Daniel Julio Dominguez v. State of Florida

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedMarch 18, 2026
Docket1D2024-1250
StatusPublished

This text of Daniel Julio Dominguez v. State of Florida (Daniel Julio Dominguez v. State of Florida) 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
Daniel Julio Dominguez v. State of Florida, (Fla. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL STATE OF FLORIDA _____________________________

No. 1D2024-1250 _____________________________

DANIEL JULIO DOMINGUEZ,

Appellant,

v.

STATE OF FLORIDA,

Appellee. _____________________________

On appeal from the Circuit Court for Alachua County. Peter K. Sieg, Judge.

March 18, 2026

ROWE, J.

Daniel Julio Dominguez filmed a video of himself holding what appeared to be an AR-15 style rifle and a handgun, while making statements about targeting a nearby middle school. He then posted the video to social media and to his personal website. After a viewer reported the video to police, Dominguez was charged with making a written or electronic threat to kill, do bodily injury, or conduct a mass shooting or act of terrorism. After a jury trial, Dominguez was convicted and sentenced on those charges. He now argues that the trial court reversibly erred when it (1) denied his motion for judgment of acquittal, (2) limited his questioning of the jury panel, and (3) failed to instruct the jury on the specific violent crime Dominguez threatened to commit. We affirm and write only to address the ruling on the motion for judgment of acquittal. I.

On October 19, 2023, Dominguez posted an approximately four-minute video titled “Suicide Note #1” to his public Instagram account and to his personal website. The video depicted Dominguez sitting on the floor with what appears to be an AR-15 style rifle on one side of him and a handgun on the other. Dominguez made the following statement on the video:

Hello there. My name is Daniel. I’m 31. I was born in North Central Florida. And I have been an American citizen my whole life. In my time here I have watched as other people have a tremendous amount more opportunities than me not based on their merit, but just based off of the distribution of resources or their status, wealth, that kind of thing.

I’ve done my best to play the game. And despite having a significant amount of my childhood stolen from, despite having my mother being chronically underpaid and overworked, despite the fact that I’ve been told my whole life that I am smart and special and capable and I’m going to go on to do great things, America has only insisted that I struggle.

When I was 27 and I did finally achieve middle class status and became a professional, my starting salary was equal to that of my mother’s who has been working her whole life. I was also in the professional sphere with $64,000 in student debt. My mother’s an immigrant, a refugee from another country who put herself through school and who lived under student debt and whose student debt I lived under.

And so given that the conditions are so bad and that the conditions even for social reproduction aren’t really there, I’ve decided that my mind is better applied to doing something useful than it is being a tool for the State and an unhappy and atomized and lonely tool of them.

2 I’ve decided to take up arms and attack [the] State. I intend to target a middle school, particularly the middle school I went to. It’s just right down the street there and it’s convenient. I know the layout. I will be going on a Saturday or a Sunday when no children are there. And will m—with the intention of getting off as many NATO 5.56 rounds from my AR-l5 at the building. I will start by shooting at the concrete walls that—that flank the building and then I’ll finish by taking out the windowed front office area.

I hope and expect the police to arrive on scene and to shoot me at this point. However, should that I am able to get off all the rounds from my rifle, I will not point the rifle at the police because I have no intention of harming anyone. But I do have this fake BB pistol Beretta that I intend to point at them to provoke them to hopefully kill me and send me to Valhalla or whatever.

What is there to say? This is the—product of what this country is creating. The messages tell me that I feel this way and that I should attack my brother. I hear that loud and clear. However, I refuse. I acknowledge that the enemy here is laid squarely at how wealth is distributed and allocated within society and how that affects our lives until the day we die. And so I’m a very real version of that.

Thank you for listening. Life’s tough. Good luck to all of you out there. I’m wishing you many moments of love, rest, and laughter in the coming years. Bye.

Dominguez included the following disclaimer, which appeared to the right of him on the video when viewed on a computer and beneath him when viewed on a smartphone:

THIS IS AN ART PIECE. A WORK OF FICTION. I AM NOT SUICIDAL, NOR AM I CONSIDERING ANY ILLEGAL ACTIVITY. NEITHER AM I MAKING THREATS. ART, THIS IS ART, IT FEELS STRONGLY

3 BECAUSE THAT IS THE INTENTION. IT IS CLEARLY INDICATED AT THE CLOSE.

So I like writing love letters, but then it occurred to me that I should also like to write suicide notes. I, personally, am not suicidal, but suicide notes are powerful and honest and beautiful and sad and all those interesting things. I like the video format, and while this is just the first one, I hope to make more with different scripting, edits, and reasons. Something about the absurdity and resolve of people in this format is beautiful and terrifying. It’s plenty of grist for the mind mill.

Anyway, I’m fine, everyone and everything is safe and sound! Please don’t call the police or report my account. I would like to enjoy my freedom of movement, and to not go to jail for art. The video is also hosted on my site, jic [just in case].

Sherri Estes, the principal of Kanapaha Middle School, saw the Instagram post. She concluded that the school described in the video was Kanapaha, and then immediately contacted the police. Dominguez, who lived just down the street from Kanapaha, was arrested and charged under section 836.10, Florida Statutes (2023), with making a written or electronic threat to kill, do bodily injury, or conduct a mass shooting or act of terrorism. Dominguez rejected a plea offer, and the case went to trial.

At trial, Estes testified that she saw Dominguez’s video the night it was posted. Based on the description of the school and the front office area, she believed that Dominguez was talking about her school. She later learned that Dominguez was a former student. Estes explained that over one thousand students attended Kanapaha. The campus was open to the public on the weekends, and some buildings were rented out each weekend. On the weekend after Dominguez made the video, the school was reserved for a children’s sports group.

The State then presented testimony on Dominguez’s unusual encounter with law enforcement a few months before he posted the video and shortly after he bought the semi-automatic rifle

4 displayed in the video. Detective Summer Harrison testified that Dominguez was riding a moped when he flagged her down. He told her that he “wanted to let [the Detective] know that he’d just bought an AR.” He provided Harrison with the model number of the rifle and told her where he bought it. He made a point to tell her that the rifle was not on his person and that he did not plan to bring it to his workplace at a nearby university.

After his arrest, Dominguez told police that the rifle was at his father’s home. Police searched that home and found a Ruger AR-556 semi-automatic rifle and a replica Baretta handgun—the guns depicted in the video. The police also found a fully functioning Glock 43 handgun, ammunition, and a rifle scope.

Investigators recovered text messages from Dominguez’s cell phone. The texts showed that Dominguez knew that his video would cause problems. He told one friend, “Instagram is not going to like my latest video,” and he said that his account might get “nuked.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Daniel Julio Dominguez v. State of Florida, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daniel-julio-dominguez-v-state-of-florida-fladistctapp-2026.