JUAN CARLOS GONZALEZ v. THE STATE OF FLORIDA ( 2022 )


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  •        Third District Court of Appeal
    State of Florida
    Opinion filed July 27, 2022.
    Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
    ________________
    No. 3D20-1525
    Lower Tribunal Nos. F18-22475 & F19-3572
    ________________
    Juan Carlos Gonzalez,
    Appellant,
    vs.
    The State of Florida,
    Appellee.
    An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Miguel M. de
    la O, Judge.
    George J. Vila, for appellant.
    Ashley Moody, Attorney General, and David Llanes, Assistant Attorney
    General, for appellee.
    Before EMAS, SCALES and BOKOR, JJ.
    SCALES, J.
    Juan Carlos Gonzalez appeals the trial court’s September 22, 2020
    “Order Revoking Probation and Sentencing Defendant,” claiming that the
    trial court committed fundamental error by conducting Gonzalez’s probation
    violation and sentencing hearing via the Zoom videoconferencing platform. 1
    Specifically, Gonzalez claims that he and his attorney had the right to be
    present in the courtroom for the probation violation and sentencing hearing
    and that the remote proceedings conducted below by the trial court violated
    Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.180 and his rights to due process,
    confrontation, and effective assistance of counsel under both the United
    States and Florida Constitutions. Recognizing, however, that he participated
    1
    On September 16, 2019, Gonzalez pleaded guilty to (i) four counts of
    aggravated stalking in violation of a court order and one count of strong-
    armed robbery (lower tribunal case number F18-22475), and (ii) two counts
    of aggravated stalking in violation of a court order (lower tribunal case
    number F19-3572). The trial court placed Gonzalez on two years of probation
    in both cases, including a special probation condition that required Gonzalez
    not to have any contact with the victim. At the remote hearing, the trial court
    determined that Gonzalez violated this special condition by sending the
    victim flowers with a card and by sending threatening texts to the victim
    through a third party. The trial court then sentenced Gonzalez for the
    underlying crimes as follows: (i) in F18-22475, to fifteen years in prison for
    strong-armed robbery, followed by two years of probation for each of the four
    counts of aggravated stalking – with all counts to run consecutive to each
    other and consecutive to the sentence imposed in F19-3572; and (ii) in F19-
    3572, to five years in prison for one count of aggravated stalking and to two
    years of probation for the second count of aggravated stalking – with both
    counts to run consecutive to each other and consecutive to the sentence
    imposed in F18-22475.
    2
    at the remote hearing without objection and while rule 3.180 was temporarily
    suspended, 2 Gonzalez acknowledges that he must establish that any error
    in his not being physically present for the remote proceeding must rise to the
    level of fundamental error. See Brown v. State, 
    335 So. 3d 123
    , 127-28 (Fla.
    4th DCA 2022).3 Below, we analyze each of Gonzalez’s alleged assignments
    of fundamental error with respect to the trial court’s conducting, remotely,
    both Gonzalez’s violation of probation hearing and the resulting sentencing
    hearing, and explain why we find no fundamental error on this record, thus
    compelling us to affirm. 4
    2
    The remote hearing conducted below occurred on September 21, 2020,
    while the Florida Supreme Court’s administrative order temporarily
    suspending court rules that “limit or prohibit the use of communication
    equipment for the remote conduct of proceedings” was still in effect. See In
    re Comprehensive COVID-19 Emergency Measures for the Florida State
    Courts, Fla. Admin. Order No. AOSC20-23, Amend. 5 (Aug. 12, 2020).
    3
    Fundamental error is error “so prejudicial to the defendant’s ability to
    receive a fair trial that reversal is required even absent a contemporaneous
    objection.” Louidor v. State, 
    162 So. 3d 305
    , 310 (Fla. 3d DCA 2015). “[F]or
    an error to be so fundamental that it can be raised for the first time on appeal,
    the error must be basic to the judicial decision under review and equivalent
    to a denial of due process.” Hopkins v. State, 
    632 So. 2d 1372
    , 1374 (Fla.
    1994) (quoting State v. Johnson, 
    616 So. 2d 1
    , 3 (Fla. 1993)).
    4
    Gonzalez does not otherwise challenge the revocation of his probation or
    the sentence imposed by the trial court. At oral argument, however,
    Gonzalez’s appellate counsel suggested that Gonzalez’s trial counsel was
    ineffective for failing to object to Gonzalez’s virtual presence at the probation
    revocation and sentencing hearing. Because this issue was not raised in
    Gonzalez’s initial brief and because trial counsel’s ineffectiveness is not
    3
    A. The Remote Probation Violation Hearing: Gonzalez’s Rule 3.180,
    Due Process and Confrontation Clause Claims
    As to the trial court’s conducting Gonzalez’s probation violation hearing
    remotely, this Court’s decision in Clarington v. State, 
    314 So. 3d 495
     (Fla.
    3d DCA 2020) squarely addressed and rejected rule 3.180, due process and
    confrontation clause claims similar to those asserted by Gonzalez. Unlike
    Gonzalez, though, Clarington made a pre-hearing objection to the trial court
    conducting Clarington’s probation violation hearing remotely. After the trial
    court denied Clarington’s objection, Clarington petitioned this Court to
    prohibit the trial court from conducting the proceedings remotely. We denied
    Clarington’s prohibition petition, concluding that: (i) “to the extent that rule
    3.180 could be construed to limit or prohibit [a] remote probation violation
    hearing . . . , AOSC 20-23 suspends application of that rule,” Id. at 500; and
    (ii) because a probation violation hearing is a post-adjudicatory proceeding
    rather than a “critical stage of trial” or a “criminal prosecution,” Id. at 502, and
    “[i]n light of the temporary nature of the proposed conduct of remote
    proceedings at issue here, and balancing the defendant’s interests against
    apparent on the face of this record, we decline to address Gonzalez’s
    ineffective assistance of trial counsel claim in the first instance. See Baxter
    v. State, 
    318 So. 3d 601
    , 604 (Fla. 3d DCA 2021); Rosier v. State, 
    276 So. 3d 403
    , 406 (Fla. 1st DCA 2019).
    4
    the competing interests at stake and the necessities created by the threat to
    public health and safety posed by the novel Coronavirus, . . . the trial court’s
    order directing that the probation violation hearing be conducted by use of
    remote technology in which each of the participants will be at a separate
    location, does not violate Clarington’s right to confrontation or due process.”
    Id. at 507.
    Based upon our decision in Clarington, with respect to Gonzalez’s rule
    3.180, due process, and confrontation clause claims, we conclude that the
    trial court did not fundamentally err by conducting Gonzalez’s probation
    violation hearing remotely.
    B. The Remote Sentencing Hearing: Gonzalez’s Rule 3.180 and Due
    Process Claims
    At the conclusion of Gonzalez’s probation violation hearing, after
    finding Gonzalez had violated the special terms of his probation, the trial
    court immediately proceeded to sentence Gonzalez for the underlying
    crimes for which Gonzalez had been put on probation. Gonzalez argues that
    the trial court fundamentally erred by conducting the sentencing portion of
    the hearing remotely.
    We deny Gonzalez’s claims and adopt the reasoning employed by the
    Fourth District in its recent decision in Brown v. State, 
    335 So. 3d 123
     (Fla.
    4th DCA 2022). In Brown, our sister court squarely addressed and rejected
    5
    similar rule 3.180 and due process claims made by Brown, who, like
    Gonzalez, failed to object to the trial court conducting the sentencing hearing
    remotely. Citing to Clarington, the Brown court dispensed with Brown’s rule
    3.180 claim, determining that no fundamental error occurred because the
    rule had been suspended temporarily by AOSC20-23 in light of the public
    health emergency created by the novel Coronavirus. 
    Id. at 128
    .
    In rejecting Brown’s argument that the remote sentencing hearing
    fundamentally infringed upon Brown’s due process rights, the Brown court
    focused on how the trial court conducted the proceedings, observing, in
    relevant part, that: (i) Brown was not denied private access to his counsel
    during the hearing; (ii) Brown had a meaningful opportunity to be heard
    through his counsel at the hearing; (iii) Brown “was able to present all of the
    evidence and the argument which he sought to introduce at sentencing”; and
    (iv) none of the technical difficulties that occurred during the hearing
    hindered Brown’s ability to present his mitigation argument to the court. 
    Id. 129-30
    . “[U]nder this case’s facts,” the Brown court concluded, “any error in
    not having the defendant physically present did not rise to the level of
    fundamental error.” 
    Id. at 127
    .
    We make the same observations regarding Gonzalez’s sentencing
    hearing, and reach the same result as did our colleagues in Brown. We
    6
    conclude that, with respect to Gonzalez’s rule 3.180 and due process claims,
    no fundamental error occurred here when the trial court remotely conducted
    the sentencing portion of Gonzalez’s hearing.
    C. The Remote Probation Violation Hearing and Sentencing Hearing:
    Gonzalez’s Effective Assistance of Counsel Claims
    Next, we turn to Gonzalez’s claims that the trial court fundamentally
    erred by conducting both the violation of probation and sentencing hearing
    remotely because, Gonzalez asserts, the remote platform abridged
    Gonzalez’s right to effective assistance of counsel. Specifically, Gonzalez
    asserts that (i) the general procedures the trial court employed for conducting
    the subject remote proceeding were fundamentally flawed, and (ii) the
    technology functioned so poorly throughout the remote proceeding that
    Gonzalez could not adequately participate in and view the proceeding and
    consult with his attorney.
    To protect Gonzalez’s right to counsel during the proceedings, the trial
    court utilized the Zoom videoconferencing platform’s “breakout room”
    feature, which enabled Gonzalez and his trial counsel to speak privately
    during the remote proceeding. The trial court gave Gonzalez permission to
    raise his hand at any time to signal to the court that he wished to speak to
    his counsel. During the probation violation aspect of the remote hearing,
    Gonzalez raised his hand during defense counsel’s cross-examination of the
    7
    probation officer. The trial court stopped the hearing, confirmed that
    Gonzalez wished to speak to his lawyer, and then placed Gonzalez and his
    counsel into the private breakout room. When the private conversation
    concluded, the hearing resumed. Similarly, during the sentencing aspect of
    the remote hearing, Gonzalez requested to speak with his attorney prior to
    making a statement to the trial court. The trial court stopped the hearing once
    again, placing Gonzalez and his counsel into the virtual breakout room.
    Moreover, whenever a hearing participant could not be seen or heard,
    or a participant dropped out of the remote proceeding, the trial court stopped
    the hearing immediately. Once the technical difficulty was resolved, the trial
    court directed counsel to repeat the question that was asked to ensure that
    all participants heard both the question and the witness’s answer. At no point
    did Gonzalez or his trial counsel inform the trial court of any inadequacies
    associated with the use of the platform’s breakout room or the trial court’s
    safeguards and remedies employed for technical difficulties.
    While it is axiomatic that a criminal defendant has the fundamental right
    to counsel at every critical stage of the proceeding, see Amend. VI, U.S.
    Const.; Art I, § 16, Fla. Const., which includes “a hearing involving revocation
    of probation as well as at the time of sentencing,” Smith v. State, 
    427 So. 2d 773
    , 774 (Fla. 2d DCA 1983), it bears noting that “the right to counsel is the
    8
    right to the effective assistance of counsel.” McMann v. Richardson, 
    397 U.S. 759
    , 771 n.14 (1970) (emphasis added). Hence, our constitutional inquiry in
    this plenary appeal is whether the trial court’s use of the Zoom
    videoconferencing platform rendered Gonzalez’s counsel so ineffective as
    to amount to fundamental error. See Jackson v. State, 
    983 So. 2d 562
    , 566
    (Fla. 2008) (recognizing that “denial of counsel” claims “remain subject to the
    contemporaneous objection rule; if not preserved at trial, they may be
    reviewed on appeal only for fundamental error”).
    On this record, we are unable to conclude that the remote hearing –
    conducted with the safeguards outlined above – resulted in a constitutional
    deprivation of the effective assistance of counsel so as to constitute
    fundamental error. We agree that, in most settings and under most
    circumstances, it is probably optimal to have counsel sitting next to the
    defendant at the same table. But this is not a case where either Gonzalez or
    his attorney notified the trial court that some infirmity of the remote platform
    hindered Gonzalez’s counsel’s effectiveness, and, even on appeal,
    Gonzalez has not identified any such infirmity. We decline Gonzalez’s
    invitation to conclude, under circumstances presented here, that a lawyer
    who is not sitting next to a defendant at counsel table during a probation
    violation hearing or a probation sentencing hearing is ineffective as a matter
    9
    of law, such that a trial court commits fundamental error by remotely
    conducting such proceedings.
    D. The Sentencing Hearing: Gonzalez’s Confrontation Clause Claims
    Finally, we dispose of Gonzalez’s claim that the trial court
    fundamentally erred by conducting the sentencing hearing remotely resulting
    in a violation of Gonzalez’s rights under the confrontation clause. 5
    While the Florida Supreme Court has determined that the confrontation
    clause applies in sentencing hearings for capital cases, 6 the confrontation
    clause’s applicability in sentencing hearings for non-capital cases is less
    certain. 7 We need not reach or decide the clause’s applicability in this case,
    5
    “In addition to allowing for face-to-face confrontation, the Confrontation
    Clause serves other important interests.” Harrell v. State, 
    709 So. 2d 1364
    ,
    1368 (Fla. 1998). “[T]he Confrontation Clause also ensures (1) that the
    witness will give the testimony under oath, impressing upon the witness the
    seriousness of the matter and protecting against a lie by the possibility of
    penalty of perjury, (2) that the witness will be subject to cross-examination,
    and (3) that the jury will have the chance to observe the demeanor of the
    witness, which aids the jury in assessing credibility.” 
    Id.
    6
    Rodgers v. State, 
    948 So. 2d 655
    , 663 (Fla. 2006) (observing, in a capital
    case, “[a] defendant’s rights under the Confrontation Clause apply to the guilt
    phase, the penalty phase, and sentencing”); Engle v. State, 
    438 So. 2d 803
    ,
    814 (Fla. 1983) (stating, in a capital case, that the “right of confrontation
    protected by cross-examination is a right that has been applied to the
    sentencing process”).
    7
    Compare Rodgers, 
    948 So. 2d at 674
     (J. Cantero, concurring) (“Virtually
    every federal appellate court has recently addressed the issue and has
    reaffirmed the longstanding principle that the Confrontation Clause does not
    10
    though, because no circumstances giving rise to the confrontation clause’s
    application occurred at sentencing. Indeed, the trial court considered no
    additional witness testimony or testimonial evidence during Gonzalez’s
    probation violation sentencing hearing. We decline Gonzalez’s invitation to
    conclude that, under these circumstances, the trial court fundamentally erred
    by conducting a remote sentencing hearing in conjunction with a probation
    violation.
    Accordingly, finding no fundamental error on this record, we affirm the
    challenged order.
    Affirmed.
    apply to sentencing.”); Grange v. State, 
    199 So. 3d 440
    , 442 (Fla. 4th DCA
    2016) (“This Court also has recognized that the Sixth Amendment right of
    confrontation does not apply in sentencing proceedings.”); Box v. State, 
    993 So. 2d 135
    , 137 (Fla. 5th DCA 2008) (“The analysis generally engaged in by
    courts considering the issue is basically that because the right of
    confrontation is a trial right, it applies during the guilt or innocence phase of
    a prosecution, but not to sentencing. Sentencing in the non-capital context
    is not conceived of as part of the trial. A review of the federal decisions
    considering this theory reflects virtual unanimous support for this position.”)
    (citation omitted), with Desue v. State, 
    908 So. 2d 1116
    , 1117 (Fla. 1st DCA
    2005) (“[W]e assume for purposes of decision that, like the Confrontation
    Clause it construes, the rule laid down in Crawford [v. Washington, 
    541 U.S. 36
     (2004)] applies at sentencing.”).
    11