Eugene v. State

53 So. 3d 1104, 2011 Fla. App. LEXIS 573, 2011 WL 222159
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJanuary 26, 2011
DocketNo. 4D07-246
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 53 So. 3d 1104 (Eugene 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
Eugene v. State, 53 So. 3d 1104, 2011 Fla. App. LEXIS 573, 2011 WL 222159 (Fla. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

GROSS, C.J.

Vladimir Eugene was convicted of first degree murder and sentenced to life in prison. We affirm. We choose to address two of his arguments on appeal. First, he contends that the victim’s emails to him were inadmissible hearsay. Second, he argues that the trial court erred in allowing the jury to hear four statements made by interrogating detectives during questioning of Eugene which suggested their belief as to his guilt or “theory as to what happened.”

We provide a detailed review of the evidence to give better context to appellant’s arguments. The 21-year old victim, Kathy Pierre, lived with her family at a house in Miramar. On a July Sunday in 2005, the victim’s younger sister, Edna, woke up at 8:30 a.m. and got ready for work. She went into the victim’s room to get some lotion. Nothing seemed unusual and nothing was out of place. Edna noticed the victim in her bed completely covered by a comforter; this was not the usual way for the victim to sleep.

After Edna left the house, the victim’s mother, Florise, discovered her daughter’s body. She saw marks on the victim’s neck and mouth. The victim had been strangled from behind' with some type of ligature, and something had applied pressure to her face. The victim was in her underwear. There was no evidence of sexual activity or assault; no alien DNA was found. There was also no evidence anywhere in the house that a struggle had occurred. There were no signs of forced entry. The only thing missing in the entire house was a cordless black house phone from a base in the victim’s room.

Appellant, who was Florise’s cousin, had an intensely close relationship with the victim and her family. Thirteen years older than the victim, he began to live with the family when the victim was in elementary school. He and the victim had a special and unique relationship. Although no one ever observed inappropriate sexual contact between them, appellant often slept in the victim’s room. While he stayed with the family, appellant got married and started his own family. The victim did not like appellant’s wife at first, but soon the women became friends. After appellant got married, he continued to frequently sleep in bed with the victim. The victim’s stepfather and mother were aware of this sleeping arrangement but did not think it was unusual. Shortly after [1106]*1106appellant’s first child was born, he moved his family to Boynton Beach.

Even after the move, appellant was a frequent visitor at the victim’s home, often spending nights in the victim’s room. He had a key to the house and knew the code to the alarm system. The victim often spent weekends with appellant and his family in Boynton Beach; during these visits the victim slept in a number of different places, sometimes in bed with appellant. Appellant’s wife commented that it was normal for her husband and the victim to lounge around together in their underwear. Witnesses described appellant and the victim as having a father-daughter relationship, but with physical interaction like a boyfriend and girlfriend who were always “all over” each other and who would tell each other everything. They spent hours talking in each other’s arms. When not together, appellant and the victim would speak every day by phone or over the Internet.

About six weeks before the murder, a rupture occurred in the relationship between appellant and the victim. Appellant got into an altercation with his wife and the victim intervened. Appellant pushed or hit the victim twice. She took offense and broke off the relationship. Her visits with appellant stopped. After the fight with the victim, appellant’s behavior changed — he stayed home, lying in front of the television all day, not wanting to do anything. Appellant told the victim’s mother that he could not afford to lose the victim’s friendship and that he would give his life for her. Over the next few weeks, appellant repeatedly telephoned the victim. Many times the victim refused to take his calls. To try and repair the relationship, appellant sent text messages and emails in which he professed his friendship and love and made it clear that his life was torn apart by losing his best friend. He told Florise that it was “killing” him to lose the victim’s friendship.

The victim’s response to the changed relationship was different than appellant’s. She cut appellant out of her life and, for the first time, began to spend time with other men. Three social friends of the victim were mentioned at trial: Adelyn, the brother of appellant’s wife and a cousin of the victim’s mother; Stephane, a friend of both the victim and Adelyn; and Benny, a boxing instructor. Appellant was jealous that the victim’ had started going out and having fun.

Adelyn lived with appellant and his family. Florise described him as a friend of her daughter. Edna characterized him as a close friend of her sister’s, whose relationship with her did not change in the month before her death. Adelyn and the victim never argued and never had a falling out. Adelyn met the victim through appellant when she visited Haiti several years before the murder. He denied having an intimate sexual relationship with the victim and testified that he had engaged only in “kissing to more intense” heavy petting with her. Adelyn talked with the victim many times over the two days preceding her death. On the night that she died, he stayed in at appellant’s home and had no contact with anyone between 11 p.m. and 8 a.m. the next morning.

About a month before the murder, Benny the boxing instructor started giving the victim boxing lessons for 2.5 hours every weekday. Three days before the murder, they went out on a date. While they were out, the victim received phone calls that upset her. They had plans to go on a second date the weekend of her death. After the murder, appellant told a friend that he never liked the boxing instructor and that he had gone to the gym to check him out, pretending to be a prospective customer. The instructor remembered [1107]*1107showing appellant around on this visit to the gym. Appellant did not think the instructor should be dating a client and did not approve of the victim receiving his late night calls.

Stephane was a friend of both Adelyn and the victim who did not meet appellant until after the murder. The night of her death, the victim went out on a date with Stephane. While the victim was getting ready, Edna used the black cordless phone in her sister’s room. When she was finished, she threw the phone onto the victim’s bed. The victim was in a good mood. She left the house shortly after 9 p.m. About ten minutes later, Edna left the house for her evening out.

The victim picked up Stephane in her car and they went to dinner at Dave & Buster’s. On the way, the victim received a call on her cell phone. Although she was not happy about it, she answered the phone, listened quietly, abruptly hung up, and then was quiet for a while. She received a second call during dinner. Her only contribution to the conversation with the caller was to ask, “Are you done yet?” Phone records later established that appellant called the victim twice while she was out with Stephane. Although his phone was turned off, Stephane received two calls from the victim’s house phone at 12:23 and 12:27 a.m. The victim dropped Stephane off at his house between 12:30 and 1:00 a.m. and said she would call him when she got home. Stephane never received the victim’s call.

When Edna arrived home shortly after 3 a.m., she noticed nothing unusual. The front door was locked. The only way to have locked the door from the outside was with a key.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 So. 3d 1104, 2011 Fla. App. LEXIS 573, 2011 WL 222159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eugene-v-state-fladistctapp-2011.