Rivera v. State
Rivera v. State
Opinion of the Court
Juan Manuel Rivera appeals the denial of his motion for postconviction relief sought pursuant to Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.850. In light of the myriad problems with the postconviction court’s handling of Rivera’s motion, we reverse this case in part. On remand, a different judge should preside at the evi-dentiary hearing on specific claims as further explained below.
Rivera filed a motion for postconviction relief in which he asserted nine claims of ineffective assistance of counsel (he denoted them A-G with A having three specific subparts and one interrelated subpart).
In this appeal, Rivera challenges the court’s handling of the three claims denoted “A” (his first through third claims), as well as the posteonviction court’s refusal at the evidentiary hearing to consider claim C (his fifth claim), claim E (his seventh claim), claim F (his eighth claim), and claim G (his ninth claim). Rivera does not challenge two of the claims considered at the evidentiary hearing (claim B, which was his fourth claim, and claim D, which was his sixth claim).
The State candidly concedes that remand is required for a portion of Rivera’s claims. We find, however, that Rivera should be afforded a full evidentiary hearing on all of the aforementioned claims of ineffective assistance of counsel except those which were not challenged in this appeal. In view of the manner in which this postconviction matter was handled and the dismissive nature of the judge’s remarks at the evidentiary hearing, we direct the chief judge of the Twentieth Judicial Circuit to assign this case to a differ
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.
. Rivera also raised a claim of sentencing error in regard to a separate case for which he entered a plea (case no. 97-093). However, that claim is not properly before this court. In fact, in response to a lengthy order from this court asking which cases were being appealed by Rivera, his appellate counsel stated that he was not seeking appellate review of case number 97-093. Thus, we decline to review that claim.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.