Keona MURRAY, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Florida, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Second District.
*452 James Marion Moorman, Public Defender, and James C. Banks, Special Assistant Public Defender, Bartow, for Appellant.
Charles J. Crist, Jr., Attorney General, Tallahassee, and John M. Klawikofsky, Assistant Attorney General, Tampa, for Appellee.
CANADY, Judge.
Keona Murray, who was convicted of one count of armed burglary, one count of armed robbery, and one count of armed carjacking, appeals the armed robbery conviction and the armed carjacking conviction. Murray also appeals the three consecutive ten-year minimum mandatory sentences imposed for the offenses pursuant to section 775.087, Florida Statutes (2001) commonly known as the 10/20/life statute. We conclude that there is no basis for reversing the appealed convictions but that the minimum mandatory sentences for the armed robbery offense and the armed burglary offense should be served concurrently because those offenses were committed in a single criminal episode.
Murray and Shameka Dickerson participated in an armed burglary, an armed robbery, and an attempted robbery of the tenant and other occupants of an apartment. Murray and Dickerson, who believed marijuana was being sold in the apartment, gained entry by claiming they wished to buy "weed." Once in the apartment, they displayed weapons, ordered the occupants to lie on the floor, and stole property from some of the occupants, while two occupants managed to escape the apartment without any property being taken from them. After leaving the apartment and finding that their getaway car was not available as planned, Murray and Dickerson approached a man who was standing outside the apartment and had not been among the occupants of the apartment. Murray and her companion demanded and obtained the man's car keys at gunpoint and drove away in his vehicle.
Murray contends that the trial court erred in imposing three consecutive rather than concurrent ten-year sentences for the armed burglary (count I), the armed robbery (count II) in the apartment, and the armed carjacking (count IV) committed after Murray left the apartment. Murray does not challenge her conviction for the attempted robbery in the apartment or the *453 probation imposed for that offense. Nor does Murray challenge the sentence imposed for the armed burglary.
"It is well-settled that sentences imposed under a sentencing enhancement statute may not run consecutively if the offenses occurred during a single criminal episode." Staley v. State,
"In order to determine whether offenses occurred during a single criminal episode, courts look to whether there are multiple victims, whether the offenses occurred in multiple locations, and whether there has been a `temporal break' between offenses." Staley,
A burglary of a dwelling followed by a robbery within that dwelling are ordinarily considered to be offenses that arose from a single criminal episode. See Staley,
The armed carjacking offense (count IV) committed by Murray after her departure from the apartment is a different *454 matter. There was a significant separation both in time and location between the offenses committed in the apartment and the offense committed outside the apartment. And the victim of the carjacking had not been a victim of the offenses within the apartment. The carjacking thus was not part of the same criminal episode as the offenses committed in the apartment. Accordingly, imposition of a consecutive sentence for the carjacking was appropriate. See Spivey v. State,
All the convictions are affirmed; the sentence for the armed carjacking (count IV) is affirmed as imposed consecutively to the other sentences; the consecutive sentence for the armed robbery offense (count II) is vacated; and the case is remanded with instructions that the sentence for the armed robbery offense (count II) be reimposed to run concurrently with the sentence for the armed burglary offense (count I).
Convictions affirmed; sentences affirmed in part and vacated in part; case remanded for resentencing.
DAVIS and SILBERMAN, JJ., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] We explicitly based our holding in Sousa,
