Eddie Hester Jr. was convicted of several crimes, all stemming from two Walmart robberies. A jury found him guilty of armed robbery, false imprisonment, kidnapping with a firearm, and-in a separate case-another count of armed robbery. The court sentenced him to consecutive terms based on the 10/20/Life law. See § 775.087, Fla. Stat. Hester appealed in both cases, and this court affirmed without opinion in both cases. See Hester v. State ,
Hester later filed a rule 3.800(a) motion, contending that consecutive minimum-mandatory sentences for certain of the counts were illegal because the offenses arose from a single criminal episode in which he did not fire a gun. See Williams v. State ,
The question, then, is whether Walton II , on which Hester now relies, applies retroactively. In Osei v. State , this court held that Williams v. State did not
We reach this conclusion even though Hester's motion was under rule 3.800(a), which allows correction of an illegal sentence "at any time," and even though the statute's meaning has never changed. When the Florida Supreme Court interprets a statute (as it did in Walton II ), it explains not just what the statute means now, but also what the statute has always meant. Cf. Rivers v. Roadway Exp., Inc. ,
More recently, this court has explained that "Rule 3.800(a) does not provide a substitute for retroactivity analysis." King v. State ,
Hester's sentence was lawful when issued. The relevant change in law was not
AFFIRMED .
Lewis and M.K. Thomas, JJ., concur.
