Leroy POOLER, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Florida, Appellee.
Supreme Court of Florida.
*1376 Michael D. Lebedeker, West Palm Beach, for Appellant.
Robert A. Butterworth, Attorney General, and Sara D. Baggett, Assistant Attorney General, West Palm Beach, for Appellee.
PER CURIAM.
We have on appeal the judgment and sentence of the trial court imposing the death penalty upon Leroy Pooler. We have jurisdiction. Art. V, § 3(b)(1), Fla. Const.
*1377 Leroy Pooler was convicted of first-degree murder for the shooting death of his ex-girlfriend, Kim Wright Brown. He also was convicted of burglary and attempted first-degree murder with a firearm. The facts supporting these convictions are as follows. On January 28, 1995, Carolyn Glass, a longtime acquaintance of Kim Brown, told her that Pooler had said he was going to kill her because if he could not have her, no one else would. (Evidence showed that Kim Brown had begun seeing another man.) Two days later, Pooler knocked on the front door of the apartment where Kim and her younger brother, Alvonza Colson, lived with their mother. Seeing Pooler through the door window, Kim told him that she did not want to see him anymore. Alvonza opened the door halfway and asked Pooler what he wanted but would not let him in. When Pooler brandished a gun, Alvonza let go of the door and tried to run out the door, but he was shot in the back by Pooler. Pooler pulled Alvonza back into the apartment by his leg. Kim begged Pooler not to kill her brother or her and began vomiting into her hands. She suggested they take Alvonza to the hospital. Pooler originally agreed but then told Alvonza to stay and call himself an ambulance while Pooler left with Kim. However, rather than follow Pooler out the door, Kim shut and locked it behind him. Alvonza told Kim to run out the back door for her life while he stayed in the apartment to call for an ambulance. When he discovered that the telephone wires had been cut, he started for the back door, just as Pooler was breaking in through the front entrance.
Pooler first found Alvonza, who was hiding in an area near the back door, but when he heard Kim yelling for help, he left Alvonza and continued after Kim. When he eventually caught up with her, he struck her in the head with his gun, causing it to discharge. In front of numerous witnesses, he pulled her toward his car as she screamed and begged him not to kill her. When she fought against going in the car, Pooler pulled her back toward the apartment building and shot her several times, pausing once to say, "You want some more?" Kim had been shot a total of five times, including once in the head. Pooler then got into his car and drove away.
The jury recommended death by a vote of nine to three. The trial court found the following aggravators: (1) that the defendant had a prior violent felony conviction (contemporaneous attempted first-degree murder of Alvonza); (2) that the murder was committed during the commission of a burglary; and (3) that the murder was heinous, atrocious, or[1] cruel. The trial court found as statutory mitigation that the crime was committed while Pooler was under the influence of extreme mental or emotional disturbance, but gave that finding little weight. The court found the following proposed statutory mitigators had not been established: (1) the defendant's capacity to appreciate the criminality of his conduct or to conform his conduct to the requirements of the law was substantially impaired; (2) the defendant acted under extreme duress or under the substantial domination of another person; and (3) the defendant's age (he was 47).
As nonstatutory mitigation, the trial court found the defendant's honorable service in the military and good employment record, as well as the fact that he was a good parent, had done specific good deeds, possessed certain good characteristics, and could be sentenced to life without parole or consecutive life sentences. The only mitigator given considerable weight was Pooler's honorable military service; the others were given some to little weight. The trial court expressly rejected as unestablished nonstatutory mitigation that Pooler has a good jail record and an ability to adapt to prison life; that he has low normal intelligence; that he has mental health problems; that he is rehabilitable; that the homicide was the result of a heated domestic dispute; and that he is unlikely to endanger others and will adapt well to prison. Concluding that each of the three aggravators standing alone would outweigh the mitigating evidence, the court sentenced Pooler to death.
Pooler raises fifteen issues in this appeal. As his first argument, he contends that the prosecutor made an improper comment *1378 during voir dire about the presumption of innocence afforded criminal defendants when he said to a prospective juror:
Now, as we sit here, Mr. Pooler is presumed to be innocent.... That doesn't mean that he is innocent, but you have to presume that.
We disagree with Pooler's characterization of the comment. The prosecutor's statement was not an improper statement of the law, nor did it constitute an expression of the prosecutor's personal belief in Pooler's guilt.
Second, Pooler claims that the trial court erred in failing to instruct the jury on attempted first-degree felony murder in the count charging him with attempted first-degree murder with a firearm. Acknowledging that this Court in State v. Gray,
Third, Pooler argues that the trial court erred in finding that the murder of Kim Brown was heinous, atrocious, or cruel (HAC). He relies on Lewis v. State,
Pooler's fourth claim is that the trial court erred in finding that the prior violent felony aggravator had been established where the underlying felony (in this case, the attempted murder of Alvonza Colson) was committed contemporaneously with the capital *1379 felony. However, as Pooler concedes, we have rejected this argument in the past. Contemporaneous convictions prior to sentencing can qualify as previous convictions of violent felony and may be used as aggravating factors in cases where the contemporaneous crimes were committed upon separate victims. E.g., Windom v. State,
Fifth, Pooler challenges the trial court's finding that he had not established that his capacity to appreciate the criminality of his conduct or to conform his conduct to the requirements of the law was substantially impaired.[2] Our review of the record reveals that it contains competent substantial evidence to support the trial court's rejection of this mitigating circumstance. See Nibert v. State,
Sixth, Pooler asserts that the trial court erred in finding that Pooler had failed to establish that he was under extreme duress or under the substantial domination of another person at the time the murder was committed.[3] In Toole v. State,
The next five claims challenge the trial court's rejection of various nonstatutory mitigators requested by Pooler. In rejecting Pooler's proposed good jail record and demonstrated ability to adapt to prison life, the trial court referred solely to the testimony of Deputy Sheriff Arthur Rack, a classification officer at the Palm Beach County Jail where Pooler was housed prior to and during his trial. Specifically, the trial court relied on Rack's testimony that Pooler's classification file for that year contained a single disciplinary report for threatening another inmate. While the decision as to whether a particular mitigating circumstance is established lies with the judge, there must be competent substantial evidence to support that determination. Stano v. State,
Pooler also takes issue with the trial court's rejection of his low-normal intelligence as nonstatutory mitigation. The trial court found that this was not established as mitigation because although his I.Q. tested at 80, Pooler's functional level was higher, as evidenced by his education, military service, and employment record. We find no abuse of discretion in the trial court's ruling.
The trial court further found that Pooler had not established that the murder was the result of a heated domestic dispute. Again, we find no abuse of discretion. Although the evidence established that Pooler had had a romantic relationship with Kim Brown, that relationship had ended. Nor was there any evidence the two had been in the middle of a heated dispute at the time of the murder. In any event, the trial court took into account Pooler's subjective view of his relationship with the victim when finding that Pooler was under the influence of extreme mental or emotional disturbance at the time of the murder.
Issue twelve, in which Pooler claims a denial of due process because the record on appeal did not contain the PSI report relied upon by the trial court in rejecting nonstatutory mitigation, is now moot because the record has since been supplemented.
The thirteenth issue we address is Pooler's claim that the trial court erred in departing from the sentencing guidelines for the offenses of attempted first-degree murder with a firearm and burglary of a dwelling while armed without issuing a written contemporaneous departure order. In Padilla v. State,
Fourteenth, Pooler challenges the constitutionality of Florida's death penalty on numerous grounds. Specifically, he argues that the death penalty in Florida, both facially and as applied, is unconstitutional for the following reasons: (1) the standard jury instruction for the felony murder aggravator fails to limit the application of the death penalty and creates a presumption of death for felony murders; (2) permitting the jury to find aggravators by majority vote violates article I, sections 9, 16, and 17 of the Florida Constitution and the Fifth, Sixth, Eighth, and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution; (3) the lack of judicial standards for ensuring competent capital defense representation in cases where the attorney is court-appointed leads to uneven application of the law; (4) the ambiguous role of the trial judge in a capital case (who on the one hand is largely bound by the jury's recommendation but on the other is supposed to be the ultimate sentencer) permits circumvention of constitutional errors because special verdicts are not required where multiple homicide theories are submitted to the jury and because the jury is not required to reveal what aggravating and mitigating circumstances were found; (5) the trial judge was selected by a racially discriminatory *1381 system (none of Broward County's forty-three circuit judges is black, despite a 13.5% representation in the county's population); (6) appellate review is no longer heightened; (7) the aggravating statutory factors are not interpreted in accordance with the rule of lenity but instead are very broadly interpreted against the defendant; (8) the contemporaneous objection rule institutionalizes disparate application of the law in capital sentencing; (9) the lack of special verdicts makes it impossible for a trial court to know what aggravating and mitigating circumstances the jury found; and (10) electrocution is cruel and unusual punishment in light of evolving standards of decency and the availability of less cruel but equally effective methods of execution. We have previously rejected most of these claims as meritless. See Hunter v. State,
Finally, we address Pooler's claim that the death sentence is disproportionate in this case, where the evidence showed that he and the victim had a domestic relationship. We disagree. We have never approved a per se "domestic dispute" exception to the imposition of the death penalty. As we explained in Spencer v. State,
The convictions and sentences of Leroy Pooler are hereby affirmed.
It is so ordered.
*1382 OVERTON, GRIMES, HARDING and WELLS, JJ., concur.
SHAW, J., concurs as to conviction, and concurs in result only as to sentence.
ANSTEAD, J., concurs in part and dissents in part with an opinion in which KOGAN, C.J., concurs.
ANSTEAD, Justice, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
I differ only with the majority's resolution of the issue of proportionality. On that issue, I would hold that our decision in a case involving virtually identical facts, Farinas v. State,
In Farinas, the defendant confronted his former girlfriend in a setting similar to that involved herein:
On November 25, 1985, the victim and her sister drove their father to work. Farinas was waiting outside the home and followed the car. Farinas continued to follow the car after the two women dropped their father off at work and tried several times to force the victim's car off the road, finally succeeding in stopping her vehicle. Farinas then approached the victim's car and expressed anger at the victim for reporting to the police that he was harrassing her and her family.
When the victim's sister urged her to drive away, Farinas leaned into the vehicle and removed the keys from the ignition, ordered the victim out of the vehicle, and guided her by the arm to his car. After returning the keys to the victim's sister, Farinas drove away with the victim in his car despite the pleas of the victim and her sister. When Farinas stopped the car at a stoplight near the Palmetto Expressway, the victim jumped out of the car and ran, screaming and waving her arms for help. Farinas also jumped from the car and fired a shot from his pistol which hit the victim in the lower middle back. According to the medical examiner, this injury caused instant paralysis from the waist down. Farinas then approached the victim as she lay face down and, after unjamming his gun three times, fired two shots into the back of her head.
....
... Evidence introduced at trial established that Farinas ignored the victim's pleas for mercy. The fact that the victim jumped from the car and ran from Farinas while screaming for help indicates that the victim was in frenzied fear for her life. As noted by the trial court, after Farinas paralyzed the victim from the waist down with a gunshot through her spine, he approached her and fired two shots into the back of her head after unjamming the gun three times. The victim was fully conscious during the time he unjammed the gun and was aware of her impending demise from the defendant.
Id. at 427-31. Despite these circumstances, this Court concluded that the death penalty should not be imposed because the defendant acted under the influence of extreme mental or emotional disturbance:
During the two-month period after the victim moved out of Farinas' home, he continuously called or came to the home of the victim's parents where she was living and would become very upset when not allowed to speak with the victim. He was obsessed with the idea of having the victim return to live with him and was intensely jealous, suspecting that the victim was becoming romantically involved with another man. See Kampff v. State,371 So.2d 1007 (Fla. 1979). We find it significant, also, that the record reflects that the murder was the result of a heated, domestic confrontation. Wilson v. State,493 So.2d 1019 (Fla.1986). Therefore, although we sustain the conviction for the first-degree murder of Elsidia Landin and recognize that the trial court properly found two aggravating circumstances to be applicable, we conclude that the death sentence is not proportionately warranted in this case. Wilson; Ross v. State,474 So.2d 1170 (Fla.1985).
Id. at 431. In addition to murder, Farinas was also convicted and sentenced for two other contemporary violent felonies arising from the same incident: armed burglary and armed kidnapping, just as Pooler has been *1383 convicted of the wounding of the victim's brother here.
Pooler cites to the trial court's refusal to follow our holding in Farinas that the circumstance of extreme emotional disturbance is entitled to significant weight. Instead, he notes that the trial court refused to consider the broken personal relationship between the parties on the basis that "women are entitled to the same protection of the law as anyone else." It is apparent that the trial court, in an apparent effort to vindicate women's rights by imposing the death penalty on Pooler, has misconstrued our prior decisions concerning the proper consideration of extreme emotional disturbance in determining an appropriate penalty. See, e.g., Farinas.
This Court has emphatically held that there is no "domestic relations" exception to the death penalty. See Spencer v. State,
I do not suggest that there is an "unrequited love" exception to the death penalty. Nonetheless, this Court consistently has accepted as substantial mitigation the inflamed passions and intense emotions of such situations. In almost every other case where a death sentence arose from a lovers' quarrel or domestic dispute, this Court has found cause to reverse the death sentence, regardless of the number of aggravating circumstances found, the brutality involved, the level of premeditation, or the jury recommendation. See Blakely v. State,561 So.2d 560 (Fla.1990) (death penalty disproportional despite finding of heinous, atrocious, or cruel, and cold, calculated, and premeditated); Amoros v. State,531 So.2d 1256 , 1261 (Fla.1988); Garron v. State,528 So.2d 353 , 361 (Fla.1988); Fead v. State,512 So.2d 176 , 179 (Fla.1987), receded from on other grounds, Pentecost v. State,545 So.2d 861 , 863 n. 3 (Fla.1989); Irizarry v. State,496 So.2d 822 , 825-26 (Fla.1986); Wilson v. State,493 So.2d 1019 , 1023 (Fla.1986); Ross v. State,474 So.2d 1170 , 1174 (Fla.1985); Herzog v. State,439 So.2d 1372 , 1381 (Fla.1983); Blair v. State,406 So.2d 1103 , 1109 (Fla. 1981); Phippen v. State,389 So.2d 991 (Fla.1980); Kampff v. State,371 So.2d 1007 (Fla.1979); Chambers v. State,339 So.2d 204 (Fla.1976); Halliwell v. State,323 So.2d 557 (Fla.1975); Tedder v. State,322 So.2d 908 (Fla.1975); cf. Hamilton v. State,547 So.2d 630 (Fla.1989) (aggravating circumstances and judgment of guilt reversed, remanded for new trial). The Court has even reversed death sentences where, as in Porter's case, the defendant murdered two people during the same violent outburst. See Garron; Wilson; Phippen; cf. Hamilton. Generally when we have affirmed death sentences in analogous situations, we have noted that the defendants had prior, unrelated convictions of violent felonies. See Hudson v. State,538 So.2d 829 (Fla.) (defendant was on community control for sexual battery when he committed the murder), cert. denied,493 U.S. 875 ,110 S.Ct. 212 ,107 L.Ed.2d 165 (1989); Lemon v. State,456 So.2d 885 (Fla.1984) (defendant committed murder shortly after serving prison sentence for assault with intent to commit first-degree murder), cert. denied,469 U.S. 1230 ,105 S.Ct. 1233 ,84 L.Ed.2d 370 (1985); Williams v. State,437 So.2d 133 (Fla.1983) (defendant had been convicted of aggravated assault, and was on parole for possession of firearm by a convicted felon, when he committed the murder), cert. denied,466 U.S. 909 ,104 S.Ct. 1690 ,80 L.Ed.2d 164 (1984); King v. State,436 So.2d 50 (Fla.1983) (defendant had a prior conviction of manslaughter for killing a woman with an axe), cert. denied,466 U.S. 909 ,104 S.Ct. 1690 ,80 L.Ed.2d 163 (1984). There is no finding that Porter had any *1384 prior, unrelated violent felony convictions before this case arose.
Porter v. State,
This does not mean that spouses, children, siblings, parents or intimate friends are entitled to less protection of the law. It does mean, however, that the extreme mental or emotional breakdowns that often occur in such relationships cannot be ignored or given no weight in determining whether the crime is among the worst of the worst and "the most aggravated and the least mitigated" for which the death penalty is reserved. State v. Dixon,
As noted above, this case is almost identical to Farinas. Indeed, the only significant difference in the two cases is that there was no nonstatutory mitigation found in Farinas, while there is extensive nonstatutory mitigation present here. This mitigation is briefly described by the majority:
As nonstatutory mitigation, the trial court found the defendant's honorable service in the military and good employment record, as well as the fact that he was a good parent, had done specific good deeds, possessed certain good characteristics, and could be sentenced to life without parole or consecutive life sentences. The only mitigator given considerable weight was Pooler's honorable military service; the others were given some to little weight. The trial court expressly rejected as unestablished nonstatutory mitigation that Pooler has a good jail record and an ability to adapt to prison life; that he has low normal intelligence; that he has mental health problems; that he is rehabilitable; that the homicide was the result of a heated domestic dispute; and that he is unlikely to endanger others and will adapt well to prison.
Majority op. at 1377. Hence, Pooler's plea for a life sentence is supported not only by our prior treatment of similar cases like Farinas, but also by the presence of substantial mitigation not found in Farinas.
KOGAN, C.J., concurs.
NOTES
Notes
[1] The sentencing order uses the conjunction "and."
[2] § 921.141(6)(f), Fla. Stat. (1995).
[3] § 921.141(6)(e), Fla. Stat. (1995).
[4] The report was not admitted into evidence.
[5] Although the CCP aggravator was not found in this case, the evidence does not even suggest that Kim Brown was killed during a heated domestic dispute or in a sudden fit of rage. To the contrary, Pooler had previously announced to a mutual acquaintance his intention to kill Kim Brown. There was no evidence that there had been any exchange of words between Pooler and Kim Brown on the day of the murder.
[6] This case is clearly distinguishable from Farinas v. State,
