Fla. Admin. Code Ann. R. 33-601.901 - Confidential Records
(1) Inmate and
offender access to records or information.
(a)
Inmate and offender access to non-medical and non-substance abuse records or
information.
1. No inmate or offender under
jurisdiction of the Department shall have unlimited or routine access to any
information contained in the records of the Department. Section
945.10(3),
F.S., authorizes the Department of Corrections to permit limited access to
information if the inmate or offender makes a written request and demonstrates
an exceptional need for information contained in the Department's records and
the information is otherwise unavailable. Such information will be provided by
the Department when the inmate or offender has met the above requirements and
can demonstrate that the request is being made under exceptional circumstances
as set forth in Section
945.10(3),
F.S.
2. It will be the
responsibility of the inmate or offender to maintain such information, and
repeated requests for the same information will not be honored. Copies of
documents which have been previously provided to the inmate or offender under
other rules of the Department will not be provided unless the inmate or
offender can demonstrate that exceptional circumstances exist.
3. No inmate or offender shall have access to
any other inmate or offender's file.
4. An inmate desiring access to non-medical
or non-substance abuse information must submit a written request to their
classification officer or officer-in-charge of a community facility. A
supervised offender must submit the request to their supervising officer. If
the request does not meet the requirements specified in Section
945.10(3),
F.S., the request will be denied in writing. If the request meets the
requirements specified in Section
945.10(3),
F.S., the request will be approved without further review. If the request meets
the requirements specified in Section
945.10(3),
F.S., but details exceptional circumstances other than those listed, the
classification officer or officer-in-charge will review the request and make a
recommendation to the classification supervisor, who will be the final
authority for approval or disapproval of requests from inmates. For supervised
offenders, the recommendation will be submitted to the correctional probation
circuit administrator or designee, who will be the final authority for approval
or disapproval.
(b)
Inmate and offender access to their own medical or substance abuse clinical
files is addressed in Rule
33-401.701,
F.A.C.
(2) Copy costs and
special service charge for review of records.
(a) If the requested information requires
duplication, the cost of duplication must be paid by the inmate or offender,
and the inmate or offender must sign a receipt for such copies. The cost for
copying is $0.15 per page for single-sided copies. Only one-sided copies will
be made for inmates; two-sided copies will not be made for inmates.
Additionally, a special service charge will be assessed for providing
information when the nature or volume of the records requested requires
extensive clerical or supervisory assistance by Department personnel.
"Extensive" means that it will take more than 15 minutes to locate, review for
confidential information, copy, and refile the requested material. The special
service charge will be computed to the nearest quarter of an hour exceeding 15
minutes based on the current rate of pay for the paygrade of the person who
performed the service. Exceptions will not be made for indigent inmates or
offenders; indigent inmates will be required to pay for copies.
(b) If the inmate requests copies of their
own medical file under Section
766.204, F.S., copies will be
provided in accordance with Rule
33-501.302, F.A.C. If funds are
not available at the time of request, a lien will be placed on the requesting
inmate's account for copies.
(3) The following records or information
contained in Department files is confidential and will be released for
inspection or duplication only as authorized in this rule or in Rule
33-401.701, F.A.C.:
(a) Protected health information of an inmate
or offender. Protected health information refers to inmate or offender
information that is created or received by the Department of Corrections,
whether oral, recorded, transmitted, or maintained in any form or medium, that
relates to the past, present, or future physical or mental health or condition
of an inmate or offender, the provision of health care to an inmate or
offender, or the past, present, or future payment for the provision of health
care to an inmate or offender and such information identifies an inmate or
offender or there is a reasonable basis to believe the information can be used
to identify an inmate or offender. Records maintained by the Department that
contain protected health information include: medical and hospital files as
defined in Rule 33-401.701, F.A.C., medical
reports, opinions, memoranda, charts or any other medical record or report of
an inmate or offender, including medical, mental health, and dental information
in classification reports; clinical drug treatment and assessment records;
letters, memoranda or other documents containing opinions or reports on the
description, treatment, diagnosis or prognosis of the medical or mental
condition of an inmate or offender; the psychological screening reports
contained in the admission summary; the psychological and psychiatric
evaluations and reports on inmates or offenders; health screening reports;
Mentally Disordered Sex Offender Status Reports; portions of inspector general
reports containing medical and mental health reports. Other persons may review
medical and mental health records only when necessary to ensure that the inmate
or offender's overall health care needs are met, or upon a specific written
authorization from the inmate or offender whose records are to be reviewed, or
as provided by law. If a request for inmate or offender protected health
information, mental health, medical, or substance abuse records is submitted
upon consent or authorization given by the patient inmate or offender, Form
DC4-711B, Consent and Authorization for Use and Disclosure, Inspection and
Release of Confidential Information, or, when appropriate, its Spanish-language
version, Form DC4-711Bsp, or a HIPAA compliant release of protected health
information form from another governmental agency must be used in accordance
with Rule 33-401.701, F.A.C. Form DC4-711B
is hereby incorporated by reference. Copies of this form are available from the
Forms Control Administrator, 501 South Calhoun Street, Tallahassee, Florida
32399-2500,
http://www.flrules.org/Gateway/reference.asp?No=Ref-06699.
The effective date of this form is May, 2016. Form DC4-711Bsp is hereby
incorporated by reference. Copies of this form are available from the Forms
Control Administrator, 501 South Calhoun Street, Tallahassee, Florida
32399-2500,
http://www.flrules.org/Gateway/reference.asp?No=Ref-06698.
The effective date of this form is May, 2016. Offenders under supervision, or
previously under supervision, who desire information from their own records
will be referred to the agency or office originating the report or document to
obtain such information.
(b)
Preplea, pretrial intervention, presentence and postsentence investigation
reports including supplements, addenda and updates, except as provided in
Section 960.001(1)(g),
F.S.
(c) Information regarding a
person in the federal witness protection program.
(d) Florida Commission on Offender Review
records which are confidential or exempt from public disclosure by
law.
(e) Information which if
released would jeopardize a person's safety.
(f) Information pertaining to a victim's
statement or which reveals a victim's identity, address or phone
number.
(g) The identity of an
executioner or any person prescribing, preparing, compounding, dispensing, or
administering a lethal injection.
(h) The identity of any inmate or offender
upon whom an HIV test has been performed and the inmate or offender's test
results, in accordance with Section
381.004, F.S. The term "HIV
test" has the same meaning as provided in Section
381.004, F.S.
(i) Records that are otherwise confidential
or exempt from public disclosure by law. This confidentiality is not intended
to prevent the use of the file material in management information systems or to
limit the dissemination of information within the Department to health services
staff having a need to know or to other criminal justice system agencies
approved by the Department.
(j)
Information or records held by the Department that identify or could reasonably
lead to the identification of any person or entity that participates in, has
participated in, or will participate in an execution, including persons or
entities administering, compounding, dispensing, distributing, maintaining,
manufacturing, ordering, preparing, prescribing, providing, purchasing, or
supplying drugs, chemicals, supplies, or equipment necessary to conduct an
execution in compliance with Chapter 922, F.S.
(4) Blueprints, detailed physical diagrams,
photographs, and security system plans of institutions and facilities are
confidential and can be released only as provided by law.
(5) Computer printouts containing information
on inmates or offenders except those printouts specifically designated for
public use are confidential and can be released only as provided in paragraph
(6)(d) of this rule.
(6) Unless
expressly prohibited by federal law, the following confidential records or
information may be released to the Executive Office of the Governor, the
Legislature, the Florida Commission on Offender Review, the Department of Legal
Affairs, the Department of Children and Families, a private correctional
facility or program that operates under a contract, a state attorney, the
court, or a law enforcement agency:
(a)
Preplea, pretrial intervention, presentence and postsentence investigations
along with attachments to such reports, except as provided in Section
960.001(1)(g),
F.S.;
(b) Florida Commission on
Offender Review records which are confidential or exempt from public disclosure
by law;
(c) Information identifying
or pertaining to a victim and the victim's statement;
(d) Other confidential information, if not
otherwise prohibited by law, upon receipt of a written request demonstrating a
need for the records or information.
(7) After victim information has been
redacted, access to preplea, pretrial intervention, presentence or postsentence
investigations is authorized as follows:
(a)
To any other state or local government agency not specified in subsection (6)
upon receipt of a written request which includes a statement demonstrating a
need for the records or information;
(b) To an attorney representing an inmate who
is under sentence of death, upon receipt of a written request which includes a
statement demonstrating a need for the records or information. Such reports on
an inmate not represented by the attorney for an inmate under sentence of death
shall not be provided;
(c) To a
public defender upon request;
(d)
Written requests under paragraphs (a) and (b), above, must be submitted to the
Bureau Chief of Classification and Central Records or designee for approval if
the request pertains to an inmate record. If the request pertains to a report
in a supervision file, the request shall be submitted to the correctional
probation circuit administrator or designee of the office where such record is
maintained. If confidential protected health information is included in the
presentence or postsentence investigation, authorization for release must be
obtained from the inmate or offender as specified herein.
(8) Parties establishing legitimate research
purposes who wish to review preplea, pretrial intervention, presentence and
postsentence investigation reports in the records of current or prior inmates
or offenders must obtain prior approval from the Bureau Chief of Research and
Data Analysis. Parties seeking to review records pursuant to this section shall
be required to submit a written request to the Bureau Chief of Classification
and Central Records or designee if the report pertains to an inmate, or to the
correctional probation circuit administrator or designee of the office where
the record is located if the report pertains to a supervised offender. The
written request must disclose the name of the person who is to review the
records; the name of any organization, corporation, business, school or person
for which the research is to be performed; the purpose of the research; any
relationship to inmates or offenders or the families of inmates or offenders;
and a confidentiality agreement must be signed. After submitting the required
written request, research parties must receive written approval as described in
this section prior to starting the project.
(9) Unless expressly prohibited by federal
law, protected health information and mental health, medical and substance
abuse records as specified in paragraph (3)(a), may be released as follows:
(a) To the Department of Health and the
county health department where an inmate plans to reside if they have tested
positive for the presence of HIV as provided in Section
381.004, F.S.;
(b) To the Executive Office of the Governor,
the Correctional Medical Authority, and the Florida Department of Health for
health care oversight activities authorized by state or federal law.
(c) To a state attorney, a state court, or a
law enforcement agency conducting an ongoing criminal investigation, provided
that the inmate or offender agrees to the release of the information and
provides written consent or, if the inmate or offender refuses to provide
written consent, in response to a court order, a subpoena, such as a grand
jury, investigative, or administrative subpoena, a court-ordered warrant, or a
statutorily authorized investigative demand or other process as authorized by
law, if:
1. The protected health information
is relevant and material to a legitimate law enforcement inquiry;
2. A clear connection exists between the
investigation and the inmate or offender whose protected health information is
being pursued;
3. The request is
specific and limited in scope to the extent reasonably practicable in light of
the purpose for which the information or records are sought; and
4. It would not be reasonable to use
de-identified information.
(d) To a state attorney or law enforcement
agency if the inmate is or is suspected of being the victim of a crime provided
that the inmate agrees to the disclosure and provides written consent or if the
inmate is unable to agree because of incapacity or other emergency
circumstance, if:
1. The information is needed
to determine whether a violation of law by a person other than the inmate
victim has occurred;
2. The
information is not intended to be used against the inmate victim;
3. The immediate law enforcement activity
that depends upon the disclosure would be materially and adversely affected by
waiting until the inmate victim is able to agree to the disclosure;
and
4. If the Department determines
the disclosure is in the best interests of the inmate
victim.
(e) To a state
attorney or a law enforcement agency if the Department believes in good faith
that the information and records constitute evidence of criminal conduct that
occurred in a correctional institution or facility, provided that:
1. The information disclosed is specific and
limited in scope to the extent reasonably practicable in light of the purpose
for which the information or records are sought;
2. An clear connection exists between the
criminal conduct and the inmate or offender whose information is being pursued;
and,
3. It would not be reasonable
to use de-identified information.
(f) To the Division of Risk Management of the
Department of Financial Services, upon certification by the Division that the
information is necessary to investigate and provide legal representation for a
claim against the Department.
(g)
To the Department of Legal Affairs or to an attorney retained to represent the
Department in a legal proceeding if the inmate or offender is bringing a legal
action against the Department.
(h)
To another correctional institution or facility or law enforcement official
having lawful custody of the inmate, if the information is necessary for:
1. The provision of health care to the
inmate;
2. The health and safety of
the inmate, other inmates, officers, employees, others at the correctional
institution or facility, or individuals responsible for transporting the inmate
from one correctional institution, facility, or setting to another;
3. Law enforcement on the premises of the
correctional institution or facility; or
4. The administration and maintenance of the
overall safety and security of the institution or facility.
(i) To the Department of Children and
Families and the Florida Commission on Offender Review, if the inmate received
mental health treatment while in the custody of the Department and becomes
eligible for release under supervision or upon the end of their
sentence.
Notes
Rulemaking Authority 20.315, 944.09, 945.10 FS. Law Implemented 119.07, 944.09, 945.10, 945.25 FS.
New 10-8-76, Amended 6-10-85, Formerly 33-6.06, Amended 1-12-89, 7-21-91, 9-30-91, 6-2-92, 8-4-93, 6-12-96, 10-15-97, 6-29-98, Formerly 33-6.006, Amended 9-19-00, 7-8-03, 2-9-06, 11-27-07, 11-14-10, 5-25-16, 9-5-18, 7-2-23.
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