact when he realized Men-zel was having a conversation on his cell phone in the interview room and was potentially unaware of the fact that it was being recorded. Hentz testified that he was at his house when he had the conversation with Menzel.

Menzel testified that the interview room was located inside the Sheriffs Administrative Building, that the individuals he saw walking around were wearing street clothes, and that the room itself looked like a small office. Menzel was never told the room was an interview room. Menzel informed Shepherd that he had phone calls to make to take care of some things. Shepherd never said anything regarding the recording devices in the room. The door to the room was shut, so Menzel believed he had privacy there to make his phone calls. While on the phone, Menzel kept his voice low so no one outside the room could hear the conversation. Menzel looked around the room to see if there was any recording or video equipment; he did not see any. On cross-examination, Men-zel acknowledged that the reason he was looking for recording equipment was because he knew there was a possibility that he might be recorded. Menzel did not think, however, that there could possibly be recording equipment in the room capable of intercepting both ends of a phone conversation.

About one week later, Shepherd reviewed the video tape of his interview with Menzel. Shepherd could hear Menzel talking to Hentz about Hentz’s cell phone. Specifically, Shepherd could hear Hentz say to Menzel that he was “freaking out” when the officers were looking around because of the pictures and video on his cell phone and that if the officers had found the phone, Menzel would have been “f*cked.” Shepherd learned from the Indian River County computer forensics specialist that, even if Hentz deleted the photos and video from the cell phone, they could be recovered as long as not too much time had passed. Once photos and videos are deleted, they remain in the phone’s memory for a period of time until the memory runs out of space. Once the phone runs out of memory, new data overwrites the deleted data, and it is lost forever.

Shepherd went to Hentz’s place of work, and told Hentz that his cell phone possibly contained evidence of a crime under investigation and that Shepherd would need to seize Hentz’s cell phone. Hentz repeatedly refused to give Shepherd his cell phone. Hentz worked in a Sprint cell phone store, and asked Shepherd to come back after Hentz was done working. But Shepherd was concerned that Hentz, working at a cell phone store, would figure out how to delete the data by the time Shepherd returned. The cell phone was ultimately seized. In the application for search warrant, Shepherd explained that Hentz had made statements during his phone conversation with Menzel which led Shepherd to believe that Hentz’s cell phone contained pictures and/or video evidence of the alleged sexual battery. Shepherd obtained a search warrant to search the phone’s contents. The search yielded incriminating photos and video footage implicating Hentz and Menzel in the crimes charged.

*1188 The tape of the intercepted phone conversation was played for the trial court. In it, Menzel called Hentz, told Hentz he would leave Menzel’s “thing” in his mailbox and asked whether Hentz knows why Menzel “did that.” Hentz replied:

Yeah, yeah, yeah, definitely. That was a good idea. Definitely.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 So. 3d 1184, 2011 Fla. App. LEXIS 8418, 2011 WL 2200628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hentz-v-state-fladistctapp-2011.