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Timothy Lee Hurst v. State of Florida, SC12-1947 (2014)

Court: Supreme Court of Florida Number: SC12-1947 Visitors: 10
Filed: May 01, 2014
Latest Update: Mar. 02, 2020
Summary: Supreme Court of Florida _ No. SC12-1947 _ TIMOTHY LEE HURST, Appellant, vs. STATE OF FLORIDA, Appellee. [May 1, 2014] PER CURIAM. Timothy Lee Hurst appeals his sentence of death that was imposed for the 1998 first-degree murder of Cynthia Harrison. We have jurisdiction. See art. V, § 3(b)(1), Fla. Const. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm his sentence. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY Hurst was convicted for the May 2, 1998, first-degree murder of Cynthia Harrison in a robbery at the Popeye
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          Supreme Court of Florida
                                  ____________

                                  No. SC12-1947
                                  ____________

                            TIMOTHY LEE HURST,
                                 Appellant,

                                         vs.

                             STATE OF FLORIDA,
                                  Appellee.

                                   [May 1, 2014]

PER CURIAM.

      Timothy Lee Hurst appeals his sentence of death that was imposed for the

1998 first-degree murder of Cynthia Harrison. We have jurisdiction. See art. V,

§ 3(b)(1), Fla. Const. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm his sentence.

                   FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

      Hurst was convicted for the May 2, 1998, first-degree murder of Cynthia

Harrison in a robbery at the Popeye’s restaurant where Hurst was employed in

Escambia County, Florida. The victim, also an employee, had been bound and

gagged and repeatedly cut and stabbed with a weapon consistent with a box cutter

found at the scene. Hurst’s conviction and death sentence were originally affirmed
in Hurst v. State, 
819 So. 2d 689
(Fla. 2002). In that decision, we set forth the

facts surrounding the murder as follows:

      On the morning of May 2, 1998, a murder and robbery occurred at a
      Popeye’s Fried Chicken restaurant in Escambia County, Florida,
      where Hurst was employed. Hurst and the victim, assistant manager
      Cynthia Lee Harrison, were scheduled to work at 8 a.m. on the day of
      the murder. A worker at a nearby restaurant, Carl Hess, testified that
      he saw Harrison arriving at work between 7 a.m. and 8:30 a.m.
      Afterwards, Hess said that he saw a man, who was about six feet tall
      and weighed between 280 and 300 pounds, arrive at Popeye’s and
      bang on the glass windows until he was let inside. The man was
      dressed in a Popeye’s uniform and Hess recognized him as someone
      he had seen working at Popeye’s. Shortly after the crime, Hess picked
      Hurst from a photographic lineup as the man he had seen banging on
      the windows. Hess was also able to identify Hurst at trial.
             On the morning of the murder, a Popeye’s delivery truck was
      making the rounds at Popeye’s restaurants in the area. Janet Pugh,
      who worked at another Popeye’s, testified she telephoned Harrison at
      7:55 a.m. to tell her that the delivery truck had just left and Harrison
      should expect the truck soon. Pugh spoke to the victim for four to
      five minutes and did not detect that there was anything wrong or hear
      anyone in the background. Pugh was certain of the time because she
      looked at the clock while on the phone.
             Popeye’s was scheduled to open at 10:30 a.m. but Harrison and
      Hurst were the only employees scheduled to work at 8 a.m. However,
      at some point before opening, two other Popeye’s employees arrived,
      in addition to the driver of the supply truck. None of them saw Hurst
      or his car. At 10:30 a.m., another Popeye’s assistant manager, Tonya
      Crenshaw, arrived and found the two Popeye’s employees and the
      truck driver waiting outside the locked restaurant.
             When Crenshaw unlocked the door, and she and the delivery
      driver entered, they discovered that the safe was unlocked and open,
      and the previous day’s receipts, as well as $375 in small bills and
      change, were missing. The driver discovered the victim’s dead body
      inside the freezer. The victim had her hands bound behind her back
      with black electrical tape and she also had tape over her mouth.
      Similar tape was later found in the trunk of Hurst’s car. The scene
      was covered with a significant amount of the victim’s blood, and it

                                         -2-
was apparent from water on the floor that someone had attempted to
clean up the area.
       The victim suffered a minimum of sixty incised slash and stab
wounds, including severe wounds to the face, neck, back, torso, and
arms. The victim also had blood stains on the knees of her pants,
indicating that she had been kneeling in her blood. A forensic
pathologist, Dr. Michael Berkland, testified that some of the wounds
cut through the tissue into the underlying bone, and while several
wounds had the potential to be fatal, the victim probably would not
have survived more than fifteen minutes after the wounds were
inflicted. Dr. Berkland also testified that the victim’s wounds were
consistent with the use of a box cutter. A box cutter was found on a
baker’s rack close to the victim’s body. Later testing showed that the
box cutter had the victim’s blood on it. It was not the type of box
cutter that was used at Popeye’s, but was similar to a box cutter that
Hurst had been seen with several days before the crime.
       Hurst’s friend, Michael Williams, testified that Hurst admitted
to him that he had killed Harrison. Hurst told him that he had an
argument with the victim, she “retaliated,” and that Hurst hit the
victim and cut her with a box cutter. Hurst said he had killed the
victim because, “he didn’t want the woman to see his face.” Williams
stated that Hurst had talked about robbing Popeye’s on previous
occasions.
       Another of Hurst’s friends, “Lee-Lee” Smith, testified that the
night before the murder, Hurst said he was going to rob Popeye’s. On
the morning of the murder, Hurst came to Smith’s house with a plastic
container full of money from the Popeye’s safe. Hurst instructed
Smith to keep the money for him. Hurst said he had killed the victim
and put her in the freezer. Smith washed Hurst’s pants, which had
blood on them, and threw away Hurst’s socks and shoes. Later that
morning, Smith and Hurst went to Wal-Mart to purchase a new pair of
shoes. They also went to a pawn shop where Hurst saw some rings he
liked, and after returning to Smith’s house for the stolen money, Hurst
returned to the shop and purchased the three rings for $300. An
employee at the shop, Bob Little, testified that on the day of the
murder, a man fitting Hurst’s description purchased three rings. Little
picked Hurst out of a photographic lineup as the man who had
purchased the rings. The police recovered the three rings from Hurst.
       Smith’s parents were out of town the weekend of the murder
but upon their return, and after discovering the container with the

                                 -3-
      money from Popeye’s in Smith’s room, Smith’s mother contacted the
      police and turned the container over to them. The police interviewed
      Smith and searched a garbage can in Smith’s yard where they found a
      coin purse that contained the victim’s driver’s license and other
      property, a bank bag marked with “Popeye’s” and the victim’s name,
      a bank deposit slip, a sock with blood stains on it, and a sheet of
      notebook paper marked “Lee Smith, language lab.” On the back of
      the notebook paper someone had added several numbers, and one
      number was the same as the amount on the deposit slip. Smith’s
      father also gave the police a pair of size fourteen shoes that appeared
      to have blood stains on them and that he had retrieved from the same
      trash can.
             Jack Remus, a Florida Department of Law Enforcement
      (FDLE) crime lab analyst, testified that the shoes were tested with
      phenolpthalein to detect blood, and while the test results exhibited
      some of the chemical indications associated with blood, attempts at
      DNA testing were not successful. Remus also tested the blood-
      stained sock and determined that the DNA typing was consistent with
      the victim. Hurst’s pants were also tested, but no blood evidence was
      detected. FDLE fingerprint expert Paul Norkus testified that the
      deposit slip in the garbage can had three of Hurst’s fingerprints on it.
             At trial, the State played the tape of an interview the police had
      conducted with Hurst shortly after the murder. Hurst said that on the
      morning of the murder he was on his way to work and his car broke
      down. He said that he telephoned Harrison at Popeye’s to say he was
      unable to come to work, and when he talked to her, she sounded
      scared and he heard whispering in the background. Hurst then went to
      Smith’s house and changed out of his work clothes. Hurst said he
      went to the pawn shop and bought necklaces for friends, but he did
      not mention purchasing the three rings or buying a new pair of shoes
      at Wal-Mart.
             At the close of the guilt phase of the trial, the jury deliberated
      for approximately six hours before finding Hurst guilty of first-degree
      murder.

Hurst, 819 So. 2d at 692-94
(footnotes omitted).




                                        -4-
      Hurst filed his initial, amended postconviction proceeding in circuit court.1

On appeal from denial of postconviction relief, we affirmed on all but one of his



       1. The claims raised in the initial postconviction motion were: (1) the State
withheld material and exculpatory evidence and/or presented misleading and false
testimony, i.e., false testimony of inmate witness Anthony Williams that defendant
confessed, in exchange for promises of leniency for Williams; suppression of
testimony of David Kladitis that three or four black males were in the Popeye’s
parking lot at 7:00 a.m.; false testimony and argument about defendant failing to
mention his trip to Wal-Mart; withholding the fact that the State planned to indict
witness Lee (“Lee-Lee”) Smith; and cumulative effect of these errors; (2) newly
discovered evidence concerning Anthony Williams that his testimony of Hurst’s
confession was fabricated, newly discovered evidence that jail witness Willie
Griffin (Anthony’s cousin) testified falsely against defendant, and newly
discovered evidence from inmate Edison Sartes that Griffin’s testimony was false;
new information that primary witness Lee-Lee Smith was going to be and was
charged in the case, when at the time of trial he had not been charged; false
testimony of witness Carl Hess, who identified defendant based on a false claim of
a prior job interview of defendant; and inappropriate conversation at trial between
Hess and Kladitis; (3) defense counsel was ineffective in that he failed to
adequately investigate and/or present exculpatory and impeachment evidence of
potential witness Andrew Salter who was at the crime scene and who would have
said he did not see defendant or his car there; failing to secure the testimony of
inmate Brett Pleasant regarding his conversations with witness Anthony Williams;
failing to object to inadmissible testimony and evidence of defendant’s lack of
remorse; failing to move for mistrial after an emotional display by the victim’s
family; failing to object or move for mistrial concerning evidence of physical
abnormality of the victim given to create sympathy; and cumulative effect of these
errors; (4) counsel failed to adequately investigate and present mitigation in the
penalty phase about defendant’s childhood, lack of parental support, poverty,
physical and mental abuse, drug and alcohol abuse; and counsel’s failure to seek a
psychiatric evaluation and to present mental mitigation including evidence of
neurological and mental deficits and brain damage; (5) defendant may not be
executed because he is mentally retarded under Atkins v. Virginia, 
536 U.S. 304
(2002); (6) Florida’s capital sentencing statute violates the Eighth and Fourteenth
Amendments to the United States Constitution and Ring v. Arizona, 
536 U.S. 584
(2002); (7) cumulative error unconstitutionally deprived defendant of a fair trial,

                                        -5-
postconviction claims. See Hurst v. State, 
18 So. 3d 975
(Fla. 2009). Although we

concluded that the State should have disclosed certain field notes by investigator

Donald Nesmith, and that the trial court’s refusal to perpetuate the testimony of

Willie Griffin was an abuse of discretion, we concluded no prejudice accrued from

those errors. 
Id. at 1015.
However, we reversed the denial of relief on Hurst’s

claim of ineffective assistance of counsel in investigation and presentation of

mitigation in the penalty phase, and remanded for a new penalty phase proceeding.

Id. at 1008.
In granting a new penalty phase, we explained that there was no sound

basis for Hurst’s defense counsel to have failed to investigate and present evidence

of Hurst’s borderline intelligence, possible organic brain damage, the fact that he

was in special education classes as a child, and other mitigation for which there

appeared to be no apparent disadvantage in presentation. See 
id. at 1013-15.
       Prior to the new sentencing trial, the trial court denied Hurst’s successive

motion for an evidentiary hearing on mental retardation. 2 In addition, the court



requiring a new trial. Not all the claims raised in the postconviction motions were
appealed.

       2. The 2013 Legislature amended all Florida statutes that refer to “mental
retardation,” “retardation,” and “mentally retarded” to now refer to “intellectual
disability” or “intellectually disabled.” See ch. 2013-162, Laws of Fla.; see, e.g.,
section 921.137, Florida Statutes (2013), titled “Imposition of the death sentence
upon an intellectually disabled defendant prohibited.” Because the prior statute
was in effect when Hurst raised the issue in the trial court, we continue to use the
terms “mental retardation” and “mentally retarded” in this opinion.


                                         -6-
denied Hurst’s request to present mental retardation to the penalty phase jury as an

absolute bar to recommendation of a death sentence, although the court allowed

him to present mental retardation and other mental issues as mitigation to the jury.

After the new penalty phase evidence was presented, in which the State presented

an abbreviated version of the trial testimony as to the circumstances of the murder,

and after the defense presented testimony concerning mitigation, the jury returned

a recommendation of death by a seven-to-five vote.

       Before sentencing, the trial court held a Spencer 3 hearing at which defense

counsel presented further argument that the evidence at the penalty phase

established that Hurst was mentally retarded. The trial court subsequently entered

a sentencing order sentencing Hurst to death. In doing so, the court found as

aggravating factors that (1) the murder was especially heinous, atrocious or cruel,

see § 921.141(5)(h), Fla. Stat. (2012), which was assigned great weight; and (2) the

murder was committed while Hurst was engaged in commission of a robbery, see

§ 921.141(5)(d), Fla. Stat. (2012), which was assigned great weight. In mitigation,

the trial court found the following two statutory mitigators: (1) no significant

history of prior criminal activity, see § 921.141(6)(a), Fla. Stat. (2012), which was

assigned moderate weight; and (2) Hurst’s age of 19 and his young mental age, see

§ 921.141(6)(g), Fla. Stat. (2012), which was assigned moderate weight. The trial

      3. Spencer v. State, 
615 So. 2d 688
(Fla. 1993).


                                         -7-
court found as additional mitigation under section 921.141(6)(h), Florida Statutes

(2012), that Hurst had significant mental issues—limited mental and intellectual

capacity with widespread abnormalities in his brain affecting impulse control and

judgment consistent with fetal alcohol syndrome, which was assigned moderate

weight—although the court expressly found that Hurst is not mentally retarded.

The trial court rejected as unproven proffered mitigating factors that the defendant

was under the influence of mental or emotional disturbance; the defendant was an

accomplice with relatively minor participation; the defendant acted under extreme

duress or substantial domination of another; or the defendant lacked the capacity to

appreciate the criminality of his conduct or conform his conduct to the

requirements of law. See §§ 921.141(6)(b), (d), (e), & (f), Fla. Stat. (2012).

      Hurst took a timely appeal from the sentence of death raising the following

issues: (1) whether the trial court erred in refusing to give him a separate

evidentiary hearing on his successive mental retardation claim, in refusing to allow

the jury to determine mental retardation as a bar to execution, and in finding after

trial that he is not mentally retarded and exempt from execution; (2) whether this

Court should recede from precedent holding that the jury need not expressly find

specific aggravators or issue a unanimous advisory verdict on the sentence; and

(3) whether his death sentence is proportionate. We turn to Hurst’s first issue on

appeal.


                                         -8-
                                     ANALYSIS

                           A. Mental Retardation Issues

      The United States Supreme Court held in Atkins v. Virginia, 
536 U.S. 304
(2002), that the Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution forbids

execution of mentally retarded defendants. However, the Supreme Court left it to

the states to determine the manner in which this constitutional restriction on

execution of its sentences will be enforced. 
Id. at 317.
Florida law sets forth a

three-pronged test to determine mental retardation as a bar to the death penalty. In

order to prove mental retardation as a bar to execution, the defendant must prove

all three of the following factors: (1) significantly subaverage general intellectual

functioning, which has been interpreted to be a full scale IQ of 70 or below on a

standardized intelligence test; (2) concurrent deficits in adaptive behavior; and (3)

manifestation of the condition before age eighteen. See, e.g., Nixon v. State, 
2 So. 3d
137, 142 (Fla. 2009); § 921.137(1), Fla. Stat. (2012). The burden is on the

defendant raising a claim of mental retardation as a bar to execution to prove

mental retardation by clear and convincing evidence. See Nixon, 
2 So. 3d
at 145;

§ 921.137(4), Fla. Stat. (2012).

      Hurst contends that the trial court erred in denying a successive mental

retardation hearing pursuant to Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.203. He

contends that he is mentally retarded and exempt from execution based on a recent


                                         -9-
Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale, Fourth Edition (WAIS-IV) test that indicated

his full scale IQ is 69, and based on expert testimony that he suffered from

adaptive deficits—all before age eighteen—such that he met the statutory

requirements for mental retardation. Hurst was previously provided a full

evidentiary hearing on the question of mental retardation in his initial

postconviction proceeding. At that evidentiary hearing, Hurst presented the expert

testimony of Dr. Valerie McClain, a licensed clinical psychologist, who

administered a number of tests to Hurst, including the Wechsler Abbreviated Scale

of Intelligence (WASI). That test placed Hurst in the borderline range with a full

scale IQ score of 70. As to deficits in adaptive functioning, Dr. McClain testified

that in her opinion Hurst did not meet the adaptive functioning deficit threshold for

mental retardation, and she did not determine that Hurst is mentally retarded. At

that same evidentiary hearing, the State presented clinical psychologist Dr. James

D. Larsen. After testing Hurst with the WAIS-III test, Dr. Larsen concluded that

Hurst’s full scale IQ was 78. Dr. Larsen also found no deficits in adaptive

functioning necessary for a diagnosis of mental retardation. The circuit court in

that initial postconviction proceeding denied the mental retardation claim, relying

primarily on the testimony of Dr. McClain and Dr. Larsen that Hurst’s adaptive

behavior was not substantially impaired; however, no appeal was taken of that

ruling when it was denied in 2007. See 
Hurst, 18 So. 3d at 1008
n.9.


                                        - 10 -
        In this case, Hurst contends that the trial court should have held a second

Atkins mental retardation hearing prior to the new sentencing trial. The trial court

denied the request for a pretrial evidentiary hearing on several grounds, one of

which was that the motion was untimely under the requirements of rule 3.203. We

conclude that denial of the request for a second Atkins hearing was not an abuse of

discretion under the circumstances present in this case. See, e.g., Arbelaez v.

State, 
898 So. 2d 25
, 42-43 (Fla. 2005) (reviewing a trial court’s decision not to

allow supplemental Ring and Atkins claims on remand under an abuse of

discretion standard). Moreover, any error in denying the pretrial evidentiary

hearing on mental retardation was harmless because Hurst was allowed to present

all his mental retardation evidence at the penalty phase, after which the trial court

ruled that he failed to establish that he is mentally retarded. The background and

mental mitigation evidence presented by Hurst at the penalty phase is discussed

next.

        Hurt’s sister, Sequester “Tina” Hurst; brother, Jermaine Bradley; mother,

Bertha Bradley; father, Timothy Bradley; Bible study teacher, Isaac Sheppard;

administrator at Hurst’s high school, Calvin Harris; and former United States

Army Major and principal of East Charter School, Jerome Chism, all testified

concerning Hurst’s family and background. Hurst’s mother was age fifteen when

Hurst was born and, during pregnancy, she drank all day, every day. As a child,


                                         - 11 -
Hurst stuttered and developed very slowly. As a toddler, he was slow to learn to

walk. He was disciplined harshly when he was growing up and was punished more

than the other children because he could not do things correctly.

      Hurst was a fun-loving child and teenager with a good personality. He liked

to play jokes and was mild tempered, but was slow mentally and did very poorly in

school. In Bible study classes as a child, Hurst was unable to progress out of the

most basic children’s Bible study book and could not look up the Bible verses that

went with the stories. He was embarrassed because he had difficulty reading.

Hurst should have been in special education classes because he was low

functioning and could not understand what was going on in class; and for that

reason, he would skip class and play basketball in the gym. Even though his

school wanted to place Hurst in a special education program, his mother objected

because she was afraid he would be picked on. He did go to East Charter School,

which taught low achievers and children with behavioral problems, and while

there, was teased about his large size and his slowness. His maturity level

remained very low and even at age eighteen, he exhibited the maturity of a middle-

school student. Hurst could not obtain a GED, but did have a driver’s license and

obtained a car with his father’s help, although he was a poor driver.

      Family members testified that Hurst had to be reminded to take care of

himself; and he allowed his mother and sister to wash his clothes, and allowed his


                                       - 12 -
mother to cook for him. He had poor hygiene and had to be reminded to bathe and

dress appropriately. He had to be reminded to keep appointments and be

awakened for work. Hurst did not have a checking account and would likely have

had difficulty making change if he was working a cash register. However, Hurst

was employed at Popeye’s and did food “prep work.”

      Dr. Joseph Wu, a psychiatrist, professor of psychiatry, and clinical director

of the University of California at Irvine College of Medicine Brain Imaging

Center, testified as an expert on the use of positron emission tomography (PET) in

regard to neurological and psychiatric disorders. He was present when a PET scan

was performed on Hurst and later interpreted the results of that PET scan. Dr. Wu

testified that the scan showed a decreased cortical cerebellum metabolic rate,

which indicated widespread damage to the cortical region of Hurst’s brain. He

opined that Hurst has widespread abnormalities in multiple areas of his brain,

which abnormalities are associated with lack of judgment, risk taking, impulsivity,

and immaturity. Dr. Wu was aware that it was reported Hurst suffered from fetal

alcohol syndrome, which, along with other trauma, can cause the types of problems

seen in Hurst’s PET scan, although he could not say from the PET scan what

caused the abnormalities in Hurst’s brain.

      Dr. Harry Krop, a clinical and forensic psychologist, testified that he

administered the WAIS-IV test, as well as a test of memory malingering (TOMM),


                                       - 13 -
to Hurst in January and February 2012. The testing resulted in a full scale IQ of

69, which is in the range of mental retardation. Dr. Krop reviewed details of the

murder, Hurst’s regular school records, the charter school records, Florida

Department of Corrections records, tests and reports of other testing performed on

Hurst, and Dr. Wu’s PET scan report. He also spoke to various family members

for the purpose of evaluating Hurst’s adaptive functioning as measured by

completion of the Adaptive Behavior Assessment System (ABAS). He did not

listen to the recorded statement Hurst gave to police. After reviewing the

questionnaire for the ABAS, which was completed by Hurst and three family

members, Dr. Krop concluded that Hurst is significantly deficient in all areas of

adaptive functioning. Dr. Krop was aware of earlier testing in which Hurst scored

in the 78 IQ range on a different WAIS test, which Dr. Krop opined was not as

accurate as the newer WAIS-IV, and his final opinion was that Hurst is mentally

retarded.

      Dr. Gordon Taub, psychologist and associate professor at the University of

Central Florida specializing in measurement of intelligence, structure of

intelligence, intelligence theory, and evaluation of intelligence tests, testified that

he has written articles about the Wechsler Scale of Intelligence tests. He testified

that the WAIS-IV, which was revised in 2008, now measures four areas of

intelligence, made changes in the subtests, and added some completely new tests.


                                         - 14 -
Dr. Taub was aware that Hurst received a full scale IQ score of 78 on the earlier

WAIS-III test in 2004, which he said tested for only two main factors. He agreed

that on the WAIS-IV test, which was given by Dr. Krop and which tests for four

main factors, Hurst received a full scale score of 69. Dr. Taub opined that scores

on the current WAIS-IV and earlier Wechsler tests cannot properly be compared

because of the changes to the newer test and because the WAIS-IV is a much better

test. However, Dr. Taub agreed that the WAIS-III is a “valid score of intelligence

and there’s no reason not to use that score if you attained it at the time that it was

the test to use to measure intelligence.”

      Dr. Taub testified that other testing done on Hurst when he was under the

age of eighteen and still in school showed depressed scores. As to Hurst’s adaptive

functioning, Dr. Taub testified that the information gathered by Dr. Krop showed

Hurst was impaired in functioning in the real world in areas of self-care and in

communication. Dr. Taub administered the Woodcock Johnson Test of

Achievement, Third Edition, to Hurst, which tests areas in reading, writing, math,

and spelling. He opined that Hurst’s limited proficiency shown on the

achievement test is consistent with his school records showing low performance.

He concluded based on the WAIS-IV test and on information concerning Hurst’s

adaptive functioning, school records, and achievement testing, that Hurst meets the

legal criteria for mental retardation in Florida.


                                         - 15 -
      The State presented the testimony of Dr. Harry McClaren, forensic

psychologist, who testified that he reviewed court documents, the testimony of

Hurst’s family members, the testimony of Drs. McClain and Larson at the prior

evidentiary hearing, mental health records from the Department of Corrections,

educational records and school test results, information about the crime, Hurst’s

statement to police, and the testimony of Drs. Taub and Krop. Dr. McClaren also

reviewed a WAIS-III test given to Hurst by a Dr. Riebsame in 2003 and the WASI

(Wechsler Abbreviated Scale of Intelligence) given by Dr. McClain in 2004. He

testified that it would be a mistake to ignore Hurst’s past testing with the WAIS-III

resulting in full scale IQ scores of 76 and 78 because that test was the state of the

art instrument at the time. Dr. McClaren also testified that there was no adaptive

behavior testing done when Hurst was young, and now the reports of his deficits

are anecdotal. He opined that Hurst does not meet the criteria for mental

retardation.

      The trial court relied primarily on the testimony of Dr. McClaren and on

evidence of Hurst’s actions in and around the time of the crime in determining that

Hurst did not meet the test for mental retardation as a bar to the death penalty. In

addition to testimony of members of law enforcement who investigated the crime

and recovered evidence from Lee-Lee Smith’s house, the State presented Hurst’s

statement given to detectives at the time. After Hurst signed a waiver of his rights


                                        - 16 -
and agreed he was speaking voluntarily with the detectives, he gave a narrative of

what he said he did that morning in which he described going to a friend’s house to

unsuccessfully try to use the telephone because, he said, his car broke down. He

gave street directions to that friend’s house. Hurst said he then went to the E-Z

Serve to use the pay telephone to call Popeye’s and tell Cynthia Harrison he would

not be able to come into work. He said that she spoke “in a scary voice” with a

“scary tone,” and he could hear some whispering in the background. He recited

the telephone number that he called to talk with her. Hurst also related to

detectives that he went to Lee-Lee Smith’s house that morning, and then to his own

house where his brother Jermaine asked Hurst to take him to a pawn shop. Hurst

described putting something in his car to clean out the gas tank and then driving to

the pawn shop with Jermaine, Lee-Lee, and another young man. Hurst said in his

statement that he bought his brother two necklaces at the pawn shop with his

brother’s money. Hurst told detectives that after leaving Lee-Lee Smith’s house

and before going to the pawn shop, he changed his shirt and shoes but not his work

pants. Timothy Bradley, Hurst’s biological father, testified that on the morning of

May 2, 1998, at around 7:45 a.m., he saw Hurst putting the battery back into his

car after the battery had been on the charger all night. At that time, Hurst was

wearing his Popeye’s uniform.




                                        - 17 -
      The trial court concluded in the sentencing order that Hurst was able to

maintain a job and had acquired a driver’s license. The court noted that Hurst’s

statement to police and his efforts to conceal his involvement in the crime were

particularly persuasive in determining that Hurst did not suffer significant deficits

in adaptive functioning. The court stated, “The statement, given shortly after the

crime, reveals an individual clearly recounting a morning’s events, giving

directions, recalling telephone numbers, and deliberately omitting certain

information tending to incriminate him. Similarly, the evidence offered at trial

suggests that Defendant took numerous steps to conceal his involvement in the

crime by attempting to clean the murder scene, having his clothes washed, hiding

the money in another location, discarding Ms. Harrison’s belongings and his shoes,

and buying new shoes.” We also note that evidence that Hurst was a nineteen-

year-old who still lived at home and allowed his mother and sister to cook for him

and do his laundry does not establish that he is unable to care for himself. Because

the trial court had before it competent, substantial evidence to support its

conclusion that Hurst is not mentally retarded under the three-prong test set forth in

Florida law, we find no error in this ruling.

      Although Hurst was allowed to present all his mental retardation and other

mental mitigation to the jury, he also contends that the trial court erred in refusing

to submit the question of mental retardation as a bar to the death penalty to the jury


                                         - 18 -
for its determination. This claim lacks merit. We have repeatedly held that a

defendant has no right under Atkins to a jury determination of whether he is

mentally retarded. See Hodges v. State, 
55 So. 3d 515
, 526 (Fla. 2010) (holding

that defendant is not entitled to a jury determination of his mental retardation

status), cert. denied, 
132 S. Ct. 164
(2011)); Kilgore v. State, 
55 So. 3d 487
, 510-

11 (Fla. 2010) (reiterating that the capital defendant has no right under Atkins to a

jury determination whether he is mentally retarded); Rodriguez v. State, 
919 So. 2d 1252
, 1267 (Fla. 2005) (same). Some states have established procedures under

which a jury does determine if a capital defendant is mentally retarded. See, e.g.,

Commonwealth v. Sanchez, 
36 A.3d 24
, 60-61 (Pa. 2011) (discussing survey of

state law on procedures for determining mental retardation in capital cases).

Florida is not one of those states, and the United States Supreme Court has not

mandated any specific procedure for making the determination of mental

retardation in the capital sentencing context. Thus, the trial court did not err in

refusing to submit to the jury the question of Hurst’s mental retardation as a bar to

the death penalty in this case.

             B. Lack of Jury Findings as to Specific Aggravators
          and Lack of a Unanimous Advisory Verdict on the Sentence

      Hurst next contends that constitutional error occurred in his case because the

advisory jury in the penalty phase was not required to find specific facts as to the




                                         - 19 -
aggravating factors, 4 and that the jury was not required to make a unanimous

recommendation as to the sentence. In this case, the jury voted seven to five to

recommend a death sentence be imposed. Hurst bases his claims on the United

States Supreme Court’s decision in Ring, which held that capital defendants are

entitled to a jury determination of any fact on which the legislature conditions an

increase in the maximum 
punishment. 536 U.S. at 589
. Hurst recognizes that our

precedent has repeatedly held that Ring does not require the jury to make specific

findings of the aggravators or to make a unanimous jury recommendation as to

sentence, and he asks us to revisit our precedent on the issue in the decisions in

Bottoson v. Moore, 
833 So. 2d 693
(Fla. 2002), and King v. Moore, 
831 So. 2d 143
(Fla. 2002). In the plurality decisions in both cases, we rejected claims that

Ring applied to Florida’s capital sentencing scheme. We decline to revisit those

decisions in this case.

      Hurst contends that the facts of this case support a conclusion that Ring

applies to require the jury to expressly find one or more aggravators and to issue its

recommendation based on a unanimous advisory verdict. He contends that this

case is distinguishable from cases where a jury has unanimously found an

aggravating factor such as conviction of a prior violent felony or that the murder



      4. Hurst’s counsel asked for an interrogatory verdict to specify the
aggravators found and the votes on each. The motion was denied.


                                        - 20 -
was committed in the course of committing, attempting to commit, or flight after

commission of a separate enumerated felony. See § 921.141(5)(b), (d), Fla. Stat.

(2012). There is no prior violent felony aggravator in this case, nor did this jury

convict Hurst of a contemporaneous felony such as robbery. However, we have

rejected the Ring claim in similarly situated cases.

      We previously rejected the invitation to revisit our decisions in Bottoson and

King in Peterson v. State, 
94 So. 3d 514
(Fla.), cert. denied, 
133 S. Ct. 793
(2012),

a case which also did not involve conviction for a prior violent felony or a

contemporaneous enumerated felony, and did not involve a unanimous jury

advisory verdict. There, the majority stated, “We have consistently rejected claims

that Florida’s death penalty statute is unconstitutional.” 
Id. at 538
(citing Baker v.

State, 
71 So. 3d 802
, 823-24 (Fla. 2011), cert. denied, 
132 S. Ct. 1639
(2012);

Darling v. State, 
966 So. 2d 366
, 387 (Fla. 2007); Frances v. State, 
970 So. 2d 806
,

822 (Fla. 2007)). Similarly, in Butler v. State, 
842 So. 2d 817
, 834 (Fla. 2003),

this Court rejected the Ring claim where there was no aggravating factor based on

a prior violent felony conviction and there was no unanimous jury advisory

sentence. See also Ault v. State, 
53 So. 3d 175
, 206 (Fla. 2010) (“[T]his Court has

repeatedly and continually rejected such claims” that the advisory verdict must be

unanimous); Coday v. State, 
946 So. 2d 988
, 1006 (Fla. 2006) (reiterating that it is




                                        - 21 -
not unconstitutional for a jury to be allowed to recommend death by a simple

majority vote). We continue to adhere to this same body of precedent.

      We also note that the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals in Evans v.

Secretary, Fla. Dep’t. of Corrections, 
699 F.3d 1249
(11th Cir. 2012), cert. denied,

Evans v. Crews, 
133 S. Ct. 2393
(2013), reversed a federal district court’s ruling

that Florida’s sentencing scheme violates Ring. The Eleventh Circuit noted that

the United States Supreme Court’s “last word in a Florida capital case on the

constitutionality of that state’s death sentencing procedures” came in Hildwin v.

Florida, 
490 U.S. 638
(1989), which predated Ring. 
Evans, 699 F.3d at 1258
. This

Court, in Hildwin v. State, rejected the claim that the sentencing scheme was

unconstitutional because the jury is not required to make specific findings

authorizing the imposition of the death penalty. 
531 So. 2d 124
, 129 (Fla. 1988).

On review, the United States Supreme Court affirmed our decision in Hildwin and

stated, “[T]he Sixth Amendment does not require that the specific findings

authorizing the imposition of the sentence of death be made by the jury.” 
Hildwin, 490 U.S. at 640-41
. As the Eleventh Circuit noted in Evans, the United States

Supreme Court has never expressly overruled Hildwin, and did not do so in Ring.

The Evans court also agreed with the State that Florida’s sentencing procedures do

provide for jury input about the existence of aggravating factors prior to

sentencing—a process that was completely lacking in the Arizona statute struck


                                        - 22 -
down in Ring. 
Evans, 699 F.3d at 1261
. For all these reasons, we reject Hurst’s

claim that Florida’s capital sentencing scheme is unconstitutional under Ring.

                                C. Proportionality

      Hurst next contends that the death sentence in this case is not proportional

because it is not one of the most aggravated and least mitigated of first-degree

murders, thus requiring that his death sentence be reduced to life in prison. He

contends that a life sentence should be imposed based on evidence of abnormalities

in his brain due to fetal alcohol syndrome, his low mental functioning, and other

mental and background mitigation. In performing the proportionality review, this

Court has explained:

      “[W]e make a comprehensive analysis in order to determine whether
      the crime falls within the category of both the most aggravated and the
      least mitigated of murders, thereby assuring uniformity in the
      application of the sentence.” We consider the totality of the
      circumstances of the case and compare the case to other capital cases.
      This entails “a qualitative review by this Court of the underlying basis
      for each aggravator and mitigator rather than a quantitative analysis.”
      In other words, proportionality review “is not a comparison between
      the number of aggravating and mitigating circumstances.”

Williams v. State, 
37 So. 3d 187
, 205 (Fla. 2010) (quoting Offord v. State, 
959 So. 2d
187, 191 (Fla. 2007) (citations omitted)). This Court has long recognized an




                                        - 23 -
obligation to perform a proportionality review. 5 See, e.g., Lamadline v. State, 
303 So. 2d 17
, 20 (Fla. 1974).

      In reviewing proportionality, this Court follows precedent that requires that

the death penalty be “reserved only for those cases where the most aggravating and

least mitigating circumstances exist.” Terry v. State, 
668 So. 2d 954
, 965 (Fla.

1996). In doing so, we “will not disturb the sentencing judge’s determination as to

‘the relative weight to give to each established mitigator’ where that ruling is

‘supported by competent, substantial evidence in the record.’ ” Blackwood v.

State, 
777 So. 2d 399
, 412-13 (Fla. 2000) (quoting Spencer v. State, 
691 So. 2d 1062
, 1064 (Fla. 1996)). We “review the weight the trial court ascribes to

mitigating factors under the abuse of discretion standard.” Smith v. State, 
998 So. 2d
516, 527 (Fla. 2008). The Court will also “affirm the weight given an

aggravator if based on competent substantial evidence.” Blake v. State, 
972 So. 2d 839
, 846 (Fla. 2007). “The weight to be given aggravating factors is within the

discretion of the trial court, and it is subject to the abuse of discretion standard.”

Buzia v. State, 
926 So. 2d 1203
, 1216 (Fla. 2006).

      Hurst contends, inter alia, that his case is similar to Cooper v. State, 
739 So. 2d
82, 86 (Fla. 1999), in which the Court vacated the death sentence and imposed a

       5. Rule 9.142 (a)(5), Florida Rule of Appellate Procedure, provides that
“[i]n death penalty cases, whether or not insufficiency of the evidence or
proportionality is an issue presented for review, the court shall review these issues
and, if necessary, remand for the appropriate relief.”

                                         - 24 -
life sentence on the basis of lack of proportionality when compared to other capital

cases. In Cooper, the evidence showed the defendant was eighteen years old at the

time of the crime. Cooper also suffered from borderline mental retardation, brain

damage likely caused by beatings and head trauma as a child, a history of seizures,

schizophrenia, cognitive brain impairment, and an abusive childhood including

being repeatedly threatened with a gun by his father. The trial court in Cooper

found three aggravators and two statutory mitigators, as well as other nonstatutory

mitigation. We conclude that although there was more aggravation in Cooper,

there was also more mitigation than is present in this case. Cooper does not

require us to find Hurst’s sentence disproportionate.

      The State relies on Jeffries v. State, 
797 So. 2d 573
(Fla. 2001), as a basis on

which to find the sentence in this case proportional. In Jeffries, the murder

occurred in a somewhat similar manner to the instant case—the victim was

stabbed, suffering multiple sharp force injuries, and was beaten. 
Id. at 575.
The

trial court found two aggravators, murder in course of commission of a robbery

and HAC. 
Id. at 576.
The mitigation included findings that the defendant’s

capacity to appreciate the criminality of his conduct was impaired, that the

codefendant was equally culpable and received a plea deal for a twenty-year

sentence, and that Jeffries had a long history of emotional and mental problems, as




                                        - 25 -
well as drug and alcohol abuse. We held that the death sentence in Jeffries was

proportional when compared to other capital cases. 
Id. at 583.
      More recently, in Allen v. State, 38 Fla. L. Weekly S592 (Fla. Jul. 11, 2013),

we found the death sentence proportionate. The victim was bound and had

chemicals poured on her face. Allen beat the victim with belts, put a belt around

her neck and, in spite of her pleas to stop, strangled her. The autopsy also revealed

facial bruising, bruising on the torso, hand, thigh, knee, and shoulder; and the

victim had contusions on her hands, face, and torso. Her hands showed ligature

marks from having been tied, and her neck showed signs of ligature. 
Id. at S593.
      The trial court in Allen found two aggravators—commission of the murder

in the course of committing or attempting to commit a kidnapping, and that the

murder was especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel. 
Id. at S594.
The nonstatutory

mitigation found by the court included that Allen had been the victim of physical

and possibly sexual abuse, had brain damage due to numerous prior head injuries

resulting in lack of impulse control, suffered a poor childhood environment, and

exhibited helpfulness. The evidence also showed that Allen had significant

organic brain damage and intracranial injuries, and was at the lower end of

intellectual capacity. Testimony was received that a PET scan revealed at least ten

brain injuries, mostly to the right side of Allen’s brain which would affect impulse

control, judgment, and mood, and would make it hard for her to conform her


                                        - 26 -
conduct to the requirements of society. We found the death sentence in Allen

proportionate when compared to sentences in other capital cases. 
Id. at S600.
      Similarly, in Rogers v. State, 
783 So. 2d 980
(Fla. 2001), the victim was

murdered by being brutally stabbed, and had bruises, abrasions, and a shallow

defensive wound to her arm. 
Id. at 986.
The trial court found two aggravators—

that the murder was committed for pecuniary gain and that it was especially

heinous, atrocious, or cruel. 
Id. at 987.
The court found one statutory mitigator—

that the defendant’s capacity to appreciate the criminality of his conduct or

conform his conduct to the requirements of law was substantially impaired. 
Id. This last
mitigating factor was based on the trial court’s finding that Rogers suffers

from psychosis and brain damage that may have been exacerbated by long-term

alcohol abuse. 
Id. at 996.
The trial court found other mitigation in Rogers’

difficult family background, abusive childhood, and his exhibition of good

qualities as a father and employee. 
Id. We upheld
the death sentence in Rogers as

proportionate.

      Based on the forgoing, we find that Hurst’s death sentence, when compared

to the death sentences in other comparable capital cases, is proportionate.

                                  CONCLUSION

      For the reasons expressed above, we affirm Hurst’s sentence of death for the

first-degree murder of Cynthia Harrison.


                                        - 27 -
      It is so ordered.

POLSTON, C.J., and LEWIS, QUINCE, and CANADY, JJ., concur.
PARIENTE, J., concurs in part and dissents in part with an opinion, in which
LABARGA and PERRY, JJ., concur.

NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING MOTION, AND
IF FILED, DETERMINED.


PARIENTE, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part.

      I concur in the majority’s conclusion that the trial court did not abuse its

discretion in denying Hurst a successive mental retardation hearing pursuant to

Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.203 prior to the new sentencing proceeding.

I dissent, however, from the majority’s affirmance of Hurst’s sentence of death

because there was no unanimous jury finding of either of the two aggravating

circumstances found by the trial judge—that the murder was heinous, atrocious, or

cruel; and that the murder was committed in the course of a robbery.

      No jury ever convicted Hurst of the contemporaneous robbery, so this case

does not fall within the exception to the constitutional requirement of juror

unanimity for a contemporaneous felony conviction or a prior violent felony

conviction as an aggravating circumstance, which automatically demonstrate that

the jury has made the necessary findings to warrant the possibility of a death

sentence. See Johnson v. State, 
969 So. 2d 938
, 961 (Fla. 2007) (rejecting a

challenge to the constitutionality of the defendant’s death sentence because the


                                        - 28 -
“murder in the course of a felony aggravator” was premised on separate

convictions, “which satisfies Sixth Amendment requirements”).

      In Hurst’s case, the jury recommended death by the slimmest margin

permitted under Florida law—a bare majority seven-to-five vote. Because a

penalty-phase jury in Florida is not required to make specific factual findings as to

the aggravating circumstances necessary to impose the death penalty pursuant to

Florida’s capital sentencing statute, it is actually possible that there was not even a

majority of jurors who agreed that the same aggravator applied. See Peterson v.

State, 
94 So. 3d 514
, 540 (Fla. 2012) (Pariente, J., concurring as to conviction and

dissenting as to sentence). In my view, Hurst’s death sentence cannot be

constitutionally imposed, consistent with the United States Supreme Court’s

decision in Ring v. Arizona, 
536 U.S. 584
(2002), and Florida’s right to trial by

jury, in the absence of a unanimous finding by the jury that any of the applicable

aggravators apply, which is not present here.

      I have previously expressed my view that “[t]he absence of a requirement of

a unanimous jury finding as a precondition to a sentence of death is . . . a matter of

constitutional significance.” Butler v. State, 
842 So. 2d 817
, 838 (Fla. 2003)

(Pariente, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part). Indeed, I continue to

believe that, in light of Ring, Florida’s death penalty statute, as applied in

circumstances like those presented in this case where there is no unanimous jury


                                         - 29 -
finding as to any of the aggravating circumstances, is unconstitutional. See

Peterson, 94 So. 3d at 538
(Pariente, J., concurring as to conviction and dissenting

as to sentence).

      As I stated in my opinion dissenting as to the affirmance of the death

sentence in Peterson:

             Under our current sentencing scheme, not all defendants who
      are convicted of first-degree murder are eligible for a sentence of
      death. The trial judge must make additional findings before the death
      penalty can be imposed. See generally § 775.082, Fla. Stat. (2011).
      Without these findings, a trial court cannot impose a higher sentence
      than life imprisonment on the basis of the verdict alone. See
      § 775.082(1), Fla. Stat. (stating that without findings by the court that
      a defendant “shall be punished by death, . . . such person shall be
      punished by life imprisonment”). It is only after a sentencing hearing
      and additional findings of fact regarding aggravators and mitigators
      that the sentence of death may be imposed. Not only is this
      requirement imposed by Florida law, but it is constitutionally
      mandated by the Eighth Amendment to prevent death sentences from
      being arbitrarily imposed.
             In addition, as interpreted by the United States Supreme Court
      in Ring, the Sixth Amendment requires that a jury find those
      aggravating factors. As Justice Scalia explained in his concurring
      opinion in Ring, the bottom line is that “the fundamental meaning of
      the jury-trial guarantee of the Sixth Amendment is that all facts
      essential to imposition of the level of punishment that the defendant
      receives—whether the statute calls them elements of the offense,
      sentencing factors, or Mary Jane—must be found by a jury.” 
Ring, 536 U.S. at 610
(Scalia, J., concurring).

Id. at 538
-39.

      “Apart from capital sentencing, the requirement of unanimity has been

scrupulously honored in the criminal law of this state for any finding of guilt and


                                        - 30 -
for any fact that increases the maximum punishment.” 
Butler, 842 So. 2d at 837
(Pariente, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part). “Florida’s exclusion of the

death penalty from the requirement of jury unanimity cannot be reconciled” with

the Supreme Court’s holdings in Ring that “[t]he right to trial by jury guaranteed

by the Sixth Amendment would be senselessly diminished if it encompassed the

factfinding necessary to increase a defendant’s sentence by two years, but not the

factfinding necessary to put him to death,” and that “the Sixth Amendment applies

to both.” 
Peterson, 94 So. 3d at 539
(Pariente, J., concurring as to conviction and

dissenting as to sentence) (quoting 
Ring, 536 U.S. at 609
) (emphasis omitted).

      It remains my view that Ring requires any fact that qualifies a capital

defendant for a sentence of death to be found by a jury, and that Florida’s state

constitutional right to trial by jury, which is embodied in article I, section 22, of the

Florida Constitution, “requires a unanimous jury finding beyond a reasonable

doubt on the existence of any element necessary to increase an authorized

punishment, most especially the ultimate punishment of the death penalty.” 
Butler, 842 So. 2d at 838
(Pariente, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part); see also

Coday v. State, 
946 So. 2d 988
, 1022 (Fla. 2006) (Pariente, J., concurring in part

and dissenting in part). In other words, article I, section 22, is violated in the rare

case where the death penalty is imposed without any of the aggravators that

automatically demonstrate that a jury has made the necessary findings to warrant


                                         - 31 -
the possibility of a death sentence, such as a prior violent felony conviction or that

the murder occurred while in the course of an enumerated felony that was also

found by a jury. This is one of those rare cases.

      This case also illustrates how the use of a special verdict form would help

solve the problem, as Hurst’s counsel requested an interrogatory verdict to specify

the aggravators found by the jury and the votes on each, but the motion was denied

in accordance with this Court’s case law preventing the use of penalty-phase

special verdict forms detailing the jurors’ determination concerning aggravating

factors. See State v. Steele, 
921 So. 2d 538
, 545 (Fla. 2005). Had the jury been

permitted to specify its findings, it is possible that this Court would have evidence

in the record that Hurst’s jury unanimously found the existence of one of the

aggravators found by the trial judge in imposing the death sentence, thereby curing

the constitutional infirmity in this case. Because the jury was not permitted to

indicate its findings, however, this evidence does not appear in our record.

      I have previously expressed my view as to the “difficulties created” by this

Court’s decisions that fail to allow or mandate the use of special interrogatories in

death penalty cases to permit the jury to make special findings as to the

aggravators. Aguirre-Jarquin v. State, 
9 So. 3d 593
, 610 (Fla. 2009) (Pariente, J.,

specially concurring). I once again renew this position here, as the use of a special

verdict form during the penalty phase would enable this Court “to tell when a jury


                                        - 32 -
has unanimously found a death-qualifying aggravating circumstance, which would

both facilitate our proportionality review and satisfy the constitutional guarantee of

trial by jury even when the recommendation of death is less than unanimous.”

Coday, 946 So. 2d at 1024
(Pariente, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part).

      Finally, I also take this opportunity to note an evolving concern as to the

possible Eighth Amendment implications of Florida’s outlier status, among those

decreasing number of states that still retain the death penalty, on the issue of jury

unanimity in death penalty cases.6 Except for Florida, every state that imposes the

death penalty, as well as the federal system, requires a unanimous jury verdict as to

the finding of an aggravating circumstance.7 This means that in no other state or

federal court in the country would Hurst have been sentenced to death in this case



      6. Since Ring was decided in 2002, six states— Connecticut, Illinois,
Maryland, New Jersey, New Mexico, and New York—have abolished the death
penalty.

       7. In 
Steele, 921 So. 2d at 548-49
, this Court explained that, aside from
Florida, only Utah and Virginia did not at that time require a unanimous jury
finding of aggravators. Subsequent state supreme court decisions in those two
states have concluded that a unanimous jury finding of an aggravating
circumstance is required. See Prieto v. Commonwealth, 
682 S.E.2d 910
, 935 (Va.
2009) (“[W]e hold that in the penalty phase of capital murder trials the death
penalty may not be imposed unless the jury unanimously finds either one or both
of the aggravating factors of ‘vileness’ or ‘future dangerousness’ beyond a
reasonable doubt.”); Archuleta v. Galetka, 
267 P.3d 232
, 259 (Utah 2011) (“In
Utah, the fact finder in the guilt phase must find—unanimously and beyond a
reasonable doubt—the statutory aggravator that makes death a possible
sentence.”).


                                         - 33 -
in the absence of a unanimous jury finding of an aggravating circumstance.

Florida is a clear outlier.8

       In 
Steele, 921 So. 2d at 548-49
, this Court urged the Legislature to

reexamine Florida’s capital sentencing statute in light of Ring and Florida’s outlier

status. I have also previously echoed this suggestion, encouraging the Legislature

to bring Florida “closer to the mainstream of capital sentencing states in regard to

jury findings.” 
Coday, 946 So. 2d at 1025
(Pariente, J., concurring in part and

dissenting in part).

       Although those calls for legislative action have arisen primarily due to Ring

and Sixth Amendment concerns, the Eighth Amendment ramifications of Florida’s

outlier status are also clear. For example, two Justices on the United States

Supreme Court have recently expressed “deep concerns” about the federal

constitutionality of Alabama’s death penalty statute in light of its outlier status on

the issue of jury overrides. See Woodward v. Alabama, 
134 S. Ct. 405
, 405 (2013)

(Sotomayor, J., with whom Justice Breyer joins as to Parts I and II, dissenting from

denial of certiorari).




      8. In addition to Florida’s outlier status as the only state in the country that
allows the death penalty to be imposed without a unanimous jury finding of an
aggravating circumstance, Florida is also one of the only states to permit the jury to
recommend death by a less than unanimous vote.


                                         - 34 -
      The United States Supreme Court has repeatedly explained that “death is

different” from every other form of punishment. See, e.g., 
Ring, 536 U.S. at 605
-

06; Harmelin v. Michigan, 
501 U.S. 957
, 994 (1991); Gardner v. Florida, 
430 U.S. 349
, 357 (1977). The Supreme Court has also emphasized the “heightened

reliability demanded by the Eighth Amendment in the determination whether the

death penalty is appropriate in a particular case.” Sumner v. Shuman, 
483 U.S. 66
,

72 (1987). As this Court has pointed out, “[m]any courts and scholars have

recognized the value of unanimous verdicts,” particularly given that the

“reliability” of death sentences “depends on adhering to guided procedures that

promote a reasoned judgment by the trier of fact.” 
Steele, 921 So. 2d at 549
(quoting State v. Daniels, 
542 A.2d 306
, 315 (Conn. 1988)).

      While questions of public policy regarding Florida’s capital sentencing

statute are left to the Legislature, the Sixth and Eighth Amendment implications of

Florida’s outlier status on the lack of jury unanimity, which threaten to unravel our

entire death penalty scheme, should be of serious concern. I once again urge the

Legislature, as has former Justice Cantero, to revisit this issue in Florida’s capital

sentencing scheme.

      For all these reasons, I dissent from the majority’s affirmance of Hurst’s

death sentence because there is no unanimous finding by the jury that any of the

applicable aggravators apply. The absence of juror unanimity in the fact-finding


                                         - 35 -
necessary to impose the death penalty remains, in my view, an independent

violation of Florida’s constitutional right to trial by jury.

LABARGA and PERRY, JJ., concur.


An Appeal from the Circuit Court in and for Escambia County,
     Linda Lee Nobles, Judge - Case No. 1998-CF-001795-A

Nancy Ann Daniels, Public Defender, and David A. Davis and William Carl
McLain, Assistant Public Defenders, Tallahassee, Florida,

      for Appellant

Pamela Jo Bondi, Attorney General, and Stephen Richard White, Assistant
Attorney General, Tallahassee, Florida,

      for Appellee




                                          - 36 -

Source:  CourtListener

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