Patterson v. Florida
Annotate this CaseDefendant was convicted of multiple crimes stemming from the alleged arsons of his truck and residence. The First and Fourth District Courts of Appeal reached conflicting decisions regarding the due process implications of admitting the testimony of State experts who physically examined the vehicle prior to its destruction where the defendant’s expert did not have that opportunity. The court applied the well-established rule from Arizona v. Youngblood and held that the State’s loss or destruction of evidence potentially useful to the defense violates due process only when done in bad faith. Therefore, the court held that no due process violation occurred in defendant's case because there is no evidence of bad faith. The court approved the result of the First District’s decision in Patterson v. State and disapproved the Fourth District’s pre-Youngblood decision in Lancaster v. State.
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