Perhaps the most dramatic of the 2001 amendments affecting |
these special rules of evidence is the change of a single |
word. The authorization in Subsection (f) of telephonic or |
audiovisual testimony in depositions and in hearing now |
substitutes the word "shall" for the word "may." Adoption by |
the States may herald the day when every relevant court room |
will be equipped with a speaker phone, at the minimum, if not |
cameras and audiovisual receivers. This amendment will also |
eliminate decisions such as Schwier v. Bernstein, 734 So.2d |
531 (Fla. App. 1999), which construed the use of electronic |
transmission of testimony to be wholly within the discretion |
of the tribunal. On a related track, the 2001 amendments to |
Subsection (b): (1) recognize the pervasive effect of the |
federal forms promulgated by the Office of Child Support |
Enforcement, HHS; (2) replace the necessity of swearing to a |
document "under oath" with the simpler requirement that the |
document be provided "under penalty of perjury," as is |
required by federal income tax form 1040. |