Florida 2024 2024 Regular Session

Florida Senate Bill S0474 Analysis / Analysis

Filed 01/12/2024

                    The Florida Senate 
BILL ANALYSIS AND FISCAL IMPACT STATEMENT 
(This document is based on the provisions contained in the legislation as of the latest date listed below.) 
Prepared By: The Professional Staff of the Committee on Governmental Oversight and Accountability  
 
BILL: SB 474 
INTRODUCER:  Senators Grall and Book 
SUBJECT:  Public Records/Suicide Victims 
DATE: January 12, 2024 
 
 ANALYST STAFF DIRECTOR  REFERENCE  	ACTION 
1. Hall  Tuszynski CF Favorable 
2. Harmsen McVaney GO Pre-meeting 
3.     RC  
 
I. Summary: 
SB 474 makes confidential and exempt from public inspection and copying the photograph or 
video or audio recording that depicts or records the suicide of a person when it is held by an 
agency. The bill allows for disclosure to a surviving spouse of the deceased; the surviving 
parents, if there is no surviving spouse; or the surviving adult children or siblings, if there are no 
surviving spouse or parents. The bill defines the “suicide of a person” and specifies who may 
obtain such photographs and recordings and the process for obtaining these materials.  
 
The bill amends s. 119.071(2)(p), F.S., to conform to the expanded exemption for photographs or 
video or audio recordings that depict the suicide of a person. Specifically: 
 Certain government entities may access such photographs or video or audio recordings in 
furtherance of their official duties; 
 A court, upon showing of good cause, may issue an order authorizing any person to view or 
copy such photographs or video or audio recordings;  
 The record custodian in control of photographs or video or audio recordings, or his or her 
designee, must directly supervise anyone who views, copies, or handles such; and 
 Any custodian of photographs or video or audio recordings that depict the suicide of a person 
who willfully and knowingly violates the provisions in the section and any person who 
violates a court order issued pursuant to the section, commits a third degree felony. 
 
The bill also makes confidential and exempt from public inspection and copying requirements an 
autopsy report of a person whose manner of death was suicide as held by a medical examiner. 
The bill allows for disclosure to a surviving spouse of the deceased; the surviving parents, if 
there is no surviving spouse; or the surviving adult children or siblings, if there are no surviving 
spouse or parents.  
 
The bill amends s. 406.135, F.S., to conform to the expanded exemption for autopsy reports of a 
person whose manner of death was suicide. Specifically: 
REVISED:   BILL: SB 474   	Page 2 
 
 Certain government entities may access such reports in furtherance of their official duties; 
 The custodian of record, or his or her designee, may not permit any other person, except an 
authorized designated agent, to view or copy an autopsy report of a person whose manner of 
death was suicide; 
 A court may use its discretion to authorize the disclosure of such reports; and 
 Any person who willfully and knowingly violates a court order regarding the disclosure of 
these reports, and any custodian who willfully and knowingly discloses these reports in 
violation of the law, are subject to a third degree felony. 
 
The bill gives retroactive application to both of these exemptions so that photographs, 
recordings, and autopsy reports addressed by this bill, regardless of when they were initially held 
by an agency, are treated as confidential and exempt from public inspection and copying 
requirements upon this bill becoming a law. 
 
The bill makes findings that the new exemptions from public records disclosure for photographs 
or video or audio recordings that depict the suicide of a person and for an autopsy report of a 
person whose manner of death was suicide meet public necessities as required by the Florida 
Constitution. A two-third vote of both the House and the Senate is required for final passage. 
 
The exemptions are subject to the Open Government Sunset Review Act and will stand repealed 
on October 2, 2029, unless reviewed and reenacted by the Legislature.  
 
The bill is not expected to impact state or local government revenues and expenditures.  
 
The bill takes effect upon becoming law. 
II. Present Situation: 
Access to Public Records – Generally 
The Florida Constitution provides that the public has the right to inspect or copy records made or 
received in connection with official governmental business.
1
 The right to inspect or copy applies 
to the official business of any public body, officer, or employee of the state, including all three 
branches of state government, local governmental entities, and any person acting on behalf of the 
government.
2
 
 
Additional requirements and exemptions related to public records are found in various statutes 
and rules, depending on the branch of government involved. For instance, s. 11.0431, F.S., 
provides public access requirements for legislative records. Relevant exemptions are codified in 
s. 11.0431(2)-(3), F.S., and adopted in the rules of each house of the legislature.
3
 Florida Rule of 
Judicial Administration 2.420 governs public access to judicial branch records.
4
 Lastly, Ch. 119, 
                                                
1
 FLA. CONST. art. I, s. 24(a). 
2
 Id.  
3
 See Rule 1.48, Rules and Manual of the Florida Senate, (2022-2024) and Rule 14.1, Rules of the Florida House of 
Representatives, (2022-2024). 
4
 State v. Wooten, 260 So. 3d 1060 (Fla. 4th DCA 2018).  BILL: SB 474   	Page 3 
 
F.S., known as the Public Records Act, provides requirements for public records held by 
executive agencies.  
 
Executive Agency Records – The Public Records Act 
The Public Records Act provides that all state, county, and municipal records are open for 
personal inspection and copying by any person, and that providing access to public records is a 
duty of each agency.
5
 
 
Section 119.011(12), F.S., defines “public records” to include: 
 
All documents, papers, letters, maps, books, tapes, photography, films, 
sound recordings, data processing software, or other material, regardless of 
the physical form, characteristics, or means of transmission, made or 
received pursuant to law or ordinance or in connections with the transaction 
of official business by any agency.  
 
The Florida Supreme Court has interpreted this definition to encompass all materials made or 
received by an agency in connection with official business that are used to “perpetuate, 
communicate, or formalize knowledge of some type.”
6
 
 
The Florida Statutes specify conditions under which public access to public records must be 
provided. The Public Records Act guarantees every person’s right to inspect and copy any public 
record at any reasonable time, under reasonable conditions, and under supervision by the 
custodian of the public record.
7
 A violation of the Public Records Act may result in civil or 
criminal liability.
8
 
 
The Legislature may exempt public records from public access requirements by passing a 
general law by a two-thirds vote of both the House and the Senate.
9
 The exemption must state 
with specificity the public necessity justifying the exemption and must be no broader than 
necessary to accomplish the stated purpose of the exemption.
10
 
 
                                                
5
 Section 119.01(1), F.S. Section 119.011(2), F.S., defines “agency” as “any state, county, district, authority, or municipal 
officer, department, division, board, bureau, commission, or other separate unit of government created or established by law 
including, for the purposes of this chapter, the Commission on Ethics, the Public Service Commission, and the Office of 
Public Counsel, and any other public or private agency, person, partnership, corporation, or business entity acting on behalf 
of any public agency.” 
6
 Shevin v. Byron, Harless, Schaffer, Reid and Assoc., Inc., 379 So. 2d 633, 640 (Fla. 1980). 
7
 Section 119.07(1)(a), F.S. 
8
 Section 119.10, F.S. Public records laws are found throughout the Florida Statutes, as are the penalties for violating those 
laws. 
9
 FLA. CONST. art. I, s. 24(c). 
10
 Id. See, e.g., Halifax Hosp. Medical Center v. News-Journal Corp., 724 So. 2d 567 (Fla. 1999) (holding that a public 
meetings exemption was unconstitutional because the statement of public necessity did not define important terms and did 
not justify the breadth of the exemption); Baker County Press, Inc. v. Baker County Medical Services, Inc., 870 So. 2d 189 
(Fla. 1st DCA 2004) (holding that a statutory provision written to bring another party within an existing public records 
exemption is unconstitutional without a public necessity statement).  BILL: SB 474   	Page 4 
 
General exemptions from the public records requirements are contained in the Public Records 
Act.
11
 Specific exemptions often are placed in the substantive statutes relating to a particular 
agency or program.
12
 
 
When creating a public records exemption, the Legislature may provide that a record is “exempt” 
or “confidential and exempt.” There is a difference between records the Legislature has 
determined to be exempt from the Public Records Act and those which the Legislature has 
determined to be exempt from the Public Records Act and confidential.
13
 Records designated as 
“confidential and exempt” are not subject to inspection by the public and may only be released 
under the circumstances defined by statute.
14
 Records designated as “exempt” may be released at 
the discretion of the records custodian under certain circumstances.
15
 
 
Open Government Sunset Review Act 
The provisions of s. 119.15, F.S., known as the Open Government Sunset Review Act (the Act), 
prescribe a legislative review process for newly created or substantially amended public records 
or open meetings exemptions,
16
 with specified exemptions.
17
 The Act requires the repeal of such 
exemption on October 2
nd
 of the fifth year after creation or substantial amendment; in order to 
save an exemption from repeal, the Legislature must reenact the exemption or repeal the sunset 
date.
18
 In practice, many exemptions continue by repealing the sunset date, rather than reenacting 
the exemption.  
 
The Act provides that a public records or open meetings exemption may be created or 
maintained only if it serves an identifiable public purpose and is no broader than necessary. An 
exemption serves an identifiable public purpose if the Legislature finds that the purpose of the 
exemption outweighs open government policy and cannot be accomplished without the 
exemption and it meets one of the following purposes: 
 It allows the state or its political subdivision to effectively and efficiently administer a 
program, and administration would be significantly impaired without the exemption;
19
 
 It protects sensitive, personal information, the release of which would be defamatory or 
would jeopardize an individual’s safety. However, if this public purpose is cited as the basis 
of the exemption, only personal identifying information is exempt;
20
 or 
 It protects trade or business secrets.
21
 
 
                                                
11
 See, e.g., s. 119.071(1)(a), F.S. (exempting from public disclosure examination questions and answer sheets of 
examinations administered by a governmental agency for the purpose of licensure). 
12
 See, e.g., s. 213.053(2)(a), F.S. (exempting from public disclosure information contained in tax returns received by the 
Department of Revenue). 
13
 WFTV, Inc. v. The Sch. Bd. of Seminole County, 874 So. 2d 48, 53 (Fla. 5
th
 DCA 2004).   
14
 Id.  
15
 Williams v. City of Minneola, 575 So. 2d 683 (Fla. 5th DCA 1991). 
16
 Section 119.15, F.S.; Section 119.15(4)(b), F.S., provides that an exemption is considered to be substantially amended if it 
is expanded to include more records or information or to include meetings. 
17
 Section 119.15(2)(a) and (b), F.S., provides that exemptions required by federal law or applicable solely to the Legislature 
or the State Court System are not subject to the Open Government Sunset Review Act. 
18
 Section 119.15(3), F.S. 
19
 Section 119.15(6)(b)1., F.S. 
20
 Section 119.15(6)(b)2., F.S. 
21
 Section 119.15(6)(b)3., F.S.  BILL: SB 474   	Page 5 
 
The Act also requires specified questions to be considered during the review process.
22
 In 
examining an exemption, the Act directs the Legislature to question the purpose and necessity of 
reenacting the exemption.  
 
If the exemption is continued and expanded, then a public necessity statement and a two-thirds 
vote for passage is required.
23
 If the exemption is continued without substantive changes or if the 
exemption is continued and narrowed, then a public necessity statement and a two-thirds vote for 
passage are not required. If the Legislature allows an exemption to expire, the previously exempt 
records will remain exempt unless otherwise provided by law.
24
 
 
Exemptions related to Sensitive Photos Videos, or Audio Recordings of Deaths 
Autopsy Photographs, Videos, or Audio Depictions 
Section 406.135, F.S., makes confidential and exempt from public inspection or copying a 
photograph, video, or audio recording of an autopsy held by a medical examiner. It does not limit 
the disclosure of any written autopsy report. There is an exception which allows for a surviving 
spouse to view and copy a photograph or video recording or listen to or copy an audio recording 
of the deceased spouse’s autopsy.
25
 If there is no surviving spouse, the surviving parent must 
have access to such records.
26
 If there is no surviving spouse and no surviving parent, then an 
adult child is required to have access to such records.
27
 Current law also allows for the disclosure 
to a local, state, or federal agency if the disclosure is in furtherance of its official duties.
28
 
 
The custodian of the record, or his or her designee, may not allow any other person to view or 
copy such records unless the deceased’s surviving relative who has authority to request such 
records, or his or her designated agent, grants permission to view or copy such records.
29
 
 
Upon a showing of good cause, a court may issue an order authorizing any person to view or 
copy a photograph or video recording, or listen to, or copy any audio recording of an autopsy.
30
 
The court may impose any restrictions or stipulations that it deems appropriate.
31
 The court must 
consider three factors when determining whether good cause exists, including: 
 Whether such disclosure is necessary for the public evaluation of governmental performance;  
                                                
22
 Section 119.15(6)(a), F.S.; The specified questions are: 
 What specific records or meetings are affected by the exemption? 
 Whom does the exemption uniquely affect, as opposed to the general public? 
 What is the identifiable public purpose or goal of the exemption? 
 Can the information contained in the records or discussed in the meeting be readily obtained by alternative means? 
If so, how? 
 Is the record or meeting protected by another exemption? 
 Are there multiple exemptions for the same type of record or meeting that it would be appropriate to merge? 
23
 See generally s. 119.15, F.S. 
24
 Section 119.15(7), F.S. 
25
 Section 406.135(2), F.S. 
26
 Id. 
27
 Id. 
28
 Section 406.135(3)(b), F.S. 
29
 Section 406.135(3)(a), F.S. 
30
 Section 406.135(4)(a), F.S. 
31
 Id.  BILL: SB 474   	Page 6 
 
 The seriousness of the intrusion into the family’s right to privacy and whether such 
disclosure is the least intrusive means available; and 
 The availability of similar information in other public records.
32
 
 
Any handling of photographs, video, or audio recordings of an autopsy must be under the direct 
supervision of the custodian of record or his or her designee.
33
 
 
The surviving spouse, surviving parent, or adult children of the deceased, as appropriate, must be 
given: 
 Reasonable notice of a petition filed with the court to view or copy a photograph or video 
recording, or listen to or copy an audio recording of an autopsy; 
 A copy of such petition; and 
 Reasonable notice of the opportunity to be present and hearing at any hearing.
34
 
 
A custodian of a photograph, video, or audio recording of an autopsy who willfully and 
knowingly violates these provisions commits a felony of the third degree.
35
 Any person who 
willfully and knowingly violates a court order issued after showing good cause to view or copy a 
photograph or video, or listen to or copy an audio recording of an autopsy commits a felony of 
the third degree.
36
 
 
A criminal or administrative proceeding is exempt from s. 406.135, F.S., but is subject to all the 
provisions of Ch. 119, F.S., unless otherwise exempted.
37
 A court in a criminal or administrative 
proceeding, however, may, upon a showing of good cause, restrict or otherwise control the 
disclosure of an autopsy, crime scene, or similar photograph, video, or audio recording.
38
 
                                                
32
 Section 406.135(4)(b), F.S. 
33
 Section 406.135(4)(c), F.S. 
34
 Section 406.135(5)(a), F.S. 
35
 Section 406.135(6)(a), F.S.; A third degree felony is punishable by up to five years imprisonment and a $5,000 fine.  
36
 Section 406.135(6)(b), F.S.  
37
 Section 406.135(7), F.S. 
38
 Id.  BILL: SB 474   	Page 7 
 
Killing of a Law Enforcement Officer, a Minor, and Mass Killings 
Section 119.071(2)(p), F.S., makes confidential and exempt from public records requirements a 
photograph or video or audio recording that depicts or records the killing of a law enforcement 
officer who was acting in accordance with his or her official duties,
39
 the killing of a minor,
40
 
and the killing of a victim of mass violence, when it is held by an agency.
41,42
 Similar to the 
above-described public records exemption related to autopsies, a surviving spouse of the 
decedent may view and copy any such photograph or video recording or listen to or copy any 
such audio recording. If there is no surviving spouse, the surviving parents must have access to 
such records, and if there is no surviving spouse or parent, then the adult children must have 
access to such records.
43
 
 
Additionally, a court may allow access to the photograph or video or audio recordings through 
the same process as described above for autopsies.
44
 
 
There is currently no exemption for photographs or video or audio recordings related to the 
suicide of a person. 
 
Suicide  
Suicide is one of the leading causes of death in the United States.
45
 In 2021, 48,183 people died 
by suicide in the United States equating to 1 death every 11 minutes.
46
 Suicide rates increased in 
2022, with an estimated 49,449 deaths by suicide.
47
 This is the highest rate of suicide since 
1941.
48
  
 
                                                
39
 Section 119.071(2)(p)1.a., F.S., defines “killing of a law enforcement officer who was acting in accordance with his or her 
official duties” to mean all acts or events that cause or otherwise relate to the death of a law enforcement officer who was 
acting in accordance with his or her official duties, including any related acts or events immediately preceding or subsequent 
to the acts or events that were the proximate cause of death. 
40
 Section 119.071(2)(p)1.b., F.S., defines the “killing of a minor” to mean all acts or events that cause or otherwise relate to 
the death of a victim who has not yet reached the age of 18 at the time of the death, including any related acts or events 
immediately preceding or subsequent to the acts or events that were the proximate cause of the death of a victim under the 
age of 18, events that depict a victim under the age of 18 being killed, or events that depict the body of a victim under the age 
of 18 who has been killed. 
41
 Section 119.071(2)(p)1.c., F.S., defines “killing of a victim of mass violence” to mean events that depict either a victim 
being killed or the body of a victim killed in an incident in which three or more persons, not including the perpetrator, are 
killed by the perpetrator of an intentional act of violence. 
42
 Section 119.011(2), F.S., defines an “agency” as “any state, county, district, authority, or municipal officer, department, 
division, board, bureau, commission, or other separate unit of government created or established by law including, for the 
purposes of [ch. 119] the Commission on Ethics, the Public Service Commission, and the Office of Public Counsel, and any 
other public or private agency, person, partnership, corporation, or business entity acting on behalf of any public agency.” 
43
 Section 119.071(2)(p)2., F.S. 
44
 See s. 119.071(2)(p)4.-6., F.S. 
45
 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Suicide Prevention, Suicide Data and Statistics (Nov. 29, 2023), available at 
https://www.cdc.gov/suicide/suicide-data-statistics.html (last visited Jan. 5, 2024).  
46
 Id.  
47
 Mary Kekatos, ABC NEWS GO, Number of Suicides in the U.S. in 2022 Reaches Record Level: CDC (Nov. 29, 2023), 
available at https://abcnews.go.com/Health/number-suicides-us-2022-reaches-record-level-
cdc/story?id=105204012#:~:text=The%20suicide%20rate%20increased%20by,1941%2C%20according%20to%20the%20re
port. (last visited Jan. 5, 2024). 
48
 Id.  BILL: SB 474   	Page 8 
 
In 2022, Florida’s suicide rates were higher than any of the last four years.
49
 Provisional data 
shows Florida had a rate of 15.8 per 100,000 people dying by suicide. This is a slight increase 
over 2021’s suicide rate of 15.4.
50
 As a result, suicide is on the list of the 10 leading causes of 
death in Florida.
51
 
 
The largest percentage increase in suicide deaths is among older adults. Suicide deaths have 
increased by nearly 7 percent in people ages 45 to 64 and more than 8 percent in people 65 and 
older.
52
 Additionally, suicide deaths for adults aged 25 to 44 have increased by 1 percent.
53
  
III. Effect of Proposed Changes: 
Section 1 amends s. 119.071(2), F.S., to make a photograph or video or audio recording that 
depicts the suicide of a person confidential and exempt from public copying and inspection when 
held by an agency. Examples of recordings that depict the suicide of a person that are held by an 
agency include law enforcement body camera footage, surveillance recordings of public spaces, 
and recordings taken from an individual’s personal phone or recording device during the course 
of an investigation of a death by suicide. Videos that are generated by an individual’s personal 
recording device may have been shared by the suicide victim. 
 
The bill defines “suicide of a person” to mean events that depict the suicide of a person, the body 
of a person whose manner of death was suicide, or any portion of such person’s body. The bill 
also conforms the provisions of s. 119.071(2)(p), F.S., to the expanded exemption for 
photographs or video or audio recordings that depict the suicide of a person. Specifically: 
 Certain government entities may access such photographs or video or audio recordings in 
furtherance of their official duties; 
 The court, upon showing of good cause, may issue an order authorizing any person to view 
or copy such photographs or video or audio recordings;  
 The record custodian in control of photographs or video or audio recordings, or his or her 
designee, must directly supervise anyone who views, copies, or handles such;  
 Any custodian of photographs or video or audio recordings that depict the suicide of a person 
who willfully or knowingly violates the provision in the section and any person who violates 
a court order issued pursuant to the section, commits a third degree felony. 
 
The bill gives retroactive application to the exemption. 
 
The bill provides for repeal of the exemption on October 2, 2029, unless reviewed and saved 
from repeal through reenactment by the Legislature. 
 
                                                
49
 Justin Matthews, FOX 13 TAMPA BAY, Higher Suicide Rates Reported in Florida in 2022, CDC Says (Aug. 12, 2023), 
available at https://www.fox13news.com/news/higher-suicide-rates-reported-in-florida-in-2022-cdc-says (last visited Jan. 5, 
2024).  
50
 Claire Farrow, TAMPA BAY 10, Deaths by Suicide in Florida Increased in 2022, CDC Data Suggests (Aug. 11, 2023), 
available at https://www.wtsp.com/article/news/health/florida-suicide-death-rate-cdc-2022-data/67-2e25f0b2-c3d7-4f19-
97db-242f2ebe4d2f (last visited Jan. 5, 2024).  
51
 Id.  
52
 Id.  
53
 Id.   BILL: SB 474   	Page 9 
 
Section 2 constitutes the statement of public necessity as required by the Florida Constitution. 
The public necessity statement provides that the release of photographs, videos, and audio 
recordings could result in trauma, sorrow, humiliation, or emotional injury to the immediate 
family of the deceased and detract from the memory of the deceased. The widespread 
dissemination of the photographs, videos, and audio recordings through the Internet could 
subject the immediate family of the deceased to continuous injury.  
 
Section 3 amends s. 406.135, F.S., to make confidential and exempt an autopsy report of a 
person whose manner of death was suicide held by a medical examiner.
54
 This section allows for 
the disclosure to the surviving spouse of the deceased; the surviving parent, if there is no 
surviving spouse; or the surviving adult children and siblings, if there is no surviving spouse or 
parent.  
 
This section also amends s. 406.135, F.S., to conform to the expanded exemption for autopsy 
reports of a person whose manner of death was suicide. Specifically: 
 Certain government entities may access such reports in furtherance of their official duties; 
 The custodian of the record, or his or her designee, may not permit any other person, except 
an authorized designated agent, to view or copy an autopsy report of a person whose manner 
of death was suicide; 
 The court may, upon a showing of good cause, issue an order authorizing any person to view 
or copy an autopsy report of a person whose manner of death was suicide; 
 The record custodian in control of an autopsy report of a person whose manner of death was 
suicide, or his or her designee, must directly supervise anyone who views, copies, or handles 
the autopsy report; 
 Any custodian of an autopsy report of a person whose manner of death was suicide who 
willfully and knowingly violates the provisions in s. 406.135, F.S., and any person who 
violates a court order issued pursuant to s. 406.135, F.S., commits a third degree felony.  
 
The bill gives retroactive application to the exemption. 
  
The bill provides for repeal of the exemption on October 2, 2029, unless reviewed and saved 
from repeal through reenactment by the Legislature.  
 
Section 4 constitutes the statement of public necessity as required by the Florida Constitution. 
The public necessity statement provides that the release of autopsy reports of a person whose 
manner of death was suicide could result in trauma, sorrow, humiliation, or emotional injury to 
the immediate family of the deceased and detract from the memory of the deceased. The 
widespread, unauthorized dissemination of such reports could subject the immediate family of 
the deceased to continuous injury.  
 
Section 5 provides that the bill takes effect upon becoming law.  
                                                
54
 The term “medical examiner” in s. 409.135, F.S., means anyone who serves in the role of a district medical examiner, as 
well as any employee, deputy, or agent of the medical examiner, or any other person who may obtain possession of a report, 
photograph, or audio or video recording of an autopsy in the court assisting a medical examiner in the performance of his or 
her official duties.   BILL: SB 474   	Page 10 
 
IV. Constitutional Issues: 
A. Municipality/County Mandates Restrictions: 
Not applicable. The mandate restrictions do not apply because the bill does not require 
counties and municipalities to spend funds, reduce counties’ or municipalities’ ability to 
raise revenue, or reduce the percentage of state tax shared with counties and 
municipalities.  
B. Public Records/Open Meetings Issues: 
Vote Requirement 
 
Article I, s. 24(c) of the State Constitution requires a two-thirds vote of the members 
present and voting for the final passage of a bill creating and expanding an exemption to 
the public records requirements. This bill enacts a new exemption for autopsy reports of a 
person whose manner of death was suicide held by a state agency or medical examiner, 
and a photograph or video or audio recording that depicts the suicide of a person when 
held by a state agency. Thus, the bill will require a two-thirds vote to be enacted.  
 
Public Necessity Statement 
 
Article I, s. 24(c) of the State Constitution requires a bill that creates or expands an 
exemption to the public records requirements to state with specificity the public necessity 
justifying the exemption. Sections 2 and 4 of the bill contain statements of public 
necessity for the exemptions.  
 
This exemption will likely preclude the disclosure of recordings or photographs 
generated by a state agency. These recordings or photographs may be otherwise protected 
by existing public records exemptions, such as the active criminal investigation 
exemption,
55
 law enforcement body camera footage exemption,
56
 and the pre-existing 
autopsy records exemption.
57
 However, those photos or recordings that are made by a 
private individual and livestreamed during the event of their suicide on social media, or 
otherwise obtained and released by another private individual, will not be fully protected 
from their disbursement, as the government cannot control access of recordings or 
photographs that are initiated outside of its scope.   
 
Scope of Exemption 
 
                                                
55
 Section 119.071(2)(c), F.S. This exemption only applies to cases that are both “active” and constitute “criminal 
investigative” information. See Wooling v. Lamar, 764 So. 2d 765, 768 (Fla. 5
th
 DCA 2000), rev. denied, 786 So. 2d 1186 
(Fla. 2001). Criminal investigative information is “active” as long as it relates to an ongoing investigation which is 
continuing with a reasonable, good faith anticipation of securing an arrest or prosecution in the foreseeable future. Section 
119.011(3)(d), F.S. 
56
 Section 119.071(2)(l), F.S. 
57
 Section 406.135(2)(a), F.S. This provision makes a photograph or video or audio recording of an autopsy held by a medical 
examiner confidential and exempt from public records law.  BILL: SB 474   	Page 11 
 
Article I, s. 24(c) of the State Constitution requires an exemption to the public records 
requirements to be no broader than necessary to accomplish the stated purpose of the law. 
The purpose of the law is to protect the surviving spouse and family members of a person 
whose manner of death was suicide. This bill exempts both (a) the photographs or video 
or audio recordings that depict the suicide of a person that are held by an agency, and (b) 
any autopsy reports of persons whose manner of death was suicide that are held by a 
medical examiner. The exemptions do not appear to be broader than necessary to 
accomplish the purpose of the law. 
C. Trust Funds Restrictions: 
None. 
D. State Tax or Fee Increases: 
None. 
E. Other Constitutional Issues: 
None identified. 
V. Fiscal Impact Statement: 
A. Tax/Fee Issues: 
None. 
B. Private Sector Impact: 
The private sector will be subject to the cost associated with an agency’s review and 
redactions of exempt records in response to a public records request. 
C. Government Sector Impact: 
Staff responsible for compliance with public record requests may require training related 
to the new public record exemptions. Additionally, agencies may experience additional 
workload associated with the redaction of exempt information prior to the release of a 
record. However, this workload should be absorbed as part of the day-to-day agency 
responsibilities. 
VI. Technical Deficiencies: 
The bill does not include a mechanism to give notice to a next of kin upon the filing of a petition 
in a court to access the photographs, video, or audio recordings that depict the suicide of a person 
that are held by an agency, or to access any autopsy reports of persons whose manner of death 
was suicide that are held by a medical examiner. To add this notice requirement to these 
exemptions, the sponsor may wish to further amend ss. 119.071(2)(p)5. and 406.135(5), F.S.  BILL: SB 474   	Page 12 
 
VII. Related Issues: 
None. 
VIII. Statutes Affected: 
This bill substantially amends sections 119.071 and 406.135 of the Florida Statutes.  
IX. Additional Information: 
A. Committee Substitute – Statement of Changes: 
(Summarizing differences between the Committee Substitute and the prior version of the bill.) 
None. 
B. Amendments: 
None. 
This Senate Bill Analysis does not reflect the intent or official position of the bill’s introducer or the Florida Senate.