Dеitrick Johnson was convicted of eight counts of robbery with a firearm and sentenced to fifty years of imprisonment on each count, to be served concurrently. We affirm on all issues rаised by the defendant, but write to address his arguments that the trial court erred by: 1) admitting evidence of a collateral robbery at the defendant’s trial, 2) refusing to sever the three robberies for whiсh the defendant was tried, and 3) admitting the defendant’s cell phone records, even though the state failed to comply with the requirements of section 934.23, Florida Statutes (2003).
Several chain drugstores located in Bro-ward County were robbed by armed men during the fall of 2007. The defendant and a co-defendant were arrested and charged with four of these robberies. Three of the robberies occurred on October 8, 2007. The other occurred on September 4, 2007. During a pre-trial motion in limine, the state presented the following evidence regarding the four robberiеs:
(1) All the robberies took place within a month of each other;
(2) All the robberies occurred at chain drugstores, mostly at CVS;
(3) All the robberies took place between the hours of three and six o’clock in the morning;
(4) All the drugstores were located in Broward County;
(5) All the robberies involved two male perpetrators;
(6) In each robbery, the perpetrators wore masks;
(7) In each robbery, the perpetrators entered the store holding guns;
(8) In each robbery, the perpetrators wore dark clothing;
(9) In each robbery, the perpetrators told the drugstore employees to lay on the ground;
(10) In each robbery, one perpetrator stayed in the front of the store while the other immediately made his way into the back;
(11) In each robbery, the perpetratоrs were in and out of the drugstore in a short period of time;
(12) In each robbery, the defendants’ cell phones were used to place calls to each other just before and after the robberies;
(13) In each robbery, the defendants’ cell phones were used at or near the location of the robberies.
(14) In most of the robberies, the perpetrators took or disabled the employees’ cell phones.
After hearing this evidence, the trial court held that the September 4, 2007 robbery was admissible collateral crime evidence because it was relevant regarding the issues of modus operandi and identity. The trial court also held that the three October 8, 2007 robbery counts could be tried together as one crime spree and denied the defendant’s motion to sever these offenses. Finally, the trial court ruled that the defendant’s cell phone records, which only included his historical cell site information, could be admitted at trial. The case proceeded to trial, and a jury found the defendant guilty on all charges.
The first two issues on appeal concern the propriety of admitting evidence of the September robbery at the defendant’s trial for the October robberies. Similar crime evidence, also known as Williams
We reject the defendant’s contention that the September robbery was not admissible because the state did not present clear and convincing evidence that the defendant committed it. Cell phone records placed the defendant at the drugstore around the time оf the robbery. Surveillance video of the robbery showed that one of the suspects was wearing a camouflage hat, and a camouflage hat was found in the parking lot of the drugstore shortly after the robbery occurred. The defendant’s DNA was found on the hat. This was clear and convincing evidence that the de
Based on the similarities between the robberies, we аlso reject the defendant’s argument that the September robbery was not sufficiently similar to the October robberies.
We also find no error in the trial court’s denial of the defendant’s motion to sever the three charged robbery offenses. A trial court’s ruling on a motion for severanсe is reviewed for an abuse of discretion. Williams v. State,
Crossley v. State,
Unlike Crossley, in this case each robbery was committed at a similar location and in a similar way. Therе was virtually no delay between the robberies; the first occurred within three hours of the last. Furthermore, the robberies were directly
The cell phone evidence mentioned above is the subject of the defendant’s next рoint on appeal. The defendant argues that the trial court committed fundamental error in admitting phone records, retrieved without a warrant, which showed that the time and location where the defendant and a co-defendant made and received cell phone calls corresponded with the time and location of the robberies. Citing privacy сoncerns and Fourth Amendment protection, the defendant urges us to hold that this information, known as historical cell phone site information, should have been suppressed. However, thе defendant acknowledges that we addressed this issue in Mitchell v. State,
Finally, we find no merit in the defendant’s argument that the trial court еrred in giving a jury instruction on principals and in denying the defendant’s motion for judgment of acquittal on all counts.
Accordingly, we affirm the judgment and sentence.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Williams v. State,
. The trial court also held that the prior uncharged robbery was admissible becausе it was inextricably intertwined with the charged robberies. Although we disagree with the trial court’s ruling on this issue, we affirm because evidence of the prior uncharged robbery was permissible Williams rule evidence. See Curtis v. State,
