Richard Kevin Kline v. State of Florida , 223 So. 3d 482 ( 2017 )


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  •                                       IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL
    FIRST DISTRICT, STATE OF FLORIDA
    RICHARD KEVIN KLINE,                  NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO
    FILE MOTION FOR REHEARING AND
    Appellant,                      DISPOSITION THEREOF IF FILED
    v.                                    CASE NO. 1D16-4338
    STATE OF FLORIDA,
    Appellee.
    _____________________________/
    Opinion filed August 10, 2017.
    An appeal from the Circuit Court for Escambia County.
    Scott Duncan, Judge.
    Andy Thomas, Public Defender, Greg Caracci, Assistant Public Defender,
    Tallahassee, for Appellant.
    Pamela Jo Bondi, Attorney General, Jason W. Rodriguez, Assistant Attorney
    General, Tallahassee, for Appellee.
    JAY, J.
    Appellant was adjudged guilty and sentenced to life imprisonment for the
    second-degree murder of his wife. On appeal, he argues that the trial court erred in
    denying his motion for judgment of acquittal because the evidence presented by the
    State was wholly circumstantial and not inconsistent with his reasonable hypothesis
    of innocence. Our standard of review is de novo. Pagan v. State, 
    830 So. 2d 792
    , 803
    (Fla. 2002). We affirm Appellant’s judgment and sentence as being supported by
    competent substantial evidence, 
    id., but write
    to explain why we find this case to be
    distinguishable from the Florida Supreme Court’s recent application of the
    circumstantial evidence rule in Wright v. State, 42 Fla. L. Weekly S587 (Fla. May
    11, 2017).
    Both this case and Wright involved a murdered victim who shared a personal
    relationship with the defendant, with no definitive DNA or other physical evidence
    that directly connected either defendant to the crime scene—classic examples of the
    State’s case being based entirely on circumstantial evidence. In Wright, the supreme
    court reiterated the familiar tenet that “where . . . the evidence of guilt is wholly
    circumstantial, ‘not only must the evidence be sufficient to establish each element
    of the offense,’ it must also ‘be inconsistent with any reasonable hypothesis of
    innocence proposed by the defendant.’” 42 Fla. L. Weekly at S590 (quoting
    Twilegar v. State, 
    42 So. 3d 177
    , 188 (Fla. 2010)). The supreme court continued:
    “Th[is] special standard requires that the circumstances lead to a reasonable and
    moral certainty that the accused and no one else committed the offense charged. It
    is not sufficient that the facts create a strong probability of, and be consistent with,
    guilt. They must be inconsistent with innocence.” 
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks
    2
    omitted) (quoting Lindsey v. State, 
    14 So. 3d 211
    , 215 (Fla. 2009)). More
    importantly, the supreme court stressed that “suspicions alone cannot satisfy the
    State’s burden of proving guilt beyond a reasonable doubt,” rather, “it is the actual
    exclusion of the hypothesis of innocence which clothes circumstantial evidence with
    the force of proof sufficient to convict.” 
    Id. at S590-91
    (internal quotation marks
    omitted) (quoting Dausch v. State, 
    141 So. 3d 513
    , 518 (Fla. 2014) (quoting Ballard
    v. State, 
    923 So. 2d 475
    , 482 (Fla. 2006))).
    Applying these principles to the facts in Wright, the supreme court
    unanimously concluded that the trial court erred in denying Wright’s motion for a
    judgment of acquittal. However, applying this same analysis to the evidence in this
    case, our facts mandate a different conclusion.
    As to the defendant in Wright—who was immediately considered by the
    police to be the prime suspect—the supreme court remarked that “none of the
    evidence presented at trial directly tied Wright to the murders. Most of the State’s
    evidence was intended to show that Wright had a motive to commit the murders and
    that other potential suspects did not.” Wright, 42 Fla. L. Weekly at S591. That motive
    arose from a paternity action that the victim filed against Wright just prior to her
    death. But the evidence showed that the victim’s relationship with Wright had ended
    over a year before she was murdered and that the victim had not seen Wright during
    that extended period of time. Moreover, Wright’s alibi went unrebutted. He made no
    3
    inculpatory statements; there was no fingerprint, footprint, blood, fiber, pattern
    impression, or other physical evidence tying Wright to the crime scene; there was
    no “cell tower” evidence placing Wright in the vicinity of the crime scene; and, as
    mentioned earlier, the DNA evidence was “equivocal.” 
    Id. There were,
    however, multiple other players involved in the victim’s life at
    the time of her murder: she had had several lovers after her relationship with Wright
    ended (including one of the first police officers who responded to the murder scene);
    she frequently threw parties at, and sold drugs from, her home; and she had an ex-
    husband who used to beat her. Importantly, her adult daughter, with whom she had
    a volatile relationship, was said to have had a “$540,000 motive to kill”—i.e., to
    collect on the victim’s life insurance policies. 
    Id. Indeed, the
    evidence revealed that
    shortly after her mother’s death, the daughter called her mother’s place of
    employment to inquire whether she possessed any life insurance policies.
    Furthermore, it was learned during the investigation that the daughter and one
    of her boyfriends had been in the victim’s residence within days before the victim’s
    body was discovered, having gained access by a key the victim was known to have
    kept hidden outside. As the supreme court observed, “[t]he only evidence presented
    by the State to prove that Wright was the murderer is the fact that he had motive and
    opportunity. But while motive and opportunity might create a suspicion that Wright
    committed the murders, even deep suspicions are not sufficient to sustain the
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    convictions.” 
    Id. The court
    was especially concerned with the fact that for the jury
    to have arrived at a conclusion that Wright was guilty, it necessarily had to base its
    conviction on impermissibly stacked inferences. In the end, the supreme court
    declared:
    The evidence presented in this purely circumstantial case does
    not establish “a reasonable and moral certainty that the accused and no
    one else committed the offense[s] charged.” 
    Lindsey, 14 So. 3d at 215
    .
    . . . Although the facts established at trial support a strong suspicion of
    guilt, they are not inconsistent with innocence. We therefore conclude
    that the evidence is insufficient to sustain Wright’s convictions.
    42 Fla. L. Weekly at S592.
    Conversely, in this case, the State’s circumstantial evidence did not lack the
    causal connection the supreme court concluded was absent in Wright. Here, the
    evidence singularly pointed to Appellant as the only possible suspect. Appellant was
    married to and, at all times pertinent, was living with the victim. The State’s
    evidence, though circumstantial, connected Appellant to the crime scene through a
    firm timeline. It established that Appellant’s marriage was an unhappy one, full of
    tension and rage. It placed Appellant in the home on the morning of October 3,
    2014—the last day his wife was known to have been alive—as evidenced by the
    conclusion of an on-line Skype conversation between the victim and a third party at
    1:54 a.m. on October 3. By his own admission, Appellant drove away from his home
    at approximately 8:30 a.m. on the morning of October 3. He embarked on what
    proved to be a meandering road trip aimed, eventually, at a destination in Tennessee,
    5
    where he hoped to secure a job as a long-haul trucker out of Nashville. His car was
    found packed with a majority of his clothes, his golf clubs, a cooler filled with food
    and drink, a road map, and most of his wife’s and deceased mother-in-law’s jewelry.
    Prior to his journey, he cleaned out the parties’ bank accounts. Along the
    way, he stopped at a motel in Georgia to write a letter to his ex-wife (and recent
    lover), who was the mother of his only daughter. In the letter, he betrayed his
    declared love for the victim by describing her as an anchor dragging him down “to
    the bottom of the ocean,” his “nightmare,” his “path to hell,” and the one person who
    fomented hatred in him. He apologized for leaving his ex-wife and daughter “in a
    situation that was not going to be easy,” a statement that he later claimed proved his
    statements regarding his wife were not inculpatory, but evidence that he was
    suicidal. The letter arrived at the ex-wife’s home in a package containing gift cards
    for her and the daughter, as well as his financial documents and cell phone. However,
    the evidence showed that Appellant later purchased a new cell phone.
    According to his defense, while Appellant was harboring suicidal ideations
    in Georgia, his wife was brutally beaten and suffocated to death in their home by an
    unknown assailant, who locked the victim in the parties’ shared bedroom and then
    exited the house, locking the front door behind him. Appellant maintained that after
    procuring the job in Nashville, his plan was to commit suicide by means of a trucking
    6
    accident. There was no evidence of a forced entry into the home and no evidence
    that an unidentified intruder had been in the home.
    What is compelling about the foregoing narrative, in comparison to the
    evidence presented in Wright, is, first, the presence of a comprehensive chronology
    of Appellant’s perambulations during the period when the medical examiner
    estimated his wife was murdered. His wife’s body was discovered by law
    enforcement on October 8, 2014, after her son (by another marriage) called law
    enforcement to come to the home because he believed that something was wrong:
    He had not heard from his mother in six days; Appellant’s ex-wife had called him
    that very evening—the evening of Appellant’s daughter’s birthday—angry over the
    fact that Appellant had not called his daughter on her birthday as was his custom,
    and asking him to go to the house; the home was locked and dark; the parties’ car,
    that was always left at home for the wife to use, was missing; and access was gained
    to the inside of the home only by the son’s key, which he gave to the police officers.
    It was readily apparent that the wife’s body had been dragged into the bedroom, and
    it was noted that her computer was still running in the adjoining office—the same
    computer that she was last known to have used prior to Appellant’s leaving the
    residence. The State presented as a witness the man that the victim had been Skyping
    with in the early morning hours of October 3, 2014—and with whom she was having
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    an on-line affair—who became concerned when their conversation did not later
    resume and she did not respond to any of his ensuing messages.
    Equally significant, within the early days of the investigation, law enforcement
    officers were able to utilize GPS tracking made available from the automobile
    dealership through which the parties’ car was financed to specifically track each of
    the movements of the parties’ vehicle—from the day that Appellant left his home
    until the day that he was apprehended in Tennessee.
    The second striking distinction between this case and Wright is the
    implausibility of Appellant’s hypothesis of innocence and the evidence the State
    presented that contradicted Appellant’s hypothesis. The rule remains that “[u]nder
    the circumstantial evidence standard, when there is an inconsistency between the
    defendant’s theory of innocence and the evidence, when viewed in a light most
    favorable to the State, the question is one for the finder of fact to resolve and the
    motion for judgment of acquittal must be denied.” Durousseau v. State, 
    55 So. 3d 543
    , 557 (Fla. 2010) (citing Floyd v. State, 
    850 So. 2d 383
    (Fla. 2002)). Furthermore,
    “‘[t]he state is not required to rebut conclusively every possible variation’ of events
    which could be inferred from the evidence, but only to introduce competent evidence
    which is inconsistent with the Defendant’s theory of events.’” 
    Id. (quoting State
    v.
    Law, 
    559 So. 2d 187
    , 189 (Fla. 1989)); see also Knight v. State, 
    186 So. 3d 1005
    ,
    1009 (Fla. 2016) (“This Court has described the circumstantial evidence standard as
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    follows: ‘[w]here the only proof of guilt is circumstantial, no matter how strongly
    the evidence may suggest guilt[,] a conviction cannot be sustained unless the
    evidence is inconsistent with any reasonable hypothesis of innocence.’ Jaramillo v.
    State, 
    417 So. 2d 257
    , 257 (Fla. 1982). The standard applies upon appellate review,
    
    id., and when
    a trial judge rules on a motion for judgment of acquittal, State v. Law,
    
    559 So. 2d 187
    , 188 (Fla. 1989).”).
    Here, in contrast to Wright, there was no evidence of a third party with a
    motive to kill the victim. To the contrary, the evidence established that Appellant
    was the last person to have contact with the victim. Moreover, the State’s evidence
    of the fully packed car, complete with golf clubs, money, and jewels, was evidence
    inconsistent with a man leaving temporarily and intending to return with a job. The
    jurors were not left to stack inference upon inference; they only had to follow the
    roadmap created by the GPS evidence to trace Appellant from his home—where his
    wife lay dead—to his ultimate destination in Tennessee.
    Finally, the jury had Appellant’s inculpatory statements in his letter to his ex-
    wife, in which he proclaimed his desire to rekindle their relationship while
    describing his life with the victim as a living nightmare. Appellant claimed that this
    was a suicide letter, but, again, the packed car with recreational equipment, food,
    and money, as well as his alleged means of suicide—death by truck—could lead a
    reasonable jury to conclude that Appellant’s hypothesis of innocence was
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    unreasonable. See Cannon v. State, 
    180 So. 3d 1023
    , 1039 (Fla. 2015) (holding that
    “[n]o reasonable hypothesis of innocence exists as to the robbery of Mr. Morgan”
    (emphasis in original)); Ferguson v. State, 
    417 So. 2d 631
    , 635 (Fla. 1982)
    (rejecting, as unreasonable, Defendant’s hypothesis that because victims’ bodies
    were left overnight in a wooded area, a passerby could have taken their money and
    jewelry); Westbrooks v. State, 
    145 So. 3d 874
    , 878 (Fla. 2d DCA 2014) (holding that
    “[t]he State is not required to rebut a hypothesis of innocence that is unreasonable”);
    Henderson v. State, 
    679 So. 2d 805
    , 806 (Fla. 3d DCA 1996) (“While we must agree
    with [Appellant] that the State was required to provide evidence inconsistent with
    any reasonable hypothesis of innocence, we emphasize that the State was not
    required to exclude any unreasonable hypothesis.”). Consequently, we are left with
    a jury issue and “‘where there is substantial, competent evidence to support the jury
    verdict, that determination will not be disturbed by the courts.’” Durousseau, 
    55 So. 3d
    at 557 (quoting Toole v. State, 
    472 So. 2d 1174
    , 1176 (Fla. 1985)).
    Because the State’s evidence was sufficient for the jury to find within “a
    reasonable and moral certainty” that Appellant, and no one else, committed the
    charged offense, we AFFIRM. Wright, 42 Fla. L. Weekly at S592.
    ROBERTS AND MAKAR, JJ., CONCUR.
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