Fla. Stat. § 27.52
(2) (a) Any person applying for appointment of a public defender or private attorney or any other due process services based on indigent status shall pay a $40 application fee to the clerk of court for each affidavit filed, regardless of the number of required due process services requested in a case. The clerk of court must assist a person who appears before the clerk and requests assistance in completing the affidavit containing financial information, and the clerk must notify the court if a person is unable to complete the affidavit after the clerk has provided assistance. The duty of the clerk in determining indigence shall be limited to receiving the affidavit of indigence executed by the individual seeking the determination and comparing the information provided in the affidavit to the standard of indigence established by law. The determination of indigence shall be a ministerial act of the clerk and not a decision based on further investigation or the exercise of independent judgment by the clerk. The application fee shall be paid at the time the financial affidavit is filed or within 7 days thereafter. If, in a criminal proceeding, the application fee is not paid prior to the disposition of the case, the clerk shall advise the sentencing judge of this fact and the court shall:
1. Assess the application fee as part of the sentence or as a condition of probation; or
2. Assess the application fee pursuant to s. 938.29
(b) The applicant shall submit, except in the case of incapacity communicated through the public defender, a completed affidavit containing the following financial information:
1. Net income, consisting of total salary and wages, minus deductions required by law, including court-ordered support payments.
2. Other income, including, but not limited to, social security benefits, union funds, veterans' benefits, workers' compensation, other regular support from absent family members, public or private employee pensions, unemployment compensation, dividends, interest, rent, trusts, and gifts.
3. Assets, including, but not limited to, cash, savings accounts, bank accounts, stocks, bonds, certificates of deposit, equity in real estate, and equity in a boat or a motor vehicle or in other tangible property.
(3) After reviewing the affidavit and questioning the applicant, the clerk shall make one of the following determinations:
(4) (a) An applicant, including an applicant who is a minor or an adult tax-dependent person, is indigent if:
1. The income of the person is equal to or below 200 percent of the then-current federal poverty guidelines prescribed for the size of the household of the applicant by the United States Department of Health and Human Services or if the person is receiving Temporary Assistance for Needy Families-Cash Assistance, poverty-related veterans' benefits, or Supplemental Security Income (SSI); or
2. The person is unable to pay for the services of an attorney without substantial hardship to his or her family.
(b) In determining whether an applicant is indigent, the clerk shall determine whether any of the following facts exist, and the existence of any such fact creates a presumption that the applicant is not indigent:
1. The person has been released on bail in the amount of $5,000 or more;
2. The person owns, or has equity in, any intangible or tangible personal property or real property or the expectancy of an interest in any such property; or
3. The person retained private counsel immediately before or after filing the affidavit asserting indigent status pursuant to subsection (2). If the clerk finds discrepancies between the financial affidavit and the investigation of assets, the clerk shall submit the information to the court and the court shall determine whether the public defender or private attorney shall continue representation, or whether the authorization for any other due process services previously authorized shall be revoked. The person may be heard regarding the information discovered by the clerk. If the court, based on the information provided, determines that the person is not indigent, the court shall order the public defender or private attorney to discontinue representation and revoke the provision of any other authorized due process services. Notwithstanding any provision of law, court rule, or administrative order to the contrary, the clerk of the court shall assign the first $40 of any fees or costs paid by an indigent person as payment of the application fee. A person found to be indigent shall not be refused counsel or other required due process services for failure to pay the fee.
History.--s. 3, ch. 63-409; s. 1, ch. 70-57; s. 4, ch. 73-334; s. 1, ch. 77-99; s. 1, ch. 77-378; s. 8, ch. 79-164; s. 3, ch. 80-376; s. 1, ch. 81-273; s. 139, ch. 95-147; s. 1, ch. 96-232; s. 4, ch. 97-107; s. 28, ch. 97-271; s. 6, ch. 98-280; s. 3, ch. 2001-122; s. 16, ch. 2003-402; s. 9, ch. 2004-265.