Carlie's Family Denounces 'Justice' System
NewsMax.com Wires
Monday, Feb. 9, 2004
SARASOTA, Fla. For the better part of a decade, the man
suspected of killing an 11-year-old girl whose abduction was caught
on videotape had been under the supervision of Florida's criminal
justice system. But despite his many brushes with the law, Joseph
P. Smith never spent long behind bars.
Now, Carlie Brucia's grieving family is demanding to know why
Smith, a drug addict who admitted attacking one woman and was
accused of trying to kidnap another, was a free man.
The longest Smith has ever spent in prison is less than 14
months. He was acquitted of the most serious crime on his rap
sheet, an attempted kidnapping, after telling jurors he meant the
woman no harm.
Florida Attorney General Charlie Crist said Saturday that his
office already was reviewing whether the state's probation laws
need to be toughened to deal with offenders such as Smith.
"You can't help but think some of the statutes are too
permissive," Crist told The Associated Press. "I think it's
important we review putting more teeth into our statutes."
Crist said the laws being reviewed dealt with probation violators
and the options judges are given to punish them.
That review took on new intensity Friday when Joe Brucia,
Carlie's father, called on Gov. Jeb Bush for an investigation of
why Smith had served little time in prison despite more
than a dozen arrests.
"The system failed Joe, and it failed that little girl,"
Smith's friend and former business partner, Ed Dinyes, told the St.
Petersburg Times.
Dinyes, who said he called police after recognizing Smith in
video images broadcast soon after the abduction, told the AP that
although he was struggling with the idea that Smith could be Carlie's
killer, his friend should have been locked up because of his
repeated crimes.
"Joe is the one who must pay the price for this, but the state
of Florida has to take a good long look at the probation department
and find out what went wrong," Dinyes said.
Carlie was abducted Feb. 1 while walking home from a friend's
house. Videotape from a security camera at a car wash showed
her being led away by a man police say was Smith. The girl's body
was found Friday in a church's parking lot.
Judge: Don't Blame Me
Sarasota Circuit Judge Harry Rapkin, the latest judge to have
handled Smith's case, said Friday he was not at fault for not
putting Smith in jail when the unemployed mechanic failed to pay
court costs and fines in December.
There's no "debtor's prison" in Florida, and Smith wouldn't
have been held simply for not paying a bill, the judge said.
Rapkin has been receiving threatening telephone calls for his
handling of the case, even though he never saw Smith in his
courtroom.
Smith's first brush with Florida's criminal justice system was a
1993 arrest for attacking a woman on a street in Sarasota and breaking
her nose with a motorcycle helmet. He plead no contest to
aggravated battery and served 60 days in jail followed by two years
on probation.
Since then, Smith has been on probation almost continually.
In 1997, he was put on one year's probation on a concealed
weapons charge for carrying a five-inch knife hidden in the
waistband of his shorts.
In 1999, he was arrested for possession of heroin and was put on
probation for 18 months. A month later, he was arrested for
prescription fraud, but the charge was dropped.
The next year, he was arrested again for prescription fraud and
sentenced to six months of house arrest followed by a year on
probation.
According to court records, his probation officer said it was
impossible to tell if a positive drug test result was from an
illegal drug or a legitimate prescription of Oxycontin for severe,
chronic back pain.
'Prison if Necessary'
"Needs long term residential treatment ... prison if
necessary," the probation officer wrote in a report that's now a
part of Smith's court file.
As the newest judge on Smith's case, Rapkin said he had never seen
that report or others on Smith's crimes throughout the years.
In 2001, Smith was arrested for prescription fraud, and that
time he did land in prison. He served about 13 months of a 16-month
sentence and was released on New Year's Day 2003.
Eight days later, deputies found Smith passed out in his car
with drugs on the seat beside him.
He could have gone to prison for five years, but a scoring
system that judges use to determine sentencing didn't add up to
enough to put Smith in prison, records showed. Instead, he was put
on probation for three more years.
State Sen. Victor Crist, chairman of the Senate Criminal Justice
Committee and a leading legislator in anti-crime initiatives for
the past decade, said it was ultimately the judge's decision when
not to use the full measure of punishment allowed by the law.
"The laws are there," Crist said. "We can always tweak them. We can always make tougher penalties, but the bottom line is we
have tough penalties. We just don't enforce them."
© 2003 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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