Lead Opinion
Petitioners were convicted in the Circuit Court of Palm Beach County, Fla., of publishing certain comic strips and pictures in violation of the Florida obscenity statute.
The Supreme Court of Florida sent the case to the trial court “for further proceedings in which the standards established in Miller v. California
On November 4, 1975, while petitioners’ request for mandamus was pending before us, the State Attorney of Palm Beach County, at the. direction of the State’s Attorney General, nolle prossed the charges. Florida follows the common law with respect to nolle prosequi and vests in its Attorney General exclusive discretion to determine that the State is “unwilling to prosecute.” See 9 Fla. Jur., Criminal Law §378 (1972). Nolle prosequi, if entered before jeopardy attaches, neither operates as an acquittal nor prevents further prosecution of the offense. See id., § 438; Smith v. State,
Petitioners further contend that in these circumstances the prosecutor’s exercise of discretionary authority to
Observation of the disposition of this case following our summary reversal reveals that the Supreme Court of Florida has attributed to this Court a decision which it never made. Further proceedings pursuant to the information charging petitioners with violating Florida’s obscenity statute were clearly foreclosed. In that circumstance, the state court’s failure to give effect to that judgment was not cured by the intervening exercise of prose-
Notes
Fla. Stat. Ann. § 847.011 (Supp. 1975).
Bucolo v. State,
Bucolo v. Florida,
4
Bucolo v. State,
In his response to petitioners’ request for mandamus, the Attorney General of Florida concedes that “there is no question but that this Court in reversing [petitioners’ conviction on April 21, 1975, by referring to [Jenkins and Kois], conclusively determined that the materials disseminated by petitioners were not obscene as a matter of law.” He urges us, however, to deny relief on other grounds.
Petitioners direct our attention to the document filed by the prosecutor in support of his decision to nolle prosse the charges. It contains the following notation:
“SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES- REMANDED THIS CASE UNDER GUIDELINES OF MILLER V. CALIFORNIA. THIS CASE NOLLE PROSSED USING PROSECUTORIAL DISCRETION REGARDING ITS AGE AND LOCATION OF WITNESSES.”
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
In Deen v. Hickman,
