Diaz v. State

132 So. 3d 93, 2013 WL 6170645
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedNovember 21, 2013
DocketNos. SC11-949, SC12-289
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 132 So. 3d 93 (Diaz v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Diaz v. State, 132 So. 3d 93, 2013 WL 6170645 (Fla. 2013).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Joel Diaz appeals two orders of the Twentieth Judicial Circuit Court denying his motion to vacate his conviction of first-degree murder and sentence of death filed under Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.851 and his motion seeking a ruling that he is ineligible to be executed due to mental retardation under Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.203. Diaz also petitions this Court for a writ of habeas corpus. We have jurisdiction. See art. V, § 3(b)(1), (9), Fla. Const. For the reasons expressed below, we affirm the postconviction court’s orders and deny Diaz’s habeas petition.

I. BACKGROUND

On direct appeal, this Court set out the following facts summarizing Diaz’s crimes:

Diaz and Lissa Shaw dated for about two years. During the second year of their relationship, they lived in Diaz’s home with Lissa’s young daughter. The relationship proved “rocky,” however, and around August 1997 Lissa moved in with her parents, Charles and Barbara Shaw. After she moved out, Diaz tried to [100]*100see her, but she refused all contact. The two last spoke to each other in September 1997.
On October 6, Diaz purchased a Rossi .38 special revolver from a local pawn shop. He was eager to buy the gun, but because of a mandatory three-day waiting period, could not take it with him. Three days later, Diaz returned to the pawn shop to retrieve the gun, but it could not be released to him because his background check remained pending. Diaz was irritated, and continued to call the shop nearly every day until he was cleared. On October 16, Diaz finally was allowed to take the gun.
On October 27, Diaz asked his brother Jose, who was living with him at the time, for a ride to a friend’s house the next morning. Sometime that night or early the next morning, Diaz wrote a letter to his brother, which the police later discovered in his bedroom. It reads:
Jose [fjirst I want to apologize for using you or to being to you to take me where you did I felt so bad but there was no other way. Theres no way to explain what I have to do but I have to confront the woman who betrayed me and ask her why because not knowing is literly [sic] killing me. What happens then is up to her.
If what happen is what I predict than I want you to tell our family that I love them so much. Believe me I regret having to do this and dieing knowing I broke my moms heart and my makes it even harder but I cant go on like this it’s to much pain. Well I guess that all theres to say I love you all.
Joel
P.S. Someone let my dad know just because we werent close doesn’t mean I don’t love him because I do.
At 5:30 a.m. on October 28, Diaz’s brother and his brother’s girlfriend drove him to the entrance of the Cross Creek Estates subdivision, where the Shaws lived. Diaz carried his new gun, which was loaded, and replacement ammunition in his pocket. Diaz walked to the Shaws’ house and waited outside for about ten minutes.
At 6:30 a.m., Lissa Shaw left for work. She entered her car, which was parked in the garage, started the engine, and remotely opened the garage door. She saw someone slip under the garage door, and when she turned, Diaz stood at her window, pointing the gun at her head. He told her to get out of the car. She pleaded with him not to hurt her. When she saw that “the situation was not going anywhere,” she told him, “Okay, okay, hold on a second, let me get my stuff,” and leaned down as if retrieving personal items. She then shoved the gear into reverse and stepped on the gas pedal. Diaz started shooting. Lissa heard three shots, but did not realize she had been hit. As she continued backing out, the car struck an island behind the driveway. She then put the car into forward drive. As she drove away, she saw Diaz in the front yard pointing the gun at her father, Charles Shaw. Charles was about five feet from Diaz, pointing and walking toward him. Lissa drove herself to the hospital where it was discovered she had been shot in the neck and shoulder.
Charles and Diaz then had some sort of confrontation in the front yard and an altercation in the garage, resulting in Diaz chasing Charles into the master bedroom where Barbara was lying in bed. A quadriplegic, Barbara could not move from the bed.
As the two men moved through the house, Barbara heard Charles saying, [101]*101“Calm down, put it down, come on, calm down, take it easy.” Barbara was able to roll back to see Diaz standing in the bedroom with a gun. He was standing on one side of a chest of drawers, closer to the door, while Charles was standing on the other side of the chest, closer to the bathroom. Charles talked to Diaz, telling him to calm down and put down the gun. Diaz held the gun with two hands, pointing it straight at Charles, about six to eight inches from Charles’s chest. Diaz pulled the trigger, but the gun, out of ammunition, only clicked. Charles visibly relaxed, but Diaz reloaded the gun. When Charles realized Diaz was reloading, he ran into the bathroom. Diaz followed. As Charles turned to face him, Diaz fired three shots. Charles’s knees buckled, and he grabbed his midsection and fell face first to the floor.
Diaz went back into the bedroom and stood beside Barbara, holding the gun. Barbara screamed, “Why did you do this?” Diaz answered that Charles deserved to die. He stood in the bedroom from 30 seconds to a minute, then returned to the bathroom, bent over Charles’s body, extended his right arm, and shot Charles again. He then moved his arm left, which Barbara judged to be toward Charles’s head, and shot again. Diaz returned to the bedroom and, according to Barbara, said, “If that bitch of a daughter of yours, if I could have got her, I wouldn’t have had to kill your husband.”
Diaz remained in the house between 45 minutes and an hour. He spent some of this time talking to Barbara in the bedroom, where he passed the gun from hand to hand and unloaded and loaded the gun about three or four times. He remained in the house until the police arrived and arrested him.

Diaz v. State, 860 So.2d 960, 963-64 (Fla.2003).

Diaz’s defense counsel at trial argued that Diaz was insane at the time of the crime and even if he was not insane, he still lacked premeditation in killing Charles Shaw. The defense presented the testimony and report of Dr. Paul Kling in support of its contention that Diaz was insane at the time of the crime. The defense further argued that the lay witness testimony regarding Diaz’s behavior indicated that he was insane and impulsive. The defense also argued that Diaz lacked premeditation in killing Charles Shaw because Diaz shot him during the course of a confrontation.

The jury convicted Diaz of “the first-degree murder of Charles Shaw, the attempted first-degree murder of Lissa Shaw, and aggravated assault with a firearm on the neighbor.” Id. at 964. The jury recommended a sentence of death by a vote of nine to three following the penalty phase. Id. After conducting a Spencer1 hearing, the trial court sentenced Diaz to death. Id.

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Bluebook (online)
132 So. 3d 93, 2013 WL 6170645, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/diaz-v-state-fla-2013.