Broxterman v. Secretary, Department of Corrections (Polk County)

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedSeptember 26, 2023
Docket8:20-cv-02940
StatusUnknown

This text of Broxterman v. Secretary, Department of Corrections (Polk County) (Broxterman v. Secretary, Department of Corrections (Polk County)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Broxterman v. Secretary, Department of Corrections (Polk County), (M.D. Fla. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA TAMPA DIVISION

DAVID BROXTERMAN,

Petitioner,

v. Case No. 8:20-cv-2940-WFJ-AEP

SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS,

Respondent. /

ORDER

David Broxterman, a Florida prisoner, timely filed a pro se petition for writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. (Doc. 1). Respondent filed a response opposing the petition. (Doc. 9). Mr. Broxterman filed a reply. (Doc. 11). Upon consideration, the petition is DENIED. I. Procedural History After two mistrials, a state-court jury convicted Mr. Broxterman of one count of scheme to defraud.1 (Doc. 10-2, Ex. 2, at 619). The trial court sentenced Mr. Broxterman to five years in prison followed by a twenty-year term of supervised release. (Id. at 786). The state appellate court per curiam affirmed the conviction and sentence. (Doc. 10-3, Ex. 9). Mr. Broxterman unsuccessfully sought postconviction relief under Florida Rule of

1 The first mistrial resulted from a hung jury; the second was declared after a witness referred to the previous trial during her testimony. (Doc. 10-2, Ex. 2, at 1521-22, 2084-85). Criminal Procedure 3.850, (id., Ex. 11, at 37, 58), and the state appellate court per curiam affirmed the denial of relief, (id., Ex. 14). This federal habeas petition followed. (Doc. 1).

II. Facts; Trial Testimony In the fall of 2009, Mr. Broxterman applied for a full-time faculty position in the “business program” at Polk State College. (Doc. 10-3, Ex. 5, at 196). At the time, he was an adjunct instructor at the school. (Id. at 186). The posting for the faculty position “include[d] a requirement for an earned doctorate degree from a regionally accredited institution of higher education.” (Id. at 174). In his application, Mr. Broxterman claimed

that he had obtained a Ph.D. in Business Administration from the University of South Florida (“USF”) in 2007. (Id. at 175-76). In fact, he had not received a Ph.D. from USF or any other university.2 (Id. at 287). Nevertheless, Mr. Broxterman was hired as a full-time professor at Polk State, serving in that role until the spring of 2014. (Id. at 180-81). During his employment as a full-time faculty member, Mr. Broxterman earned a total of

approximately $250,000 in salary from the school. (Id.) In April 2014, the administration at Polk State discovered that Mr. Broxterman “did not, in fact, have a Ph.D.” (Id. at 182). An on-campus meeting was held to discuss the matter. (Id.) During the meeting, Mr. Broxterman claimed he had completed his Ph.D. under Professor Michael Kovac, the former Dean of the College of Engineering at USF.

(Id. at 190, 318). Professor Kovac had retired from USF in 2008 and passed away in 2012. (Id. at 318-20). Mr. Broxterman told the administration that he could not find his

2 Mr. Broxterman did receive a bachelor’s degree from Wilmington College in 1986 and a master’s degree from Webster University in 2000. (Doc. 10-3, Ex. 5, at 436-37). dissertation, that he did not have “any receipts” to show that he had “paid for the[] classes [he] would have taken,” and that he “couldn’t remember” who had served on his

dissertation committee other than Professor Kovac. (Id. at 198-99). He also claimed that he had defended his dissertation in a “one-of-a-kind classroom” on the Lakeland campus of Polk State. (Id. at 200). This classroom had a “raised stage” and “theater-type seating,” making it “the only classroom of its type” on campus. (Id.) College records contained no indication that Mr. Broxterman, Professor Kovac, or USF had ever reserved the room. (Id. at 200-01).

Polk State suspended Mr. Broxterman pending further investigation. (Id. at 184). On May 2, 2014, David Lyon—an “economic crime[s] investigator” with the State Attorney’s Office—met with Mr. Broxterman and his attorney. (Id. at 214, 217). During the meeting, Mr. Broxterman claimed he had first met Professor Kovac in the parking lot of the Moffitt Cancer Center in the summer of 2006. (Id. at 221). According to Mr.

Broxterman, Professor Kovac initially offered him entrance to the USF Ph.D. program for $6,200, but he “negotiated the price of it down to $5,000 if he paid cash.” (Id.) Mr. Broxterman said he did not have a receipt or any “bank records” to corroborate his story. (Id. at 222). He also claimed that he was “currently looking for” his dissertation, and that he did not “walk in the [USF] graduation ceremony” because “his father became ill.” (Id.)

One week later, Mr. Lyon spoke to Mr. Broxterman over the phone. (Id. at 233-34). Mr. Broxterman asked whether he could “get some items from [his Polk State] office.” (Id.) Mr. Lyon denied the request because he was in the middle of obtaining a search warrant for the office. (Id.) Mr. Broxterman became upset and claimed that he “was just one dissertation short of a Ph.D.” (Id. at 234).

Three days after this conversation, Mr. Lyon executed the search warrant at Mr. Broxterman’s office. (Id. at 224). Mr. Lyon found a fake USF diploma hanging on the wall. (Id. at 225-26). The diploma was printed on copy paper, misspelled “Board” as “B-A-O- R-D,” and indicated that Mr. Broxterman graduated “cum laude.” (Id. at 227-28, 279-80). USF Ph.D. students do not receive Latin honors at graduation. (Id. at 279). Mr. Lyon also found a USF Bulls helmet in the office. (Id. at 230). Inside the helmet was the inscription,

“Broxterman, Ph.D., May 2007, University of South Florida.” (Id.) The date on the fake diploma, by contrast, was March 2007. (Id. at 230-31). Mr. Lyon did not find “any evidence of a dissertation” in the office. (Id. at 234-35). Subsequent investigation revealed that Professor Kovac did not become a patient at Moffitt Cancer Center until December 2009, over three years after the alleged parking-lot

meeting between him and Mr. Broxterman. (Id. at 237). Moreover, in August 2007— several months after he allegedly received his Ph.D. from USF—Mr. Broxterman contacted Capella University, an online college where he had taken several courses. (Id. at 297, 440- 41). He submitted a request for “recognition” that he had “completed [the] comprehensive exam and [was] moving into the dissertation phase” of the Ph.D. program. (Id. at 308). The

college denied the request because Mr. Broxterman “had not been active in a course since [w]inter 2005.” (Id. at 309-10). Shortly after Mr. Broxterman was suspended from Polk State in May 2014, he reached out to Capella University again. (Id. at 313). This time, he submitted a “road map request,” indicating that he wished to resume his studies at the college. (Id. at 313). Mr. Broxterman never received a Ph.D. from Capella University. (Id. at 316).

Sharon Kovac was married to Professor Kovac for forty-seven years before he passed away. (Id. at 318). She testified at trial that (1) she did not believe her husband visited the Moffitt Cancer Center in 2006, (2) she did not know Mr. Broxterman and had never heard her husband “talk about him or reference him in any way,” (3) she never saw Mr. Broxterman’s name on any documents her husband kept at the house, (4) money was never “an issue in [the] household” from 2005 until her husband’s passing, and (5) she

never saw her husband “come home with $5,000 cash.” (Id. at 320-22). III. Standard of Review The Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (“AEDPA”) governs this proceeding. Carroll v. Sec’y, DOC, 574 F.3d 1354, 1364 (11th Cir. 2009). Habeas relief can be granted only if a petitioner is in custody “in violation of the Constitution or laws or

treaties of the United States.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254

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