Suarez v. State

481 So. 2d 1201, 11 Fla. L. Weekly 1
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedDecember 19, 1985
Docket65260
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 481 So. 2d 1201 (Suarez v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Suarez v. State, 481 So. 2d 1201, 11 Fla. L. Weekly 1 (Fla. 1985).

Opinion

481 So.2d 1201 (1985)

Ernesto SUAREZ, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Florida, Appellee.

No. 65260.

Supreme Court of Florida.

December 19, 1985.
Rehearing Denied February 21, 1986.

*1202 James Marion Moorman, Public Defender and Douglas S. Connor, Asst. Public Defender, Tenth Judicial Circuit, Bartow, for appellant.

Jim Smith, Atty. Gen. and Davis G. Anderson, Jr., Asst. Atty. Gen., Tampa, for appellee.

PER CURIAM.

This case is a direct appeal from a trial resulting in a sentence of death. We have jurisdiction. Art. V, § 3(b)(1), Fla. Const.

The state's evidence at trial showed that Suarez drove a car with four accomplices to a convenience store in Immokalee. Suarez waited in the car while the four accomplices went into the store and robbed the clerk at gunpoint. During the robbery an off-duty detective pulled into the parking lot of the store and observed the robbery in progress. He left the parking lot and called in marked units to aid in capturing the perpetrators. The accomplices got into the car and Suarez drove away from the store followed by the off-duty officer. When a marked sheriff's deputy's car pulled in behind Suarez, Suarez attempted to evade by speeding up. A high-speed chase ensued during which Suarez forced several oncoming cars off the road and also went through two attempted roadblocks. The chase ended when Suarez pulled into a driveway at a migrant labor camp, his car coming to rest at the rear of a parked bus. Four deputies by this time were close behind the getaway car, and they pulled into the area and stopped. Suarez got out of the car taking with him his .22 caliber semi-automatic rifle. He fired more than a dozen rounds from the rifle before it apparently jammed. One of those bullets found its way into the chest of one of the deputies as he was exiting his vehicle. The shot killed him instantly, a fact not discovered until a short while later after two suspects *1203 had been captured and Suarez and two other accomplices had fled the scene.

Suarez testified he didn't know of the robbery until he was driving away from the convenience store. He claimed he fired the rifle only after he saw the flash of muzzle fire from the direction of the sheriff's deputies, and that he had merely fired the rifle blindly. He claimed that this was an automatic reaction resulting from his military experience as a Cuban soldier.

The jury convicted Suarez of first-degree murder and armed robbery. In the penalty phase, Suarez's psychiatrist testified that the defendant had suffered a series of struggles since a child. He was expelled from his home for striking his stepfather and joined the Cuban military. He went AWOL and served time in prison before he was released to serve as a soldier in Angola. There he was wounded three times, once almost fatally. He emigrated to Miami during the Mariel boatlift where he became involved in the paramilitary group, Alpha 66. The psychiatrist testified that, although Suarez was not mentally ill at the time of the killing, when under great stress, "instincts for survival take over."

The jury recommended death, 8-4. In his sentencing order, the judge found no mitigating circumstances and three aggravating: The murder was committed during flight from a robbery, to avoid arrest, and created great risk to many persons.

SIMULTANEOUS TRANSLATION

Suarez first raises a claim regarding the use of an interpreter during his trial. Prior to trial the court appointed an interpreter to assist Suarez's counsel. Suarez spoke little or no English, and the state does not claim that an interpreter was not needed. The interpreter sat at the defense table throughout the trial. As the state pointed out at oral argument, the record does not show that the interpreter did not provide simultaneous translation of all English-speaking witnesses at trial (and the record would normally not show this, unless defense counsel or someone else specifically entered this observation into the record). Because we hold that failure to provide simultaneous translation under the circumstances here is not error, we do not need to resolve this record deficiency.

Prior to the sentencing, Suarez's defense counsel moved for retrial, claiming that Suarez had been denied a fundamental constitutional right by failure to have the entire trial translated to him. The judge denied the motion on the ground that the court had fulfilled its responsibility in appointing the interpreter, and that it was the defense counsel's responsibility to determine how that interpreter should be used.

We do not take issue with Suarez's claim that a non-English-speaking defendant has a right to an interpreter at trial. This right is grounded on due process and confrontation considerations of the Constitution.

Considerations of fairness, the integrity of the fact-finding process, and the potency of our adversary system of justice forbid that the state should prosecute a defendant who is not present at his own trial, unless by his conduct he waives that right. And it is equally imperative that every criminal defendant — if the right to be present is to have meaning — possess "sufficient present ability to consult with his lawyer with a reasonable degree of rational understanding." Otherwise, "[t]he adjudication loses its character as a reasoned interaction * * * and becomes an invective against an insensible object."

United States ex rel. Negron v. New York, 434 F.2d 386, 389 (2d Cir.1970).[1] In other words, a defendant who has no way of *1204 understanding the trial at which he is being tried is, in effect, absent from that trial.

However, we do not agree with Suarez that the state or the court has a duty to do anything more than provide him with a competent interpreter. Appellant relies on the court's discussion of waiver of the right to an interpreter in Negron:

The least we can require is that a court, put on notice of a defendant's severe language difficulty, make unmistakably clear to him that he has a right to have a competent translator assist him, at state expense if need be, throughout his trial.

Id. at 390-91 (footnotes omitted). Suarez argues that this statement reflects a judicial duty to personally inform a defendant of his right to simultaneous translation at trial, and that only after such record notice to the defendant can the defendant waive the right. See also State v. Neave, 117 Wis.2d 359, 344 N.W.2d 181 (1984) (right to interpreter waivable only by defendant personally, and not by defendant's attorney). We note, though, that the court in Negron was confronted with a trial where "[t]he times during pre-trial preparation and at trial when translation made communication possible between Negron and his accusers, the witnesses, and the officers of the court were spasmodic and irregular" because an interpreter was only intermittently available to the defendant. 434 F.2d at 388. In Neave the defendant never had an interpreter but counsel had never requested one, and the question before that court therefore was whether failure of defense counsel to request an interpreter constituted a valid waiver of the defendant's right to an interpreter.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Detroit Tigers, Inc. and Sedgwick CMS v. Sodders
District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2024
State v. Oscar R. Juracan-Juracan
Supreme Court of New Jersey, 2023
Lanier v. McMath Construction, Inc.
141 So. 3d 974 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 2013)
Benitez v. State
57 So. 3d 939 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2011)
Haynes v. State
2008 WY 75 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 2008)
Adams v. Franklin
924 A.2d 993 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2007)
State v. Maloney
2004 WI App 141 (Court of Appeals of Wisconsin, 2004)
State v. Wade
2003 VT 99 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2003)
State v. McCarthy
2003 ME 40 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2003)
Rodriguez v. State
822 So. 2d 587 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2002)
Cadet v. State
809 So. 2d 43 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2002)
Cook v. State
792 So. 2d 1197 (Supreme Court of Florida, 2001)
Cherry v. State
781 So. 2d 1040 (Supreme Court of Florida, 2000)
Tehrani v. State
764 So. 2d 895 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2000)
The Florida Bar v. Feinberg
760 So. 2d 933 (Supreme Court of Florida, 2000)
Downs v. State
740 So. 2d 506 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1999)
Teffeteller v. Dugger
734 So. 2d 1009 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1999)
United States v. Lowery
166 F.3d 1119 (Eleventh Circuit, 1999)
Matter of Howes
1997 NMSC 024 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1997)
Jordan v. State
694 So. 2d 708 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1997)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
481 So. 2d 1201, 11 Fla. L. Weekly 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/suarez-v-state-fla-1985.