Dontae R. Morris v. State of Florida

CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 11, 2018
DocketSC15-2395
StatusPublished

This text of Dontae R. Morris v. State of Florida (Dontae R. Morris v. State of Florida) 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
Dontae R. Morris v. State of Florida, (Fla. 2018).

Opinion

Supreme Court of Florida ____________

No. SC15-2395 ____________

DONTAE R. MORRIS, Appellant,

vs.

STATE OF FLORIDA, Appellee.

[January 11, 2018]

PER CURIAM.

Dontae Morris appeals his conviction of first-degree murder and sentence of

death.1 For the following reasons, we affirm the conviction but vacate his sentence

and remand for a new penalty phase.

I. BACKGROUND

Morris was convicted and sentenced to death for the May 18, 2010, first-

degree premeditated murder of Derek Anderson. The evidence at trial established

that on May 18, 2010, at approximately 11:20 p.m., twenty-one-year-old Derek

1. We have jurisdiction. See art. V, § 3(b)(1), Fla. Const. Anderson was walking home with a friend, Joe Anderson, when they noticed a

white car following them. Joe testified that as they reached the entrance to Derek’s

apartment complex, the white car drove by them slowly at about five miles per

hour and that he saw four males in the car looking at him and Derek. Joe and

Derek then parted ways, and Joe watched Derek walk across the apartment

complex’s parking lot towards the apartment where Derek lived with his mother.

Joe proceeded to walk back to his home.

Shortly thereafter, while Joe was walking home, he called Derek’s mother’s

cell phone to check on Derek. Derek answered the phone and appeared to be all

right, but the call ended in static. Joe called the number back, and someone

answered the phone. Joe heard screams and raised voices. Joe ran home to talk to

his parents and then back to Derek’s apartment where he found police officers and

neighbors crowded by Derek’s body in front of Derek’s apartment door.

Police Officer John Simpkins was the first officer to arrive on the scene.

Officer Simpkins testified that at 11:31 p.m. he received a dispatch to respond to

Derek’s apartment complex and was advised that someone had been shot. He

arrived at the scene one minute later to find Derek on the ground in front of his

apartment door with a bloodstain on his shirt. Derek was not breathing and did not

have a pulse, so Officer Simpkins began CPR. Officer Dennis Small arrived on the

-2- scene and helped Officer Simpkins with CPR until Tampa Fire Rescue EMS

arrived and transported Derek to the hospital.

Officer Small followed Derek to the emergency room, where trauma

surgeons and nurses attempted to revive him. Despite the doctors’ and nurses’

efforts, Derek was pronounced dead at 12:33 a.m. Derek had no exit wounds, so

Officer Small asked Dr. Shapiro to remove any projectiles from Derek’s body for

evidentiary purposes. Officer Small witnessed Dr. Shapiro remove a bullet from

Derek’s right pectoral muscles.

Dr. Mary Mainland testified that an autopsy revealed that Derek’s cause of

death was a single gunshot wound to his back with the bullet perforating his heart,

aorta, esophagus, and lungs. The bullet had an upward trajectory from the entrance

wound to where it was located in Derek’s right pectoral muscles. The gunshot

wound caused Derek to bleed to death within seconds or minutes.

Yolanda Soto, a firearm and toolmaking examiner with the Florida

Department of Law Enforcement, compared the projectile taken from Derek’s

body with two projectiles that came from a firearm Morris fired forty-two days

after Derek was shot. Ms. Soto testified that all three projectiles were fired from

the same firearm.

Tamora Dorn, Derek’s sister, lived in the same apartment complex as Derek

but in a different apartment unit. Ms. Dorn testified that on May 18, 2010, at

-3- around 11:30 p.m., she had her apartment door open because she was cleaning, and

she heard a gunshot. She walked outside of her apartment and saw people

scuffling outside. She spoke with someone briefly and then ran towards her

mother’s apartment. As she approached the apartment, she could see Derek’s body

and hear her mother. She also confirmed that Derek did not own a phone and

would sometimes use his mother’s phone.

Cordelia Fisher, a neighbor, testified that around 11:30 p.m. on May 18,

2010, she was in her apartment and heard a gunshot. She looked out her window

and saw four black men, whom she did not recognize, running toward a white car

that was in the parking lot. She saw the men get in the car and drive away.

Willieshia Jones, Derek’s friend who lived near the apartment complex,

testified that between 11:00 and 11:30 p.m. she was in the apartment’s park area

when she heard a gunshot. She saw people running toward the back of the

apartment complex. She followed the crowd and saw Derek’s body. When she

turned to walk away from the area, she saw a white car pull out of the parking lot.

Ashley Price testified that she was friends with Morris. They were intimate

on one occasion, but after that encounter remained friends and talked on the phone

but were not romantically involved. Morris called Ashley on the phone almost

daily to confide in her. Also, Ashley stated that she had previously lived in the

-4- same apartment complex as Derek, and she knew Derek sold marijuana in the

apartment complex.

A few days after Derek’s murder, Morris called Ashley and told her that he

murdered Derek. Morris told Ashley that earlier on the day of Derek’s murder, he

and Derek had an argument, which almost turned physical, over Derek selling

marijuana on Morris’ “turf,” and Derek told Morris that he would continue to sell

marijuana wherever he wanted. Later, around midnight on the same day, Morris

saw Derek walking inside the apartment complex. Morris followed Derek from a

distance, so Derek would not realize he was being followed. When Derek was in

front of his second-floor apartment door talking on the phone, Morris stood on a

knee-high wall in the first-floor breezeway and shot Derek in the stomach area.

According to Morris, Derek fell to the ground immediately. Morris told Ashley

that he knew where to shoot a person to kill him.

Photographs of the apartment building where Derek was shot show that there

is a knee-high wall directly below Derek’s second-story apartment and that there is

a large rectangular open space in the middle of the second floor, allowing a person

on the first floor to see the area by Derek’s front door. During the investigation, a

detective stood on the wall and had a clear view of the location where Derek was

shot. Additionally, when Ashley was interviewed, law enforcement had not

released any information about Derek being on the phone when he was shot.

-5- On June 2, 2010, Detective Henry Duran placed a call to a phone number

associated with Morris and spoke with Morris, who identified himself. Detective

Duran subsequently heard Morris’ voice in person and on recordings of jail phone

calls and testified that he had no doubt that Morris was the person who answered

the phone on June 2, 2010. Cell phone records for that phone number revealed that

on the date of Derek’s murder, the phone was utilizing cell phone towers located

near the murder scene. Notably, at 11:30 p.m. the cell phone used a tower one-

third of a mile away from the crime scene.

Following the State’s case, Morris rested without presenting any evidence or

calling any witnesses in his defense. Morris argued during closing arguments that

the circumstantial evidence did not prove his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt and

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