Marquis L. Bell, Jr., appeals his adjudication for violation of probation. We affirm the trial court’s finding that Bell violated his probation by possessing illicit drugs based upon this court’s precedent in Terry v. State,
We reverse the trial court’s finding that Bell violated - his probation by associating with persons engaged in criminal activity because this ground was not alleged in the violation affidavit. See Manis v. State,
We write further to explain why we believe that Terry was decided correctly. First, we will discuss the different eviden-tiary standards that apply to violation of probation hearings. Second, we will discuss the significance of a drug use/drug possession violation and the evidence typically relied upon by the state to prove the violation. Third, we will discuss the conflict cases, both (1) what we view as a mistake in classifying evidence that may have led our sister appellate courts to reach a different result and (2) what appears to be a more restrictive application of evidentiary rules than should apply in VOP hearings, which may be a second reason for the departure from Terry. Finally, we will explain why we believe that the trial court correctly admitted the evidence relied upon bj| the State to prove the violation in this case, and why that evidence was sufficient to support the trial court’s finding that Bell violated his probation.
Unique Evidentiary Standards Apply To VOP Hearings
It is well established that “[probation is an act of grace to a- defendant convicted of a crime.” Peraza v. Bradshaw,
A probation revocation hearing is more informal, the charging affidavit need not comply with the requirements indictments and informations must meet, thestrict rules- of evidence cm be deviated 'from, and the admission of [otherwise inadmissible] hearsay [as substantive evidence] is not error. Furthermore, there is a lesser burden of proof because only the conscience of the court must be satisfied.
Cuciak v. State,
The Drug Use/Possession Violation In General
It is worth noting that probation revocation for the use or possession of illegal drugs is one of the more frequent violations that we see, probably because (1) the violation can be detected with relatively inexpensive drug testing conducted during one of the probationer’s, routine. appointments at the probation office; and (2) the state does not have: the. resources to monitor the 'conduct of probationers through rigorous - or frequent field investigations. Consequently, the evidence necessary to prove this violation is of particular statewide significance.
The state regularly seeks 'to prove this violation primarily by calling the probation officer to testify regarding the general conditions of probation, to identify the probationer, and to explain that the probationer was instructed on the relevant conditions of probation. The probation officer then explains what he or she did and observed when collecting the urine sample from the defendant and administering the presumptive “field” test, along with his or her personal observation of the test’s positive indication of drug use. Eviden.ce regarding this , initial stage of drug testing is routine and ubiquitous, such that judges throughout the state (i.e., the fact-finders in VOP proceedings) are well-versed in the procedure. .And, studies have proven the results of these tests to be highly reliable, even when the test is not administered by a trained laboratory analyst. For example, in 2000 the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (“NHTSA”) released a study of different field drug tests used by various law enforcement agencies. The NHTSA concluded in its final report that the overall error rates were a low 2.5% when the tests were administered by officers and an even lower 0.8% when administered by trained laboratory technicians. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, ■ Field Test of On-Site Drug Detection Devices, Final Report, October 2000, http://www.nhtsa.gov/people/ injury/research/pub/onsite-detection/ ■ Drugs — Ch5.htm.
. In 2004, the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration reported that on-site or field “urine testing ha[s] been subjected to evaluations by investigators independent of the manufacturers and found to perform similar to that of the instrumented immunoassay tests
Although this testimony obviously meets the foundational test for admissibility, see § 90.402, Fla. Stat. (2014) (“All relevant evidence is admissible, except as provided by law.”); 28A C.J.S. Drugs and Narcotics 8 390 (“The results of field tests, laboratory tests, and urinalysis tests are relevant in criminal drug prosecutions”), states differ in their rulings on whether and under what circumstances the results of “presumptive” field tests can be admitted in criminal jury trials. Compare, e.g., Fortune v. State,
In Florida, however, the Department of Corrections appears to always confirm the result of the field test by sending the sample to a laboratory for independent testing (using an even more accurate and sophisticated technology). This is clearly the better and more widely accepted practice. See Cathryn Jo Rosen, The Fourth Amendment Implications of Urine Testing for Evidence of Drug Use in Probation, 55 Brook. L. Rev. 1159, 1167-68 (1990) (“Professionals in the field generally recommend that screening test results be confirmed through the use of (gas chromatography/mass spectrometry] or one of the other confirmatory techniques in situations in which positive test results ‘have an impact on the life, liberty, property, reputation, or employment of the person being tested.’ ” (quoting Council on Scientific Affairs, Scientific Issues in Drug Testing, 257 JAMA 3110, n. 24 (1987))). Of course, “confirmatory tests are expensive[,]” which is why “in some jurisdictions, probation officers, have sought to revoke probation on the basis of either a single, unconfirmed [screening] test, or a second, ‘confirmatory,’ [screening] test using the same method on. the .same urine sample.” Rosen, Supra, at 1168.
Although Florida incurs the cost of independent laboratory testing when an on-site test indicates the use of -illicit drugs, our State has not historically incurred the additional cost to subpoena the chemist or laboratory analyst who conducted the independent laboratory test as a witness for the violation of probation hearing.
We have found no other cases, aside, from the Florida conflict cases which we will discuss next, holding that direct testimony from a probation officer who conducted the positive on-site drug test, confirmed by a report from an independent laboratory, is insufficient to meet the relaxed burden of proving a probation violation.
The Conflict Cases'
In Dawson, recently decided by the First District, the state relied upon the typical evidence discussed above to prove that the defendant violated probation by using illicit drugs. As explained in Dawson, the probation. officer testified “that she conducted ¿.’urinalysis at her office that indicated appellant used cocaine, and then she sent a urine sample to a laboratory' which issued a report indicating the urine tested positive for cocaine.” Dawson,
Bray does not analyze the question either, but declares the testimony to be hearsay based upon that panel’s reading of L.R. v. State,
Hearsay “is a statement, other than one made by the declarant while testifying at a trial or hearing, offered in evidence to prove the truth of the matter asserted. See § 90.801(1)(c), Fla. Stat. (2014) (emphasis added), “A ‘declarant’ is a person who makes a statement.” See § 90.801(1)(b), Fla. Stat. (2014). In Dawson, the officer (the “declarant”) was testifying at hearing, subject to cross-examination, to what she personally did and observed. This is classic non-hearsay testimony. And, clearly, the drug test is not a “declarant” capable of uttering hearsay. See id. (“A ‘declarant’, is a person —” (emphasis added)). So, if there is a problem with the testimony, it is not — as the Dawson panel stated, citing Bray — that the testimony is hearsay.
Bray was also cited without question for the erroneous conclusion that a probation officer’s testimony regarding the result of a field test is hearsay in Rothe v. State,
First, because of the ubiquitous nature of this type of testimony in this context, we question whether a probation officer needs to first be qualified as an expert before being allowed to testify to the test results. See Fortune,
We also believe that the typical probation officer field test testimony should qualify for admission, at least at a probation hearing, as expert testimony. As explained in Chavez v. State,
This Case
Turning to the evidence in this case, we find no abuse of discretion in the admission of the probation officer’s testimony regarding the results of the presumptive field test that the officer conducted on a urine specimen submitted to him by Bell at the probation office on March 4, 2014. The sample tested positive for “marijuana metabolite.” The officer was certified to administer the test and had fifteen years-'of experience in administering field tests. The officer also testified to the positive results from an independent laboratory, Alere Toxicology Services, Inc.', which confirmed Bell’s use of marijuana. Because the’ hearsay evidence regarding the independent ‘confirmatory test was corroborated by the probation officer’s non-hearsay testimony regarding his field test results, we find no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s finding that Bell violated his probation 'as'alleged, based upon this evidence. We certify that this conclusion conflicts with Dawson and Queior. We also certify conflict with Bray, on which the Dawson panel relied' to reach its result, and with Rothe, the other First District case which followed Bray.
AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED IN PART; CONFLICT CERTIFIED.
Notes
. An immunoassay test or, more properly "immunochemical assay” test, detects. a "drug or its metabolites in the urine” because the substance acts as “an ‘antigen,’ combining with antibodies to the drug to form antigen-antibody complexes that can be detected" by a substance used in the laboratory or drug testing kit. Zeese, Drag Testing Legal Manual § 2:23 (2d ed,), “There are three basic types of immunoassays: enzyme immunoas-says, radio immunoassays, and fluorescent immunoassays.” Id. "Immunoassays have been in existence since the 1950s and have been used to analyze biological fluids for low
. We also have experience with lab analysts testifying in criminal jury trials, usually to confirm that they tested a substance at one time possessed by the defendant. In our experience, these experts test many substances submitted by many law enforcement agencies relating to many different cases, each day. As a practical matter, by, the time of trial or hearing they have no specific memory of conducting the test about which they are testifying and rely on the report: ’ Because section 90.803(5), Florida Statutes, allows the state to permit the lab analyst to read portions of the written ¡report into the record as substantive evidence, the state is able to admit the test results so long as the analyst is in court to lay the proper foundation for a "recorded recollection” (or uses the written report to "refresh” his or her memory). Of course, this means that the testimony of the analyst ends up being no more or less helpful (for either party or the trier of fact), than the report itself. Because of this reality, an evidentiary ruling that would require the state to begin calling laboratory analysts at VOP hearings in order to introduce the report would greatly increase the cost of supervising probationers with no real increased benefit for either party or the court in terms of the quality of information available to the trial judge' when exercising his or her. discretion at a VOP hearing.
. We note that in some jurisdictions, these reports were admitted in criminal jury trials prior to Crawford v. Washington,
. In Bell, the Eighth Circuit expressly held that introducing a urinalysis lab report at a violation of probation hearing, without calling the laboratory analyst as a.witness, did not violate a defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to confront and cross-examine witnesses. The Florida Supreme Court has also held that introducing otherwise inadmissible hearsay evidence at a violation of probation hearing does not violate a defendant’s Sixth Amendment right. Russell v. State, 982 So.2d 642, (Fla.2008) ("[R]evocation of probation or community control proceedings are not criminal prosecutions and therefore Crawford [v. Washington,
. Although section 90.702, Florida Statutes was significantly amended in 2013 to adopt the federal standard for admitting export testimony, it retains these preliminary determinations. See § 90.702, Fla. Stat. (2014).
