JAMYLIN JAMON'E BROWN v. STATE OF FLORIDA

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJanuary 12, 2022
Docket20-1426
StatusPublished

This text of JAMYLIN JAMON'E BROWN v. STATE OF FLORIDA (JAMYLIN JAMON'E BROWN 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
JAMYLIN JAMON'E BROWN v. STATE OF FLORIDA, (Fla. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA FOURTH DISTRICT

JAMYLIN JAMON’E BROWN, Appellant,

v.

STATE OF FLORIDA, Appellee.

No. 4D20-1426

[January 12, 2022]

Appeal from the Circuit Court for the Nineteenth Judicial Circuit, St. Lucie County; Charles A. Schwab, Judge; L.T. Case No. 562018CF003211B.

Carey Haughwout, Public Defender, and Cynthia L. Anderson, Assistant Public Defender, West Palm Beach, for appellant.

Ashley Moody, Attorney General, Tallahassee, and Kimberly T. Acuña, Assistant Attorney General, West Palm Beach, for appellee.

GERBER, J.

The defendant, a juvenile charged as an adult, appeals from his sentences following his no contest plea to robbery with a deadly weapon while masked, and burglary of a structure while armed and masked with an assault or battery. The defendant argues the circuit court erred in two respects: (1) fundamentally, by conducting the sentencing hearing with the defendant appearing remotely by video; and (2) reversibly, by denying the defendant’s request for a downward departure sentence.

We affirm on both arguments. We write to provide discussion of the first argument only.

Procedural History

The seventeen-year-old defendant and the twenty-two-year-old co- defendant robbed a gas station’s convenience store while armed with handguns. According to the arrest affidavit, the store’s surveillance video showed the following: The [co-defendant] went around to the register and removed the entire drawer. The [defendant] stood watch at the front door and pointed a black pistol at the clerk several times. The [co-defendant] stopped the clerk on the way out of the store and demanded his money to which the clerk reached in his pocket and then put the money in the cash register drawer. Both suspect males then fled out of the store ....

The defendant and the co-defendant were arrested later that same night. The defendant, after waiving his Miranda rights, told the police that the co-defendant had planned the robbery, he (the defendant) had agreed to participate in the robbery, and the co-defendant had given him a handgun to use during the robbery.

The state charged the defendant (and the co-defendant) with two counts: robbery with a deadly weapon while wearing a mask, and burglary of a structure while armed and masked with an assault or battery. Both offenses were first-degree felonies.

Before the pandemic affected courthouse operations, the defendant entered a no contest plea to both charges. Thus, at the plea hearing, the defendant was physically present in the courtroom with his counsel. The defendant acknowledged his lowest permissible prison sentence was 75.75 months, and the maximum was life in prison. After accepting the defendant’s plea, the judge scheduled a sentencing hearing.

The judge continued the sentencing hearing twice before the pandemic affected courthouse operations. The judge granted the second continuance so defense counsel could have more time to review the convenience store’s surveillance video and present witnesses in an effort to mitigate the defendant’s culpability compared to the co-defendant.

By the time the third sentencing date arrived, the pandemic had resulted in courthouse closures. The judge rescheduled the sentencing hearing for a fourth date.

On the fourth sentencing date, the defendant appeared by video from the county jail. The judge stated the defendant’s sentencing hearing would have to be rescheduled again. A jail deputy responded that the defendant had heard the judge. The judge proposed a fifth sentencing date for later that week, and the following discussion occurred between the judge and defense counsel:

2 JUDGE: ... [T]he reality is if you’re available Thursday or Friday, we’re looking to get camera time Thursday and Friday, are you available?

….

DEFENSE COUNSEL: [Y]es, Your Honor.

JUDGE: All right. I’ll have [my judicial assistant] ... get in touch with you as soon as we know what day that we are able to get camera time and if you’re still available, we’ll do it then.

DEFENSE COUNSEL: Perfect.

(emphasis added).

On the fifth sentencing date, the defendant appeared remotely from the county jail by video, but the attorneys, defense witnesses, and the judge were physically present in the courtroom. All wore face masks, including the defendant. After swearing in the defendant, the judge asked him: “I can see you by Zoom video. I believe you can see me, yes?” The defendant answered: “Yes, sir.” The judge asked defense counsel if any reason existed why sentencing could not proceed. Defense counsel answered: “No, sir.” The judge did not conduct a colloquy to determine if the defendant waived his physical presence at sentencing.

Defense counsel called the defendant to testify. During the defendant’s testimony, he was wearing a face mask and defense counsel had to ask the defendant to “speak up.” Direct examination lasted fourteen minutes, and nearly half of that time, the defendant’s face was not visible on the projected screen. Instead, only the top of his head could be seen.

The defendant testified that on the day when the robbery occurred, he had just met the co-defendant through a friend. While they were leaving the friend’s house by car, the co-defendant asked the defendant if he wanted to rob a store. The defendant laughed at the co-defendant at first. The co-defendant “kept questioning [the defendant] telling [the defendant] he just needed [the defendant] to hold the door” during the robbery. “After ten minutes [the defendant] just told [the co-defendant] [he’d] do it.”

When they got to the store, the co-defendant pulled out two guns from under the car’s seat, and gave the defendant a gun. The defendant verified that the gun which the co-defendant gave him was not loaded. During the robbery, the defendant held the door like the co-defendant had asked him

3 to. After the robbery, the defendant and co-defendant were stopped by police, and the defendant told the police “everything.”

At the end of defense counsel’s direct examination, the defendant read to the judge a prepared statement in which he expressed remorse for his actions. After the defendant read his statement, defense counsel mentioned the surveillance video, and said he “would stipulate that [the defendant] was at the door holding a weapon.”

The prosecutor then cross-examined the defendant for two minutes. Although the defendant’s masked face had greater visibility during cross- examination than during direct testimony, his face still was not visible for nearly forty seconds. Further, in responding to one of the prosecutor’s questions, the defendant referred to the prosecutor as “Your Honor.” The prosecutor then corrected the defendant: “[I]t’s not the judge [who’s] asking ... questions right now, it’s the prosecutor ... just so we’re clear. I know you can’t see me.”

After the defendant’s testimony, defense counsel had the defendant’s father and stepmother testify on the defendant’s behalf, and then rested.

The prosecutor introduced the store’s surveillance video into evidence, without objection. Because the courtroom had no screen, the prosecutor brought his laptop computer to the bench so the judge could view the surveillance video. Defense counsel moved to a spot in the courtroom where he also could view the surveillance video. Defense counsel did not object that the defendant was unable to view the surveillance video.

After playing the surveillance video, the state requested the judge, without objection, to take judicial notice of various items from the court file, including the Department of Juvenile Justice’s summary of the defendant’s juvenile criminal record.

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JAMYLIN JAMON'E BROWN v. STATE OF FLORIDA, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jamylin-jamone-brown-v-state-of-florida-fladistctapp-2022.