Dalia Dippolito v. State , 143 So. 3d 1080 ( 2014 )


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  •         DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA
    FOURTH DISTRICT
    July Term 2014
    DALIA DIPPOLITO,
    Appellant,
    v.
    STATE OF FLORIDA,
    Appellee.
    No. 4D11-2628
    [July 30, 2014]
    Appeal from the Circuit Court for the Fifteenth Judicial Circuit, Palm
    Beach County; Jeffrey Colbath, Judge; L.T. Case No. 2009CF009771AXX.
    Andrew B. Greenlee, Robert L. Sirianni, Jr. and Michael M. Brownlee of
    Brownstone, P.A., Winter Park, for appellant.
    Pamela Jo Bondi, Attorney General, Tallahassee, and John M.
    Klawikofsky, Assistant Attorney General, Tampa, for appellee.
    WARNER, J.
    Dalia Dippolito appeals her conviction for solicitation to commit first
    degree murder with a firearm. She argues the trial court erred by denying
    her request to individually question prospective jurors about their
    exposure to pretrial publicity about her case, and by denying her request
    to strike the entire jury venire after all the jurors heard an allegation that
    appellant had attempted to poison the victim in this case. We agree and
    reverse. We affirm as to the remaining issues without further comment,
    as they were either not error or not properly preserved.
    Background
    In the late summer of 2009, appellant’s lover approached the Boynton
    Beach Police Department and reported that appellant was planning to kill
    her husband. An investigation ensued, during which police videotaped
    incriminating meetings between appellant and her lover, as well as
    between appellant and a purported hit man, who was in reality an
    undercover officer. The hit man agreed to shoot and kill appellant’s
    husband in their home and make the killing look like part of a burglary.
    Subsequently, police staged a fake crime scene at appellant’s home and
    informed her that her husband had been killed in the manner described
    by the hit man. Appellant’s reaction was videotaped by the police and by
    the television show “Cops,” which was then filming the Boynton Beach
    Police Department. Appellant was subsequently taken to the police station
    and interviewed. The police eventually told appellant that her husband
    was alive and revealed the hit man was an undercover officer. Appellant
    maintained her innocence.
    She was charged with solicitation to commit first degree murder with a
    firearm. The case generated considerable pretrial publicity. She pled not
    guilty, and a ten-day jury trial was held in late April and early May of 2011.
    Prior to trial, on March 30, 2011, appellant moved to individually
    question prospective jurors about their exposure to pretrial publicity.
    Appellant alleged the case had “received a great deal of national attention
    and publicity and has been reported on a variety of national media
    shows[.]” She alleged that, due to unspecified public comments by her
    husband’s divorce attorneys, she had sought a gag order in the parties’
    divorce proceedings in late August 2010. She also reported that the
    Boynton Beach Police Department had uploaded to YouTube the videos of
    appellant taken during the investigation. She tallied the number of views
    the videos had received to date and alleged they had been “played
    nationally, locally on the internet and on nationally produced television
    shows[.]” These included the Today Show, Good Morning America, CNN,
    and CBS News. The trial court denied the motion but noted appellant
    could re-raise the issue at jury selection.
    Appellant renewed her motion on the first day of jury selection. Her
    counsel asserted several new newspaper articles had appeared in the prior
    forty-eight hours, which had “liken[ed] this case or compare[d] it to Scott
    Peterson or Martha Stewart or Michael Jackson,” and had “impl[ied] that
    this is some sort of slam dunk by the State[.]” The court again denied the
    motion, but noted questioning might “evolve into individual voir dire”
    depending on “[the] venire’s knowledge of the case[.]”
    The court read prospective jurors a brief description of the charges,
    which had been agreed upon by the parties, and asked jurors for a show
    of hands as to who had heard of the case. Many indicated they had: the
    court commented there were “a lot of hands,” and appellant’s later motion
    for new trial alleged that twenty-eight of the fifty-four prospective jurors
    2
    raised their hands. The court asked whether any juror had “some strong
    feelings that would be difficult to overcome and give either the State a fair
    trial or the Defense a fair trial.” No hands were raised.
    When it was appellant’s turn to question the jurors, she again
    requested individual voir dire, concerned that asking individual jurors
    about the media reports could lead to contamination of the entire jury
    pool. The court commented that none of the jurors “held any strongly held
    opinions on the merits of the case” and opined, “I don’t think it’s necessary
    for you to say, hey, tell me everything you heard about this case. . . .
    [T]hat’s going to lead to more problems than it’s going to solve.” Appellant
    argued she had the right to ask jurors what, specifically, they had heard
    about the case, and the court eventually agreed she could do so. However,
    the court ruled it would “[n]ot yet” allow individual questioning.
    As appellant proceeded to question the jurors about their knowledge of
    the case, the jurors freely recounted what they had heard and seen on the
    news. One juror mentioned “an allegation that [appellant] had tried to
    poison her husband with antifreeze. That was in the Palm Beach Post.”
    The trial court had already ruled that allegation inadmissible at trial.1
    Therefore, appellant moved to strike the jury panel and for a mistrial. The
    court denied both requests.
    The case proceeded to trial, after which the appellant was convicted of
    attempted first degree murder with a firearm. The court sentenced her to
    twenty years in prison. She then filed this appeal.
    Refusal To Conduct Individual Voir Dire and To Strike Jury Panel
    Appellant claims that the court erred in refusing individual voir dire
    and in failing to strike the jury panel after it had heard inadmissible bad
    acts evidence from one of the jurors. This is dispositive of the appeal. We
    conclude that the court erred in refusing to allow individual voir dire
    questioning and in failing to strike the jury pool.
    The denial of a motion to strike the jury panel is reviewed for an abuse
    of discretion. Williams v. Osking, 
    105 So. 3d 653
    , 655 (Fla. 4th DCA 2013).
    Likewise, “a trial court has broad discretion in deciding whether
    1 Contrary to the state’s assertion on appeal, the state had not merely agreed to
    refrain from introducing this evidence; the trial court had ruled it inadmissible
    in a pretrial order dated April 20, 2011.
    3
    prospective jurors must be questioned individually about publicity the
    case has received.” Bolin v. State, 
    736 So. 2d 1160
    , 1164 (Fla. 1999).
    Three Florida Supreme Court cases control the disposition of this case:
    Boggs v. State, 
    667 So. 2d 765
     (Fla. 1996), Bolin v. State, 
    736 So. 2d 1160
    (Fla. 1999), and Kessler v. State, 
    752 So. 2d 545
     (Fla. 1999). In Boggs and
    Bolin, the defendants’ initial convictions and death sentences were
    reversed and, just before jury selection in the retrial, local newspapers
    published inadmissible and prejudicial information about the first trial.
    Boggs, 
    667 So. 2d at 766
    ; Bolin, 
    736 So. 2d at 1161-63
    . Similarly, in
    Kessler, on the day of jury selection a newspaper article published
    inadmissible and prejudicial information about the defendant’s federal
    conviction for the same crime and stated he was being investigated for
    unsolved murders. 
    752 So. 2d at 551
    .
    In Boggs, the court held,
    [B]ecause of the timing and content of the newspaper articles
    and the statements made by these prospective jurors that they
    had read newspaper articles and had formed opinions about
    the case, individual voir dire examination of these prospective
    jurors was compelled. Through individual voir dire, the trial
    court could have determined the extent of the prospective
    jurors’ knowledge of the newspaper articles and evaluated
    whether their preformed opinions could be set aside. This
    procedure would have also protected the remainder of the
    venire from any potential contamination resulting from this
    questioning. . . . [W]e find that the trial court abused its
    discretion by not allowing further individual inquiry of the two
    prospective jurors who could not unequivocally state that they
    could not set aside their preformed opinion as to Boggs’ guilt
    and base a verdict solely on the evidence presented . . . .
    
    667 So. 2d at 768
    . Bolin appears to expand on Boggs, holding that even
    where the jurors had not formed opinions based upon media reports,
    individual voir dire was still required:
    Even though these jurors, unlike the challenged prospective
    jurors in Boggs, stated during voir dire that they had formed
    no opinions as to Bolin’s guilt, there was no individual voir
    dire with specific questions concerning the jurors’ knowledge
    of newspaper articles containing inadmissible and prejudicial
    information. Thus, defense counsel, the trial judge, and this
    4
    Court are left to speculate about what these jurors had
    learned from these newspaper accounts.
    In Reilly v. State, 
    557 So. 2d 1365
     (Fla.1990), we found the
    same type of publicity concerning inadmissible information to
    be so prejudicial that even a prospective juror without a
    preformed opinion should not be allowed to serve on a jury
    after exposure to the publicity. 
    Id. at 1367
    .
    Bolin, 
    736 So. 2d at 1164-65
    .
    Relying on a federal case which held that “simply asking members of
    the jury venire to indicate by a show of hands whether the publicity would
    impair their ability to render an impartial decision did not adequately
    protect the defendant’s constitutional rights,” Bolin held, “the preferred
    approach for Florida trial courts is to conduct individual and sequestered
    voir dire of prospective jurors whenever, as in Boggs, ‘the timing and
    content’ of pretrial publicity creates the probability that prospective jurors
    have been exposed to prejudicial information that will not be admissible at
    trial.” 
    Id. at 1165
     (relying on Cummings v. Dugger, 
    862 F.2d 1504
    , 1507-
    08 (11th Cir. 1989)). However, the court noted that exposure to prejudicial
    information “might not require disqualification of prospective jurors if this
    information were going to be introduced into evidence.” Id. at 1165.
    In Kessler, one venire member admitted having read the prejudicial
    article about the defendant in its entirety, and sat on the jury after
    Kessler’s for-cause challenge was denied. 
    752 So. 2d at 550
    . Even though
    this juror had stated during questioning that he had not formed an opinion
    and could be fair, the supreme court found that the denial of individual
    voir dire
    prevented defense counsel from developing an accurate picture
    of the impact of the article on juror Mengel, for had counsel
    attempted to do so the information would have been broadcast
    to the entire venire. Defense counsel, for instance, was unable
    to gauge the following: Whether Mengel had focused closely on
    the article when he read it; whether he had understood and
    absorbed the details of the article; whether he had found the
    article credible; and whether he had experienced a gut-level
    reaction to the article.
    The State contends that it is enough that Mengel averred that
    he possessed an open mind and could render a fair verdict
    based solely on the evidence presented at trial. We disagree.
    5
    
    Id. at 551
    . Although Boggs had noted that exposure to pretrial publicity
    was not enough, in and of itself, to raise a presumption of unfairness,
    citing Bundy v. State, 
    471 So. 2d 9
     (Fla. 1985), Kessler distinguished
    Bundy as addressing “a motion for change of venue–not a dismissal [of a
    juror] for cause” and found “[t]he practical and policy considerations
    underlying these two issues are vastly different.” Kessler, 
    752 So. 2d at 552
    .
    In sum, Bolin and Kessler hold that, where inadmissible and prejudicial
    information about the case has recently been published in the media, the
    trial court abuses its discretion if it does not permit individual voir dire of
    jurors exposed to such publicity. Bolin, 
    736 So. 2d at 1165
    ; Kessler, 
    752 So. 2d at 552
    . They hold there is an abuse of discretion even if the venire
    members exposed to the publicity testify, per a show of hands, that they
    have not formed an opinion and can be impartial. Bolin, 
    736 So. 2d at 1164-65
    ; Kessler, 
    752 So. 2d at 550-52
    . Thus, the state’s argument in
    this case that there was no abuse of discretion because no juror who had
    formed an opinion sat on the jury is without merit.
    Under the Boggs/Bolin/Kessler standard, while the trial court may not
    have abused its discretion in denying the pretrial request for individual
    voir dire, it did abuse its discretion in denying the appellant’s later,
    renewed request for individual voir dire to determine each juror’s
    knowledge of the media reports. Further, the court abused its discretion
    in denying the motion to strike the panel when a juror revealed
    inadmissible prior bad acts of appellant.
    The pretrial motion requesting individual voir dire cited to media
    reports which appeared to have aired more than six months before the
    motion was filed. Although appellant later complained of more recent
    stories, she failed to specifically identify, in either her written pretrial
    motion or her renewed motion prior to questioning the jurors, any
    prejudicial, inadmissible information that had been reported in the media.
    See Kessler, 
    752 So. 2d at 551
     (individual voir dire should have been
    allowed where article appearing on second day of voir dire stated the
    defendant was serving a federal sentence for the same crime); Bolin, 
    736 So. 2d at 1162-63
     (individual voir dire should have been allowed in retrial
    where multiple articles published within a few days of jury selection
    recounted inadmissible information from the defendant’s first trial for the
    offense). Because the media reports were not recent and did not, as
    described by appellant, convey inadmissible evidence, individual voir dire
    was not mandated from the start.
    6
    Moreover, much of the evidence contained in the media reports would
    later be admitted as evidence at trial. The YouTube videos of appellant
    were admissible and, indeed, were later played at trial. Thus, exposure to
    these videos would not necessarily have required disqualification of
    prospective jurors. See 
    id.
     (exposure to prejudicial information “might not
    require disqualification of prospective jurors if this information were going
    to be introduced into evidence”). When individually questioned, jurors who
    indicated they could not be fair because they had seen the videos were
    stricken and did not sit on the jury. Appellant failed to identify any other
    prejudicial information to which prospective jurors could have been
    exposed. She mainly objected to the tone of the media coverage, which
    she believed implied her guilt. On this record, we cannot say the trial
    court abused its discretion by denying the motion for individual,
    sequestered voir dire prior to jury selection.
    However, this trial shows why individual voir dire should have been
    conducted once it became apparent that a multitude of prospective jurors
    had been exposed to pretrial publicity. Appellant had the right to ask these
    jurors what specific information they had learned from the media; the
    jurors’ show of hands was insufficient to protect her right to a fair and
    impartial jury. See Bolin, 
    736 So. 2d at 1164-65
    ; Kessler, 
    752 So. 2d at 551-52
    . The trial court’s refusal to allow appellant to do so on an
    individual basis posed the danger that one juror’s response could taint the
    entire panel. This is, in fact, what occurred when one juror mentioned the
    poisoning allegation. We thus find that the trial court abused its discretion
    when appellant renewed her request to individually voir dire the jurors on
    the media coverage during her counsel’s opportunity to question the
    jurors. See Bolin, 
    736 So. 2d at 551
    ; Kessler, 
    752 So. 2d at 1164-65
    .
    The trial court then erred by failing to strike the jury panel after all the
    jurors had heard the poisoning allegation. Because it involved an attempt
    to kill the same victim, it was closely related to the pending charges and
    could have prejudiced jurors in rendering their verdict. Even though
    appellant had not been formally charged with a crime based on the alleged
    poisoning, we find the comment analogous to comments informing
    prospective jurors of a defendant’s criminal history, other pending
    charges, or arrests. See Evans v. State, 
    36 So. 3d 185
    , 186 (Fla. 4th DCA
    2010); Holt v. State, 
    987 So. 2d 237
    , 239 (Fla. 1st DCA 2008); Wilding v.
    State, 
    427 So. 2d 1069
    , 1069 (Fla. 2d DCA 1983).
    The state argues any error was harmless “[i]n light of the video evidence
    of Appellant soliciting the undercover officer to kill her husband[.]” Yet the
    harmless error test “does not re-weigh the sufficiency of the evidence but
    focuses on how the error affects the trier of fact.” Holt, 
    987 So. 2d at 240
    .
    7
    Here, we cannot conclude that this error was harmless beyond a
    reasonable doubt “because of the possibility that jurors were unfairly
    prejudiced by their knowledge” of this closely related allegation. 
    Id.
    (finding error was not harmless because “[j]urors could have assumed that
    because Appellant was charged with another robbery, he was the
    perpetrator of the robbery being tried as well”); see also Jackson v. State,
    
    729 So. 2d 947
    , 951 (Fla. 1st DCA 1998) (finding error was not harmless
    “because of the possibility that the jury panel was unfairly prejudiced by
    virtue of their knowledge of his arrest for other crimes”). We note that, if
    this type of evidence had been improperly introduced at trial, it would have
    been presumed harmful. See Kopsho v. State, 
    84 So. 3d 204
    , 212 (Fla.),
    cert denied, 
    133 S. Ct. 190
     (2012). Accordingly, appellant was deprived of
    an impartial jury, and we reverse appellant’s conviction and remand for a
    new trial.
    Reversed and remanded for a new trial.
    DAMOORGIAN, C.J., and MAY, J., concur.
    *         *         *
    Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
    8