616 So. 2d 1125 | Fla. Dist. Ct. App. | 1993
Following our reversal of his conviction in Pottgen v. State, 589 So.2d 390 (Fla. 1st DCA 1991), Pottgen was again found guilty of disturbing the contents of a grave and now appeals from the resulting adjudication and sentence. We find no reversible error in any of the three evidentiary points presented.
In accordance with the previous opinion, 589 So.2d at 391, the trial judge, upon the state’s pre-trial motion, made a specific finding that the witness Fred Day, who disappeared after the first trial and whose testimony was therefore read into evidence at the second under section 90.804(l)(e), Florida Statutes (1989), was adverse to the state
Second, there is nothing at all to the claim — which concerns .the state’s star witness, Rose Charland, who was also unavailable for retrial — that the admission of her former testimony in acknowledged conformity with section 90.804(l)(e) and the United States Constitution, somehow violated the confrontation clause of the Florida Constitution, article I, section 16. See Putnal v. State, 56 Fla. 86, 47 So. 864 (1908).
Finally, Pottgen complains that the state’s cross-examination of a defense witness erroneously implied that he had committed an offense of which the prosecutor had no direct evidence.
Affirmed.
. The inflammatory videotape which occasioned the initial reversal was of course not shown at the second trial.
. We need not consider the effect of the fact that between the trials, section 90.608 was amended to eliminate the adversity requirement.
. Q [BY THE STATE] Now, you were playing with Mr. Pottgen and Mr. Womack this Dungeons and Dragons in December of 1989; were you not?
A [BY JAY SHELL] Yes, sir.
Q Have you ever photographed a grave?
A A grave?
Q Yes, sir.
A No, sir.
Q Specifically, let me show you State’s Exhibit No. 1 in evidence. Did you photograph this grave?
A No, sir.
Q I’m going to ask you a rather long question, Mr. Shell. I ask you to listen very carefully to the answer. Back in December of 1989, did you "go to Scott Cemetery off North 441 and photograph the grave of Glen Morgan, so that grave could be placed in a fashion that it was before the body was removed from it?
A No, sir.
[THE STATE]: I don’t have any other questions.