2D13-2712 / Shrader v. State

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedSeptember 7, 2016
Docket2D13-2712
StatusPublished

This text of 2D13-2712 / Shrader v. State (2D13-2712 / Shrader v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
2D13-2712 / Shrader v. State, (Fla. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING MOTION AND, IF FILED, DETERMINED

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF FLORIDA SECOND DISTRICT

GEORGE O. SHRADER, ) DOC #101103, ) ) Appellant, ) ) v. ) Case No. 2D13-2712 ) STATE OF FLORIDA, ) ) Appellee. ) ________________________________ )

Opinion filed September 7, 2016.

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Hillsborough County; Emmett L. Battles, Judge.

Howard L. Dimmig, II, Public Defender, and Richard J. D'Amico, Special Assistant Public Defender, Bartow, for Appellant.

Pamela Jo Bondi, Attorney General, Tallahassee, and Wendy Buffington, Assistant Attorney General, Tampa, for Appellee.

WALLACE, Judge.

George O. Shrader challenges his judgment and sentences for one count

of first-degree felony murder and two counts of sexual battery with the use of a deadly

weapon or actual physical force likely to cause serious personal injury following a jury trial. We conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying Mr.

Shrader's motion for mistrial made after the fleeting exposure of a few of the jurors to a

newspaper article that referenced Mr. Shrader's prior murder conviction. However,

because the State failed to prove that the victim did not consent to the sexual contacts

or that she sustained her injuries contemporaneously with the sexual acts, we reverse

the convictions for sexual battery. The reversal of the sexual battery convictions

requires reversal of the felony murder conviction, which was based upon the jury's

findings of guilt on the sexual battery counts. Thus, we remand for a new trial for

second-degree murder.

I. THE FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The charges against Mr. Shrader arose from the killing of a young woman

in the early morning hours of January 27, 1986, in Hillsborough County. The victim was

last seen at the 18 Wheeler Bar in Gibsonton, Florida, around midnight on January 26,

1986. 1 Her partially nude body was discovered at 7:24 a.m. on January 27, 1986, in the

middle of a dirt road at Whiskey Stump, an undeveloped peninsula of land south of

Gibsonton that juts into Tampa Bay. The investigation of the victim's murder went cold

within a few weeks after it had begun.

Twenty-one years later, in March 2007, Detective Chris Fox of the

Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office and Agent James Noblitt of the Florida Department

of Law Enforcement decided to reopen the case and to review the physical evidence.

They sent two soil samples taken from the crime scene that contained apparent blood to

1January 26, 1986, was the date of Super Bowl XX between the Chicago Bears of the National Football Conference and the New England Patriots of the American Football Conference.

-2- the FDLE lab for DNA testing, along with anal, oral, and vaginal swabs taken from the

victim. Both soil samples tested positive for blood, and a partial DNA profile was

developed for one soil sample. Partial DNA profiles were found in both the epithelial

cell fraction and the sperm cell fraction of the rectal swab, with the profile from the

sperm cell fraction being consistent with the partial profile from the soil sample.

The partial DNA profiles were entered into CODIS, 2 which presented no

immediate hits. But in 2010, after Mr. Shrader was convicted on an unrelated charge

that required him to submit a DNA sample, CODIS matched Mr. Shrader's known DNA

profile with the partial profiles developed from the soil sample and rectal swab in the

victim's case. Ultimately, on May 19, 2011, a grand jury returned an indictment against

Mr. Shrader on the following charges: first-degree premeditated murder of the victim

with a weapon, a violation of section 782.04(1)(a), Florida Statutes (1985); one count of

sexual battery of the victim (penetration or union of penis with vagina) with a deadly

weapon or physical force likely to cause serious personal injury, a violation of section

794.011(3), Florida Statutes (1985); and one count of sexual battery of the victim

(penetration or union of penis with anus) with a deadly weapon or physical force likely to

cause serious personal injury, a violation of section 794.011(3).

II. THE TRIAL

At Mr. Shrader's trial, the State presented evidence of the victim's

activities on January 26, 1986, which was Super Bowl Sunday, including her visits to the

Happy Days Lounge, the East Side Lounge, and the 18 Wheeler Bar in Gibsonton.

2CODIS is an acronym for the "Combined DNA Index System" operated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

-3- Although there was evidence that Mr. Shrader also patronized the 18 Wheeler Bar and

the East Side Lounge on occasion, no witness placed him at either of these locations on

January 26 or 27, 1986, and no witness saw Mr. Shrader and the victim together that

night. In addition, there was no direct evidence about how or when the victim came to

be at Whiskey Stump.

The evidence reflected that the victim was found around 7:24 a.m. on

January 27 in the middle of a dirt road at Whiskey Stump undressed except for a yellow

T-shirt. There was no other clothing at the scene. Earlier that night, the victim had

been seen wearing jeans, a blue shirt with writing, and a black, silky jacket. There was

no explanation of how the victim came to be clad in the yellow T-shirt. She had been

stabbed thirty-six times, including four defensive-type wounds to her left arm and right

hand. Although the temperature was below or near freezing when a sheriff's deputy

discovered the body, the body was still warm. There were tire tracks that were casted,

but were never linked to any vehicle. However, soil samples taken from around the

body included Mr. Shrader's blood. And when Mr. Shrader appeared at the courthouse

for fingerprinting in an unrelated case on January 27, the officer was not able to take

fingerprints of his right hand because it had been lacerated. Later, Mr. Shrader gave

several inconsistent stories about how he had cut his hand.

The medical examiner, Dr. Charles Diggs, testified that the first stab

wounds occurred to the victim's chest area and that she was moving around as she was

stabbed multiple times. He also stated that the victim was likely to have been attacked

and killed where her body had been found because of the amount of the blood at the

scene and because the attacker's blood was apparently also found at the scene. Dr.

-4- Diggs observed that it was common for an attacker stabbing a victim to injure himself or

herself during the attack.

The State introduced evidence at trial that Mr. Shrader's sperm cells were

found in both the victim's vagina and anus. However, Dr. Diggs testified that "there was

no physical evidence of bruising, lacerations, or tearing in any of the orifices, such as

the vagina or rectum" to suggest a sexual battery. But the fact that there was no

evidence of such trauma did not mean that a sexual battery did not take place. Many

victims of sexual battery do not have evidence of sexual trauma.

The State also introduced evidence that when Detective Fox and Agent

Noblitt confronted Mr. Shrader, he denied remembering the victim or being with her on

the night of the murder. He denied that he had sex with her, and he denied that he

knew of or had ever been to Whiskey Stump. The State's theory was that Mr. Shrader

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