Court Opinion

ID: 9377639
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-03-08 16:03:43.320756+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:17:15.339146
License: Public Domain

Third District Court of Appeal
                               State of Florida

                         Opinion filed March 8, 2023.
       Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.

                            ________________

                             No. 3D23-0083
                       Lower Tribunal No. F22-6632
                          ________________

                              Jose Alcazar,
                                 Petitioner,

                                     vs.

                         The State of Florida,
                                Respondent.

     A Case of Original Jurisdiction – Habeas Corpus.

      Law Offices of Jason T. Forman, PA, and Jason T. Forman and
Dalianett Corrales (Fort Lauderdale), for petitioner.

      Ashley Moody, Attorney General and Katryna Santa Cruz, Assistant
Attorney General, for respondent.

Before EMAS, GORDO and BOKOR, JJ.

     BOKOR, J.
      Jose Alcazar stands accused, via an amended information, of

attempted first-degree murder after allegedly hiring an undercover officer to

kill his ex-girlfriend’s then-husband. Alcazar petitions for habeas relief from

pretrial detention, contending in pertinent part, that the acts allegedly

committed amount to, at most, preparatory acts in a solicitation scheme, but

fail to rise to the level of an overt act sufficient to ground a charge of

attempted first-degree murder. The State argues that Alcazar’s alleged acts

cross the line from mere preparation to an overt act well on the way to

consummation of the crime of attempted first-degree murder. As explained

below, we agree with the State and deny the petition.

      Our sister court highlights the elements of a criminal attempt:

      Under Florida law, criminal attempt occurs when a defendant
      commits “any act toward the commission of [an offense
      prohibited by law], but fails in the perpetration or is intercepted or
      prevented in the execution thereof . . . .” § 777.04(1), Fla. Stat.
      (2009). To establish the crime of attempt, the State must prove
      the defendant intended to commit a crime, committed an overt
      act towards its commission, and failed to successfully complete
      the crime. See Bist v. State, 35 So. 3d 936, 941 (Fla. 5th DCA
      2010). The overt act element differentiates criminal attempt from
      solicitation, the latter of which is completed when a person asks
      another to commit a crime with the intent that the other commit
      the crime. See State v. Johnson, 561 So. 2d 1321, 1323 (Fla.
      4th DCA 1990); see also § 777.04(2), Fla. Stat. (2009). “An overt
      act is one that manifests the pursuance of a criminal intent, going
      beyond mere preparation to the actual commencement of the
      crime.” Bist, 35 So. 3d at 941; see also Groneau v. State, 201
      So. 2d 599, 603 (Fla. 4th DCA 1967) (explaining for the overt act
      element to be established, “[t]here must be some appreciable

                                        2
      fragment of the crime committed and it must be in such progress
      that it would be consummated unless interrupted by
      circumstances independent of the will of the attempter.”).
      “Drawing the distinction between a preparatory act and an overt
      act is often difficult and depends on the facts of each case.” Bist,
      35 So. 3d at 941.

Carlton v. State, 103 So. 3d 937, 939 (Fla. 5th DCA 2012). In Carlton, the

defendant’s actions constituted an overt act sufficient to satisfy this test for

attempted first-degree murder where the defendant approached the hitman

(undercover officer) with the intent to murder the victim, hired the undercover

officer, provided photographs, addresses, and personal information, made a

down payment, and discussed an alibi. See id. at 941.

      The State presented testimony (or relied on testimony presented at a

prior hearing) that Alcazar solicited a hitman (undercover officer), provided

the hitman with the victim’s personal information, including a driver’s license,

credit card number, and photograph, contacted and met with the hitman,

provided $100 for surveillance, identified a location for the crime (the victim’s

driveway), asked for the murder to be staged as a robbery gone wrong, and

provided $400 as a down payment for the crime. Alcazar contends that the

act wouldn’t be consummated without additional discussion and plans, and

points us to Arias v. State, 593 So. 2d 260, 263 (Fla. 3d DCA 1992), in which

this court reversed a conviction of attempted first-degree murder and

                                       3
concluded that the defendant’s actions constituted mere preparation and

lacked “overt acts nearing consummation of the crime.”

      In Arias, the defendant discussed a murder plot with co-defendants

and gave one of them a bottle of Hycomine to give to the infant victim. See

id. However, the court explained that “[t]he plot to kill the child went no

further,” the co-defendant hadn’t committed to doing anything, and neither

the defendant or co-defendants took any additional steps toward planning or

completing the crime. Id. Arias provides no succor for Alcazar. 1 The

1
        The dissent notes that “[i]t does not matter whether this panel agrees
with the holdings of Robinson or Arias.” We agree. While the dissent implies
(or maybe explicitly claims) that the panel is overruling Arias sub silento, the
reality is less dramatic. We disagree on the application of Arias to the facts
of this case. The dissent encourages us to apply precedent to the facts of
this case in the way it chooses, while ignoring that "[d]rawing the distinction
between a preparatory act and an overt act is often difficult and depends on
the facts of each case." Bist, 35 So. 3d at 941 (emphasis added). We find
that the facts of this case differ from the facts of Arias. The acts here rise to
the level of overt acts nearing consummation of the crime, therefore
mandating denial of the petition.
       The dissent’s conclusory statement that Arias compels our granting of
the petition because the scheme in Arias “comes much closer to the requisite
overt act” lacks support in the record (but may be an inadvertent admission
by the dissent that Arias should be revisited and clarified). That the scheme
here involved greater detail and more overt acts on the way to commission
of the crime should be obvious on its face. Here, we have multiple meetings
or calls, first with an informant and then with the undercover officer “hitman,”
an exchange of money (including both payment of money for surveillance
and a down payment for the murder), formulation of a plan, provision of
personal information, and even a directive that the hitman murder the victim
in his own driveway and make it look like a robbery.

                                       4
provision of the drug and request to murder the child in Arias is chilling, but

other than the recipient taking possession of the poison before contacting

the authorities, Arias lacks the amount and character of overt acts leading to

consummation present here. To apply Arias to these facts would all but

prevent any charge of attempted murder in a solicitation context, outside of

cases where the hitman pulls the trigger but misses the victim.

      Arias involved an initial meeting, the handing of the drug to be used to

kill the infant, and nothing else in the way of planning or consummating the

crime. Arias provides the standard for mere preparation without sufficient,

overt acts.2 The evidence against Alcazar, on the other hand, mirrors almost

       Similarly, Robinson v. State, 263 So. 2d 595 (Fla. 3d DCA 1972), offers
no support for Alcazar. The court in Robinson found the evidence insufficient
to establish a necessary overt act for the crime of attempted grand larceny.
Id. at 596–97. Robinson and an undercover officer met up for what was
supposed to be the purchase by the undercover officer of a stolen television.
See id. at 596. While a sale price was discussed in a phone call, and the
undercover officer met with Robinson, the crime progressed no further—
there was no agreement as to how the sale would be accomplished, and no
exchange of money. Id. Robinson presents the quintessential case of mere
planning and preparation with minimal overt acts. The dissent spends pages
trying to fit this case into Robinson and Arias. Robinson had minimal overt
acts while Arias had some. But Arias, importantly, demonstrated no indicia
of movement beyond the planning phase. Conversely, Alcazar committed
significant overt acts well on the way to consummation of the crime, as
explained throughout this opinion, and but for the fact that the hitman was an
undercover officer, the act would have likely been consummated with no
further preparation or action needed.
2
       However, while the dissent insists the factual underpinnings of Arias
provide as much or greater indicia of overt acts on the way to consummation

                                      5
exactly the facts of Carlton. “Had Carlton not hired an undercover detective,

he likely would have effectuated the murder of his ex-wife.” Carlton, 103 So.

3d at 941. Similarly, had Alcazar not hired an undercover detective, he would

likely have effectuated the murder of his ex-wife’s lover. Like Carlton, and

unlike Arias, the State presented sufficient evidence from which the trial court

could conclude the alleged scheme advanced from preparation to overt acts

putting the murder-for-hire scheme in motion. 3 See, e.g., Robinson, 263 So.

2d at 596–97 (“The overt act must reach far enough towards the

accomplishment of the desired result to amount to a commencement of the

consummation.”); see also Groneau, 201 So. 2d at 603.

as present here, a conclusion we reject, to the extent the en banc court or
Florida Supreme Court agrees with the dissent, the remedy should be en
banc or Florida Supreme Court review to clarify the threshold for an overt act
in this context—and in the process, overrule or clarify Arias.
3
       The dissent explains that “factual impossibility is not a legal defense in
Florida . . . [but] the State’s effort to seek pretrial detention . . . under these
circumstances, brings with it certain practical difficulties.” Under the facts of
this case and applying the overt act requirement discussed in Arias and
Robinson, we see no such difficulty. Florida law doesn’t permit the defense
of factual impossibility, and here we have sufficient overt acts such that the
murder scheme was well on its way to fruition but for factors outside of
Alzazar’s control. See, e.g., State v. Rios, 409 So. 2d 241, 243–44 (Fla. 3d
DCA 1982) (“We further reject any suggestion that the defense of legal
impossibility should bar any criminal attempt prosecution, where, as here,
the crime which the defendant attempted was legally impossible to commit
due to the fact that the subject property was not stolen. The defense of legal
impossibility has never been adopted in Florida in any criminal attempt
prosecution and is generally discredited by the overwhelming weight of
authority in other jurisdictions.”).

                                        6
Petition denied.

GORDO, J., concurs.

                      7
                                                  JOSE ALCAZAR V. STATE
                                                                3D23-83

      EMAS, J., dissenting.

      I respectfully dissent because we are bound by our own precedent

which, as applied to the instant case, compels this court to grant Alcazar’s

petition for writ of habeas corpus. While the State has offered sufficient

evidence to establish a reasonable probability that Alcazar committed the

crime of solicitation to commit first-degree murder, it has failed to offer

sufficient evidence to establish a substantial probability that Alcazar

committed the crime of attempted first-degree murder. As a result, Alcazar

cannot be held in pretrial detention and he is constitutionally entitled to a

reasonable bond.

      This is the second petition for writ of habeas corpus filed by Alcazar,

and some procedural history is therefore necessary to place the case in its

proper context. For the limited purposes of this petition, the relevant facts are

not in dispute:

      In April 2022, Jose Alcazar was initially charged with, inter alia,

solicitation of first-degree murder.    The State filed a motion for pretrial

detention pursuant to section 907.041, Florida Statutes (2022), and Florida

Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.132, contending Alcazar should be held without

                                       8
bond pursuant to section 907.041(4)(c)5., which authorizes the trial court to

order pretrial detention if it finds that:

          1) the defendant is presently charged with a “dangerous
          crime”;

          2) there is a substantial probability that the defendant
          committed such crime;

          3) the factual circumstances of the crime indicate a disregard
          for the safety of the community; and

          4) there are no conditions of release reasonably sufficient to
          protect the community from the risk of physical harm to
          persons.

      The term “dangerous crime” is expressly defined by section

907.041(4)(a), which lists twenty-two individual crimes (such as homicide,

kidnapping, robbery, sexual battery), designating each as a “dangerous

crime.”

      The statute further provides that “[a]ttempting or conspiring to commit”

any of the twenty-two enumerated offenses constitutes a “dangerous crime.”

Importantly, however, solicitation to commit any of the enumerated offenses

is not legislatively designated as a dangerous crime. Nevertheless, following

a hearing, the trial court granted the State’s motion for pretrial detention

concluding that solicitation of first-degree murder, while not included within

the list set forth in the statute, qualified as a “dangerous crime,” and that the

State had satisfied the remaining requirements for pretrial detention.

                                             9
      In September 2022, Alcazar filed his first petition for writ of habeas

corpus, challenging the trial court’s order on the ground that solicitation of

first-degree murder is not a “dangerous crime” under section 907.041 and

thus could not serve as a basis for pretrial detention. This court, relying on

our holding in Hodges v. State, 327 So. 3d 923, 925 (Fla. 3d DCA 2021),4

concluded that the trial court was without authority to order pretrial detention

because “a dangerous crime can only be one that is enumerated in section

907.041(4)(a).” Alcazar v. State, 349 So. 3d 930, 935 (Fla. 3d DCA 2022).

This court further noted:

      While the Legislature explicitly included attempt and conspiracy
      in the “dangerous crimes” definition, it omitted solicitation. Based
      on the plain language of the statute, we find no basis to expand
      the list of enumerated “dangerous crimes” to cover a crime
      specifically excluded from the definition.
Id.

      We granted Alcazar’s petition and remanded to the trial court for further

proceedings on the issue of pretrial release. On remand, the State amended

the charging document, adding the charge of attempted first-degree

murder—an offense enumerated as a “dangerous crime” under section

4
  As this court noted in Alcazar I, our decision in Hodges held “section
907.041, Florida Statutes, contains an exhaustive list of those crimes
deemed by the legislature sufficiently dangerous to demonstrate the accused
poses a risk of harm to the community.” Alcazar v. State, 349 So. 3d 930,
935 (Fla. 3d DCA 2022).

                                      10
907.041(4)(a). After a hearing, the trial court granted the motion for pretrial

detention upon the conclusion that the State established a substantial

probability that Alcazar committed the crime of attempted first-degree

murder. Alcazar has now filed a second petition for writ of habeas corpus,

this time challenging the sufficiency of the State’s evidence to establish the

crime of attempted first-degree murder.

      I note this is an alleged “murder for hire” case. The allegation is that

Alcazar (a corrections officer) told an inmate there was an individual he

wanted to have killed. That individual is the husband of Alcazar’s girlfriend.

The inmate relayed this information to law enforcement, and was instructed

by law enforcement to tell Alcazar that he (the inmate) had a nephew who

could take care of this. A meeting was scheduled between the “nephew” (in

reality, an undercover officer) and Alcazar.     There were two meetings,

portions of which were recorded by video, audio or both.

      Accepting the majority’s statement of salient evidence in support of the

charge, the State’s ostensible support for the offense of attempted first-

degree murder was as follows:

      Alcazar solicited a hitman (undercover officer), provided the
      hitman with the victim’s personal information, including a driver’s
      license, credit card number, and photograph, contacted and met
      with the hitman, provided $100 for surveillance, identified a
      location for the crime (the victim’s driveway), asked for the

                                      11
        murder to be staged as a robbery gone wrong, and provided
        $400 as a down payment for the crime.

Maj. Op. at *3.

        This evidence, while certainly enough to establish a substantial

probability that Alcazar committed solicitation of first-degree murder,5 is

simply insufficient under our binding precedent to establish a substantial

probability that Alcazar committed attempted first-degree murder.

        While both solicitation and attempt are inchoate offenses, they require

different elements and acts. 6 As our sister court has noted:

        With respect to the crime of solicitation, the great weight of
        American authority holds as a general proposition that mere
        criminal solicitation of another to commit a crime does not itself
        constitute an attempt. Perkins, Criminal Law, 505, 508 (1957).

5
    Section 777.04(2), Florida Statutes (2022) provides:

        A person who solicits another to commit an offense prohibited by
        law and in the course of such solicitation commands,
        encourages, hires, or requests another person to engage in
        specific conduct which would constitute such offense or an
        attempt to commit such offense commits the offense of criminal
        solicitation.
6
  Conspicuously absent from this discussion is the inchoate offense of
conspiracy, due to the fact that Alcazar was meeting with an undercover
officer whom Alcazar believed would be the person committing the killing.
As the Florida Supreme Court has held: “[W]here two or more persons
conspire with another who is, unknown to them, a government agent acting
in the line of duty, to commit an offense under an agreement and an intention
that an essential ingredient of the offense is to be performed by, and only by,
such government agent, such persons may not legally be convicted of a
conspiracy.” King v. State, 104 So. 2d 730, 733 (Fla. 1958).

                                       12
      This proposition has been particularly applied to a charge of
      attempted first degree murder where the facts established only
      solicitation to commit that offense. . . .

      ***

      The gist of criminal solicitation is enticement, whereas an attempt
      requires an intent to commit a specific crime, an overt act and
      failure to consummate that crime. This being true, to call
      solicitation an attempt is to delete the element of overt act.

      ***

      Solicitation may supply an element in the attempt concept, but
      in and of itself, solicitation does not satisfy all these elements. To
      merge attempts and solicitation bastardizes the concepts of each
      and breeds further confusion in an area already wrought with
      confusion.

Hutchinson v. State, 315 So. 2d 546, 548-49 (Fla. 2d DCA 1975) (citations

omitted).

      This court’s own precedent compels the conclusion that Alcazar’s

alleged actions did not constitute the crime of attempted first-degree murder.

In Robinson v. State, 263 So. 2d 595, 596-97 (Fla. 3d DCA 1972), defendant

was charged with attempted grand larceny. 7          The acts engaged in by

Robinson were summarized in the opinion as follows:

7
  In 1972, attempted larceny was a lesser included offense of larceny. In
1977, the Florida Legislature amended the definition of larceny (theft),
creating section 812.014 and providing that a person is guilty of theft if he
obtains or uses “or endeavors to obtain or to use” the property of another
with the requisite criminal intent. See Ch. 77-342, § 4, Laws of Florida. As
a result, the crime of theft includes an attempt to commit theft, State v. Sykes,

                                       13
      Charles S. Olesky, received a telephone call from an unknown
      person asking whether he wanted to purchase a stolen television
      set for four hundred dollars. Following the telephone call Olesky
      contacted the police who later kept the rendezvous established
      between Olesky and the caller. A police officer contacted the
      defendant at the meeting place and while the two men sat in an
      automobile the officer told defendant he had the money for the
      television set when in fact he only had five dollars in an envelope.
      Defendant stated the television set was nearby but he wanted
      the money first and when the officer refused, defendant said ‘No
      man, we don't do business that way’. Defendant then attempted
      to leave the vehicle but the officer placed him under arrest.

Id. at 596.

      Defendant was convicted of attempted grand larceny, and on appeal

this court reversed, holding the evidence was insufficient to establish the

overt act necessary for the crime of attempt:

      An attempt to commit a crime involves the idea of an incompleted
      act as distinguished from the complete act necessary for the
      crime. The guiding principles necessary for an attempt were
      given in Gustine v. State, 86 Fla. 24, 97 So. 207 (1923):

              There must be an intent to commit a crime coupled
              with an overt act apparently adopted to effect that
              intent, carried beyond mere preparation, but falling
              short of execution of the ultimate design.

      The intent to commit a crime standing alone does not amount to
      an attempt nor is preparation alone sufficient. The overt act
      must reach far enough towards the accomplishment of the
      desired result to amount to a commencement of the
      consummation. There must be some appreciable fragment
      of the crime committed and it must be in such progress that

434 So. 2d 326 (Fla. 1983) and there is no separate crime of attempted theft
in Florida. See Harriman v. State, 174 So. 3d 1044 (Fla. 1st DCA 2015).

                                      14
      it would be consummated unless interrupted by
      circumstances independent of the will of the attempter.

Id. at 596-97 (emphasis added). See also Groneau v. State, 201 So. 2d 599,

603 (Fla 4th DCA 1967) (“Mere intention to commit a specific crime does not

amount to an attempt. Preparation alone is not sufficient. Something more is

required than mere menace, preparation or planning.           The attempt is

complete and punishable, when an act is done with intent to commit the

crime, which is adapted to the perpetration of it, whether the purpose fails by

reason of interruption, or for other extrinsic cause. The act must reach far

enough towards the accomplishment of the desired result to amount to the

commencement of the consummation. There must be some appreciable

fragment of the crime committed and it must be in such progress that it would

be consummated unless interrupted by circumstances independent of the

will of the attempter. It is not, however, essential that the actor would have

actually succeeded if he had followed the course of conduct upon which he

had embarked”) (internal citations omitted).

      Twenty years later, in Arias v. State, 593 So. 2d 260 (Fla. 3d DCA

1992), we reaffirmed our adherence to the analysis and holding in Robinson.

In Arias, the defendant was accused and convicted of attempting to murder

an infant who was born with severe birth defects. Jean Arias was the

                                      15
Director of Nursing for a facility that provided medical care for children. Id. at

261. The infant was the granddaughter of the physician who ran the facility.

Shortly after the child was born, she was placed under twenty-four-hour

nursing supervision. Several nurses, including Arias, administered

medication periodically to ease the infant’s pain and suffering. Id. At some

point, Arias contacted a nurse, Judy Felsenstein, and told Felsenstein she

needed someone to work during Easter weekend. Arias also confided to

Felsenstein that she had a plan to kill the infant by administering an overdose

of pain medication.     Id. Felsenstein recommended that Arias call Etiole

Means for this purpose. Means and Felsenstein had both worked with Arias

in the past, and Arias had replaced Means at a prior place of employment.

Id.

      Arias, Felsenstein and Means met at a restaurant and discussed the

plan to kill the infant. Arias told Means and Felsenstein that the infant’s

grandfather was aware of the plan and had approved of it. Id. at 262. Means

testified at the trial that, after she applied for the temporary nursing position,

Arias gave Means a bottle of medication, Hycomine, and was instructed to

administer it to the infant. A very small amount of that medication, if given to

the child, would have proven fatal. Id. Means was given the bottle of

Hycomine four days before the murder was to take place. After receiving the

                                       16
medication, however, Means became worried and called police to tell them

about the murder plot. Before the plot was to be carried out, the police went

to Arias' home and arrested her. Id.

      Arias was convicted of attempted first-degree murder. She contended

on appeal that the evidence was insufficient to establish the crime of

attempted first-degree murder. We agreed and reversed, citing to Robinson

for the proposition that “[t]he overt act must reach far enough towards the

accomplishment of the desired result to amount to a commencement of the

consummation. There must be some appreciable fragment of the crime

committed . . . .” Id. at 263 (citing Robinson, 263 So. 2d at 596–97). We held

that “the acts committed by Arias were only those of preparation to commit

the crime and did not rise to the level of overt acts nearing consummation of

the crime. Therefore, the evidence was not sufficient to sustain a verdict of

attempted first degree murder.” Id.

      The acts of Alcazar in the instant case, like the acts of the nursing

director in Arias, while sufficient to support the charge of solicitation of first-

degree murder, are insufficient to support the charge of attempted first-

degree murder. In both cases, the State failed to meet the requirement of

Robinson that “[t]he overt act must reach far enough towards the

accomplishment of the desired result to amount to a commencement of the

                                        17
consummation. There must be some appreciable fragment of the crime

committed. . . .” Robinson, 263 So. 2d at 596-97.

        In fact, one could make a viable argument that the conduct of Jean

Arias—in particular, providing Means with the actual weapon to be used to

murder the child four days later—comes closer to the requisite overt act than

the conduct engaged in by Alcazar.           By holding that Alcazar’s conduct

establishes attempted first-degree murder, the majority opinion blurs the

distinction between the discrete offenses of solicitation and attempt,

inconsistent with our binding precedent.

        The majority posits that “[t]o apply Arias to these facts would all but

prevent any charge of attempted murder in a solicitation context, outside of

cases where the hitman pulls the trigger but misses the victim.” Maj. op. at

*5. The majority’s postulation, while perhaps overstated, does make a good

point. After all, it is the State which, in square-peg, round-hole fashion, has

decided to charge attempted murder in a murder-for-hire scheme that could

never have been consummated, given that the solicited “hitman” was an

undercover officer. And though factual impossibility is not a legal defense in

Florida,8 the State’s effort to seek pretrial detention by adding a charge of

attempted first-degree murder under these circumstances, brings with it

8
    See Gaskin v. State, 869 So. 2d 646 (Fla. 3d DCA 2004).

                                        18
certain practical difficulties. Chief among them is the difficulty in establishing

Alcazar engaged in an overt act that “must reach far enough towards the

accomplishment of the [murder] to amount to a commencement of the

consummation. There must be some appreciable fragment of the

[murder] committed and it must be in such progress that it would be

consummated unless interrupted by circumstances independent of the

will of the attempter.” Arias, 593 So. 2d at 263 (quoting Robinson, 263

So.2d at 596–97).       The State has offered no overt act that meets the

requirements of Arias and Robinson. Instead, the State’s evidence showed:

      Alcazar solicited a hitman (solicitation), provided the victim’s personal
      information including a driver’s license, credit card number, and
      photograph (mere preparation), contacted and met with the
      hitman/undercover officer (solicitation and mere preparation), provided
      $100 for surveillance (mere preparation), identified a location for the
      crime (mere preparation), asked for the murder to be staged as a
      robbery gone wrong (solicitation and mere preparation), and provided
      $400 as a down payment for the crime (solicitation).

      It does not matter whether this panel agrees with the holding of

Robinson or Arias. Further, it does not matter, were those cases being

decided today on a clean slate, whether the outcomes might be different.

And finally, it does not matter whether the Fifth District’s decision in Carlton

v. State, 103 So. 3d 937 (Fla. 5th DCA 2012) arguably supports the majority

decision. A panel of this district may not overrule, recede from, or decline to

                                       19
follow its own binding precedent. Our holdings in Robinson and Arias may

be overruled only by the Florida Supreme Court or by this court in an en banc

proceeding. See In re Rule 9.331, Determination of Causes by a Dist. Court

of Appeal En Banc, 416 So. 2d 1127, 1128 (Fla. 1982) (observing that “a

three-judge panel of a district court should not overrule or recede from a prior

panel's ruling on an identical point of the law.” Instead, intra-district conflict

should be resolved by an en banc decision of the court pursuant to rule

9.331); Nat’l Med. Imaging, LLC v. Lyon Fin. Servs., Inc., 347 So. 3d 63, 64

(Fla. 3d DCA 2020) (“Unless the Florida Supreme Court overrules a prior

panel's decision, a subsequent panel of this Court is not free to disregard,

and must follow, precedent of the prior panel. See Bean v. Univ. of Miami,

252 So. 3d 810, 821 (Fla. 3d DCA 2018). Only the Court, sitting en banc,

may recede from a prior panel's decision. See State v. Washington, 114 So.

3d 182, 188-89 (Fla. 3d DCA 2012)”).

      Our decisions in Robinson and Arias have not been overruled or

receded from. Applying that precedent to the instant case, the State failed

to make the necessary showing to establish a substantial probability that

Alcazar committed attempted first-degree murder. As a result, the State’s

motion for pretrial detention should have been denied and the trial court

should have proceeded to set reasonable conditions of pretrial release.

                                       20
      I would grant the petition for writ of habeas corpus, and therefore

respectfully dissent from the majority’s opinion denying the petition.

                                      21