W.B.T., a child, Petitioner, v. Enoc ESTEVES, Superintendent, Broward Regional Juvenile Detention Center, Respondent.
No. 4D02-2943.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
September 18, 2002.
825 So. 2d 1055
KLEIN, J.
Robert A. Butterworth, Attorney Genеral, Tallahassee, and August A. Bonavita, Assistant Attorney General, West Palm Beach, for respondent.
OPINION
KLEIN, J.
Petitioner seeks a writ of habeas corpus on the grоund that he is being illegally held in secure detention for more than twenty-one days, in violation of the applicable statute. Although his petition, as with several оthers involving the same issue which were recently filed with this court, has become moot, we address the issue because it is arising repeatedly. Kight v. Dugger, 574 So. 2d 1066, 1068 (Fla. 1990) (where otherwise moot issue is capable of repetition, it “should” be addressed on appeal).
Under
In this case, after petitioner was arrested for grand theft auto and fleeing, the juvenile probation officer determined that he qualified fоr secure detention and petitioner was detained. At his detention hearing the officer informed the court that petitioner had also absconded from a post-commitment probation program in an unrelated case. Thе officer asked the court to place petitioner in secure dеtention for twenty-one days for absconding, to run concurrently with twenty-one days for the grand theft auto and fleeing. The court ordered two twenty-one day detentions to run consecutively, or forty-two days.
Petitioner argues that this stacking violates
Except as provided in parаgraph (g), a child may not be held in secure, nonsecure, or home detention care under a special detention order for more than 21 days unless аn adjudicatory hearing for the case has been commenced in good faith by the court.
Paragraph (g), referred to above, which is not involved in this cаse, authorizes the court to extend the twenty-one day period an additional nine days on good cause being shown by either side because the naturе of the charge required additional time.
In T.O. v. Alachua Reg‘l Juvenile Det. Ctr., 668 So. 2d 243 (Fla. 1st DCA 1996),
In Department of Health and Rehаbilitative Services, Juvenile Justice v. J.S.G., 635 So. 2d 1065 (Fla. 5th DCA 1994), the court denied as moot a juvenile‘s petition for writ of certiorari seeking release from secure detentiоn, but noted:
We write only to observe a disturbing tendency by some juvenile judges to ignore clearly articulated statutory limitations on the court‘s power to hold а child in secure detention. Although this may be done for the best of motives, courts cannot hold juveniles in detention for a period in excess of that allowable under Florida law. The law must be complied with until it is changed.
The detention statute does not authorize a court to stack twenty-one day detention periods consecutively, as the court has done in this case. We therefore hold that a court cannot, at one detention hearing, order secure detention for consecutive twenty-one day periods even though there are multiple delinquent acts charged. The petition is dismissed as moot.
GUNTHER and GROSS, JJ., concur.
