Garcia v. State ( 2019 )


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  •           Third District Court of Appeal
    State of Florida
    Opinion filed May 1, 2019.
    Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
    ________________
    No. 3D15-2815
    Lower Tribunal No. 14-22311
    ________________
    John Garcia,
    Appellant,
    vs.
    The State of Florida,
    Appellee.
    An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Stephen T.
    Millan, Judge.
    Carlos J. Martinez, Public Defender, and Susan S. Lerner, Assistant Public
    Defender, for appellant.
    Ashley Moody, Attorney General, and Jeffrey R. Geldens, Assistant
    Attorney General, for appellee.
    Before EMAS, C.J., and SCALES and HENDON,1 JJ.
    SCALES, J.
    1   Judge Hendon did not participate in oral argument.
    John Garcia appeals his convictions and sentences for second-degree murder
    and second-degree grand theft.      Because we conclude that, at trial, the State
    presented competent, substantial evidence that the value of the property Garcia
    stole from the victim, Larissa Macriello, was only $1,000, we reduce Mr. Garcia’s
    conviction for second-degree grand theft to third-degree grand theft and remand to
    the lower court for resentencing. With regard to Mr. Garcia’s conviction for
    second-degree murder, the State presented purely circumstantial evidence that Ms.
    Macriello was deceased and that she died through the criminal agency of Mr.
    Garcia. Therefore, because we conclude that the State failed to adduce sufficient,
    competent evidence to rebut Mr. Garcia’s reasonable hypothesis of innocence, we
    also reverse Mr. Garcia’s conviction for second-degree murder and remand to the
    lower court with directions to enter an order of acquittal on this charge.
    I. RELEVANT FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    In 1999, Larissa Macriello relocated to the United States from Panama.
    Over the years, she lived in Rhode Island, Maryland, North Carolina and Florida.
    In the summer of 2009, Ms. Macriello moved to Jacksonville Beach, Florida to live
    with her brother, Roderik Mokillo. In early 2011, she moved to Miami. In early
    June 2013, Ms. Macriello disappeared suddenly and without a trace.
    Ms. Macriello was close to her family, staying in frequent contact with her
    mother and siblings via telephone, email, text message and social media. She last
    2
    communicated with her brother, Mr. Mokillo, via text message in late May of
    2013, over Memorial Day weekend. She last spoke to her mother on the telephone
    on June 1, 2013.
    Ms. Macriello’s landlord last saw and spoke to Ms. Macriello on June 3,
    2013. Ms. Macriello told the landlord that she was waiting for her passport to
    arrive so that she could return to Panama to visit her mother. On June 10, 2013,
    between noon and 2 p.m., the landlord heard Ms. Macriello’s car being parked in
    her usual parking spot in front of her apartment building. The landlord did not,
    however, see the individual who drove the car. That same day, June 10, 2013,
    around noon, a taxi driver picked up the defendant, John Garcia, and an unknown
    woman (not Ms. Macriello) from a convenience store located several blocks from
    Ms. Macriello’s residence.
    After Ms. Macriello failed to respond to text messages, or to answer or
    return telephone calls, Mr. Mokillo traveled to Miami on June 18, 2013 to file a
    missing person report. That same day, with the assistance of the landlord, officers
    from the Miami-Dade County Police Department (“MDPD”) gained access to Ms.
    Macriello’s apartment to conduct a check on Ms. Macriello’s welfare.            Ms.
    Macriello was not inside the apartment. The police walk-through of the apartment
    revealed no signs of a struggle, and nothing out of the ordinary. The police did not
    see her purse, laptop computer, cellphone or car keys in the apartment; these items
    3
    were never found. The officers observed Ms. Macriello’s car in the parking space
    outside the apartment building, but did not search it once it was clear that Ms.
    Macriello was not inside it. The officers’ subsequent calls to hospitals and jails in
    Miami-Dade County and Broward County revealed no information on Ms.
    Macriello’s whereabouts.
    Ms. Macriello had checking and savings accounts with Bank of America
    (“BOA”). Although Ms. Macriello’s brother, Mr. Mokillo, was not an authorized
    user on the BOA accounts, he was listed as the beneficiary on the accounts. Mr.
    Mokillo visited a BOA bank branch and was able to learn, generally, that
    withdrawals were being made out of her accounts in large amounts. Mr. Mokillo
    relayed this information to the police, who subpoenaed Ms. Macriello’s BOA
    account records.
    The BOA account records revealed that, around the date of Ms. Macriello’s
    disappearance (June 3, 2013), there was approximately $24,000 in her BOA
    checking account and $23,000 in her BOA savings account. Beginning on June 5,
    2013 and going through August 15, 2013, however, the bulk of her BOA account
    balances was drained through a series of transactions, all to the benefit of Mr.
    Garcia – specifically: (i) on June 5 and 12, 2013, Mr. Garcia made two ATM
    withdrawals from Ms. Macriello’s BOA savings account,2 using her ATM card and
    2BOA surveillance video and still pictures from the BOA ATM evidenced Mr.
    Garcia making the two ATM withdrawals, the first of which Mr. Garcia made at a
    4
    personal identification number (“PIN”); (ii) Mr. Garcia deposited two $20,000
    personal checks (dated June 5 and 10, 2013, respectively), written by Ms.
    Macriello to Mr. Garcia, into his own BOA checking account; and (iii) multiple
    online transfers were made from Ms. Macriello’s BOA checking account to Mr.
    Garcia’s BOA checking account totaling $4,700.3
    The police subpoenaed the cellphone records for Ms. Macriello’s and Mr.
    Garcia’s cellular accounts, learning that there were frequent calls between Mr.
    Garcia’s and Ms. Macriello’s cellphones between the time Ms. Macriello was last
    seen (June 3, 2013) and when her cellphone was shut off (July 7, 2013). Other
    than calling voicemail, Ms. Macriello’s cellphone made no outgoing calls to
    anyone other than Mr. Garcia. Moreover, during this timeframe, numerous calls
    between Mr. Garcia’s cellphone and Ms. Macriello’s cellphone “pinged” off the
    same cellular antenna, within the same sector, indicating that the cellphones were
    within close proximity to each other at the time of the calls.
    When MDPD crime scene investigators (“CSI”) processed and inspected
    Ms. Macriello’s vehicle, they found that her car was unlocked, smelled of cleaning
    agents, and was thoroughly clean inside. The driver’s seat was positioned further
    BOA drive-up ATM while driving Ms. Macriello’s vehicle.
    3  The BOA records custodian testified that the following online transfers were
    made: $1,000 on June 5, 2013; $1,000 on June 26, 2013; $1,000 on July 5, 2013;
    $1,000 on July 17, 2013; and $700 on August 5, 2013.
    5
    back to accommodate a driver taller than Ms. Macriello. CSI sprayed the interior
    of the vehicle with luminol, which reacts to hemoglobin in blood. The luminol
    reacted to a fluid in the trunk (possibly detecting the outline of a purse) and to a
    fluid on the front passenger floorboard (possibly detecting the outline of a
    hammer). The affected area was removed and tested, but the results came back
    negative for blood. CSI found two strands of Mr. Garcia’s hair in the vehicle
    interior, and one DNA sample matching Mr. Garcia on the car’s center console.
    In October 2014, Mr. Garcia voluntarily went to the police station to discuss
    Ms. Macriello’s disappearance with an MDPD homicide detective.               In the
    interview, Mr. Garcia stated that he met Ms. Macriello on a dating website. He
    admitted to having an ongoing sexual relationship with Ms. Macriello, but denied
    ever paying her for sex. Mr. Garcia’s wife did not know Ms. Macriello or that Mr.
    Garcia had a relationship with her. Mr. Garcia claimed that he had last seen Ms.
    Macriello sometime between July 4 and August 2013.
    Mr. Garcia told the MDPD homicide detective that he had lent money to Ms.
    Macriello on occasion; but, Mr. Garcia did not tell the detective about a specific
    loan to Ms. Macriello where she had executed a promissory note memorializing a
    $20,000 loan from him. Mr. Garcia denied having any access to, or taking any
    money from, Ms. Macriello’s BOA accounts. Mr. Garcia also told the detective
    that he had only ever been in Ms. Macriello’s car as a passenger.
    6
    During the taped police interview, Mr. Garcia’s wife confronted him. Mr.
    Garcia told his wife that he and Ms. Macriello were just friends, and he denied that
    he ever had sex with Ms. Macriello. Mr. Garcia initially denied receiving any
    money from Ms. Macriello, but later admitted to his wife that Ms. Macriello had
    given him two $20,000 checks because Ms. Macriello owed him money.4 Mr.
    Garcia told his wife that he did not kill Ms. Macriello and that Ms. Macriello
    would show up some day. The police arrested Mr. Garcia that same day.
    The State charged Mr. Garcia by information with the first-degree
    premeditated murder of Ms. Macriello, and one count of second-degree grand
    theft. A Florida grand jury also indicted Mr. Garcia on these charges.5 The case
    went to trial in November 2015.
    At trial, the State theorized that, on June 4, 2013, Mr. Garcia killed Ms.
    Macriello in order to steal the money in her BOA savings and checking accounts.
    4  A warranted search of Mr. Garcia’s home revealed a handwritten promissory
    note, purportedly in Ms. Macriello’s handwriting, that was found in the back of a
    filing cabinet drawer. This note purported to evidence that Mr. Garcia had lent Ms.
    Macriello $20,000.
    5 The State also charged Mr. Garcia with, and indicted him for, two counts of
    possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. These two counts were eventually
    severed and Mr. Garcia pled guilty to both counts, reserving his right to challenge
    the legality of the search on appeal. The trial court sentenced Mr. Garcia to fifteen
    years in prison on each count of possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, to
    run consecutively. The trial court later vacated one of the firearm possession
    sentences. In appellate case number 3D15-2236, this Court affirmed Mr. Garcia’s
    conviction for one count of possession of a firearm and the fifteen-year sentence
    thereon. See Garcia v. State, 
    225 So. 3d 820
     (Fla. 3d DCA 2017).
    7
    At the close of the State’s case, the defense moved for a judgment of acquittal. As
    to the charge of first-degree premeditated murder, defense counsel argued that the
    State had failed to provide sufficient evidence that Ms. Macriello was dead, or, in
    the alternative, that Mr. Garcia was the one who killed her. As to the charge of
    second-degree grand theft, defense counsel argued that the State had failed to
    prove that Mr. Garcia stole the money from Ms. Macriello’s BOA accounts. The
    trial court denied the motion for judgment of acquittal.
    The jury found Mr. Garcia guilty of second-degree murder, a lesser included
    offense of first-degree premeditated murder. The jury also found Mr. Garcia guilty
    of second-degree grand theft, finding that the value of the stolen property was
    “$20,000 or more but less than $100,000.” The trial court sentenced Mr. Garcia to
    life in prison for second-degree murder and fifteen years in prison for second-
    degree grand theft, to run consecutively. This appeal ensued.
    II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    In reviewing an order denying a motion for judgment of acquittal, our
    standard of review is de novo, whereby this Court reviews the evidence presented
    below to determine whether, as a matter of law, the evidence is legally adequate to
    sustain the defendant’s conviction. See Johnston v. State, 
    863 So. 2d 271
    , 283
    (Fla. 2003). In general, this Court will not reverse a conviction that is supported
    by competent, substantial evidence. 
    Id.
     “There is sufficient evidence to sustain a
    8
    conviction if, after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the State, a
    rational trier of fact could find the existence of the elements of the crime beyond a
    reasonable doubt.” 
    Id.
     In moving for a judgment of acquittal, the defendant
    “admits not only the facts stated in the evidence adduced, but also admits every
    conclusion favorable to the adverse party that a jury might fairly and reasonable
    infer from the evidence.” Lynch v. State, 
    293 So. 2d 44
    , 45 (Fla. 1974).
    Where the State’s proof of guilt is wholly circumstantial,6 however, this
    Court employs a “special standard of review” of the evidence presented at trial.
    See Knight v. State, 
    186 So. 3d 1005
    , 1010 (Fla. 2016) (“[I]n determining whether
    the circumstantial evidence standard applies, the relevant evidence is that which
    points to the defendant as the perpetrator. Courts should ask whether the evidence
    of that particular defendant’s guilt is entirely circumstantial, not whether all of the
    State’s evidence of the crime is circumstantial.”); Hodgkins v. State, 
    175 So. 3d 741
    , 746 (Fla. 2015); Lindsey v. State, 
    14 So. 3d 211
    , 214 (Fla. 2009).
    Specifically, we must review the circumstantial evidence, in the light most
    favorable to the State, to determine whether the State presented competent
    evidence from which the jury could infer the defendant’s guilt for the crime
    6  “Direct evidence is evidence which requires only the inference that what the
    witness said is true to prove a material fact.” Kocaker v. State, 
    119 So. 3d 1214
    ,
    1224 (Fla. 2013) (quoting Charles W. Ehrhardt, Ehrhardt’s Florida Evidence §
    401.1 (2012 ed.)). “Circumstantial evidence is evidence which involves an
    additional inference to prove the material fact.” Id.
    9
    charged to the exclusion of all reasonable hypotheses of innocence. See Hodgkins,
    175 So. 3d at 746; Crain v. State, 
    894 So. 2d 59
    , 71 (Fla. 2004); Scott v. State, 
    581 So. 2d 887
    , 893 (Fla. 1991) (recognizing that the circumstantial evidence “must be
    of a conclusive nature and tendency, leading on the whole to a reasonable and
    moral certainty that the accused and no one else committed the offense charged”
    (quoting Hall v. State, 
    107 So. 246
    , 247 (Fla. 1925))). We must assess the record
    for its sufficiency, not its weight. See Crain, 
    894 So. 2d at 71
    .
    Under this special standard of review, the 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.” State v. Law, 
    559 So. 2d 187
    , 189 (Fla. 1989)
    (quoting State v. Allen, 
    335 So. 2d 823
    , 826 (Fla. 1976)) (footnote omitted); see
    Johnston, 
    863 So. 2d at 283
    . “Once the State meets this threshold burden, it
    becomes the jury’s duty to determine whether the evidence is sufficient to exclude
    every reasonable hypothesis of innocence beyond a reasonable doubt.” Johnston,
    
    863 So. 2d at 283
    . If the State fails to meet its threshold burden, the defendant
    must be acquitted of the underlying charge. See Hodgkins, 175 So. 3d at 746;
    Lindsey, 
    14 So. 3d at 215
    ; Ballard v. State, 
    923 So. 2d 475
    , 482 (Fla. 2006) (“If the
    State’s evidence is not inconsistent with the defendant’s hypothesis of innocence,
    then no jury could return a verdict in favor of the State.”).
    10
    III. ANALYSIS
    1. Grand Theft
    Section 812.014(1) of the Florida Statutes (2013), Florida’s theft statute,
    provides:
    (1) A person commits theft if he or she knowingly obtains or uses,[7]
    or endeavors to obtain or to use, the property of another with intent to,
    either temporarily or permanently:
    (a) Deprive the other person of a right to the property or a benefit
    from the property.
    (b) Appropriate the property to his or her own use or to the use of any
    person not entitled to the use of the property.
    In moving for a judgment of acquittal on the grand theft charge, defense
    counsel argued that the State had failed to present competent, substantial evidence
    that Mr. Garcia stole any of the money from Ms. Macriello’s BOA checking and
    savings accounts, be it through his depositing the two $20,000 personal checks, the
    series of online transfers totaling $4,700, or his making the two $500 ATM
    withdrawals. We agree in part and disagree in part.
    7Section 812.012(3) of the Florida Statutes (2013) defines “obtains or uses” as any
    manner of:
    (a) Taking or exercising control over property.
    (b) Making any unauthorized use, disposition, or transfer of property.
    (c) Obtaining property by fraud, willful misrepresentation of a future
    act, or false promise.
    (d)1. Conduct previously known as stealing; larceny; purloining;
    abstracting; embezzlement; misapplication; misappropriation;
    conversion; or obtaining money or property by false pretenses, fraud,
    or deception; or
    2. Other conduct similar in nature.
    11
    a. The two $20,000 personal checks from Ms. Macriello to Mr. Garcia
    The State posited below that Mr. Garcia had somehow coerced Ms.
    Macriello into writing and signing the two $20,000 personal checks by placing her
    under duress. The State, however, presented no evidence to support its coercion
    theory.8
    The State’s forensic document examiner testified that she compared BOA
    machine copies of the two personal checks to known handwriting samples of Ms.
    Macriello. Based on her comparisons, the forensic document examiner opined that
    the two checks were “probably written by Larissa D. Macriello.” The memo line
    of the check dated June 5, 2013, read “Repay Loan #1.”          The memo line of the
    check dated June 10, 2013, read “#2.”
    The forensic document examiner also testified that she examined the
    original, handwritten promissory note purportedly evidencing that Ms. Macriello
    owed $20,000 to Mr. Garcia. Based on her comparison of the promissory note to
    Ms. Macriello’s known handwriting samples, the forensic document examiner
    testified that she was “able to identify Larissa D. Macriello as the writer of that
    note.” When asked by the State whether the forensic document examiner was able
    to determine whether a document was “written freely,” “under duress,” or “under
    8   Notably, the State did not argue this theory to the jury during closing argument.
    12
    any kind of pressure,” the forensic document examiner answered each time,
    unequivocally, “No.”
    The State presented no evidence that Mr. Garcia made the June 5, 2013
    online transfer9 of $20,000 from Ms. Macriello’s BOA savings account to her BOA
    checking account, or that Mr. Garcia somehow coerced Ms. Macriello into writing
    the two $20,000 personal checks or the promissory note. Thus, the State failed to
    present competent, substantial evidence that Mr. Garcia knowingly obtained Ms.
    Macriello’s property ($40,000) with the specific intent either to deprive Ms.
    Macriello of her right to the property or to appropriate the property to his own use.
    See § 812.014(1), Fla. Stat. (2013). This, however, does not end our inquiry as the
    State provided other evidence that Mr. Garcia committed grand theft in this case.
    b. The $4,700 in online transfers from Ms. Macriello’s BOA checking
    account
    The State maintained below that Mr. Garcia stole money from Ms.
    Macriello’s BOA checking account by making the numerous online transfers
    (between June 5, 2013 and August 15, 2013) from Ms. Macriello’s BOA checking
    account to Mr. Garcia’s BOA checking account. The State, however, presented no
    evidence at trial to support this theory.
    9   See section III(1)(b), infra.
    13
    BOA’s records custodian testified that BOA has the capability of
    determining where an online transfer originates from – i.e., the geographic location
    and the specific computer – by looking at the internet protocol (“IP”) address
    associated with a particular online transaction. To the BOA records custodian’s
    knowledge, however, MDPD never made an IP address request for the subject
    online transactions.10 Because BOA did not process such a search request, the IP
    address(es) for the online transactions are unknown.
    The State presented no evidence that Mr. Garcia ever possessed, or had
    access to, Ms. Macriello’s laptop computer, or that Ms. Macriello stored the
    username and password for her BOA accounts on the laptop computer.          MDPD
    never recovered Ms. Macriello’s laptop computer after her disappearance. The
    State also presented no evidence that Mr. Garcia had learned Ms. Macriello’s
    username and password through other means,11 nor did the State adduce any
    evidence of Mr. Garcia’s use of his own personal computer with respect to the
    subject online transactions. In short, there was no evidence presented to the jury
    that the online transfers were initiated by Mr. Garcia.
    10The MDPD homicide detective testified that the IP addresses for the subject
    online transactions were subpoenaed from BOA, but BOA never complied with the
    subpoena.
    11We note that Mr. Garcia’s possession of Ms. Macriello’s ATM card and PIN did
    not establish that Mr. Garcia knew the username or password for Ms. Macriello’s
    BOA accounts.
    14
    Given this lack of evidence, the State was unable to posit to the jury any
    explanation for how Mr. Garcia allegedly accomplished the online transactions in
    this case. Indeed, during the State’s closing argument, the prosecutor commented:
    Now, we all know you have to have security codes to do these kinds
    of transfers. He got Larissa’s security code somehow. I can’t tell you
    how. I can’t tell you how. Even her family didn’t have them. Even
    her family didn’t have them. He got them somehow.
    Thus, the State failed to present competent, substantial evidence that Mr.
    Garcia knowingly obtained, through online banking transactions, Ms. Macriello’s
    property ($4,700) with the specific intent either to deprive Ms. Macriello of her
    right to the property or to appropriate the property to his own use.12         See §
    812.014(1), Fla. Stat. (2013). This leaves the evidence that Mr. Garcia committed
    grand theft by making the two $500 ATM withdrawals.
    c. The two $500 ATM withdrawals from Ms. Macriello’s BOA savings
    account
    Ms. Macriello’s brother, Roderick Mokillo, testified that Ms. Macriello did
    not give anyone access to her BOA accounts. The BOA records custodian testified
    12 We are cognizant that theft can be charged where there is a knowing and
    intentional possession of recently stolen property. See §812.014(1), Fla. Stat.
    (2013); §812.022(2), Fla. Stat. (2013); Smith v. State, 
    742 So. 2d 352
    , 354-55 (Fla.
    5th DCA 1999). The State, however, did not charge or indict Mr. Garcia in this
    manner, nor was the jury instructed thereon. Moreover, while the State established
    that Mr. Garcia was in possession of Ms. Macriello’s property ($4,700) – i.e., the
    funds were transferred into Mr. Garcia’s BOA account – the State failed to present
    evidence that the property was stolen from Ms. Macriello.
    15
    that Ms. Macriello was the only legal signer on her BOA savings account. The
    State introduced, through the BOA records custodian, surveillance video, still
    pictures and transaction records evidencing that: (i) on June 5, 2013, at 3:56 p.m.,
    while driving Ms. Macriello’s vehicle, Mr. Garcia used Ms. Macriello’s ATM card
    and PIN to withdraw $500 from her BOA savings account at a BOA drive-up
    ATM located in Brownsville; and (ii) on June 12, 2013, at 4:05 p.m., Mr. Garcia
    used Ms. Macriello’s ATM card and PIN to withdraw $500 from her BOA savings
    account at a BOA walk-up ATM located in North Miami Beach.
    The State presented direct evidence13 that Mr. Garcia had knowingly
    obtained Ms. Macriello’s property – i.e., the $1,000 he withdrew from the BOA
    ATMs. Notwithstanding this direct evidence, Mr. Garcia argues that the State
    failed to present any evidence to prove that he had the requisite specific intent
    either to deprive Ms. Macriello of her property or to appropriate the property to his
    own use. See § 812.014(1), Fla. Stat. (2013); Benitez v. State, 
    852 So. 2d 386
    , 388
    (Fla. 3d DCA 2003) (“Grand theft requires proof of intent to deprive the owner of
    property of its use or benefit.”). We disagree. “Intent, being a state of mind, is
    13 We note that the special standard of review for wholly circumstantial evidence
    does not apply here because the evidence of Mr. Garcia’s guilt for making
    unauthorized withdrawals from Ms. Macriello’s BOA account was not entirely
    circumstantial. See Knight, 186 So. 3d at 1010 (holding “that the circumstantial
    evidence standard of review applies only where all of the evidence of a defendant’s
    guilt – i.e., the evidence tending to show that the defendant committed or
    participated in the crime – is circumstantial, not where any particular element of a
    crime is demonstrated exclusively by circumstantial evidence”).
    16
    often not subject to direct proof and can only be inferred from circumstances.
    Benitez, 
    852 So. 2d at 388
     (quoting Jones v. State, 
    192 So. 2d 285
    , 286 (Fla. 3d
    DCA 1966)). Unlike the grand theft charges premised on the checks and online
    transfers, Mr. Garcia’s specific intent can be inferred under the circumstances
    outlined herein.14 The State, therefore, presented sufficient evidence to create a
    jury question as to whether Mr. Garcia had the intent either to deprive Ms.
    Macriello of her property or to appropriate the property to his own use.
    For these reasons, viewing the ATM withdrawal evidence in the light most
    favorable to the State, we conclude that the jury could find the existence of the
    elements of grand theft beyond a reasonable doubt and that, therefore, the trial
    court did not err in denying the motion for judgment of acquittal on this evidence.
    d. Mr. Garcia’s theft conviction must be reduced to third-degree grand theft
    The State charged and indicted Mr. Garcia with second-degree grand theft,
    which requires that the property stolen be valued “at $20,000 or more, but less than
    $100,000.” § 812.014(2)(b), Fla. Stat. (2013). Whereas, if the property stolen is
    valued between $300 and $19,999, it is grand theft of the third degree. See §
    812.014(2)(c)1.-3., Fla. Stat. (2013). Because the combined value of the two ATM
    14The State’s presentation of direct evidence that Mr. Garcia knowingly withdrew
    $1,000 from the BOA ATMs under circumstances from which his specific intent to
    commit theft could be inferred distinguishes the two ATM withdrawals from the
    two $20,000 checks and the $4,700 in online transfers. See section III(I)(a)-(b),
    supra.
    17
    withdrawals is $1,000, Mr. Garcia’s conviction must be reduced to third-degree
    grand theft. See § 924.34, Fla. Stat. (2013); Council v. State, 
    206 So. 3d 155
    , 156
    (Fla. 1st DCA 2016) (“[W]e hold that the State failed to introduce competent,
    substantial evidence showing that the value of the stolen property exceeded
    $20,000, and we reverse and remand to the trial court to impose a sentence for
    grand theft over $10,000 but less than $20,000, a third-degree felony.”).
    2. Second-Degree Murder
    “The corpus delicti of a homicide consists of three elements, i.e., ‘first, the
    fact of death; second, the criminal agency of another person as the cause thereof;
    and third, the identity of the deceased person.’” Golden v. State, 
    629 So. 2d 109
    ,
    111 (Fla. 1993) (quoting Jefferson v. State, 
    128 So. 2d 132
    , 135 (Fla. 1961)). The
    State can prove these elements through the introduction of wholly circumstantial
    evidence, “even without any evidence of the discovery of the victim’s body.”
    Crain, 
    894 So. 2d at
    72 (citing Meyers v. State, 
    704 So. 2d 1368
    , 1369 (Fla.
    1997)). In this case, the parties agree that the State presented purely circumstantial
    evidence to prove that Ms. Macriello died through the criminal agency of Mr.
    Garcia.   Therefore, this Court employs the special standard of review of the
    evidence presented at trial – i.e., whether the State presented competent evidence
    below from which the jury could exclude every reasonable hypothesis of innocence
    18
    beyond a reasonable doubt. See Hodgkins, 175 So. 3d at 746; Johnston, 
    863 So. 2d at 283
    ; Law, 
    559 So. 2d at 188-89
    .
    In moving for a judgment of acquittal on the homicide charge, Mr. Garcia
    argued that the State had failed to provide sufficient evidence that either: (i) Ms.
    Macriello was dead, theorizing that she had simply moved elsewhere without
    notifying anyone; or (ii) Ms. Macriello’s alleged death was caused by any criminal
    act of Mr. Garcia; ergo, she died under other circumstances. Even assuming that
    the circumstances surrounding Ms. Macriello’s sudden disappearance constitute
    strong circumstantial evidence of her death by the criminal agency of another, we
    conclude that the State’s evidence was insufficient to establish that Ms. Macriello’s
    apparent death was due to the specific criminal agency of Mr. Garcia.
    a. The circumstantial evidence introduced at trial
    The State presented significant circumstantial evidence below in support of
    its theory that Mr. Garcia killed Ms. Macriello in order to steal a substantial sum of
    money from her BOA savings and checking accounts, including:
     On June 5, 2013, an online transfer of $1000 was made from Ms.
    Macriello’s BOA checking account to Mr. Garcia’s BOA checking
    account.
     On June 5, 2013, an online transfer of $20,000 was made from Ms.
    Macriello’s BOA savings account to her BOA checking account.
     On June 5, 2013, Mr. Garcia deposited a $20,000 personal check
    (dated June 5, 2013) written by Ms. Macriello to Mr. Garcia into his
    BOA checking account.
    19
       On June 5, 2013, Mr. Garcia drove Ms. Macriello’s car to a BOA
    drive-up ATM and used Ms. Macriello’s ATM card and PIN to
    withdraw $500 from her BOA savings account.
     On June 10, 2013, Mr. Garcia deposited a second $20,000 personal
    check (dated June 10, 2013) written by Ms. Macriello to Mr. Garcia
    into his BOA checking account.
     On June 10, 2013, around noon, the landlord heard Ms. Macriello’s
    car being parked in the driveway in front of Ms. Macriello’s
    apartment building.
     On June 10, 2013, also around noon, a taxi driver picked up Mr.
    Garcia from a convenience store located several blocks from Ms.
    Macriello’s home.
     On June 12, 2013, Mr. Garcia used Ms. Macriello’s ATM card and
    PIN to withdraw $500 from Ms. Macriello’s BOA savings account.
     On June 26, July 5, July 17 and August 5, 2013, online transfers were
    made from Ms. Macriello’s BOA checking account to Mr. Garcia’s
    BOA account, totaling $3,700.
     The interior of Ms. Macriello’s vehicle smelled of cleaning agents and
    appeared to have been detailed thoroughly.
     Luminol (which reacts to hemoglobin in blood) sprayed in the interior
    of Ms. Macriello’s car reacted to a fluid in the trunk (possibly
    detecting the outline of a purse) and to a fluid on the front passenger
    floorboard (possibly detecting the outline of a hammer).
     CSI found two strands of Mr. Garcia’s hair in Ms. Macriello’s vehicle,
    and one DNA sample matching Mr. Garcia on the car’s center
    console.
     From the time Ms. Macriello was last seen (June 3, 2013) until her
    cellphone was shut off (July 7, 2013), numerous calls between Mr.
    Garcia’s cellphone and Ms. Macriello’s cellphone “pinged” off the
    20
    same cellular antenna, within the same sector, indicating that the
    cellphones were within close proximity to each other at the time of the
    calls.
     Ms. Macriello’s cellphone made calls solely to voicemail and to Mr.
    Garcia after her disappearance.
     Mr. Garcia denied having access to Ms. Macriello’s BOA accounts,
    and also denied taking any money from her BOA accounts.
     Mr. Garcia denied driving Ms. Macriello’s car.
     Mr. Garcia never told the police about the promissory note, in Ms.
    Macriello’s handwriting, that was found in the back of a filing cabinet
    drawer in his home.
    b. Suspicious circumstances are not enough to obtain a conviction
    The State’s voluminous circumstantial evidence clearly creates a strong
    suspicion that Mr. Garcia was responsible for Ms. Macriello apparent death.
    Strong suspicion, however, is not the standard for obtaining a criminal conviction
    based on purely circumstantial evidence. Scott, 
    581 So. 2d at 893
    . “The 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.’” Lindsey, 
    14 So. 3d at 215
     (quoting Frank v.
    State, 
    163 So. 223
    , 223 (1935)); Orme v. State, 
    677 So. 2d 258
    , 261 n.1 (Fla. 1996)
    (“Evidence which furnishes nothing stronger than a suspicion, even though it
    would tend to justify the suspicion that the defendant committed the crime, . . . is
    21
    not sufficient to sustain conviction. It is the actual exclusion of the hypothesis of
    innocence which clothes circumstantial evidence with the force of proof sufficient
    to convict.” (quoting Davis v. State, 
    90 So. 2d 629
    , 631-32 (Fla. 1956))); Law, 
    559 So. 2d at 188
     (“Where 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.”).
    We find the Fourth District’s opinion in Ramsammy v. State, 
    43 So. 3d 100
    (Fla. 4th DCA 2010) to be particularly instructive. In that case, Ramsammy was
    convicted of murdering his wife after she disappeared without a trace. The wife’s
    body was never found and there was no physical evidence of her death. 
    Id. at 102
    .
    Ramsammy waited two months to report his wife’s disappearance to the police, in
    the meantime giving relatives and friends wildly conflicting, and sometimes
    incoherent, explanations for her disappearance. 
    Id. at 102-03
    . During the police
    investigation into the wife’s disappearance, the police learned that the wife had an
    extra-marital affair with another man, and that Ramsammy had threatened
    repeatedly to kill the wife and her paramour. 
    Id. at 102
    . Ramsammy admitted to
    the investigating detective that he had hit his wife after learning of the affair. 
    Id. at 104
    . Ramsammy also told the detective at one point, “I’m not going to tell you
    that I’m innocent. I’m not going to tell you that I’m guilty. That is up to you to
    investigate.” 
    Id.
    22
    The jury convicted Ramsammy of second-degree murder.                The Fourth
    District reversed on appeal, concluding that the State had failed to present
    sufficient evidence that Ramsammy was responsible for his wife’s death:
    Here, we are confronted with a case where the victim’s body has not
    been recovered, no evidence of the manner of death was presented, no
    physical evidence like blood, DNA, or any other type of forensics was
    found, no confession to homicide was made, and no witnesses to the
    crime testified. We are left only with appellant’s various suspicious
    statements to family, friends, and law enforcement. . . . [T]here is a
    “strong suspicion” that appellant murdered the victim. But troubling
    suspicions about appellant stacked upon one another are insufficient
    as a matter of law. This court has found that “[c]ircumstantial
    evidence is insufficient when it requires pyramiding of assumptions or
    inferences in order to arrive at the conclusion of guilt.” Brown v.
    State, 
    672 So. 2d 648
    , 650 (Fla. 4th DCA 1996). “Where the evidence
    creates only a strong suspicion of guilt or simply a probability of guilt,
    the evidence is insufficient to sustain a conviction.” 
    Id.
    Id. at 109 (footnotes omitted).
    c. The State’s circumstantial evidence is not inconsistent with Mr. Garcia’s
    reasonable hypothesis of innocence
    In this case, while the State established that (i) Mr. Garcia drove Ms.
    Macriello’ car after she went missing, (ii) Mr. Garcia’s DNA and hair were found
    in her vehicle after it had been thoroughly cleaned, (iii) luminol spray reacted to
    fluid in the vehicle’s trunk and front passenger floorboard, and (iv) Mr. Garcia was
    picked up by a taxi several blocks from Ms. Macriello’s residence around the same
    time that her vehicle reappeared in front of her apartment building, these
    suspicious circumstances did not serve to establish that Ms. Macriello’s vehicle
    23
    was involved in her apparent death. Indeed, CSI found no blood or an actual
    weapon in Ms. Macriello’s car.
    Moreover, the series of financial transactions from Ms. Macriello’s BOA
    accounts, while suspicious, are also insufficient to establish any specific criminal
    agency by Mr. Garcia to commit murder. As set forth herein,15 we concluded that
    the State failed to establish that Mr. Garcia committed theft by depositing the two
    $20,000 personal checks into his BOA account, or by receiving the $4,700 in
    online transfers to his BOA account, the sum of which constituted the bulk of Ms.
    Macriello’s BOA account balances. This undercuts the State’s posited motive for
    Mr. Garcia to commit murder.
    Finally, as to the cellphone records, the State argued at trial that the close
    proximity of Ms. Macriello’s and Mr. Garcia’s cellphones in the calls on the day
    of, and following, her disappearance, as well as the lack of any outgoing calls to
    anyone other than Mr. Garcia, suggested that Mr. Garcia was in possession of both
    cellphones the whole time. Thus, the State argued, Mr. Garcia placed the calls
    himself in an attempt to make it appear that Ms. Macriello was still alive, and to
    make himself above suspicion. Ms. Macriello’s cellphone was never found. While
    certainly suspicious, these circumstances do not serve to establish any criminal act
    by Mr. Garcia with respect to Ms. Macriello’s apparent death. See DeJesus v.
    15   See section III(1)(a)-(b), supra.
    24
    State, 
    225 So. 3d 285
    , 288 (Fla. 4th DCA 2017) (concluding that cell site data of
    “Appellant’s location near the scene of the crime around the time of the burglary”
    served to “furnish[] only a suspicion that Appellant was complicit in the charged
    crimes” and, therefore, was insufficient to exclude every reasonable hypothesis of
    innocence).
    Aside from the impermissible pyramiding of assumptions and inferences
    drawn from the purely circumstantial evidence discussed herein, the State
    presented no direct evidence (physical or testimony) at trial connecting Mr. Garcia
    to Ms. Macriello’s apparent death.      See Ballard, 
    923 So. 2d at 482
     (“[T]he
    circumstantial evidence test guards against basing a conviction on impermissibly
    stacked inferences.” (quoting Miller v. State, 
    770 So. 2d 1144
    , 1149 (Fla. 2000)));
    Ramsammy, 
    43 So. 3d at 109
    .          This required the State to overcome every
    reasonable hypothesis of Mr. Garcia’s innocence. See Hodgkins, 175 So. 3d at
    746; Johnston, 
    863 So. 2d at 283
    ; Law, 
    559 So. 2d at 188-89
    . Ms. Macriello’s
    body was never found. There was no crime scene, no evidence of the location or
    manner of Ms. Macriello’s death, no murder weapon, no eyewitness to the crime,
    and Mr. Garcia made no confession to Ms. Macriello’s murder. In short, the
    evidence introduced at trial was insufficient to establish that Ms. Macriello died by
    a criminal act committed by Mr. Garcia. See Hodgkins, 175 So. 3d at 748-750
    (holding that purely circumstantial evidence was insufficient to support a
    25
    conviction for murder where no murder weapon was recovered, no eyewitnesses
    placed the defendant at the victim’s home around the time of the murder, and the
    State failed to present competent evidence to rebut the defendant’s theory that the
    victim scraped his back with her fingernails during a consensual encounter days
    prior to the victim’s murder); Ballard, 
    923 So. 2d at 483-84
     (finding that purely
    circumstantial evidence was insufficient to a support conviction for murder where
    there were no eyewitnesses to the crime, no murder weapon was recovered,
    fingerprints belonging to unknown individuals were found at the crime scene, the
    defendant did not confess, and the State presented no evidence to refute the
    possibility that the defendant’s prior innocent presence in the victim’s home
    accounted for his hair and fingerprint being found at the crime scene); Ramsammy,
    
    43 So. 3d at 108-09
    .
    Under these circumstances, we conclude that Mr. Garcia’s hypothesis of
    innocence – that Ms. Macriello, if dead, died under circumstances for which Mr.
    Garcia was not responsible – was reasonable. See Wright v. State, 
    221 So. 3d 512
    ,
    523 (Fla. 2017) (“Wright’s hypothesis of innocence – that he was not present at the
    time of the murders and that someone else committed them – is not unreasonable
    considering the absence of any evidence to place him at the crime scene or prove
    his identity as the killer.”).
    IV. CONCLUSION
    26
    The State presented competent, substantial evidence from which the jury
    could find Mr. Garcia guilty of grand theft beyond a reasonable doubt for the two
    $500 ATM withdrawals.         The State failed, however, to present competent
    substantial evidence that Mr. Garcia committed theft by either: (i) depositing the
    two $20,000 personal checks into his BOA checking account; or (ii) receiving the
    $4,700 in funds through a series of online transfers from Ms. Macriello’s BOA
    checking account. Because the value of the property stolen is $1,000, we reduce
    Mr. Garcia’s conviction for second-degree grand theft to third-degree grand theft
    and remand for resentencing. See § 924.34, Fla. Stat. (2013); § 812.014(2)(c)1.,
    Fla. Stat. (2013).
    Because the State relied upon wholly circumstantial evidence as proof of
    Mr. Garcia’s guilt for killing Ms. Macriello, the State was required to present
    competent evidence from which the jury could infer Mr. Garcia’s guilt for second-
    degree murder to the exclusion of all reasonable hypotheses of innocence. We
    conclude that the State failed to meet this burden. The circumstantial evidence
    presented at trial, which furnished nothing more than a strong suspicion that Mr.
    Garcia murdered Ms. Macriello, was insufficient to establish that Ms. Macriello’s
    apparent death was due to the specific criminal agency of Mr. Garcia.           We,
    therefore, reverse and remand this case to the trial court with directions to enter a
    judgment of acquittal on the homicide charge.16
    27
    Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded with instructions.
    16Because we conclude that the evidence will not sustain Mr. Garcia’s conviction
    for second-degree murder, we need not reach the other issues raised on appeal with
    respect to this conviction.
    28