Goldstein v. State ( 2015 )


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  •               NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING
    MOTION AND, IF FILED, DETERMINED
    IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL
    OF FLORIDA
    SECOND DISTRICT
    JAY GOLDSTEIN,                     )
    )
    Appellant,              )
    )
    v.                                 )                Case No. 2D13-2598
    )
    STATE OF FLORIDA,                  )
    )
    Appellee.               )
    ___________________________________)
    Opinion filed January 7, 2015.
    Appeal from the Circuit Court for
    Hillsborough County; Chet A. Tharpe,
    Judge.
    Frank de la Grana, Tampa; and Kenneth S.
    Siegle, Tampa, for Appellant.
    Pamela Jo Bondi, Attorney General,
    Tallahassee, and Cerese Crawford Taylor,
    Assistant Attorney General, Tampa, for
    Appellee.
    KHOUZAM, Judge.
    On January 20, 2012, Jay Goldstein was charged with one hundred
    counts of possession of child pornography. Though his Criminal Punishment Code
    Scoresheet indicated a lowest permissible sentence of 1342.5 months (111.875 years)
    in prison, the State offered Goldstein an open plea that would cap his sentence at ten
    years and that allowed for an unlimited amount of supervision. But the court rejected
    the plea negotiations. Goldstein entered an open plea, and the court sentenced him to
    fifteen years on count one and five years on the remaining counts, to run consecutively
    to the sentence on count one but concurrent to each other. These sentences are a
    significant downward departure.
    Goldstein appeals, relying on this court's decision in Barnhill v. State, 
    140 So. 3d 1055
     (Fla. 2d DCA 2014), to argue that the trial judge's explanation of the
    sentence revealed that he committed fundamental error by applying a general policy
    and lumping Goldstein with all other similarly charged defendants regardless of the
    evidence about his individual case presented at sentencing. Ultimately, Goldstein
    seeks resentencing before a different judge, which may or may not result in a shorter
    overall sentence for him. We conclude that Goldstein is entitled to the relief he
    requests. As we will discuss below, explanations at sentencing can lend legitimacy to
    the court's decisions and foster a public confidence in our judicial system. But the
    problem in this case, much like in Barnhill, is that the trial judge had established a
    general policy—personal to himself and at odds with the law of Florida—that caused
    him to sentence Goldstein, not for the crimes he had committed and for his
    circumstances at the time of sentencing, but rather for the crimes the judge feared
    Goldstein might commit in the future based on the nature of the crimes for which he was
    convicted.
    -2-
    I.     BACKGROUND
    The State offered Goldstein a plea that would have capped his sentence
    at ten years. Goldstein had been collecting child pornography via the internet since
    2007, but there was no evidence that he had used the internet to meet children or, most
    importantly, that he had ever had any sexual contact with any child. Indeed, Goldstein
    had taken a polygraph examination that indicated that he had never inappropriately
    touched a child. In offering the sentencing cap, the State had also considered the
    psychological evaluation prepared by Dr. Imhof, who had concluded as follows:
    Available information indicates Mr. Goldstein is a low risk to
    commit future sexual offenses, either a contact or
    pornography offense. Additionally, Mr. Goldstein presents
    without antisocial orientation, significant problems with
    general or sexual self-management, or substance use
    problems and is participating in mental health services and
    has a positive and supportive social system in the
    community, all of which suggest a reduced risk to commit
    sexual offenses in the future. It is further noted that Mr.
    Goldstein has been in the community for approximately eight
    months since his arrest and there is no indication he has
    engaged in any inappropriate sexual behavior or accessed
    child pornography via the internet. As research involving
    samples of generic sexual offenders has indicated risk for
    future sexual offenses is reduced by approximately half
    between five and ten years post release, Mr. Goldstein's
    already low risk will reach negligible levels at approximately
    eight years. Although diagnostic issues are unclear for Mr.
    Goldstein, mental health treatment is indicated given his
    excessive use of pornography, some of which involved
    minors, and the interference it has caused in his
    performance at home and work. Given Mr. Goldstein's
    relatively low risk for future sexual offenses and amenability
    for treatment, he presents with minimal risk should he be
    returned to the community with supervision and supportive
    mental health treatment.
    Goldstein was receiving treatment as recommended in the psychological evaluation.
    -3-
    The court rejected the plea negotiations, and Goldstein entered an open
    guilty plea on April 23, 2013. After accepting the plea, the judge took testimony to
    consider before imposing sentence. Goldstein's attorney presented numerous letters,
    video recorded statements, and testimony from people who knew Goldstein in an effort
    to show that he was not a danger to the community. As a diving coach, Goldstein was
    constantly interacting with minors, and yet there was no evidence whatsoever that he
    ever acted inappropriately toward them. To the contrary, the evidence affirmatively
    suggested that no such contact had ever taken or would ever take place. Several of
    Goldstein's diving students, who had trained with him for years, stated that they had
    never felt uncomfortable around him. They trusted him, describing him not only as a
    friend but as a member of their families and a role model. One young woman stated
    that Goldstein was "an inspiration." Another attested, "Jay is one of my best friends.
    He still is."
    Several parents asserted that even in light of Goldstein's conviction they
    would still want him to coach their children. They described him as a wonderful coach
    and friend. One mother wrote that the worst thing about this case was that her
    granddaughter would not be able to train with Goldstein as her daughter had. The
    father of two girls who were Goldstein's students testified that Goldstein was a leader,
    that he had the utmost respect for Goldstein, and that his girls and society would be
    missing out if Goldstein were put in prison. Another father of two children Goldstein had
    coached testified that his children had been taught to look out for inappropriate behavior
    by coaches, and they told him that Goldstein had never done anything inappropriate.
    The man stated, "frankly, knowing my kids are the single most important thing in my life,
    -4-
    given the opportunity I would have no apprehension to allow Jay to be their coach
    again."
    Goldstein's neighbors, including two young men who had grown up living
    next door to him, testified that they were close to Goldstein and that nothing
    inappropriate had ever happened between them. One of the young men described
    Goldstein as "the brother I never had." The young men's mothers also testified they
    allowed their children to spend time with Goldstein and nothing inappropriate ever
    happened. One explained, "I believe in my heart that Jay would never, ever do anything
    inappropriate to a child." The other mother testified that she had five children who grew
    up living next door to Goldstein and that he had been a mentor to her boys when her
    husband left. She stated, "to this moment I would allow my children to be with him. He
    has been nothing but wonderful to my children. We are all human." She also noted that
    she is vigilant about child abuse because she owns a child care center.
    Many of Goldstein's friends and colleagues, who had known him for years
    and even decades, testified as well. They maintained that Goldstein was not a threat.
    They noted the numerous opportunities that Goldstein had working with children and
    that there was never any indication that he had acted inappropriately in any way. For
    example, a fellow swim coach testified that as an educator, coach, and Boy Scout
    leader, he had been trained to look for child predation and he had never seen such
    behavior with Goldstein during the fifteen years that they had known each other. A
    friend who had been close to Goldstein for about thirty years described him as "the kind
    of person that I want to be."
    -5-
    Members of Goldstein's family also testified. Goldstein's former brother-
    in-law described Goldstein as "an outstanding individual" and a "pillar of the
    community." Several witnesses mentioned that Goldstein had been taking care of his ill
    mother for years and that recently he had been visiting her on a daily basis. Goldstein's
    cousin, a physician, stated that Goldstein would often contact him with questions about
    how to best care for his mother. "It's incredible, I can tell you," the cousin stated,
    "[b]etter than any nurse I've . . . worked with." All of the witnesses asked the court to
    show mercy on Goldstein.
    Goldstein's attorney also made reference to two studies prepared for the
    United States Sentencing Commission that show how child pornographers who do not
    commit contact offenses are far less likely to commit any contact offenses in the future.
    He argued that the studies support a claim that online offenders have a lower recidivism
    rate, suggesting that Goldstein would be unlikely to reoffend.
    On the other side, the State presented evidence that a search of
    Goldstein's computers uncovered 272 images of child pornography. Forty-eight "known
    notable child victims as characterized by the National Center for Missing and Exploited
    Children" were depicted. There were approximately eight videos located on Goldstein's
    computers. Various other images of child pornography were on discs categorized and
    labeled with titles such as PTHC, standing for "Preteen Hard Core." Some showed
    young children between the ages of eight and fifteen. All showed children engaging in
    almost any imaginable sex act. An investigating detective testified that Goldstein
    admitted downloading the child pornography and that he knew what it was.
    In imposing sentence, the trial judge made the following statements:
    -6-
    I can tell you that I could probably count on one hand
    the number of persons that come in front of me charged with
    child pornography that have criminal histories. Almost every
    single one has never been involved in the criminal system.
    It's [a] first-time offense.
    Someone mentioned that Mr. Goldstein lived in—or in
    his circle of friends, that no one knew about this. And I'm
    sure that you didn't because there's a dark side in child
    pornographers['] lives that no one knows about, except other
    child pornographers. Those are the ones that know.
    And I would be just like you, had I not had the
    experience of being involved with child pornography, of
    knowing someone for 30 years or all my life because I'm
    related to them, or 10 or 15 years thinking I can't believe that
    this happened, that's not the person that I know, but what
    you don't also realize is that these—for the most part men,
    live two lives. They live the life that we all know. And then
    they live the dark side that no one knows other than other
    child pornographers that they are sharing their files with. . . .
    Some people have told me that "it's just pictures,
    Judge." It's not just pictures. In order to make that picture or
    to make that movie, you have to rape a child. There's no
    other way of getting around it. You have to rape a child.
    I'm in trial in this division every other week. . . . In the
    years that I've been trying these cases, there has not been
    one time when I didn't have at least two people, I have had
    as many as ten or twelve, approach the bench, some crying,
    saying that they had been abused as a child and could not
    hear this particular case. I have had more than that
    approach the bench and tell me that they have had a loved
    one sexually abused.
    ....
    I guess the last thing that I want to say is child
    pornography perpetuates the sexual abuse of children. It
    does. And although you may not have had someone tell you
    this before, but I know from my experience in sitting in this
    courtroom day-in and day-out, that these men in their dark
    side are sexually aroused, sexually interested in children.
    And a child's innocence, it's not like stealing a car or
    someone breaks in your house and steals your television or
    -7-
    your jewelry, you can replace that. You cannot replace a
    child's innocence. Once that's taken away from a child, it's
    taken away forever.
    We—we are taught to respect adults. We're taught to
    respect our elders. An adult man can be rebuked by an
    adult woman. It's very, very, very hard for a child to stop an
    adult or a man from grooming them or getting into a situation
    where the child is vulnerable and now because of his sexual
    interest he takes advantage of that child.
    We also know that we don't have years and years of
    studies and competent data to accurately predict whether or
    not a person who is a child pornographer is going to reoffend
    by actually touching a child because the phenomenon,
    according to experts, is still too new. And we have had
    studies that say the risk assessments are so low, and then
    that same study has gone back to those individuals who
    have then said we didn't tell the truth or we then went out
    and we actually did contact children when we told you that
    we had not.
    There are other studies that say that the risk
    assessments are higher than what other studies say and
    they have come back and revised those studies as well.
    The fact of the matter is, the phenomenon is so new
    to the scientific society, that we don't know what the honest
    to good true risk assessment is for a child pornographer
    going out and touching a child, even though we do know that
    they are sexually attracted to children. That's a given.
    I'm not willing to take that risk. It's real easy for me to
    put a child—a car thief on probation, say don't do it again.
    He goes out and steals a car, okay. I'm not—I'm not willing
    to take the risk that at some point in time Mr. Goldstein, or
    others that have a proclivity for child pornography, bondage,
    eight year olds, that's not at some point in time going to
    offend by actually sexually abusing a child.
    (Emphasis added.)
    -8-
    II.    ANALYSIS
    The judge's statements in this case are remarkably similar—in fact, almost
    identical—to the statements that this court found fundamentally erroneous in Barnhill v.
    State, 
    140 So. 3d 1055
     (Fla. 2d DCA 2014). In Barnhill, the same trial judge rejected
    the defendant's request for a downward departure sentence based on his general
    concern in child pornography cases. In sentencing Barnhill, the judge made the
    following statements:
    I just want you to know that I struggle on these cases, not
    just Mr. Barnhill's, but these types of cases every single day
    of my life since I've been put into this division, and there's
    not one day that goes by, not one, that I don't think about
    these cases.
    Mr. Barnhill is one of many individuals that come in
    front of me that have absolutely no criminal record
    whatsoever, none, that live a dark side, if you will, that no
    one knows about. Family members don't know about,
    teachers don't know about, business associates don't know
    about[.] [T]he only people that know about it is Mr. Barnhill
    and other persons that have like interests that he would
    choose to know about his interests as well.
    ....
    This child pornography phenomenon, if you will, is
    becoming an epidemic. It's bigger, I think, than what any of
    us in this room or in law enforcement circles absolutely
    realize . . . .
    And the psychologists in their book . . . list it as a
    fantasy [.] [P]edophiles are real. They're real. They may
    have some twisted fantasy about observing prepubescent
    children in bondage situations and being raped and having
    sexual intercourse and oral intercourse, being sodomized,
    but even though that might be a fantasy of watching those
    things on a computer while they stimulate themselves, it's
    real when they touch. And when they touch, that child is
    damaged forever, forever.
    -9-
    And maybe it's what some people don't even—don't
    even think about. It's just a picture. It's not just a picture.
    This is a child who has actually been manipulated either by
    fear or because a person is so much older and can control
    them and grooms them to go into these sexual scenarios,
    and even though you get some of these pictures where you
    get a six year old [sic] or seven year old [sic] and it appears
    to be, and I've seen them, I've seen them in this courtroom,
    where they appear in the video or on the pictures to be
    enjoying the act, they've been groomed.
    That first time they are—they were raped and they are
    being raped each time as it happens. That's what scares
    me. That is what scares me in these types of cases.
    But I guess first and foremost, I want you to know that
    there is not one thing that the [S]tate of Florida can, has or
    ever will be able to say that is going to cause me to sentence
    someone that I don't believe the sentence is appropriate, for
    whatever that is worth.
    ....
    . . . I honestly believe that this is an epidemic of greater
    proportions than any of us in this room . . . ever realized.
    And there is no magic answer as to whether you're
    going to reoffend, or you're not going to reoffend in this
    particular case, whether you're going to touch or you're not
    going to touch. . . .
    And some people say, well, you've taken my life away
    or you've taken my husband's life away or you've taken my
    father's life away, but in these types of cases, if you touch,
    you take the life away of a child[.] [A]nd I cannot tell you how
    many times I have seen in this courtroom where we have
    attempted to pick a jury[,] the numbers of men and women,
    adult men and women, some of which are older than I am
    [who] have stood at the bench in front of me with tears rolling
    down their faces because they were sexually abused as a
    child.
    
    Id. at 1058-59
     (some alteration in original).
    - 10 -
    In Barnhill, we held that the trial judge's statements indicated that he was
    applying a general policy in child pornography cases and that the application of such a
    general policy amounted to fundamental error:
    We recognize that these types of cases are disturbing
    by their very nature and that trial judges must deal with them
    on a regular basis. As a result, we are not unsympathetic to
    the difficulty that each trial judge must face when presiding
    over such cases. However, trial judges are required to rise
    above the disturbing nature of these and other crimes and to
    provide every defendant a fair opportunity to be heard by an
    impartial judge who will consider only the evidence
    presented to the court within that case.
    . . . It is . . . apparent that in considering Barnhill's
    sentence, the trial judge lumped Barnhill with all other
    similarly charged defendants irrespective of the testimony
    that Barnhill presented at sentencing.
    . . . [E]ven to the most casual observer, it could not be
    believed that Barnhill received a hearing in a dispassionate
    environment before a fair and impartial judge. Rather, the
    transcript reflects the trial judge here was deeply concerned
    not by the facts specific to Barnhill's case but by the general
    nature of the crimes involved and the potential for
    defendants charged with these types of crimes to progress
    into crimes involving "hands-on" contact with children. Thus
    the trial judge at least implied that he would not consider a
    downward departure in child pornography cases as a
    general policy.
    We conclude that the application of such a general
    policy constitutes a due process violation resulting in
    fundamental error.
    
    Id. at 1061
     (emphasis added) (citations omitted).
    By the same token, the statements made by the judge in the instant case
    reveal that he lumped Goldstein with all other similarly charged defendants and applied
    a general policy, regardless of the evidence presented at sentencing. As we read the
    trial court's comments, the policy he explains is one of denying probation to all
    - 11 -
    defendants convicted of possession of child pornography because science has not
    proven they will not become sexual predators in the future. It is true that the purpose of
    uniform sentencing laws is to create "general policies" for the sentencing of defendants,
    but here the judge applied a personalized general policy that was at odds with Florida
    law.
    Additionally, in both Barnhill and the instant case, the judge apparently
    feared that the defendants would commit new criminal acts of abuse that they were
    never accused of committing and took this speculation into account when imposing
    sentence. As in Barnhill, this fear was not based on the evidence before the trial court
    as to this defendant. In a different context, this court has stated: "A sentencing court
    may not rely on 'unsubstantiated allegations of misconduct or speculation that the
    defendant probably committed other crimes' when it imposes sentence." Craun v.
    State, 
    124 So. 3d 1027
    , 1030 (Fla. 2d DCA 2013) (quoting Nusspickel v. State, 
    966 So. 2d 441
    , 445 (Fla. 2d DCA 2007)); see also Martinez v. State, 
    123 So. 3d 701
    , 704 (Fla.
    1st DCA 2013) ("[A] sentence based on mere allegation or surmise violates the
    fundamental constitutional rights of the defendant."). It seems even more evident to us
    that a court cannot rely on crimes it fears the defendant might possibly commit in the
    future simply because he has admitted the charged offenses. While protection of the
    public is clearly a proper consideration, the judge's comments taken in the context of the
    evidence presented raise the concern that the court was applying generalized, personal
    concerns rather than considering the specific circumstances of this case.
    However, we must emphasize that the holding in this case, much like the
    holding in Barnhill, is narrow. This opinion does not disturb trial judges' wide discretion
    - 12 -
    in sentencing criminal defendants. See Bracero v. State, 
    10 So. 3d 664
    , 665 (Fla. 2d
    DCA 2009) ("A sentencing court has wide discretion regarding the factors it may
    consider when imposing a sentence."); Stano v. State, 
    473 So. 2d 1282
    , 1286 (Fla.
    1985) ("A trial court's discretion extends to determining what is relevant evidence at
    sentencing."). A court has the discretion to reject a negotiated plea, to reject the
    testimony presented at sentencing hearings, and to impose departure sentences as
    permitted by law. The court's discretion also encompasses providing explanations at
    sentencing to support the reasonableness and legitimacy of its decision to both the
    public and to the reviewing court. Although a trial court is often free to impose a
    sentence with no public explanation, a thoughtful explanation can foster a public
    confidence in our judicial system. Explaining to the public that possession of
    pornography is not a victimless crime, for example, is a completely appropriate role for
    the trial judge and for this court.
    Likewise, we do not intend to suggest that trial judges cannot learn from
    experience or consider prior cases when seeking to impose a proper sentence. See In
    re Inquiry Concerning a Judge, J.Q.C. No. 77-16, 
    357 So. 2d 172
    , 178 (Fla. 1978)
    ("Every judicial officer is the sum of his past. When he dons his robe and ascends to
    the bench, he is not divested of the effects of his previous training, education and real
    life experiences. He takes his official office as a human being, not as a judicial robot.");
    Nateman v. Greenbaum, 
    582 So. 2d 643
    , 644 (Fla. 3d DCA 1991) (recognizing that
    judges are "expected to be influenced by real life experiences"). On the contrary, we
    recognize that all good judges attempt to improve their skills and sensitivities from their
    prior experience on the bench. So the fact that the trial judge in this case may have
    - 13 -
    relied on his previous training, education, and experience in imposing sentence is not
    problematic in and of itself—indeed, judges can and should learn from experience in
    order to reach a just result.
    The problem here is that the trial court expressly considered and relied
    upon its own generalized fears of greater future offenses for any person who possesses
    child pornography. Such fear is simply a factor that the court, as a matter of law, had no
    authority to use when exercising its wide discretion or drawing from personal
    experience. Accordingly, we conclude that the court fundamentally erred in relying on
    its generalized fears of greater future offenses for any similarly charged defendant and
    applying a general policy in sentencing Goldstein contrary to Florida law. We reverse
    Goldstein's sentences and remand for sentencing before a different judge.
    Judgment affirmed; sentences reversed; and remanded with instructions.
    WALLACE, J., and DAKAN, STEPHEN L., ASSOCIATE SENIOR JUDGE, Concur.
    - 14 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2D13-2598

Judges: Khouzam, Wallace, Daean, Stephen

Filed Date: 1/7/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024