Green v. Secretary, Department of Corrections

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedFebruary 18, 2021
Docket8:13-cv-00837
StatusUnknown

This text of Green v. Secretary, Department of Corrections (Green v. Secretary, Department of Corrections) 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
Green v. Secretary, Department of Corrections, (M.D. Fla. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA TAMPA DIVISION

DAVID LEE GREEN,

Petitioner,

v. Case No. 8:13-cv-837-T-35TGW

SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS,

Respondent. __________________________/

O R D E R

This cause is before the Court on David Lee Green’s counseled, timely-filed petition for the writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. (Doc. 1) Upon consideration of the petition, the memorandum (Doc. 2), the response (Doc. 30), and the reply (Doc. 37), and in accordance with the Rules Governing Section 2254 Cases in the United States District Courts, it is ORDERED that the petition is DENIED: PROCEDURAL HISTORY Green was convicted after a jury trial of solicitation to commit first degree murder. (Doc. 32 Ex. 29 at 53) The state trial court sentenced Green to 30 years in prison. (Doc. 32 Ex. 29 at 55-59) The state appellate court per curiam affirmed the conviction and sentence. (Doc. 12 Ex. 5) The state court denied Green’s motion for postconviction relief, filed under Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.850. (Doc. 32 Ex. 20 at 34-78; Ex. 21 at 239-41, 278- 82, 355-56) The state appellate court initially reversed the denial of Green’s claim that trial counsel was ineffective in not presenting an entrapment defense because the postconviction court did not attach to its order portions of the record that conclusively refuted the claim. Green v. State, 34 So.3d 783 (Fla. 2d DCA 2010). The state appellate court affirmed the denial of relief in all other respects. Id. On remand, the state postconviction court conducted an evidentiary hearing on the claim of ineffective assistance of counsel for not raising entrapment. Following the hearing, the court again denied Green’s claim. (Doc. 32 Ex. 28 at

297-310) The state appellate court per curiam affirmed the order of denial. (Doc. 32 Ex. 37) Green’s § 2254 petition was initially dismissed as time barred. (Doc. 16) Based on a change in the law while the subsequent appeal was pending, however, Green’s § 2254 petition was determined to be timely. (Docs. 23, 25) This Order reviews the petition on its merits. FACTUAL BACKGROUND I. Evidence Presented At Trial; Green’s Defense Petitioner David Lee Green and Ginger Green (“Ginger”) married in August 1999. Green, who had at one point worked selling life insurance, purchased a $50,000 life insurance policy on Ginger. Green was the beneficiary of the policy. Ginger moved out in February

2000 and filed for divorce. The divorce was finalized in June 2000. During the divorce proceedings, Green was ordered to cancel the life insurance policy. Upon leaving the courtroom after the final divorce hearing, Green stated that he was not going to cancel the policy and that he was going to collect on it. Green did not cancel the policy. In July 2000, Green’s acquaintance Michael Bemis called Green from jail, asking for assistance. Green paid Bemis’s bond. According to Bemis, when Bemis asked Green how he could pay Green back, Green said that he had an insurance contract job for Bemis. Bemis said that Green asked him to kill Ginger and told Bemis that he would receive half of the life insurance proceeds. Bemis told Green that he would think about it. Bemis was arrested again in September 2000. On September 30, 2000, while incarcerated, he told a detective that Green had asked him to kill Ginger. On October 3, 2000, after Bemis was released from jail, he went to Green’s house wearing a wire. Law enforcement officers who were positioned nearby, including Detective Wayne Durrance, listened to and

recorded a conversation between Green and Bemis. The two discussed various ways in which Bemis could kill Ginger. Green told Bemis where Ginger lived, where she worked and went to school, and where she went on Friday nights. Green showed Bemis photographs of Ginger and informed Bemis that he could provide more photographs and a work schedule. Green and Bemis also discussed obtaining a gun; Green indicated that he could get one from a person named Gene. Green was arrested the next day, October 4, 2000. Green’s defense was that he was only joking when he talked to Bemis about killing Ginger. Therefore, he argued, the State could not prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.1 Green and Bemis both testified that the two would sometimes play games of “What If”. Green explained that this game was “a defining of the What Ifs, you know. What if you won [a]

million dollars. What if we happen to be walking down the street and an armored car guy

1 The jury was instructed (Doc. 32 Ex. 29 at 36) (emphasis added):

Before you can find the defendant guilty of Criminal Solicitation, the State must prove the following two elements beyond a reasonable doubt:

1. David Lee Green solicited Michael Bemis to commit Murder in the First Degree (Premeditated).

2. During the solicitation, David Lee Green encouraged, hired, or requested Michael Bemis to engage in specific conduct, which would constitute the commission of Murder in the First Degree. . . .

To “solicit” means to ask earnestly or to try to induce the person solicited to do the thing solicited. trips or something like that.” (Doc. 32 Ex. 31 at 230) Green testified that he and Bemis would discuss committing crimes but would not actually do so. Green contended that he made the recorded statements in a game of “What If” and did not genuinely mean them. Bemis acknowledged his deposition testimony that it was “maybe 50/50” whether

Green was serious during their conversation. (Doc. 32 Ex. 30 at 167) Bemis also testified that Green had a “strange, sick” sense of humor, and that they “BS’d around” about things that they never actually did, including criminal conduct. (Doc. 32 Ex. 30 at 163-65) In support of his assertion that the conversation was not serious, Green also noted that the discussion was rambling and addressed numerous topics other than killing Ginger. II. The Recorded Conversation A recording of the October 3, 2000 conversation between Bemis and Green was played at trial. The transcript of the recording spans approximately 44 pages. Excerpts of the conversation, along with summaries of other portions of the conversation, are set out below.

Near the beginning of the recording, Bemis and Green stated (Doc. 32 Ex. 30 at 82- 91): MR. BEMIS: [ ] So how much you figure I owe you now?

MR. GREEN: What do you feel, $300.

MR. BEMIS: $300. You’re going to let me work that off, though? You still want me to do that job?

MR. GREEN: Which one?

MR. BEMIS: The ex-wife thing.

MR. GREEN: Must be something pretty freaky.

MR. BEMIS: Well, you’re serious about it, man, I am, too. I need money bad. How much you say that policy is? MR. GREEN: Fifty.

MR. BEMIS: And I get half, 25 big ones, minus the $300. (Laughing) What’s that, $24,000, ah, $700. I could still live on that. Goddamn right.

MR. GREEN: You could get a - - somewhere.

MR. BEMIS: Huh?

MR. BEMIS: Shit, no. Have to move, fucking - - I’m staying at a goddamn, ah, what is that little dive. My girlfriend’s got a fucking little trailer we’re trying to get up out of right now. I’m fucking strapped, man. I’m still driving that car you loaned me. It’s about to go out. Got fix [sic] her Mustang. I just ain’t got bread for shit, man. And I have my habit, too, you know. You thought about how you want it done?

MR. GREEN: I don’t care how it’s done.

MR. BEMIS: As long as that bitch is dead, you know. (burps) Well, I thought I’d give a friendly overdose. $100 worth of dope. It looks like an accident, you know what I’m saying? Put her hand around the syringe, leave the fingerprints on the syringe. It looks like she did it herself. What do you think?

MR. GREEN: She doesn’t do any.

MR.

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