Bryan LEWIS, Appellant,
v.
The STATE of Florida, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Third District.
*206 Bennett H. Brummer, Public Defender and Robert Kalter, Assistant Public Defender, for appellant.
Robert A. Butterworth, Attorney General and Terri Leon-Benner, Assistant Attorney General, for appellee.
Before GERSTEN, SHEVIN and SORONDO, JJ.
SORONDO, Judge.
Bryan Lewis, defendant, appeals from a judgment of conviction and sentence for the crimes of armed robbery and armed carjacking. The state and the defendant agree that the follоwing facts accurately describe the events which lead to the defendant's arrest and conviction:
On March 1, 1996, the victim in this case went to an ATM machine and withdrew approximately fifty dollars. As he returned to his car a man approached him, identified himself as a police officer and accused him of selling drugs. The man told him to lie on the ground and surrender his money. As the robber took thе money, the victim saw a second man approach. The victim testified that the second man was holding something that appeared to be a gun. After the first man stole his money the two men stolе his car and fled the scene.
Officer Santiago of the Metro Dade Police Department responded to the scene. The victim described the man that robbed him as between 20-25 years, аpproximately six feet tall and weighing approximately 200 pounds. He also described the car that was taken in the robbery. Officer Santiago immediately called a robbery detectivе and proceeded to look for the victim's vehicle. Santiago located the car and contacted the lead detective in the case. After processing the car and discovering no prints it was returned to the victim.
Three days after the robbery, the victim discovered a wallet under the front seat of his car. He opened the wallet and saw two photograрhs which resembled the individual who had robbed him. He contacted the police and told them that the individual in the photograph looked like the person that had robbed him. The police seizеd the wallet, arrested defendant and charged him with armed robbery and armed carjacking. The arresting officer testified that on the day defendant was arrested he was thirty-three years old, appeared to be approximately six feet three inches tall and weighed approximately 245 pounds.
At the trial, the victim testified that at a preliminary hearing he was unable to identify the dеfendant as being the individual who robbed him. He was also unable to make an in-court identification of the defendant at trial.
The jury found the defendant guilty of armed robbery with a weapon and armed *207 carjacking with a weapon. The court sentenced the defendant to fifteen years in state prison as to both counts and ordered the sentences to run concurrent.
The defendant's sоle argument on appeal is that the trial judge erred in denying his motions for mistrial based on improper arguments made by the prosecutor during closing argument. He argues that these improper arguments denied him a fair trial. We disagree and affirm.
A review of the prosecutor's closing argument is extremely disturbing. During his summation the prosecutor, Harvey Hyman, improperly, and repeatedly, vouched for and bolstered the testimony of the victim as follows:
And, he was honest. He didn't exaggerate. He didn't lie. He didn't go in and say, "Yeah, that's the guy," because, you know, he's a nice kid. That's just the type of person he is. As a matter of fact, even when he was describing the gun, he said, "look, it was used in a manner that I believed it was a gun." But he's not going to come out and say, yeah, man, a hundred percent it's a gun, beсause that's the type of person he is.
Don't let that confuse you. Don't release him into society. Don't let him walk simply because [the victim] is super honest or super accurate.
(Emphasis added). The prosecutor later continued his improper vouching:
Don't reward him because Peter is a super honest guy and would not come in here and exaggerate and would not come in here and lie.
(Emphasis added). The law is clear that this type of vouching is completely improper. Cisneros v. State,
Not satisfied with merely vouching for, and bolstering his witness' testimony, the prosecutor then attaсked the defense:
MR. HYMAN: You know, I've prosecuted in this courthouse about four years, tried about sixty cases
MS. MARTIN: I'm going to object.
THE COURT: Sustained.
MR. HYMAN: You see different types of defenses. It is my job to present the evidence and it is their jоb to question the evidence. But you know, the manner with which they're questioning it, there's no other term for it, it's just lame.
This comment constituted an impermissible attack on defense counsel. See Riley v. State,
Now I got to admit I got a little bit on a rant and I sort of got a littleI stepped over the bound a little when I talked about sixty cases or when I called it lame, that's it, when I called their defense lame. The standard is whether or not Your Honor feels that that comment I made was so outrageous that it tainted the finding оf guilt and I don't think that it was. Your honor is going to say that it's so outrageous that it shifted the trial. You have to remember, in my opinion, the actual evidence introduced in trial was fairly overwhelming in terms of guilt.
The prosecutor continued:
Now wherе it talks about my job to present the evidence and their job to question and then I argue about their manner of questioning, I agree, that was improper argument.
He then argued that State v. Benton,
We remind counsel that prosecutors, like all lawyers, have ethicаl responsibilities. Most significant among these is a duty to seek justice. See Kirk v. State,
Turning now to an analysis of the impact of the improper comments in this case, in Lopez v. State,
The person responsible for this robbery, these weren't valuable to them. It didn't matter to them whether or not they left these behind. What mattered is they found somebody else to put this robbery on. Why would Mr. Lewis leave this behind? This is what he needs.
This was the only explanаtion offered to explain the presence of the defendant's wallet in the victim's car. As we observed above, there was absolutely no evidence to support this contention. Dеspite the impropriety of the prosecutor's comments, on these facts we do not believe the Lopez test for granting a new trial was satisfied.
Affirmed.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Lest the prosecutor in this case misread this opinion as he did Benton, we note that this is his seсond transgression in this area. Although the law in the area of improper prosecutorial comment is unlikely to change in the near future, a series of violations by the same individual, evincing a total disregard for the decisions of this Court, may ultimately require a referral to the Florida Bar for disciplinary measures.
