Wednesday, September 14, 2011

ARMED CAREER CRIMINAL ACT NEWS

This bulletin is for defendants charged in the federal courts as felons in possession facing enhancement under §924(e) and, indirectly, for those facing Guidelines sentencing as a Career Offender. The Supreme Court's most recent decision in Sykes on the subject of what constitutes a "violent felony" appears to be at least a temporary setback to a trend limiting application of the Armed Career Criminal Act to only those defendants with a history of convictions for crimes involving purposefully aggressive conduct. www.fedcrimes.com

What is the Armed Career Criminal Act? The ACCA imposes a 15-year mandatory minimum prison term on a felon unlawfully in possession of a firearm who has three prior convictions for committing certain drug crimes or "a violent felony," 18 U. S. C. §924(e)(1), defined as a crime punishable by more than one year's imprisonment that, inter alia, "involves conduct that presents a serious potential risk of physical injury to another," §924(e)(2)(B)(ii).

Why is it important? The Act is supposed to present a three-strikes rule to deter criminals with a history of violent criminal conduct. The problem with the Act historically has been that the statute was over extended or wrongly applied to individuals with minor criminal records for typically non-violent offenses - for example, repeat drunk driving felony conviction (Begay, infra) or failing to report to serve a prison sentence (not escape) after a defendant has been given post conviction bail and ordered to present himself at a jail or prison to serve a sentence (Chambers). Most would agree that convictions for robbery, arson, extortion, kidnapping, murder, rape and other such misconduct are violent felonies. But the criminal law has often been extended by statute to include non-violent misconduct under the same statutory sections and definitions as misconduct generally acknowledged to be crimes of violence - for instance, burning a car to recover insurance money is arson under most state criminal statutes (common law defined arson by the more violent conduct of intentionally setting a fire that causes the material wasting of a dwelling house, a crime that created a far greater risk of harm).

At issue in recent litigation is the meaning of the statute's residual or "catch-all" clause:

The Act defines a “violent felony” as a “crime punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding one year” that also either “(i) has as an element the use, attempted use, or threatened use of physical force against the person of another; or other.” §924(e)(2)(B), the ACCA’s so-called residual clause

See, Begay v. United States, 553 U.S. 137 (2008) (drunk driving crimes cannot be a crime of violence predicate) Applicable statutes 18 USC §§ 922(g) 924(e) 924(g) 924(c)

See, also Chambers v. United States, 555 U. S. 122 (2009) (failing to report for incarceration does not qualify as a "violent felony" for the purposes of the Armed Career Criminal Act (18 U.S. 924 (e)).

For purposes of the Act's definitions, it is the generic crime that counts, not how the crime was committed on a particular occasion. Taylor v. United States, 495 U. S. 575, 602. This categorical approach requires courts to choose the right category, and sometimes the choice is not obvious. The nature of the behavior that likely underlies a statutory phrase matters in this respect. The state statute at issue in Chambers placed together in a single section several different kinds of behavior, which, as relevant here, may be categorized either as failure to report for detention or as escape from custody. Failure to report is a separate crime from escape. Its underlying behavior differs from the more aggressive behavior underlying escape, and it is listed separately in the statute’s title and body and is of a different felony class than escape. At the same time, the statutory phrases setting forth the various kinds of failure to report describe roughly similar forms of behavior, thus constituting a single category. Consequently, for ACCA purposes, the statute contains at least two separate crimes, escape and failure to report.

The “failure to report” crime was held not to satisfy ACCA’s “violent felony” definition. Although it is punishable by imprisonment exceeding one year, it satisfies none of the other parts of the definition. Most critically, it does not “involve conduct that presents a serious potential risk of physical injury to another.” Conceptually speaking, the crime amounts to a form of inaction, and there is no reason to believe that an offender who fails to report is otherwise doing some- thing that poses a serious potential risk of physical injury.

The Supreme Court's opinion in Johnson last year (case involving a predicate conviction for domestic assault) provided guidance to the lower courts that a conviction did not qualify as a crime of violence unless is involved purposeful aggressive conduct. United States v. Johnson (2010). Scalia, writing for the majority, concluded that the term “force” contemplates strength or energy, violence, and pressure directed against a person – that is, a degree of power not satisfied by the merest touching. The Court reasoned that the meaning of a statute is ultimately determined by its context, as it declined to “‘force term-of-art definitions into contexts where they plainly do not fit and produce nonsense.’” The Court deemed it clear that, in the context of a statutory definition of “violent felony,” “physical force” means violent force.

Johnson had pleaded guilty to possession of ammunition by a convicted felon. 18 U. S. C. §922(g)(1). The Government sought sentencing under the Armed Career Criminal Act, which authorizes an enhanced penalty for a person who violates §922(g) and who “has three previous convictions” for “a violent felony,” §924(e)(1), defined as, inter alia, an offense that “has as an element the use … of physical force against the person of another,” §924(e)(2)(B)(i). Among the three prior felony convictions the Government proffered was Johnson’s 2003 Florida conviction for simple battery, which ordinarily is a first-degree misdemeanor, Fla. Stat. §784.03(1)(b), but was a felony conviction for Johnson because he had previously been convicted of another battery, Fla. Stat. §784.03(2). Under Florida law, a battery occurs when a person either “[a]ctually and intentionally touches or strikes another person against [his] will,” or “[i]ntentionally causes bodily harm to another person.” §784.03(1)(a). Nothing in the record permitted the District Court to conclude that Johnson’s 2003 conviction rested upon the “strik[ing]” or “[i]ntentionally caus[ing] bodily harm” elements of the offense. Accordingly, his conviction was a predicate conviction for a “violent felony” under the Armed Career Criminal Act only if “[a]ctually and intentionally touch[ing]” another constitutes the use of “physical force” under §924(e)(2)(B)(i). Concluding it does, the District Court enhanced Johnson’s sentence under §924(e)(1), sentencing him to a term of 15 years.

A clear retreat from the bright-line rules established by Begay, Chambers and Johnson, all, supra, occurs in the high court's most recent decision, Sykes, a decision where the majority, Kennedy, instructs not to "read too much into" earlier decisions. Sykes v United States, No. 09–11311, decided June 9, 2011 (Kennedy, J.)(predicate convictions include an Indiana-law offense for eluding police in a motor vehicle that does not contain an element of violent conduct such as high speed chase, an assault with the vehicle or a crash). When punishable by more than one year in prison, Justice Kennedy reasoned, burglary, arson, extortion, and crimes that involve use of explosives are "violet felonies". Under the residual clause a crime is also a violent felony when it “otherwise involves conduct that presents a serious potential risk of physical injury to another,” §924(e)(2)(B)(ii), i.e., “comparable to that posed by its closest analog among” the statute’s enumerated offenses. According to the court's syllabus:

When defendant flees from police in a car, his determination to elude capture makes a lack of concern for the safety of others part of the offense, even if he drives without going full speed or the wrong way. Such a defendant, the argument goes, creates the possibility that police will exceed or almost match his speed or use force to bring him within their custody. A fleeing criminal who creates a risk of this dimension takes action similar in degree of danger to that involved in arson, which also entails intentional release of a destructive force dangerous to others. Also telling is a comparison to burglary, which is dangerous because it can end in confrontation leading to violence. In fact, the risks associated with vehicle flight may outstrip the dangers of both burglary and arson.

The majority rejected Sykes' argument that Begay v. United States, 553 U. S. 137, and Chambers v. United States, 555 U. S. 122, require predicate crimes to be purposeful, violent, and aggressive in ways that vehicle flight is not over reads those opinions. In general, levels of risk divide crimes that qualify as violent felonies from those that do not. Chambers is no exception: It explained that failure to report does not qualify because the typical offender is not “significantly more likely than others to attack, or physically to resist, an apprehender.” Begay, which held that felony repeat driving under the influence (DUI) is not an ACCA predicate and stated that it is not purposeful, violent, and aggressive, 553 U. S., at 145–148, is the Court’s sole residual clause decision in which risk was not the dispositive factor. But Begay also gave a more specific reason for its holding: DUI “need not be purposeful or deliberate,” id., at 145, and is analogous to strict-liability, negligence, and recklessness crimes. Begay’s “purposeful, violent, and aggressive” phrase is an addition to the statutory text that has no precise link to the residual clause. Because vehicle flight is not a strict-liability, negligence, or recklessness crime and is, as a categorical matter, similar in risk to the crimes listed in the residual clause, it is a violent felony.

See the fedcrimes.com website.

Readmore »»

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Lee County and Fort Myers Murder Lawyer David A. Brener 239-332-1100 Gets Murder Charges Dismissed in "Steak N Shake" Case

Fort Myers and Lee County Murder Lawyer Attorney David A. Brener 239-332-1100 recently persuaded the state attorney's office to dismiss murder, home invasion robbery, and aggravated battery with a firearm charges against his client, Patrick Nelson, in the Cape Coral "Steak N Shake" murder case. The client pled to one count of burglary while armed, and received a sentence of 120 months in prison, less approximately 20 months time already served. He was originally facing two life sentences plus 45 years. Readmore »»

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Martin Sheen Lobbies Congress to Support Drug Courts

Martin Sheen who played President Bartlet on "The West Wing" lobbied congress this week to support drug court programs. Drug Courts are programs designed to keep non-violent drug offenders out of jail. If someone is charged with being under the influence of a controlled substance or narcotics or possession of a controlled substance or narcotics they can participate in a couple of different programs. Individuals charged with sales of narcotics are not eligible for drug court.

In California there is diversion program for first time drug offenders. If someone is charged with being under the influence or possession they can participate in a 6 month drug class. They then have to stay out of trouble for an additional 12 months and their case will be dismissed. Drug Court is a more complex version of this designed individuals who have aleady gone through a diversion program.

Drug court is designed help drug addicts overcome their addiction and give them tools to stay clean rather than sending them to jail or prison. Our jails and prisons are already far too overcrowded. Drug addicts do not need punishment, they need rehabilitation. Drug court provides that opportunity. Drug court is an intensive program which involves mental health services, supervision by probation, drug testing, group and individual counseling and frequent court appearances. This program can last for up to several years depending on the individual. If a drug court participant uses and has a "dirty" or positive drug test, they are sanctioned and might spend a few days in jail. They are then released and placed back in the program.

Many individuals have successfully completed drug court and they have gone on to lead productive lives. Many have gone on to assist others in their rehabilitation. Sending an addict to jail does not serve anyone. The addict is released from custody and continues to use drugs. The community suffers. If we can rehabilitate drug addicts through drug court programs society will benefit. There will be less crime, less violence, less overcrowding in prisons and more contributing members of society. How can we lose?

If you or a loved one are charged with drug or narcotics offenses you should always be represented by an experienced criminal defense attorney. Contact the Law Office of Diane C. Bass at (949) 494-7011. Readmore »»

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Jesse James' Sister Charged in Federal Mail Fraud Case

A Federal Grand Jury has indicted Juliana James England for Mail Fraud. Ms. England is the sister of Sandra Bullock's infamous ex-husband Jesse James. Ms. England was arraigned in Federal Court in Santa Ana, California this week after being arrested at her home in Arkansas. She made her initial appearance in Federal Court in Arkansas where she was released on her own recognizance.

Ms. England allegedly defrauded her former employer, Callan Western Sales in Los Alamitos, California out of approximately $400,000. Ms. England had access to the company's checks, credit cards and online checking account. Ms. England allegedly wrote checks to herself and used the company credit cards without authorization. The fraud was discovered after the business closed due to financial difficulties and the owners received credit card statements with charges unrelated to the business.

Why is she charged with mail fraud you may ask? Because Ms. England allegedly had the credit card statements mailed to a post office box which she specifically opened to hide the transactions from her employer. Any time the mail is used during the commission of a crime involving fraud, it can be charged as mail fraud.

Here's where it gets silly; news articles and press releases, even one by the FBI itself, state that Ms. England is facing 60 years in Federal Prison. Let's get this straight. There is a huge difference between someone's statutory maximum sentence, which may be 60 years in this case, and what they will actually be sentenced to IF convicted. First, we have to pressume that Ms. England is innocent. If the U.S. attorney's office can prove that she is guilty of each element of the offenses for which she is charged beyond a reasonable doubt, or if she enteres a guilty plea, then and only then will she be sentenced. Sentencing in Federal Court is quite complex but basically it is based on a set of guidelines. Under the sentencing guidelines, assuming Ms. England has no prior criminal convictions, and assuming she pleads guilty to the charges, she is facing approximately 21 months in federal prison, of which she will serve around a year and a half.

If I were Ms. England's attorney, after reviewing the evidence and helping her decide how she should proceed with her case I would spend time with Ms. England determining whether there were any mitigating factors to present to the court which might persuade a judge not to send her to prison at all. An experienced federal criminal attorney will know what issues a court would find extraordinary and what factors are important to the court. I have worked with the assistant United States attorney who is handling this case and the Judge who is assigned to this case many times. I have a great deal of respect for both of them. I'm sure they will do the right thing for all of the parties involved in this case. Readmore »»

Thursday, June 30, 2011

Is That Guy Really Going to get 140 Years in Prison???

You all know who I'm talking about but that's not the point. Many times the media will announce that someone has been charged with a crime or convicted of a crime and they are facing some extraordinary amount of time in state or federal prison. They are usually referring to the statutory maximum sentence for those crimes and not the actual sentence that the person will receive.

All crimes in federal court have a statutory sentence which in some cases includes a maximum and a minimum sentence. That means the court can't impose more or less than these sentences. However, in federal court there are also the United States Sentencing Guidelines which essentially provide a formula for calculating a sentence in any given case. There are "offense levels" which are applied to each offense which are taken into consideration with a person's criminal history and together these factors, among others, help a judge determine the applicable sentence in any given case. In most cases, this sentence is far less than the statutory sentences such as 140 years.

In state court there are sentencing ranges for felony offenses which range from 16 months to life in state prison. However, a state court judge can sentence someone who pleads guilty or been found guilty of any one of these felony offenses to a period of probation which includes a significantly shorter period of time in jail, if any.

Is most of what we hear on the news regarding the kind of time people are facing hype? Yes. It is also a lack of understanding about the way the law works. That is why it is so important to consult with an experienced criminal defense attorney when you facing charges in state or criminal court, even if it's simply to give you peace of mind so you don't have a heart attack worrying that you're going to go to jail for 140 years! Readmore »»

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Bill to Remove Marijuana from Federal Controlled Substances List

When it comes to marijuana laws the states and the feds are not on the same page. Many states allow the use of medical marijuana and the fines and penalties for possession of less than an ounce of marijuana are minor. In California if you are caught with less than an ounce of marijuana you can have your case dismissed by either attending an eight hour class or by giving a DNA sample. The maximum fine for possession of less than an ounce of marijuana in California is $100. Many states and counties allow individuals to grow marijuana for personal use. Counties such as Mendocino allow individuals to plant a 10 square foot area of marijuana. The local police will not do anything to those growers. However, the feds will. So while you might have a recommendation to smoke and grow marijuana in a state which recognizes this right, the feds can still arrest you. This is a huge problem when it comes to marijuana dispensaries or collectives. The state is telling you you can do this while the feds could swoop in at any moment and arrest you. Where is the sense in this?

The current federal marijuana laws have created a black market for marijuana, increased crime and filled our prisons.

Senator Barney Frank and Presidential hopeful Ron Paul have just introduced a bill which allows the states to control the marijuana laws. The opponents of this law say that marijuana has no proven medical benefits which is simply not true. Many people benefit greatly from the use of medical marijuana. Others argue that there is a high potential for abuse. However marijuana is one of the least harmful substances out there. It is certainly less harmful and less addictive than other prescription medications such as vicodin and oxycontin which are lethal and highly addictive.

If you or a loved one are charged in state or federal court with possession, sales or transportation of marijuana please consult with an experienced criminal defense, marijuana or drug lawyer. They will be able to guide you through the process and obtain the best possible result for you. Readmore »»

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

The Judicial Overrride of Life or Death Recommendations in Capital Cases in Florida, by David A. Brener, Esq.

THE JUDICIAL OVERRIDE OF THE JURY’S LIFE OR DEATH RECOMMENDATIONS IN CAPITAL CASES IN FLORIDA, by David A. Brener, Esq.

In Florida, judicial overrides in capital cases have been part of our statutory scheme since 1972, when the trial judge became the actual sentencer in capital cases. Prior to that, the jury sentenced the defendant to either death or life imprisonment. An override occurs when a judge sentences a capital defendant to a sentence that is different than the one recommended by a majority of the jury. The override was initially intended as a way to protect a capital defendant from a jury recommendation based on juror emotion, and without the experienced perspective and dispassionate analysis that a judge has in comparing the capital case to other first degree murder cases. Judges were an extra level of protection for the capital client.

In practice, however, historically most judicial overrides, rather than protecting the defendant from an impassioned, wayward jury, were life to death overrides where the court sentenced the defendant to death notwithstanding a jury recommendation of life. Many have speculated that political considerations, re-election hopes, and the desire to appear tough on crime are responsible for the large number (at least 167) of life to death overrides in Florida. In Tedder v. State, 322 So.2d 908 (Fla. 1975), although the Florida Supreme Court approved of life to death overrides only in circumstances where clear and convincing evidence showed that no reasonable person could differ that death was the only appropriate penalty, the liberal use and supreme court affirmance of the override, even in cases where heavy majorities voted for life, undermined the strong language allegedly restricting its use.

Ring v. Arizona, 536 U.S. 584, (2002), cast doubt on the continued viability of life to death overrides, as the jury’s recommendation of life may well constitute a “verdict” to the effect that the aggravating circumstances were not proven beyond a reasonable doubt, or were “insufficient” to justify the imposition of the death penalty. See Florida Standard Jury Instruction 7.11. Thus, life to death overrides may well violate the defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to Trial by Jury as announced in Ring, and in any event, the law now appears to preclude such an override unless there is no mitigation in the record to support a life recommendation. See e.g., Ferry v. State, 507 So.2d 1373, 1376-77 (Fla. 1987); Boyett v. State, 688 So.2d 308, 310 (Fla. 1996).

On the other hand, death to life overrides are still cognizable in Florida. Since 1992, there have been 36 judicial sentences to life after a jury recommendation of death. The percentage of death to life overrides, as one might expect, decreases as the number of jurors voting for the death penalty increases, with the highest number of overrides (13) occurring when the vote was 7-5 in favor of the death penalty, and only two (2) cases where the vote was 12-0 in favor of the ultimate punishment. The reasons for the judges’ decisions to override the recommendations of the juries vary, and demonstrate how conscientious and, indeed judicious, are some members of our judiciary. While most death to life overrides result in no public criticism of the overriding judge, and no election challenge, most judges are nevertheless aware of the mob and pro-death mentality which accompanies high profile capital cases. To ignore those social and political considerations and do what the court thinks is right, is the epitome of what it means to be a judge, and is one very important reason for the independence of our third branch of government.

According to Professor Michael Radelet’s research, since 1992 sixteen (16) overrides were based, in part, on the defendant’s mental illness or retardation, nine (9) overrides were based on questions about intent or premeditation, thirty-five (35) where the mitigation outweighed the aggravation, eleven (11) involved consideration of the defendant’s lack of criminal record, and others included questions about who was the triggerman, or considered the defendant’s remorse, responsibility or cooperation. Several local judges issued death to life overrides in high profile capital cases, including the Honorable Thomas S. Reese (3), William Nelson (3), Isaac Anderson, and Edward J. Volz. The current judicial college death penalty lecturer, a proponent of capital punishment, the Honorable O.H. Eaton, has overridden a jury recommendation of death to life on more than one occasion.

Given the existence of the death penalty in Florida, perhaps our tripartite system of capital punishment – a separate penalty phase, a jury recommendation, and a sentence issued by a judge - can indeed afford an added level of protection to capital defendants, at least when the Court gives meaning to the mitigating evidence in the case, is precluded from overriding a life recommendation, and reserves the ultimate penalty for the truly worst of the worst.

David A. Brener is a Fort Myers criminal defense lawyer who concentrates on homicide and serious felony cases, and is the Chairperson of the Criminal Law Practice Section of the Lee County Bar Association. Readmore »»

Friday, April 29, 2011

Fort Myers and Lee County Criminal Lawyers Brener and DeMine, P.A. 239-332-1100 Practice Exclusively Criminal Law

Fort Myers and Lee County Criminal Lawyers Brener and DeMine, P.A. 239-332-1100 limit their practice to criminal defense, and do not dabble in it or other areas of law. We are extremely serious about defending people who are charged with crimes, many of them very serious ones, and defending all of our rights to due process and equal protection of the law. Unlike many other criminal law firms locally and in the region, we do not do personal injury, family law, bankruptcy, foreclosure, entertainment, or real estate law. We focus exclusively on criminal defense, and provide 100% of our efforts in that area. If you or someone you know has been charged with a misdemeanor, felony, serious felony, homicide, or federal offense, experience and committment really does matter. Remember, Accused of a Crime? Call Brener and DeMine. Justice Is Our Passion!

Law Offices of Brener and DeMine, P.A.
12381 South Cleveland Avenue
Suite 201
Fort Myers, Fl. 33907
239-332-1100
http://www.justiceisourpassion.com
http://www.murderlawyerflorida.com Readmore »»

Thursday, April 28, 2011

Florida Murder Lawyer - Death Penalty Overrides To Life Sentences By Conscientious Florida Judges

The following information on death to life overrides in Florida was compiled by Michael Radelet. Many of the reasons for the overrides are attached in tables at the end of the list of cases. Bear in mind that there are many more life to death overrides in Florida, although in recent years this practice has subsided due to caselaw requiring that the evidence demonstrates so clear and convincingly that no reasonable person could dffer that the death penalty is the only appropriate punishment. See e.g., Tedder v. State, 322 So.2d 908 (Fla.1975). It is questionable whether Tedder survived Ring v. Arizona, 536 U.S. 584 (2002), as an argument can be made that a majority of the jury found the aggravation not proven or insufficient to justify the death penalty.

Death-to-Life Overrides in Florida
1992-Present1
Jan. 27, 2011 (n=36, plus 51 from 1992 = 87)

Michael L. Radelet
University of Colorado2

1. Armour, Donald Hugh
March 1976
New Port Richey
Trial Judge: Lawrence E. Keough
Jury Recommendation: Unknown
Defense Attorney: Robert Focht

Case Synopsis: Convicted of killing one of his two wives, Jacqueline, shortly after she
learned that Armour was also married to the other woman.3 Armour immediately turned
himself into the police and confessed. Judge Keough overrode the jury’s recommendation of
death, “apparently considering Armour’s lack of a previous criminal record and his physical
and mental state at the time of the crime.”4 Armour died in prison on Dec. 1, 2007.

2. Barber, Justin
September 2006
St. Augustine
Jury recommendation: 8-4
Trial Judge: Edward Hedstrom
Defense Attorney: Robert Willis

Case Synopsis: Convicted (after four days of deliberation) of killing his wife, April Barber,
during a stroll on the beach. Barber refused to allow his family to testify during the penalty
phase and refused to ask for leniency, steadfastly maintaining his innocence. Consequently,
the penalty phase consisted of a three-minute statement from the defense attorney, during
which the attorney advised the jury that Mr. Barber did not want to present mitigation for an
act for which he was not responsible. The judge explained his decision on the basis of the
fact that the jury did not hear any mitigation, and thus their opinion did not hold great weight.

This report updates Michael L. Radelet & Michael Mello, Death to Life Overrides: Saving the Resources of the
Florida Supreme Court, 20 FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW 195 (1992). My friend and co-author, Mike
Mello, passed away on November 23, 2008. Our 1992 FSU paper documented 51 death-to-life overrides through
the end of 1991 that had been given to 47 defendants. I know of only one death-to-life override prior to Dec. 31,
1991 that was not included in that paper (case of David Armour, infra).
2 Please send any edits, corrections, updates, etc. to . I plan to post periodic updates to
this paper on my web site, .
3 Cary Davis, Man Who Killed His Wife Might Be Set Free, ST. PETERSBURG TIMES, Feb. 16, 2003.
4 David M. Snyder, Despite Jury’s Recommendation, Armour Gets Life Term for Murder, ST.
PETERSBURG TIMES, March 19, 1976, available at http://news.google.com/newspapers?
nid=888&dat=19760319&id=3SEMAAAAIBAJ&sjid=UF0DAAAAIBAJ&pg=5505,2654187.

It is likely that lingering doubts about the defendant’s guilt also played a role.5

3. Barnes, Corrie D.
July 2004
Shalimar
Jury recommendation: 7-5
Trial Judge: Thomas Remington
Defense Attorneys: Jerry T. Allred and Martin Lester

Case Synopsis: Sentenced to two life terms for shooting and killing Edward Carthon, and
then firing shots at an Okaloosa County Sheriff’s Deputy (the latter resulted in a conviction
for attempted first-degree murder). Mr. Carthon’s widow had argued in favor of a life
sentence, stating after the verdict “It’s a big relief … I accept what they gave him and I’m
proud they did justice.” According to newspaper reports, the defense attorneys “presented
testimony indicating Barnes had suffered several head injuries as a child and that lingering
effects from those injuries could have affected his behavioral patterns.” They also argued
that there were lingering doubts about guilt.6

4. Bennett, Christopher Lamont
May 2006
Key West
Jury recommendation: 10-2
Trial Judge: Leonard Glick (visiting judge)
Defense Attorney: Trish Docherty

Case Synopsis: Convicted of killing his 5-year old son, Zachary. Some 40 family members
attended the sentencing hearing to support Christopher’s plea to be spared the death penalty.
Said the trial judge, “In weighing the aggravating circumstances against the mitigating
circumstances, the scales of life and death tilt to the side of life in state prison without the
possibility of parole.”7 The mother and grandmother of the victim settled a civil suit against
the Department of Children and Families for $160,000 for placing the boy in the custody of
his father, despite his long criminal record.8

5. Carpenter, David Charles
June 2003
Largo
Jury recommendation: 7-5
Trial Judge: Dee Anna Farnell
Defense Attorneys: D. Robert Lewis and Robert Ford

Barber v. State, 4 So.3d 9 (2009); Christina Abel, Barber Vows to Pursue Vindication: Judge Gave Man Life in
Prison Because Defense Offered No Testimony at His Sentencing, FLORIDA TIMES-UNION, Sept. 20, 2006; Letter
from Robert Stuart Willis to MLR (June 24, 2008).
6 Jeff Ayres, Judge Rejects Jury’s Recommendation, Declining to Elaborate on His Decision, NORTHWEST FLORIDA
DAILY NEWS (Ft. Walton Beach), Jul. 31, 2004.
7 Christine Braden, Bennett Spared Death Sentence: Judge Hands Down a Life Prison Term, FLORIDA KEYS
KEYNOTER (Marathon), May 24, 2006.
8 Man Found Guilty of Stomping his 5-Year-Old Son to Death, GAINESVILLE SUN, Feb. 14, 2006.

Case Synopsis: This was the third time that Mr. Carpenter had been sentenced for the murder
of Ann Powell, age 63. In 1996, Carpenter was sentenced to death following a 7-5 jury
recommendation, but this recommendation was thrown out by the trial judge because the jury
was told that he may be eligible for parole if sentenced to life. He resentenced to death in
1997 after a new jury voted 10-2 for death. That conviction was thrown out by the Florida
Supreme Court in 2001.9 In 2003, Judge Farnell rejected the jury’s recommendation of death
because she “didn’t think prosecutors proved Carpenter was more responsible for the 1994
killing than a friend who also participated.”10 Carpenter may have also had a lesser role in
the murder than the accomplice (a juvenile who pled to second degree murder).

6-7. Chilmonik, Adam and David Hubbard
March 1994
Ft. Myers
Jury recommendation: 8-4 for Chilmonik; 9-3 for Hubbard
Trial Judge: William Nelson
Defense Attorneys: Dennis J. Rehak, for Chilmonik; Barbara LeGrande for Hubbard

Case Synopsis: Convicted of the murder of a clerk at a 7-11, Steven Reid, during a
robbery. The judge felt that premeditation was never proven and that it was impossible to
tell who pulled the trigger. In addition, the judge found that because of excessive alcohol
consumption, Chilmonik’s capacity to conform his conduct to the requirements of the law
was impaired. Chilmonik was aged 18 at the time of the offense.11

8. Davis, Darrell
June 1997
Jacksonville
Jury recommendation: 7-5
Trial Judge: Henry Davis
Defense Attorney: Jerry Shea

Case Synopsis: Davis and a friend, Robert Thomas, were convicted of kidnapping two
victims (one male and one female), robbing and raping the woman and killing the man,
Imara Skinner.12 In sentencing Davis to life, the trial judge said that “Evidence did not show
Darrell Davis knew Thomas would kill Skinner.”13 Thomas was originally sentenced to
death for the murder, but this sentence was vacated,14 and in 2000 he was resentenced to 45
years.15

Carpenter v. State, 785 So.2d 1182 (2001).
William R. Levesque, Judge Reduces Death Sentence to Life in Prison, ST. PETERSBURG TIMES, June 24, 2003;
David Sommer, Killer’s 3rd Sentence Yields Life Term, TAMPA TRIBUNE, June 24, 2003.
11 Bob Norman, Judge Spares Lives of 2 Men, NEWS-PRESS (Ft. Myers), Mar. 17, 1994.
12 Vivian Wakefield, Retrial Plea Closes ’96 Murder Case, FLORIDA TIMES-UNION, Nov. 3, 2000.
13 Beau Halton, Judge Overrules Death Sentence, FLORIDA TIMES-UNION, June 27, 1997.
14 Thomas v. State, 748 So.2d 970 (1999).
15 Vivian Wakefield, Retrial Closes ’96 Murder Case, FLORIDA TIMES UNION, Nov. 3, 2000.

March 1998
Ft. Myers
Jury Recommendation: 7-5
Trial Judge: Isaac Anderson
Defense Attorney: Kenneth Garber

Case Synopsis: Durain was visiting Ft. Myers and staying with a friend and the friend’s
roommate, Glenn Harkins. Durain’s car had been stolen and he had lost his job. After a
day of drinking, Durain and Harkins got into a fight (allegedly after Harkins teased Durain
by calling him a “mama’s boy”). Later that day, Harkins was beaten with a bat and a plastic
bag was placed over his head. Prosecutors claimed that he had been attacked in his bed as
he slept.16 According to newspaper reports, Judge Anderson “ruled that the one aggravating
factor that went toward the death penalty – that the slaying was especially heinous,
atrocious or cruel – was outweighed by several mitigating factors for a life sentence.”17

10. Galloway, David
November 1998
Largo
Jury recommendation: 7-5
Trial Judge: David Seth Walker
Defense Attorney: Anne Borghetti

Case Synopsis: Convicted of killing a two-week child who he erroneously believed was his
son. Judge Walker cited Galloway’s lack of a prior record and evidence of severe mental
retardation.18

11. Gatlin, Brandan
December 2004
Bartow
Jury Recommendation: 12-0
Trial Judge: Dennis Maloney
Defense Attorneys: Robert Norgard and Deborah Wells

Case Synopsis: Convicted of the murder of a Lakeland convenience store owner, (Ms.)
Varsha Patel. Judge Maloney found that there was intent to rob, but not kill, and his order
focused heavily on Gatlin’s chaotic childhood. Gatlin had a prior conviction for robbing a
pizza deliveryman. In 2001, while in jail awaiting trial for the murder, Gatlin and another
inmate severely beat another jail inmate, leaving the victim for six months in a coma. Both
men received 30-year sentences for that crime.19

Peter Franceschina, Killer Out to Sue Sheriff, NEWS-PRESS (Ft. Myers, Fla.), June 4, 2000.
Florida Digest, Lee County, Life Sentence, NEWS-PRESS (Ft. Myers, Fla.), Mar. 26, 1998.
18 William R. Levesque, Man Gets Life Term for Death of Baby, ST. PETERSBURG TIMES, Nov. 14, 1998.
19 Jason Geary, Convict Escapes Death: Judge Rejects Jury’s Choice and Sends Murderer to Prison for Life,
LAKELAND LEDGER, Dec. 18, 2004.

Tampa
Jury Recommendation: 8-4
Trial Judge: J. Rogers Padgett
Defense Attorney: Deborah Goins

Case Synopsis: Convicted of killing a female acquaintance, DeCarla Dixon, who had
cerebral palsy and could not walk. The victim was stabbed 39 times, left in her home, and
her very young children came home and found her on the floor. Her dying declaration
named “Troy”. Testimony at the penalty phase revealed that Green had a low IQ and
neuropsychological deficits. Judge Padgett determined that the murder was not “especially
heinous, atrocious or cruel,” and that the mitigation was sufficient to overcome aggravating
circumstances.20

13. Grodin, Justin
September 2009
Ft. Myers
Trial Judge: Edward Volz, Jr.
Jury Recommendation: 10-2
Defense Attorneys: Ray LeGrande and John Mills

Case Synopsis: Convicted of killing his 11-month old stepdaughter. After the death,
Grodin and his wife, Mary (who was convicted of child abuse for her role in the case, and
sentenced to 13 years in prison21), buried the baby and fled to Seattle, where they were
arrested. Justin Grodin was repeatedly found incompetent to stand trial. In sentencing him
to life imprisonment, Judge Volz cited Grodin’s lifelong history of mental illness (including
two stays in a mental hospital), his tumultuous childhood, and the lack of evidence that he
intended to kill the baby. He also noted the culpability and disparate treatment of Mary
Grodin. “Although three aggravating circumstances were established, they simply do not
rise to the level whereby this case could be characterized as one of the most aggravated. …
The court concludes that this homicide, though despicable, does not place it in the category
of the most aggravated and least mitigated for which the death penalty is appropriate.”22
After the sentence was announced, State Attorney Anthony Kunasek said that he was not
disappointed, since jurors often cast death penalty votes based on emotion, not the law.23

14. Harris, Alfred B.
May 2002
Tampa
Jury recommendation: 10-2
Trial Judge: J. Rogers Padgett
Defense Attorney: Robert Fraser

Joshua B. Good, Judge Rejects Opinions of Jurors, Orders Life Sentence, Not Death, TAMPA TRIBUNE, Mar. 18,
2003; Rejecting Jury, Judge Gives Life, ST. PETERSBURG TIMES, Mar. 19, 2003; E-mail from Deborah Goins to
MLR (June 5, 2008).
21 Pat Gillespie, Mary Grodin Sentenced to 13 Years, NEWS-PRESS (Ft. Myers, Fla.), Sept. 22, 2009.
22 Sentencing Order, State v. Grodin, Case No. 00CF3779 (Sept. 18, 2009), at 12-13.
23 Pat Gillespie, Nine Years Later, Child Killer Justin Grodin Gets Life, NEWS-PRESS (Ft. Myers, Fla.), Sept. 19,
2009.

Case Synopsis: Convicted of burglarizing the home of 71-year old Raymond Brooks, beating
him with an iron skillet, killing him with a butcher knife, and then raping Mrs. Brooks. In
sentencing Harris to life in prison, Judge J. Rogers Padgett noted Brooks died suddenly, and
may not have been fully aware of what was happening to him. The defense argued that the
blow from the skillet stunned Brooks, or even knocked him out, before the knife attack. As
recounted by a newspaper report, Judge Padgett wrote in his order that “This killing is not
one of the most wicked of the wicked for which the death penalty is reserved …” Padgett
concluded that “the jury’s call for death was skewed by emotionally wrenching testimony
about the rape of Brooks’ wife. But Brooks was already dead when that happened.” The
newspaper report continued, “The undisputed depravity of the killer’s youth also tilted the
judge toward mercy. According to testimony, Harris was raised by a neglectful mother who
encouraged his criminality. When Harris was about 11, for instance, he helped his mother
rob men she lured into the woods with the promise of sex. Padgett called the neglect and
abuse Harris suffered ‘as bad as, if not worse than, any this court has ever heard,’ adding that
he was “destined to end up where he is now.”24

15. Heyne, Justin
December 2009
Viera
Jury recommendation: 8-4
Trial Judge: O.H. Eaton
Defense Attorney: Randy Moore

Case Synopsis: Heyne was convicted of killing Sarah Buckoski, her boyfriend, Benjamin
Hamilton, and their 5-year-old daughter, Ivory. Hamilton and Heyne had been best friends
and heavily involved in drug dealing; Heyne had been living with the family when the
murders occurred. The jury voted 8-4 to recommend a death sentence for Buckoski’s death,
but Judge Eaton rejected this vote and sentenced Heyne to life imprisonment on this count.
Following jury recommendations, Heyne was sentenced to life for the murder of Benjamin
Hamilton, and to death for the murder of the child. In his sentencing memorandum, Judge
Eaton found that Heyne had a significant history of mental illness that outweighed any
aggravation in the case.25

16. Jamison, Lewis
October 1995
Bartow
Jury recommendation: 8-4
Trial Judge: J. Tim Strickland
Defense Attorney: Robin Matis-Jackson

Case Synopsis: Jamison, aged 64, was convicted of shooting Matthew Roosevelt Biggs, aged
65, during an argument. Jamison had a 1970 conviction for manslaughter in South Carolina
and a sexual battery with slight force in 1981. Jamison was intoxicated at the time of the

Christopher Goffard, Judge Rejects Death for Killer, ST. PETERSBURG TIMES, May 7, 2002.
Sentencing Order, State v. Justin Heyne, Case No. 2006-CF-19237-A (Brevard County) (Dec. 17, 2009); Keyonna
Summers, Killer Justin Heyne Gets Death Penalty, FLORIDA TODAY (Titusville), Dec. 17, 2009.

crime, and the judge cited both his age and his alcoholism in his decision.26

17. Johnson, Lloyd
June 2004
West Palm Beach
Jury recommendation: 7-5
Trial Judge: Stephen Rapp
Defense Attorneys: Phillip Massa (penalty phase) and Robert Gershman

Case Synopsis: Convicted, with Randall Leighty, of killing three women, execution style,
during the robbery of a Greenacres restaurant. The men were tried together with separate
juries. Johnson’s jury recommended death; Leighty’s recommended life (10-2).27
Consequently, Johnson’s attorneys advanced a proportionality claim, arguing that equally
culpable defendants should receive similar sentences. There was no consensus on who did
the shooting or on who possessed the gun.28

18. Knight, Ronald
December 1995
W. Palm Beach
Jury recommendation: 12-0
Trial Judge: Edward Rodgers
Defense Attorney: Gregg Lerman

Case Synopsis: Convicted of killing Brendan Meehan, who was chosen as a victim because
he was gay. The jury spent only 19 minutes deliberating on penalty, and Judge Rodgers said
that was insufficient to properly weigh the decision. In addition, Judge Rodgers found that
the prosecution did not prove “heightened premeditation.” Further, an accomplice was
sentenced to only ten years for his role in the crime.29 Later, Knight was sentenced to death
for a second, similar murder, and that conviction and sentence were upheld on appeal.30

19. Lewis, James Darnell
May 2008
Titusville
Jury recommendation: 7-5
Trial Judge: Lisa Davidson
Defense Attorney: J. Randall Moore

Case Synopsis: Convicted of beating to death a fellow homeless man, Donald Kirby. Lewis
was already serving two life sentences for a 1999 murder (the killing of a 77-year old during
a crack cocaine binge) when he came forward in 2006 and pleaded guilty to the robbery and
murder of Kirby. Judge Davidson cited remorse, taking full responsibility, lack of violent

Bill Henry, Judge Rejects Jury’s Choice, Gives Life Term, TAMPA TRIBUNE, Oct. 13, 1995.
Leighty’s defense attorneys were Mitchell Beers and Ned Reagan.
28 Susan Spencer-Wendel, Pair Get Life in Murders of 3 Women at Restaurant, PALM BEACH POST, June 11, 2004.
29 David Holmberg, Judge: Decision on Death Rushed, PALM BEACH POST, Dec. 9, 1995; see also Stephanie Smith,
Man Gets Life Terms Despite Jury’s Recommendation, SUN SENTINEL (Ft. Lauderdale), Dec. 9. 1995.
30 Knight v. State, 770 So.2d 663 (2000).

criminal history, and adjustment to prison as mitigating factors. “The Court finds that the
defendant has the ability to be a positive influence on his fellow inmates.”31

20. Morris, Walter
February 2001
Largo
Jury recommendation: 8-4
Trial Judge: Robert Beach
Defense Attorneys: Violet Assaid and Chris Helinger

Case Synopsis: Convicted of killing his housemate’s 33-month old child, Dustin Gee. The
child had suffered from a long history of abuse by his mother before Morris arrived on the
scene. “The beating of Dustin resulting in his death by the defendant was inexcusable but
was not planned or done with premeditation (and) came about as a result of his inability to
control his temper.”32

21. Murphy, Gregory
July 2008
Daytona Beach
Trial Judge: J. David Walsh
Jury Recommendation: 8-4
Defense Attorneys: Matthew Phillips and James Valerino

Case Synopsis: Murphy was convicted of killing Erleen Albright, who was a housekeeper for
Mr. Murphy’s employer. She was also the mother of Tony Bobbitt, who had a brief career as
a professional basketball player. Evidence presented by the defense indicated that Murphy
had a long history of mental illness.33

22. Norman, Rhonda
July 2009
West Palm Beach
Trial Judge: Sandra McSorley
Jury Recommendation: 9-3
Defense Attorneys: Gregg Lerman and Michael Hanrahan

Case Synopsis: Convicted of the murder of her former boyfriend’s mother, Jane Tackaberry,
and the attempted murder of his six-year-old son. The state alleged that Norman urged Wes
McGee (sentenced to life for his role after his jury recommended life) to commit the crime,
which was apparently triggered by Norman’s jealousy because her boyfriend was seeing

Keyonna Summers, Prisoner Gets Two More Life Sentences: Jury Urged Death for Fatal Beating, FLORIDA
TODAY, May 24, 2008.
32 William R. Levesque, 2-year-old Boy’s Killer Avoids Death Penalty, ST. PETERSBURG TIMES, Feb. 16, 2001; see
also David Sommer, Man Who Killed Tot Gets Life in Prison, TAMPA TRIBUNE, Feb. 16, 2001; E-mail from George
Couture to MLR (Aug. 20, 2002).
33 Ludmilla Lewis, Killer Should Die, Volusia Jury Says, ORLANDO SENTINEL, Mar. 27, 2008; Jay Stapleton, Judge
Overturns Death Penalty in 1997 Murder, DAYTONA BEACH NEWS-JOURNAL, July 12, 2008.

another woman.34 Attorney Gregg Lerman speculated that Judge McSorley was persuaded to
impose a life sentence because McGee, the actual killer, already had been sentenced to life,
the cooperation that Ms. Norman gave to police investigators, her significant mental health
mitigation, and the possibility that the jury was improperly moved by what had happened to
the minor child.35

23. Permenter, Timothy
October 2008
St. Petersburg
Trial Judge: R. Timothy Peters
Jury Recommendation: 7-5
Defense Attorney: Bob McClure

Case Synopsis: Convicted of killing his girlfriend, Karen Pannell, by stabbing her some 16
times. He had been convicted of 16 previous felonies, six of which were crimes of violence.
At sentencing, extensive testimony was presented from mental health experts that supported
the claim that Permenter was psychotic and that he came from a dysfunctional family.
Permenter was raised by his mother in the home of his paternal grandfather, Alex Finch, a
former Clearwater mayor who was murdered in his office in 1989.36

24. Robinson, Kevin
September 2003
Orlando
Jury recommendation: 8-4
Trial Judge: A. Thomas Mihok
Defense Attorney: Andrea Black

Case Synopsis: Convicted of the murders of Ruth MacEachon and Pashion Morrison. The
jury recommended life for MacEachon’s killing, but death for the murder of Morrison.
Judge Mihok said that Robinson’s attorneys had proven several factors to offset the death
sentence, “including his immaturity, his mental state at the time of Morrison’s death and a
diagnosed ‘borderline personality disorder’.” Robinson was also abused as a child.37 In
2004, Robinson died of natural causes while in prison.38

25. Roca-Moreno, Alfredo
May 2005
Titusville
Jury Recommendation: 7-5

Susan Spencer-Wendel, Vengeful Ex-Girlfriend Sentenced to Life in Prison for Brutal Murder of Ex-Boyfriend’s
Mother in West Palm Beach, PALM BEACH POST, July 30, 2009; Susan Spencer-Wendel, Life in Prison for Woman
Convicted of Murder; Rhonda Norman Sentenced in Killing of Former Boyfriend’s Mother, SUN-SENTINEL (Ft.
Lauderdale), July 31, 2009.
35 E-mail from Gregg Lerman to MLR, Sept. 15, 2009.
36 Jose Cardenas, Give Him Death, Jury Decides, ST. PETERSBURG TIMES, Nov. 17, 2007.
37 Anthony Colarossi, Judge Spares Man Convicted in 1999 Car-Trunk Murders, ORLANDO SENTINEL,, Sept.30,
2003.
38 Anthony Colarossi, Orlando Man Dies in Panhandle Prison; Kevin Robinson Suffered Seizures. He was
Sentenced to Life in Prison After He Killed Two Women in 1999. ORLANDO SENTINEL, Mar. 11, 2004.

Trial Judge: Warren Burk
Defense Attorney: Kenneth Studstill

Case Synopsis: Roca-Moreno was found guilty of two counts of first-degree murder and one
count of attempted first-degree murder. Roca-Moreno, Anthony Fernandez (who hanged
himself shortly after his arrest), and Ernesto Rosa went to a trailer park to rob a purported
marijuana dealer. After the robbery, the trio left the trailer, but were chased by the victim.
He was shot, and the second victim was hit by a stray bullet. The victims were Kenneth
Hines and Richard Wise, Jr. While this satisfied the criteria for felony murder, defense
attorney Studstill argued that there was no evidence of heightened premeditation or intent.39
In 2006 Rosa was sentenced to 18 years in prison for his role in the crime.40

26. Rogers, Alvin
February 1997
Largo
Jury recommendation: 7-5
Trial Judge: Brandt Downey
Defense Attorney: David Parry

Case Synopsis: Convicted of murdering 17-year-old Kimberly Leshore during a robbery of
Church’s Fried Chicken in St. Petersburg. Rogers had been hospitalized 39 times for mental
illness, his mother hooked him on cocaine when he was 11, and Judge Downey was
concerned that his instructions to the jury had not been followed. He believed a death
sentence would have been overturned by the Florida Supreme Court.41

27. Saintil, Wilson
August 2008
Largo
Trial Judge: Nancy Moate Ley
Jury Recommendation: 9-3
Defense Attorney: Dudley Clapp and Michael Hays

Case Synopsis: Convicted of the murder of an assistant manager of a St. Petersburg
steakhouse, Stephen Holmes. Approximately $5,000 was also taken from the restaurant’s
safe. Saintil was a cook and cleaner in the restaurant. Holmes’s father wrote a letter to Judge
Ley stating that they opposed the death penalty, although Judge Ley stated that the law, and
not the letter, guided her decision. Saintil had been abandoned as a child in Haiti, had an IQ
of 63. Nonetheless, he had performed well as a father.42

Phone interview with Kenneth Studstill (Jul. 10, 2009); Zenaida A. Gonzalez, Jury Finds Man Guilty in Fatal
Shootings, FLORIDA TODAY, Apr. 3, 2005; Jury Recommends Death for Roca-Moreno, FLORIDA TODAY, Apr. 6,
2005.
40 John A. Torres, Murder Suspect OKs Plea Deal, Gets 18 Years, FLORIDA TODAY, Oct. 13, 2006,
41 Craig Pittman, Man Convicted in Teen’s Slaying Apologizes, Gets Life Sentence, ST. PETERSBURG TIMES, Feb. 27,
1997; David Sommer, Judge Sticks to His Plan, Spares Rogers from Death, TAMPA TRIBUNE, Feb. 27, 1997.
42 Prep Cook Goes on Trial in Durango Murder, ST. PETERSBURG TIMES, Apr. 16, 2008; Chris Tisch, Judge Rejects
Death Sentence, ST. PETERSBURG TIMES, Aug. 25, 2008.

28-29. Saum, Dustin [judge overrode two death recommendations]
September 1996
Bartow
Jury recommendation: 9-3 (Ward) and 10-2 (Kelly)
Trial Judge: Robert Young
Defense Attorneys: Austin Maslanik and Rex Dimmig

Case Synopsis: Convicted of killing his father, Larry, and two neighbors, Michael Kelly
and Carol Waid. The jury had rejected an insanity defense, but the judge did not.
Prosecutors did not seek death for the father’s murder. The judge found that the murders
were the product of “extreme emotional disturbance.”43

30. Silas, Willie
November 1993
Miami
Jury recommendation: 7-5
Trial Judge: Thomas Carney
Defense Attorney: Clinton Pitts

Case Synopsis: Convicted of killing a Canadian tourist, Gemma Lapointe, during an
attempted robbery. Judge Carney did not explain his decision, but the defense argued that
the jury was improperly influenced by intense media coverage of violence against tourists.44

31. Smith, Lawrence Joey
April 2008
Dade City
Jury recommendation: 7-5
Trial Judge: Lynn Tepper
Defense Attorney: Keith Hammond

Case Synopsis: Convicted as the triggerman in the 1999 revenge shootings of teenage pals
Robert Crawford and Stephen Tuttle (who survived), on orders from drug dealer Faunce
Pearce (who was sentenced to death). Two accomplices were not charged in exchange for
cooperating with prosecutors. Smith was originally sentenced to death for the murders in
2001, but that sentence was vacated by the Florida Supreme Court.45 Judge Tepper
questioned the honesty of the accomplices and decried the disparate treatment (she stated that
the prosecution never proved who the shooter was), and cited Smith’s positive effect on other
inmates.46

Susan Barbosa, Saum Receives Life in Prison: Judge Rejects Death Penalty, LAKELAND LEDGER, Sept. 21, 1996.
Murderer Gets Life Instead of Death, TALLAHASSEE DEMOCRAT, Nov. 22, 1993.
45 Smith v. State, 866 So.2d 51 (2004).
46 Geoff Fox, Smith To Serve Life in Slaying of Teen, TAMPA TRIBUNE, Apr. 23, 2008; Molly Moorhead, Life of
Clever Killer Spared, ST. PETERSBURG TIMES, Apr. 23, 2008; Tom Jackson, In Capital Cases, There Can Be No
Doubts, TAMPA TRIBUNE, Apr. 24, 2008.

Bartow
Jury recommendation: 9-3
Trial Judge: Dennis Maloney
Defense Attorney: Larry Hardaway

Case Synopsis: Convicted of the 1994 stabbing death of Robert Lucas. In 1995, Judge
Maloney sentenced Steverson to death for the same crime, but that conviction was
overturned by the Florida Supreme Court in 1997.47 Judge Maloney stated that the grounds
for sentencing a person to death had narrowed between 1995 and 1999, and that a death
sentence in this case would not survive proportionality review.48

33. Terranova, Joseph Angelo
November 1996
Tampa
Jury recommendation: 10-2
Trial Judge: J. Rogers Padgett
Defense Attorneys: Dwight Wells (who withdrew before the second jury was impaneled, but
who is responsible for the defendant’s ultimate discharge), and John Skye

Case Synopsis: Convicted of killing his former girlfriend, Brenda Lee Turner, and
her boyfriend, Michael Emerine, as they slept together in a trailer park. The first jury
recommended death, 10-2, but the judge set aside that recommendation and set the case for
a new sentencing hearing because even though the defendant had been found guilty of two
counts of first degree murder, only a single jury recommendation verdict had been submitted
to the jury. A second jury was convened but discharged before any evidence was heard
when a prospective juror reported to the judge that one of the seated jurors had stated during
jury selection that she wanted to be on the jury because she thought the defendant should
be “fried.” Over the state’s objection, Judge Padgett then made his decision to sentence the
defendant to two consecutive life terms without a new jury recommendation. On appeal in
1999, the 2nd District Court of Appeal (in a decision written by future Florida Supreme Court
Justice Peggy Quince) vacated both of the convictions because the state’s circumstantial
evidence failed to prove a prima facie case of either first-degree murder, and the defendant
was discharged.49

34. Tucker, Jason
August 2006
Viera
Jury Recommendation: 8-4
Trial Judge: Lisa Davidson
Defense Attorneys: Keith Szachacz and Kepler Funk

Case Synopsis: Tucker was convicted of the rape-murder of Joan Dunbar. Judge Davidson

Steverson v. State, 695 So.2d 687 (1997).
Bill Henry, Judge Reconsiders, Issues Life Sentence, TAMPA TRIBUNE, Sept. 4, 1999; Jenna Deopere, Judge
Spares Convicted Killer’s Life, LAKELAND LEDGER, Sept. 4, 1999;
49 Terranova v. State, 764 So.2d 612 (1999); Letter from John J. Skye to MLR, June 25, 2008; Barbara Boyer, Man
Gets Life in 2 Murders, TAMPA TRIBUNE, Nov. 13, 1996.

noted that Tucker was just a few days past his 18th birthday at the time of the offense, and he
suffered from mental health problems. Tucker had prohibited his attorneys from putting on
any mitigation during the penalty phase.50

35. Walker, James
August 1998
Miami
Jury recommendation: 7-5 in 1994 trial
Trial Judge: Michael Salmon
Defense Attorney: Brian McDonald (1994 trial).
Steve Harper, Ray Taseff, and Chris Spaulding (1998).

Case Synopsis: Convicted of killing his former girlfriend and their 17-month old son, binding
them with duct tape, and throwing them into a canal. Walker was originally sentenced to
death in 1994, at which time the trial court acknowledged significant child abuse, but gave it
no weight. On appeal, the Florida Supreme Court ordered a resentencing (with no new jury
empanelled or new jury recommendation).51 The trial court was ordered to “reweigh”
mitigation and give “careful and proper reconsideration” of the sentences,
according “appropriate consideration and weight” to the significant mitigating factor” of
Walker’s abusive upbringing.52

36. Williams, Walter E.
August 1994
Clearwater
Jury recommendation: 8-4
Trial Judge: Karl Grube
Defense Attorneys: Michael Schwartzberg and Richard Watts

Case Synopsis: Williams was convicted of the 1988 murder of his three-year old son.
Williams had a prior conviction of aggravated child abuse for abusing his daughter in 1990,
and was convicted of a 1989 attempted murder. Judge Grube cited the lack of premeditation,
that Williams suffered from a slight emotional disturbance that prevented him from
controlling his anger, and his cooperation with police (he would not have been prosecuted
had he not confessed).53
Table 1
Factors Used to Justify Death-to-Life Overrides (n=36)

Retardation or Mental Illness

Case Numbers

1, 3, 10, 12, 13, 15, 21, 22, 23, 24, 26, 27, 28-29,
34, 36

Kaustuv Basu, Convicted Killer Heads to Prison, FLORIDA TODAY, Aug. 17, 2006.
Walker v. State, 707 So.2d 300 (1997).
52 Id., at 319.
53 William Yelverton, Judge Rejects Death Sentence, TAMPA TRIBUNE, Aug. 27, 1994.

Questions about Premeditation or
Intent

6-7, 11, 13, 18, 20, 25, 33, 36

Questions about Who Was Triggerman

Mitigation outweighed aggravation

5, 8, 13, 17, 18, 22, 31, 32

11, 13, 14, 23, 24, 26, 27, 35

18, 22, 26, 30, 22

6-7, 17, 31

2, 4, 9, 12

2, 3, 33

3, 4, 27

Defendant’s Remorse, Responsibility, or
Cooperation

Lack of Prior Criminal Record

19, 22, 36

6, 16, 34

5, 16

1, 10

14

Table 2
Death-to-life Overrides, 1972-2011

Date

Nov. 1974

July 1975
Mar. 1976
May 1977
Apr. 1978
Mar. 1980
May 1980
Sept. 1980
Sept 1980
Mar. 1982
Oct. 1982
May 1984
Oct. 1984
Apr. 1985
July 1985
Oct. 1985
Oct. 1985
Oct 1985
Aug. 1986
Dec. 1986
Jan. 1987
Mar. 1987
June 1987
May 1987
July 1987
Aug. 1987
Aug. 1987

Trial Location

Orlando

Miami
Pasco County
Miami
Starke
Orlando
Sebring
Pensacola
Fernandina Beach
West Palm Beach
West Palm Beach
St. Petersburg
Tampa
Panama City
Tampa
Tampa
New Port Richey
Miami
Fort Myers
Fort Myers
Orlando
West Palm Beach
Miami
Miami
Sanford
Marianna
Tampa

Trial Judge

Peter de Manio

Dan Satin
Lawrence E. Keough
Wilkie D. Ferguson
Wayne Carlisle
Frank N. Kaney
John H. Dewell
William Frye III
Henry Lee Adams, Jr.
Marvin Mounts
Edward Rodgers
Susan Schaeffer
John P. Griffin
N. Russell Bower
M. William Graybill
Donald Evans
Lawrence E. Keough
Thomas M. Carney
Thomas Reese
Thomas Reese
Gary Formet
William Owen
Steven Robinson
Norman Gerstein
O. H. Eaton, Jr.
Robert L. McCrary
John P. Griffin

Sept. 1987
Nov. 1987
Mar. 1988
May 1988
Mar. 1988
Sept. 1988
Sept. 1988
Oct. 1988
Feb. 1989
Feb. 1989
Feb. 1989
July 1989
Nov. 1989
Jan. 1990
July 1990
Nov. 1990
Dec. 1991

Miami
New Port Richey
Melbourne
Live Oak
Inverness
Miami
Tampa
Fort Myers
Bartow
West Palm Beach
Melbourne
Bartow54
Daytona Beach
Bartow
West Palm Beach
Fort Myers
Ft. Lauderdale

Ralph N. Person
Lawrence E. Keough
John Antoon
John Peach
Thomas Sawaya
Ralph Person
Richard A. Lazzara
Thomas S. Reese
J. Tim Strickland
Harold Cohen
John Antoon
John Antoon
S. James Foxman
E. Randolph Bentley
Walter Colbath
William Nelson
Charles Green

On venue change from Brevard County.

Nov. 1993

Mar. 1994
Aug. 1994
Oct. 1995
Dec. 1995
Sept. 1996
Nov. 1996
Feb. 1997
June 1997
Mar. 1998
Aug. 1998
Nov. 1998
Sept. 1999
Feb. 2001
May 2002
Mar. 2003
June 2003
Sept. 2003
June 2004
July 2004
Dec. 2004
May 2005
May 2006
Aug. 2006
Sept. 2006
May 2008
Apr. 2008
July 2008
Aug. 2008
Oct. 2008
July 2009
Sept. 2009
Dec. 2009

Miami

Lee County
Clearwater
Bartow
W. Palm Beach
Bartow
Tampa
Clearwater
Jacksonville
Ft. Myers
Miami
Largo
Lakeland
Pinellas
Tampa
Tampa
Largo
Orlando
West Palm Beach
Shalimar
Polk County
Titusville
Key West
Viera
St. Augustine
Titusville
Dade City
Daytona Beach
Pinellas County
Pinellas County
West Palm Beach
Ft. Myers
Titusville

Thomas Carney

William Nelson
Karl Grube
J. Tim Strickland
Edward Rodgers
Robert Young
J. Rogers Padgett
Brandt Downey
Henry Davis
Isaac Anderson
Michael Salmon
David Seth Walker
Dennis Maloney
Robert Beach
J. Rogers Padgett
J. Rogers Padgett
Dee Anna Farnell
A. Thomas Mihok
Stephen Rapp
Thomas Remington
Dennis Maloney
Warren Burk
Trish Docherty
Lisa Davidson
Edward Hedstrom
Lisa Davidson
Lynn Tepper
J. David Walsh
Nancy Moate Ley
R. Timothy Peters
Sandra McSorley
Edward Volz, Jr.
O.H. Eaton

* See Radelet & Mello, supra note ??, at 216-28.
# See Appendix II, infra.

Judge overrode two death recommendations.

Table 3
Judges Who Have Overridden Death Recommendations
In More Than One Trial

William Cruse*
James Mays*
George Porter*
Thomas Carney
Willie Silas, infra
David Cook*
Lisa Davidson
James Lewis, infra.
Jason Tucker, infra.
O.H. Eaton
Justin Heyne, infra.
Victor White*
John Griffin
Ronald Hale
George Taylor
Lawrence E. Keough David Armour
Joseph Garron
Dennis Maloney
Brandan Gatlin, infra.
Bobby Steverson, infra.
William Nelson
Adam Chilmonik and David Hubbard, infra.
Eddie Ferguson*
J. Rogers Padgett
Troy Green, infra.
Alfred Harris, infra.
Joseph Terranova, infra.
Ralph Person
James Bryant, Dee Casteel, Michael Irvine, and William Rhodes*
Julita de Parias*
Edward Rodgers
James Ballard
Ronald Knight
Thomas Reese
Christopher Ferguson*
Juan Rivera*
J. Timothy Strickland Lewis Jamison, infra.
Michael Rippley*

*For case information, see Radelet & Mello, supra note ??, at 216-28.

David A. Brener, Esq.
Brener and DeMine, P.A.
12381 South Cleveland Avenue
Suite 201
Fort Myers, Fl. 33917
239-332-1100
http://www.justiceisourpassion.com
http://www.murderlawyerflorida.com Readmore »»

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Fort Myers Federal Criminal Lawyer Attorney David A. Brener 239-332-1100 Utilizes Sentencing Poem For Federal Inmate

Recently, Fort Myers based federal criminal defense attorney David A. Brener 239-332-1100 utilized a poem which he wrote in order to persuade a federal district court judge to sentence his client below the advisory federal sentencing guidelines. The client had been charged with conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute oxycodone (roxycodone), methadone, and alprazalam (zanax). "Bank Robbin Bob", the alias used by the defendant and charged in the indictment, had spent almost thirty of his fifty seven years in prison on other charges, and was accused of being part of a scheme in which phony prescriptions were presented to various pharmacies for large quantities of drugs. Brener's client was personally responsible for obtaining over eleven thousand pills, and because the scripts were introduced into evidence, and the client was identified by the pharmacists as the person presenting them, he was convicted after a jury trial. During the trial, the government called numerous cooperating codefendants to testify against the defendant, who had fired a number of prior attorneys and took a very dim view of the court, the prosecutor, and the lead agent. Knowing that the client would insist on adressing the court in an inappropriate and self-defeating manner at sentencing, and being aware that the client had 29 criminal history points and was a career offender, attorney Brener wrote a poem about the case, which he recited at sentencing in an effort to inject some levity and creativity into the proceedings. The Court, which admittedly had other grounds to justify a downward variance, subsequently sentenced the Defendant to seventy (70) months below the low end of the advisory guidelines range, that is, to 135 months instead of the advisory range of 210 to 262 months. The text of the poem follows:

May it please the Court:

• Bank Robin Bob is no angel type – and as you heard at trial he’s really a hype.

• It’s not greed that moves him like some other thugs - for Bank Robbin Bob it’s all about the drugs.

• Yes, he’s got a lot of criminal history points,

• But the motive's always been the pills, H, and joints.

• And it’s true that he did take his case to a trial, but he wasn’t just wastin' the court’s time for a while.

• The case was built on addicts and thieves, and none of those co-defendant’s were worthy of beliefs.

• Every single one of them had a big motive to lie:

• They tried to please the government to get that Rule 35.

• Carey Bergin tried to minimize,

• Her role as one of the masterminds,

• But despite her suit and pleasant smile, the Agent confirmed she lied for a while.

• Susan Hamilton couldn’t reveal, how she ignored her own plea agreement, and took an appeal.

• And Theresa Martinez wouldn’t admit, that she lied for Bob, to help him acquit.

• Jason Bergin had a sham trial, that was over so fast it made Charley Harris smile.

• It was done because Bergin wouldn’t confess, and he wanted to preserve his Motion to Suppress.

• Judge, for almost three hours, the jury was out; I’d started to think, we had reasonable doubt.

• Then come the verdict for conspiracy. The government was happy when they heard it –guilty, guilty, guilty.

• This really isn’t about actual innoce`nce, but assigning culpability that seems to make sense.

• In our system of justice, what we value by far,

• Is the truth of the matter, that is our polestar.

• Each one of the witnesses fell into the muck,
of falsehood –n- self-interest, and began to obstruct.

Bank Robbin Bob forced the government’s proof, but did not commit perjury, or alter the truth.

• Judge, I’m not just asking for mere leniency`.

• But invite you to look at 3553.

• All of the runners got 10 years or less,

• Sprafka even sold drugs,

• To (PROBATION) he confessed.

• For him - the government did not pursue role or the max,

• But agreed to a downward departure in fact.

• Bob is an addict who didn’t sell or buy,

he just took his cut and went to get high.

The fact he’s an addict, he never denied,

• And if you care to know
what happened inside,

• Just look at his childhood, and at his young life,
deprived of love and full of strife.

• If you could go back, with the eyes of a seer,

• You’d say it’s no wonder - the fact that we’re here.

• Unlike the Bergins, who sold pills for cash – Bank Robbin Bob just needed his stash.

• Your Honor, I’m not asking to ignore history,

• Just put it in context, don’t throw away the key.

• Judge I’m not askin' you to send him on home,

• But give me some credit for writing this poem. Readmore »»

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

The Unforgiving ask for Forgiveness

One of the strictest judges in Orange County who is known for imposing harsh sentences has admitted to using his position as a Superior Court Judge to help friends and family members with traffic tickets. Judge Richard W. Stanford Jr. is one of the most "papered" judges in Orange County. A judge is "papered" when a lawyer files a motion to recuse the judge based on the fact that they do not believe that they could have a fair trial in front of this judge. Many Orange County Criminal Defense lawyers do not want to try cases in Judge Stanford's court because he is known to be harsh. This is apparently not true when the cases involve his friends or family. Judge Stanford helped several people by having their traffic tickets transferred to his court where he usually only handles felony cases. The judge then waived fines for these individuals. The judge purportedly donated the amount he would have assessed in fines to Orangewood Children's Home. Why not just pay the fines for his friends and family members instead? The judge now apologizes for his actions and says he now sees the error of his ways. How compassionate would he be if somoene came into his court and said they were sorry for their actions? I would guess, not compassionate at all. The commission on Judicial Performance has instituted formal proceedings against him. Once again, I submit that someone who is meant to uphold the law should be held to a higher standard. Why should he be forgiven when he, of all people, should have known better? Readmore »»

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Not All Sex Offenders are Created Equal

Orange County has just passed a law which bans all registered sex offenders from county parks. This law is unconstitutional because it is over-broad. It is overbroad because it treats all sex offenders the same. There is a great misconception in the public about registered sex offenders. Most people believe that all registered sex offenders are child molesters or pedaphiles but that is simply not true. A conviction for any "lewd act" can subject a person to the sex registration requirement. People who commit low level offenses which are misdemeanors may not even go to jail for their crimes yet they are treated in the same fashion as those who spend years in prison for their crimes. Low Level sex offenders are not necessarily predators. Someone who has been convicted of exposing themselves or of masterbating in public, and by public I mean in their car at night with no one around, or of having sex with their boyfriend or girlfriend or spouse in public, same scenario as above, could be required to register as a sex offender if convicted of this crime. While the sex registration law is intended to protect people from true predators, it simultaneously destroys the lives of those required to register for minor offenses because they are treated with the same disdain as those who have committed much more serious and harmful offenses. They are ostracized by society. They can't find jobs or homes. Obviously there are some predators that we are all concerned about. But this law is not limited to those people. Not all sex offenders should be treated equally, because they are not all the same. Readmore »»

Friday, April 1, 2011

Why Do Police Officers Always Get the Benefit of the Doubt?

A former 25 year veteran of the Orange County Sheriff's Department was prosecuted for making false statements in a police report. The former sheriff stated in her report that she had contacted certain victims when she had not. District attorney's rely on police reports when filing charges against people. What officers put in their reports is critical information. However, the jury was deadlocked in the former sheriff's trial this week. Why do people always give police officers the benefit of the doubt? When was the last time a cop ever did anything for you? And yet, anytime a police officer testifies in a trial or hearing in a criminal case, their testimony is given more weight than that of a defendant. Officers walk into court in uniform with their guns strapped to their side and for some reason carry an air of credibility. I have been practicing criminal defense for approximately 15 years and 90% of my clients tell me that the police report in their case contains some form of fiction. One of the comments in response to an article about this case in the Orange County Register said, "Go after the real criminals." Officers of the law should be held to an even higher standard. They are arresting people and depriving them of their liberty and their basic constitutional rights when they lie. Someone who breaks the law yet pretends to be upholding the law is even worse than someone who is a hard, cold criminal in my opinion. If people who were charged with crimes were all given the same benefit of the doubt that officers are given, there would be far fewer innocent people convicted of crimes. Readmore »»

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Borrow goes to prison while CEO of Countrywide walks

Once again, money walks. A man who exaggerated his income on a mortgage application is serving 21 months in prison for a so called, "liar loan" while the CEO of Countrywide paid a $67.5 million fine to settle fraud charges brought by the SEC. Countrywide made billions of dollars selling subprime loans. The CEO personally made hundreds of millions of dollars and admitted that he knew many of the loans were fraudulent. These loans caused the housing bubble and also burst it. These loans are one of the primary factors which led this country into one of the worst recessions since the great depression. Yet the one with the deep pockets walks. Yes. It is a crime to lie on a loan application. But how many millions of people did this during the heyday of the subprime loan? Is the government going to prosecute all of those people? Of course not! How do they pick and choose which ones are going to be prosecuted? Furthermore, wasn't it the greedy mortgage brokers who were "encouraging" their clients to exaggerate their income? Shouldn't they be held responsible? This situation is exactly like the case involving CVS where they sold pseudoephedrine to "meth smurfs" far in excess of the amounts permitted under statute and yet they will not face criminal charges. They merely paid a fine. Meanwhile, the individuals who were buying the cold medicine which contained the pseudoephedrine for a small fee are facing years in federal prison. It is clear that the department of justice needs to get its priorities straight. Stop letting the real bad guys walk, even if they're loaded. Stop wasting tax dollars, which are scarce, to prosecute the little guy. Readmore »»

Monday, March 28, 2011

Why You Should Remain Silent

A man was sentenced to 10 years in federal prison this week for attempting to lure a 13 year old girl to meet him for sex over the internet. Ten years is the mandatory minimum sentence for this offense in federal court. The court ordered the man to register as a sex offender for 20 years when he is released from prison. However, in California the sex registration requirement is a lifetime requirement. People convicted of sex crimes in federal court have to abide by the registration laws in the state in which they reside. The man in this case, was actually chatting with an undercover FBI agent posing as the girl. The man, who is 37 years old, testified at his trial that he thought he was chatting with an adult woman, not a 13 year old girl. The jury rejected the man's testimony because his testimony differed from what he had told the FBI when he was interviewed after his arrested. There was no other evidence that the man had any sexual interest in children. If this man had not spoken with the FBI after his arrest, the jury very possibly would have believed his testimony at trial and he might have been acquitted rather than convicted and facing 10 years in federal prison. You should never speak to law enforcement. Agents and officers will always make you believe that it is in your best interest to "cooperate" with them. It is almost never in your best interest. When they say, "Anything you say will be used against you" they mean it! It will be used against you. If you are arrested or under suspicion for committing a crime, always remain silent and call me! Readmore »»

Friday, March 25, 2011

Don't Punch Your Lawyer!

An Orange County Man was convicted of multiple felony charges this week for punching out his laywer. The man was in court on a $100 marijuna ticket when he apparently became angry with his lawyer. The man punched his lawyer in the face, knocked her into a wall and broke her glasses. He pled guilty to felony assault on a public official (his lawyer was a public defender)and aggravated assault and battery with serious bodily injury. The man was sentenced to two years in state prison.

Moral of the story: Don't punch your lawyer! Readmore »»

Thursday, March 24, 2011

No Warrant, No Search!

Two young me were stopped by Tustin Police for riding their bikes without propper lighting at 2:00 a.m. The police searched the men's napsacks where they found items that had been stolen from unlocked cars in Tustin Ranch. After finding the items in the mens' backpacks, they confessed to stealing the items. The men were arrested for burglary, receiving stolen property, vehicle tampering and petty theft.

It is most likely that the two men gave the officers consent to search their backpacks. Most people don't realize that unless the police have a search warrant they may not search you, your car, your purse, your house, your phone or any items under your control. There are a few exceptions to this rule. Consent is one exception to the search warrant requirement. However, most people feel intimidated by police officers and will consent to a search because they think they have no choice. You have a choice. In this case, if the boys had not given the police consent to search their napsacks, they would not have been arrested for these crimes. They were not being detained for suspicion of committing car burglaries. They were stopped for riding their bikes without lights. An officer cannot detain someone for longer than necessary without a specific suspicion that a crime has been committed.

These men now face several misdemeanor, criminal charges. An experienced criminal defense attorney should be able to have some of the charges dismissed by the district attorney's office and if the men have no prior criminal history they will most likely be sentenced to community service for their crimes. Readmore »»

Fort Myers Federal Defense Attorney David A. Brener 239-332-1100 To Speak At Panel Discussion About Federal Courts

Fort Myers Federal Criminal Defense Attorney David A. Brener of the Law Offices of Brener and DeMine, P.A. has been invited to speak at a panel discussion on the federal court system. The forum is open to all members of the community and will be attended by a federal district judge from Fort Myers, the United States Attorney for the Middle District of Florida, a federal civil law attorney, and David Brener, who will speak about federal criminal defense.
The forum takes place at the County Commissioner's Building (old courthouse) in downtown Fort Myers, on Friday March 25th, 2011, begining at 10:00 a.m.

Brener and DeMine, P.A.
12381 South Cleveland Avenue
Suite 201
Fort Myers, Fl. 33907
http://www.justiceisourpassion.com Readmore »»

Friday, February 25, 2011

"Florida's Felony Murder Rule Sweeps With A Broad Brush", by David A. Brener, Esq.

Florida's felony - murder rule, incorporated into its murder statute, section 782.04, makes it first degree murder when the death of a non-participant occurs during the commission, attempt to commit, or escape from the commission of various enumerated felonies. These crimes include the most frequently committed felonies, such as robbery, burglary, rape, kidnapping, arson, and others. As a consequence, someone who agrees to participate in one of these felonies is deemed responsible under the law if a homicide occurs during the course of the crime. This is true even if the person did not pull the trigger or commit the killing, and even if the homicide was unintended, an accident, or actually committed by a third party, like, for example a police officer, security guard, or homeowner. If the person who is killed is the victim of the underlying crime, an innocent bystander, or anyone other than one of the perpetrators, the crime is first degree murder. If the person who dies is a co-perpetrator, then the proper charge, under Florida law, is felony second degree murder. If a non-enumerated felony is being committted when the killing occurs, like for example grand theft, then the proper charge, under the law, is felony third degree murder.
First degree murder is punishable by only two possible sentences: life in prison without parole, and the death penalty. Second degree felony murder is punishable by up to life in prison, with approximately twenty years as the low end of the sentencing range, without any additional charges. Third degree murder charges are rare, and usually are seen as a jury compromise verdict to lesser included charges of felony first degree murder.
Florida's felony murder rule applies to not only the killer, but the killer's co-participants in the underlying felony. That is the purpose of this law - to hold people responsible for a homicide which they did not commit because they took the risk associated with committing the underlying crime. The fact that a person did not intend for the homicide to occur, and did not know that someone, be it co-perpetrator or police officer, was going to kill, is no defense. This results in an extremely harsh application of the law, and one that really does not treat people who kill differently than those who do not. It is for this reason that the country which invented felony murder, England, has abolished it, and why a number of states, unlike Florida, have severely limited its application.
One recognized legal defense to felony murder in Florida is the independent act doctrine. Florida recognizes a defense to felony murder if the homicide was not committed by the defendant, the defendant did not intend for the homicide to occur, and the killing was not part of the plan and not a reasonably forseeable consequence of the plan to commit the underlying felony. This last part - about what is reasonably foreseeable - is where the problem lies, and where the litigation has centered. Some authorities suggest that when the defendant is aware that firearms are involved in the underlying felony, then the independent act defense is unavailable, even if the defendant did not carry. Thus, the getaway driver and the guy who planned the robbery but stayed home, can be charged and convicted of murder even though violence was not supposed to occur. Similarly, a defendant in a high speed chase cannot claim, when a police officer dies, that it was the independent act of the officer of pursuing the defendant at high speed which was the legal cause of the death. The courts have generally taken the view that to permit a defendant in a robbery homicide to defend based on the fact that the co-defendant killed the store clerk with a firearm which the defendant knew the co-defendant was carrying, or to defend because the store clerk killed the co-defendant when confronted by armed perpetrators, would eviscerate the felony murder rule.
To the contrary, leaving it to a jury to decide, and giving the legal instructions on independent act and allowing the jury to apply the law to the facts, would allow some relief, in exceptional cases, from this draconian law. Until this harsh law is repealed, this is the least we should do.

by: David A. Brener, Esq.
Brener and DeMine, P.A.
12381 South Cleveland Avenue
Suite 201
Fort Myers, Fl. 33907
239-332-1100
www.murderlawyerflorida.com
www.justiceisourpassion.com Readmore »»

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Florida Murder and Homicide Attorney Lawyer David A. Brener 239-332-1100 Travels Statewide For Homicide Defense

Florida Murder and Homicide Lawyer Attorney David A. Brener 239-332-1100, based out of Fort Myers, is available to represent clients charged with murder or manslaughter throughout the State of Florida. Brener is admitted to all the courts in the state, as well as the United States District Courts for the Southern and Middle Districts of Florida. Brener is one of a relatively few attorneys who are qualified to act as lead counsel in capital death penalty cases, and has handled approximately 20 such charges, as well as dozens of second degree murder and manslaughter cases. David A. Brener is peer review rated "AV Preeminent" in criminal law by Martindale Hubbell, and is listed in the Bar Registry of Preeminent Lawyers.
Law Offices of Brener and DeMine, P.A.
12381 South Cleveland Avenue
Suite 201
Fort Myers, Fl. 33907
239-332-1100
murderlawyerflorida.com Readmore »»

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Fair Sentencing Act

Kevin Barron Attorney Website

The following information is adapted from the text of an opinion by Curtis L. Collier, USDCJ in the Eastern district of Tennessee:

President Obama signed the Fair Sentencing Act (FSA) into law on August 3, 2010. The preamble of the FSA states it is “[a]n Act [t]o restore fairness to Federal cocaine sentencing.” The FSA seeks to achieve this end by raising the quantities of crack required to trigger various statutory mandatory minimum sentences for crack trafficking. The Justice Department has taken the position that Fair Sentencing Act reductions in mandatory minimum crack sentences should not take effect in prosecutions for conduct before the August 2010 enactment date of the statute. The Department's position is clearly contrary to the intent of Congress but since the Act contains no statement that it applies retroactively or to all pending prosecutions, the Department argues that the "caving clause" of 1 U.S.C. § 109 applies (The "repeal of any statute shall not have the effect to release or extinguish any penalty, forfeiture, or liability incurred under such statute, unless the repealing Act shall so expressly provide….)

The Act has raised the amount of crack required to trigger a 10-year mandatory minimum under 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(A)(iii) from 50 grams to 280 grams. Pub. L. No. 111-220, § 2. and raise the amount of crack required to trigger a 5-year mandatory minimum under 21 U.S.C. § 841 (b)(1)(B)(iii) from 5 grams to 28 grams. Additionally, in a section captioned “Emergency Authority for United States Sentencing Commission,” the Act ordered the United States Sentencing Commission to “make such conforming amendments to the Federal sentencing guidelines as the Commission determines necessary to achieve consistency with other guideline provisions and applicable law,” and to do so within 90 days of the Act’s enactment. Id. at § 8. Following Congress’s mandate, the Commission promulgated amended Guidelines …“to ensure[] that the relationship between the statutory penalties for crack cocaine offenses and the statutory penalties for offenses involving other drugs is consistently and proportionally reflected throughout the Drug Quantity Table.”….

The amended Sentencing Guidelines became effective November 1, 2010, and apply to all offenders sentenced after that date, even if those offenders committed their offenses before enactment of the FSA on August 3, 2010. See 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a)(4)(ii) (sentencing courts must consider the guidelines that “are in effect on the date the defendant is sentenced”). …. ….

Many courts are now applying the Act’s new mandatory minimum thresholds to offenders who committed criminal conduct before enactment of the Act, but who are sentenced afterwards. The plain language of the Act neither compels nor proscribes its retroactive application. See United States v. Carradine, 621 F.3d 575, 580 (6th Cir. 2010) (“the [ACT] contains no express statement that it is retroactive nor can we infer any such express intent from its plain language”). The United States argues the absence of such a statement requires the Act not be applied retroactively. The United States bases this argument in large part upon the general “saving statute” or “saving clause.”

At common law, the repeal of a criminal statute, or its re-enactment with different penalties, “abated all prosecutions which had not reached final disposition in the highest court authorized to review them.” Bradley v. United States, 410 U.S. 605, 607-08 (1973). To abolish the common-law presumption of abatement, Congress enacted its first general savings provision in 1871. See c. 71, 16 Stat. 432 (1871); see also Warden v. Marrero, 417 U.S. 653, 660 (1974). In 1947, Congress codified the general saving statute at 1 U.S.C. § 109. Section 109 provides, in relevant part:

The repeal of any statute shall not have the effect to release or extinguish any penalty, forfeiture, or liability incurred under such statute, unless the repealing Act shall so expressly provide, and such statute shall be treated as still remaining in force for the purpose of sustaining any proper action or prosecution for the enforcement of such penalty, forfeiture, or liability.

At first blush, the saving statute’s requirement an Act “expressly provide” for retroactivity seems to foreclose retroactive application of the Act. However, the Supreme Court has interpreted the savings statute’s effect more modestly than its strong language might seem to indicate. Over one hundred years ago the Supreme Court explained the savings statute “cannot justify a disregard of the will of Congress as manifested either expressly or by necessary implication in a subsequent enactment.” Great N. Ry. Co. v. United States, 208 U.S. 452, 465 (1908); see also Marrero, 417 U.S. at 659 n.10 (“only if § 1103(a) can be said by fair implication or expressly to conflict with § 109 would there be reason to hold that § 1103(a) superseded § 109"). In other words, saving statute notwithstanding, Congress has the power to make a statute retroactive without the use of “magical passwords,” see Marcello v. Bonds, 349 U.S. 302, 310 (1955), so long as it clearly signals its intent some other way. See Lockhart v. United States, 546 U.S. 142, 148 (2005) (Scalia, J., concurring) (“We have made clear in other cases as well, that an express-reference or express-statement provision cannot nullify the unambiguous import of a subsequent statute. . . . A subsequent Congress, we have said, may exempt itself from [express statement] requirements by ‘fair implication’ — that is, without an express statement.”). Thus, despite no express retroactivity provision in the Act, if the conclusion Congress intended the Act to apply retroactively arises by fair or necessary implication, the general saving statute is no bar to such application.

In the brief period since the Act was enacted, a large number of courts have considered whether Congress intended the Act to apply retroactively to offenders who committed crimes prior to Act’s enactment, but have not yet been sentenced. Overwhelmingly, these courts have concluded the necessary implication of the Act is that Congress intended the Act to apply retroactively. See, e.g., United States v. Douglas, No. 09-202-P-H, 2010 WL 4260221 (D. Me. Oct. 27, 2010); United States v. Gillam, No. 1:10-CR-181-2, 2010 WL 4906283 (W.D. Mich. Dec. 3, 2010); United States v Jones, No. 4:10-CR-233 (N.D. Ohio, Jan. 3, 2011); United States v. Cox, No. 3:10-CR-85-WMC, 2011 WL 92071 (W.D. Wis. Jan. 11, 2011); United States v. Johnson, No. 6:08-CR-270 (M.D. Fla. Jan. 4, 2011); United States v. English, No. 3:10-CR-53, 2010 WL 5397288 (S.D. Iowa Dec. 30, 2010); United States v. Whitfield, No. 2:10-CR-13, 2010 WL 5387701 (N.D. Miss. Dec. 21, 2010); United States v. Holloway, 3:04-CR-90 (S.D. W. Va. Dec. 20, 2010); United States v. Johnson, No. 3:10-CR-138 (E.D. Va. Dec. 7, 2010); United States v. Favors, No. 10-CR-384-LY-1 (W.D. Tex. Nov. 23, 2010); United States v. Spencer, No. CR 09-00400 JW (N.D. Cal. Nov. 30, 2010); United States v. Shelby, No. 2:09-CR-379 (E.D. La. Nov. 10, 2010).4

The leading opinion in this growing body of cases is that written by Judge D. Brock Hornby in Douglas. Nearly all of the cases cited above draw on Judge Hornby’s thorough analysis of the issue, as does this Court. After dispatching the United States’s argument the saving statute ipso facto applies because the Act does not contain an express retroactivity provision, the Douglas court went on to catalogue the evidence indicating Congress intended the Act to apply retroactively:

There is no saving clause in the Fair Sentencing Act itself. To the contrary, in this statute Congress expressly granted the Commission emergency Guideline amendment authority, so that the Commission could adopt Guideline amendments effective almost immediately. And in addition, Congress expressly directed the Commission to adopt Guideline amendments “as soon as practicable, and in any event not later than 90 days”, i.e., by November 1, 2010. What amendments? To be sure, the new enhancement provisions, but also any changes in the new crack penalty provisions. Where would the latter changes come from? From the new statutory minimum provisions. According to the statutory language, Congress instructed the Commission “pursuant to the emergency authority provided under paragraph (1), [to] make such conforming amendments to the Federal sentencing guidelines as the Commission determines necessary to achieve consistency with other guideline provisions and applicable law.” The Commission has followed Congress's instructions. Effective November 1, 2010, “the relationship between the statutory penalties for crack cocaine offenses and the statutory penalties for offenses involving other drugs is consistently and proportionally reflected throughout the Drug Quantity Table.” But the new Guidelines cannot be “conforming” and “achieve consistency” (Congress's express mandate) if they are based upon statutory minimums that cannot be effective to a host of sentences over the next five years until the statute of limitations runs on pre-August 3, 2010 conduct.

What is more, for years the Sentencing Reform Act of 1984 has directed expressly that the governing Guidelines are those in effect on the day a defendant is sentenced. The Guideline commentary refers to this statutory provision as “Congress's directive to apply the sentencing guidelines in effect at the time of sentencing.” Thus, during the past two decades of the Guidelines' existence, whenever the Commission has adopted Guideline amendments, those amendments have applied to all defendants sentenced thereafter, regardless of when the crime was committed. That is what will happen to the new Guidelines' alterations of the base offense levels for various quantities of crack: the new Guidelines will apply to all future sentencings after November 1, 2010, even if the criminal conduct occurred before the Fair Sentencing Act's effective date. Congress “expressly” required that outcome by ordering the emergency amendments within 90 days. Thus, many pre-August 3, 2010 offenders will benefit from the changed crack offense levels, at least if the mandatory minimums do not apply to them. Congress instructed the Commission to make such changes and make them immediately, under an existing statutory structure that makes them apply to those who have already offended but who have not yet been sentenced. It would be a strange definition of “conforming” and “consistency” to have these new amended Guidelines go into effect while the old and therefore inconsistent statutory minimums continue.

Finally, Congress stated that its goal was to “restore fairness to Federal cocaine sentencing.” Understandably, Congress might not have wanted a large volume of previously sentenced offenders to be released from prison immediately. But what possible reason could there be to want judges to continue to impose new sentences that are not “fair” over the next five years while the statute of limitations runs? Unlike Marrero, the explicit congressional grant of emergency guideline amendment authority and the mandate of “consistency” and “conforming” amendments, coupled with the express language of the Sentencing Reform Act of 1984 (that the Guidelines in effect on the day of sentencing control irrespective of when offense conduct occurred), unmistakably demonstrate Congress's urgency and expectation of immediate change.

Douglas, 2010 WL 4260221, at ** 4-5. The Court agrees fully with Judge Hornby’s analysis in Douglas. The context in which the Act was passed, its preamble, and most importantly its “emergency” mandate that the Guidelines be amended to achieve consistency with applicable law, that is, with the Act, give rise by necessary implication to the conclusion Congress intended the Act to apply to all offenders sentenced after its enactment.

Readmore »»