John Steven Huggins v. State of Florida

161 So. 3d 335, 2014 WL 5026425
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedOctober 9, 2014
DocketSC11-219, SC12-2161
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 161 So. 3d 335 (John Steven Huggins 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
John Steven Huggins v. State of Florida, 161 So. 3d 335, 2014 WL 5026425 (Fla. 2014).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

John Steven Huggins appeals an order of the 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 petitions this Court for a writ of habeas corpus. We have jurisdiction. See art. V, § 3(b)(1), (9), Fla. Const. For the following reasons, we affirm the denial of Huggins’ motion and deny his petition for a writ of habeas corpus.

OVERVIEW

Huggins was convicted of the June 1997 murder of Carla Larson and sentenced to death. After discovering that the State committed a Brady 1 violation, the trial *340 court ordered a new trial. At Huggins’ second trial, he was again convicted of murder and sentenced to death. This Court affirmed his conviction and sentence on direct appeal. Huggins filed the instant po'stconviction motion on June 5, 2006. Subsequently, the postconviction courts found Huggins was incompetent to proceed and he was committed to the Department of Children and Family Services (DCF) for treatment. The court monitored Huggins’ progress until ultimately determining that Huggins was competent to proceed with his postconviction proceedings. Huggins moved through counsel for an additional competency determination, but refused to cooperate. The postconviction court held an evidentiary hearing without first determining Huggins’ competency. After the evidentiary hearing, the court ordered Huggins to meet with experts, then ruled that Huggins was competent and denied Huggins’ postconviction motion. Huggins now appeals that denial and petitions this Court for a writ of habe-as corpus. We find that the postconviction court did not err and that Huggins has not established that he is entitled to a writ of habeas corpus.

STATEMENT OF THE CASE AND FACTS

Huggins was first convicted of Larson’s murder on February 3, 1998. After finding that the State had committed a Brady violation, the trial court ordered a new trial. State v. Huggins, 788 So.2d 238, 244 (Fla.2001). The facts presented in Huggins’ second direct appeal were as follows:

The victim, Carla Larson, was married and had a daughter. She was an engineer for Centex-Rooney, a construction company, and was working on Disney’s Coronado Springs project in June 1997. She drove a white Ford Explorer with a black bug guard on the front, light blue pinstripes, a Passport radar detector hard-wired to the dash, and air conditioning and radio controls in the back seat. On the morning of June 10, 1997, Larson took her daughter to day care and went to work. Just prior to lunch, Larson told a co-worker, Cindy Garris, that she was going to a grocery store to pick up food for an afternoon meeting. Garris suggested that she go to a new Publix grocery store on International Drive, just off of the Osceola Parkway, and Larson indicated that she would go there. Larson left work at approximately noon. A Publix receipt indicated that she purchased food at 12:11 p.m. However, Larson never returned to work.
Numerous witnesses testified to various sightings that afternoon of a white sport utility vehicle (SUV) on a dirt road off of the Osceola Parkway that led into a wooded area. Between 12:30 and 12:45 p.m., Barry O’Hearn and his landscaping crew were eating lunch in that wooded area when O’Hearn saw a white Ford Explorer drive past him on a dirt road. He could only describe the driver as white. Between 12:45 and 1 p.m., Floyd Sparks, Disney’s superintendent of drainage and roadways in the area, was driving on the Osceola Parkway and saw, through a fire break line in the woods, that an SUV was parked in an unauthorized area of the woods. Though normally part of his job, Sparks was not able to investigate it at that time. Gary and Brad Wilson, a father and son who both worked for Centex-Rooney, were returning from lunch on the Osceola Parkway just prior to 1 p.m. when they saw a white Ford Explorer exit from the dirt road onto the Osceola Parkway at an unusually high rate of speed. Their vehicle soon passed the Ford Explorer, and both looked at the driver. Brad Wilson later told a sketch *341 artist that 'the driver was a white male with a dark tan, weathering of the face, highlights in his hair, and a moustache and beard. He testified at trial that the driver had longer, brownish hair and described his facial hair as a close growth. Gary Wilson, however, described the driver as a white male who was flushed in the face, had medium-length dark hair, and no facial hair. Finally, between 2:30 and 3 p.m., Chris Smithson, a subcontractor on the Coronado Springs project, saw a white Ford Explorer exit from the dirt road, partially cross the Osceola Parkway, stop in the median and wait to merge with oncoming traffic. Smithson noticed the vehicle because it was nice and seemed out of place in the woods. Smithson later saw Huggins in the median and identified him as the driver of that vehicle.
Two days after Larson’s disappearance, two of her co-workers instituted a search. They encountered Sparks, who mentioned the SUV he had seen two days earlier. Sparks then went to the point on Osceola Parkway from where he had seen the SUV and, via hand-held radios, directed Larson’s co-workers to the- point where he could see them through the same fire break line. From there, they were led by smell to a body about 200 feet away. The body, which was naked and covered by a towel, was later identified as Larson. Dr. Shashi Gore, the medical examiner in this case, testified at trial that significant decomposition indicated the body had been there for approximately two days and concluded from his autopsy that death was by strangulation. Except for her wedding band, the jewelry Larson usually wore was missing, as was her clothing and purse. Months later, on December 24, 1997, a landscaping crew found Larson’s purse in the brush off of the driver’s side of a ramp along World Drive between the Osceola Parkway and Highway 192.
On the day of Larson’s disappearance, Huggins and his wife, Angel, were visiting Orlando with their five children. Although Huggins and Angel were estranged, the family stayed together at a Days Inn on Highway 192 near the Osceola Parkway and International Drive on the evenings of June 8 and 9, 1997. At the trial, Huggins’ sixteen-year-old son, Jonathon Huggins, testified that he could not remember much about the trip, which had occurred five years earlier. The trial court found that Jonathon was effectively unavailable as a witness, and his prior deposition was admitted. In Jonathon’s deposition, he stated that in the summer of 1997, his father did not have a car and the family visited Orlando in Angel’s small car. On the day after visiting Gatorland, they returned to Angel’s house without his father, and his father later returned in a different vehicle, which Jonathon remembered as being dark in color, new in appearance, with air vents and radio controls in the back seat, and a clean interior. Jonathon also remembered riding in that vehicle approximately three times and that later that summer, his father drove him back to Panasoffkee, where Jonathon lived with his grandmother, in a little blue car.
Angel Huggins’ mother, Fay Blades, with whom Angel lived in Melbourne, testified that on June 10, 1997, she returned home from work a little after 5 p.m.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Dantzler v. State of Florida
District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2026
Robert Castro v. State of Florida
District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2026
Darrius Romeo Tucker v. State of Florida
District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2025
ANDRES ANDRES v. THE STATE OF FLORIDA
District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2023
JAMES AYERS v. STATE OF FLORIDA
District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2020
Nolasco v. State
275 So. 3d 795 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2019)
Ronald Pak Zern v. State of Florida
215 So. 3d 185 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2017)
Turner, Albert James
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2015

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
161 So. 3d 335, 2014 WL 5026425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-steven-huggins-v-state-of-florida-fla-2014.