For the sec­ond time in less than four months, the Florida Supreme Court has changed state law to uphold a death-row prisoner’s con­vic­tion or death sen­tence and dimin­ish the legal pro­tec­tions avail­able to oth­er indi­vid­u­als con­vict­ed of cap­i­tal offens­es. In an unsigned May 14, 2020 rul­ing uphold­ing the con­vic­tion and death sen­tence of Sean Bush, the court abro­gat­ed a cen­tu­ry-old legal stan­dard gov­ern­ing cas­es in which a con­vic­tion is based sole­ly on circumstantial evidence. 

In dis­sent, Justice Jorge Labarga, the lone remain­ing lib­er­al on the court after three long-serv­ing jus­tices reached manda­to­ry retire­ment age, sharply crit­i­cized what he called the court’s sweep­ing deci­sion to aban­don the height­ened stan­dard of review in all crim­i­nal cas­es that are based sole­ly on cir­cum­stan­tial evi­dence.” For more than one hun­dred years,” Labarga wrote, this Court has applied a more strin­gent stan­dard of review in review­ing con­vic­tions sup­port­ed only by cir­cum­stan­tial evi­dence. … Yet today, this Court elim­i­nates anoth­er rea­son­able safe­guard in our death penal­ty jurispru­dence and in Florida’s crim­i­nal law across the board.” 

The deci­sion is the lat­est in a string of rul­ings in which the court has over­turned estab­lished pro­ce­dur­al pro­tec­tions for Florida crim­i­nal defen­dants. In January, the court reversed its pri­or land­mark deci­sions requir­ing that cap­i­tal sen­tenc­ing juries unan­i­mous­ly agree to the death penal­ty before a tri­al judge may sen­tence a defen­dant to death. Weeks lat­er, the court over­turned anoth­er deci­sion that had barred juve­niles from being sen­tenced to terms longer than 20 years with­out an oppor­tu­ni­ty for con­sid­er­a­tion of early release. 

Bush was con­vict­ed on the basis of cir­cum­stan­tial evi­dence of the 2011 mur­der of his estranged wife. No direct evi­dence con­nect­ed Bush to the mur­der, in part because the mur­der weapons were nev­er found. Prosecutors pre­sent­ed a case based on cir­cum­stan­tial evi­dence, includ­ing the fact that Bush, who was expe­ri­enc­ing severe finan­cial dis­tress” in the months lead­ing up to the mur­der, was the ben­e­fi­cia­ry of the victim’s life insur­ance pol­i­cy, which was worth more than $800,000. He was con­vict­ed and sen­tenced to death in 2017

Prior to the rul­ing in Bush’s case, Florida used a spe­cial appel­late stan­dard” in cas­es based on cir­cum­stan­tial evi­dence. The court defined that stan­dard as: Where the only proof of guilt is cir­cum­stan­tial, no mat­ter how strong­ly the evi­dence may sug­gest guilt, a con­vic­tion can­not be sus­tained unless the evi­dence is incon­sis­tent with any rea­son­able hypoth­e­sis of inno­cence.” The court’s deci­sion revoked that spe­cial stan­dard, which the four-jus­tice major­i­ty called an out­lier” because fed­er­al courts and most state courts do not use it. 

Dissenting Justice Jorge Labarga called the stan­dard a rea­son­able safe­guard” that the state had applied for more than a cen­tu­ry. Circumstantial evi­dence is a vital evi­den­tiary tool, and the admis­sion of such evi­dence is com­mon­ly relied on by the state to estab­lish its case-in-chief. However, cir­cum­stan­tial evi­dence is inher­ent­ly dif­fer­ent from direct evi­dence in a man­ner that war­rants height­ened con­sid­er­a­tion on appel­late review,” he wrote. Labarga ques­tioned why the court found it nec­es­sary to with­draw the pro­tec­tions pro­vid­ed by height­ened review of cir­cum­stan­tial evi­dence, not­ing that Bush’s con­vic­tion would have been upheld even if that stan­dard had been applied in his case. 

The Florida’s high court’s revo­ca­tion of legal pro­tec­tions for crim­i­nal defen­dants has fol­lowed in the wake of Governor Ron DeSantis’ replace­ment of the three retir­ing jus­tices with con­ser­v­a­tive jus­tices who have open­ly expressed a will­ing­ness to re-shape broad areas of Florida law. Defense advo­cates have raised con­cerns about the court’s depar­ture from stare deci­sis,” a legal prin­ci­ple in which courts gen­er­al­ly rely on prece­dent from ear­li­er deci­sions. Eighth Judicial Circuit Public Defender Stacy Scott called the juve­nile deci­sion the sec­ond case in as many months where this new Supreme Court com­po­si­tion has reversed prece­dent by just say­ing, oh, they were wrong… It’s dis­re­gard­ing prece­dent that’s the scari­est part of this rul­ing to me,. Because if that’s what this court is going to do, then they can do it on any type of case that they want to .… It seems to me that this is judi­cial activism at its worst — dis­re­gard­ing prece­dent and the respect that our laws have for stare decisis.” 

Citation Guide
Sources

Jim Saunders, Justices end decades-old evi­dence stan­dard, News Service of Florida, May 14, 2020 ; Dara Kam, Florida Supreme Court revers­es its course on juve­nile sen­tenc­ing, News Service of Florida, March 122020.

Read the Florida Supreme Court’s deci­sion in Bush v. State.