Jonathan Huey Lawrence v. State of Florida

CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedOctober 29, 2020
DocketSC18-2061
StatusPublished

This text of Jonathan Huey Lawrence v. State of Florida (Jonathan Huey Lawrence 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
Jonathan Huey Lawrence v. State of Florida, (Fla. 2020).

Opinion

Supreme Court of Florida No. SC18-2061 ____________

JONATHAN HUEY LAWRENCE, Appellant,

vs.

STATE OF FLORIDA, Appellee.

October 29, 2020

PER CURIAM.

Jonathan Huey Lawrence appeals his sentence of death for the 1998 first-

degree murder of Jennifer Robinson that was imposed in a 2018 resentencing

proceeding. We have jurisdiction, see art. V, § 3(b)(1), Fla. Const., and affirm. As

is more fully explained below, although Lawrence’s original death sentence was

determined to be proportional based on substantially the same evidence presented

during the de novo resentencing proceeding at issue, Lawrence argues on appeal

that his sentence of death is not proportional. The State argues that this Court is

legally prohibited, by the Florida Constitution, from reviewing death sentences for

comparative proportionality when that review is not authorized by statute. We

agree with the State and hold that the conformity clause of article I, section 17 of the Florida Constitution forbids this Court from analyzing death sentences for

comparative proportionality in the absence of a statute establishing that review.

BACKGROUND

In 2000, Lawrence pleaded guilty to principal to the first-degree murder of

Robinson, conspiracy to commit first-degree murder, giving alcoholic beverages to

a person under twenty-one, and abuse of a dead human corpse, and he was

sentenced to death for Robinson’s murder. Lawrence v. State, 846 So. 2d 440, 442

(Fla. 2003). Robinson’s murder followed two separate criminal episodes in which

Lawrence and his codefendant murdered one individual and attempted to murder

another individual. See id. at 443 n.3. We detailed the facts of Robinson’s murder

on direct appeal, explaining that Lawrence and his codefendant, who was also

convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to death for Robinson’s murder,

carried out their crimes against Robinson in accordance with notes in Lawrence’s

handwriting:

Lawrence’s codefendant, Jeremiah Martel Rodgers, picked up eighteen-year-old Jennifer Robinson from her mother’s home on May 7, 1998. Rodgers and Robinson met Lawrence, and all three drove in Lawrence’s truck to a secluded area in the woods. After imbibing alcoholic beverages, Robinson had sex with Rodgers and then with Lawrence. At some point thereafter, Rodgers shot Robinson in the back of the head using Lawrence’s Lorcin .380 handgun. The gunshot rendered Robinson instantly unconscious, and she died minutes later. Lawrence and Rodgers loaded Robinson’s body into Lawrence’s truck and drove further into the woods. Lawrence made an incision into Robinson’s leg and removed her calf muscle. Rodgers took Polaroid

-2- pictures of the body, including a picture of Lawrence’s hand holding Robinson’s foot. Lawrence and Rodgers buried Robinson at that site. Investigators traced Robinson’s disappearance to Lawrence and Rodgers. When confronted by Investigator Todd Hand, Lawrence denied knowing Robinson and consented to Hand’s request to search Lawrence’s trailer and truck. After recovering multiple notes written by Lawrence and Polaroid photographs depicting Robinson post- mortem, Hand arrested Lawrence. One page of the recovered notes states in part: “get her very drunk,” “yell in her ears to check consicouse [sic],” “even slap hard,” “[r]ape many, many, many times,” “ ‘slice and dice,’ [d]isect [sic] completely,” “bag up eatabile [sic] meats,” and “bag remains and bury and burn.” Another page of notes provides a list of items and tasks, some of which had been checked off or scribbled out. That list includes “coolers of ice = for new meat,” strawberry wine, everclear alcohol, scalpels, Polaroid film, and “.380 or-and bowies [knives].” Other items located by investigators during their search of Lawrence’s trailer and truck included a box for a Lorcin .380 handgun; empty Polaroid film packages; a piece of human tissue in Lawrence’s freezer; a blue and white ice chest; an empty plastic ice bag; disposable gloves; a scrapbook; and several books, including an anatomy book []titled The Incredible Machine, within which had been marked female anatomy pages and pen lines drawn at the calf section of a leg. Lawrence subsequently confessed to his involvement, after waiving his Miranda [v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966)] rights, and led detectives to Robinson’s body.

Id. at 442-43 (footnotes omitted). On direct appeal, Lawrence appealed only his

sentence of death, and we affirmed, id. at 446, including on the basis that

Lawrence’s death sentence was proportionate in comparison to other cases in

which we have upheld the imposition of the death penalty, id. at 452-55.

We subsequently affirmed the denial of Lawrence’s initial postconviction

motion and denied his habeas petition. Lawrence v. State, 969 So. 2d 294, 315

(Fla. 2007).

-3- Thereafter, the trial court granted Lawrence’s successive postconviction

motion, vacated his death sentence, and ordered a new penalty phase proceeding

pursuant to Hurst v. State, 202 So. 3d 40 (Fla. 2016), receded from by State v.

Poole, 297 So. 3d 487 (Fla. 2020).

Before the second penalty-phase proceeding, which is at issue here, began,

Lawrence sent a handwritten letter to the trial court requesting that his death

sentence be “reinstated,” stating in pertinent part:

[M]ay I request to please have my death sentence reinstated? I’ve never wanted a new trial or anything to do with the Hurst hearing/ruleing [sic] and have been trying for ten years to have my last attorney . . . drop all my appeals but he has completely ignored me and refused any form of communications with me until telling me my new attorney’s names and that I’m to go . . . for a new sentencing that I do not want. I’m guilty of all my charges and deserve my death sentence. I’ve had no intention of putting the families, friends and loved ones of the innocent people I deliberately helped murder through all these 20 long years of grief, suffering and loss, to have to indure [sic] more. They deserve justice and every amount of peace my death sentence and conclusion might give them.

Through appointed counsel, Lawrence subsequently moved to waive his

rights to a penalty-phase jury, to present mitigation, and to challenge the State’s

evidence. After inquiring of Lawrence and hearing testimony from a doctor who

had evaluated Lawrence and found him competent, the trial court found

Lawrence’s waivers to be knowing, intelligent, and voluntary. The trial court

ordered a presentence investigation and appointed special counsel pursuant to

-4- Marquardt v. State, 156 So. 3d 464 (Fla. 2015), to assist it in considering available

mitigation.

Thereafter, following the State’s penalty-phase presentation and special

counsel’s presentation at a subsequent hearing that also served as a Spencer1

hearing, the trial court sentenced Lawrence to death, finding that the aggravating

circumstances 2 “greatly outweigh” the statutory and nonstatutory mitigating

circumstances. 3 In sentencing Lawrence to death, the trial court further found as

follows:

1. Spencer v. State, 615 So. 2d 688 (Fla. 1993).

2. The trial court found that the State had proven two statutory aggravating circumstances beyond a reasonable doubt and assigned both of them great weight: (1) the defendant was previously convicted of another capital felony or of a felony involving the use or threat of violence to the person; and (2) the murder was committed in a cold, calculated, and premeditated manner.

3.

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