Jorge Emmanuel Martinez v. Secretary, Florida Department of Corrections

684 F. App'x 915
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedApril 11, 2017
Docket15-10116, 15-10116
StatusUnpublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 684 F. App'x 915 (Jorge Emmanuel Martinez v. Secretary, Florida Department of Corrections) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jorge Emmanuel Martinez v. Secretary, Florida Department of Corrections, 684 F. App'x 915 (11th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

COOGLER, District Judge:

Jorge Emmanuel Martinez (“Martinez”) appeals the district court’s denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 and its refusal to hold an evidentiary hearing regarding the ineffective assistance of Martinez’s trial counsel for failure to investigate an alibi defense. Martinez entered a plea of nolo contendere to a charge of lewd and lascivious battery under Fla. Stat. § 800.04(4)(a) based on improper sexual contact with a minor. After careful review of the record and the briefs of the parties, and having the benefit of oral argument, we affirm the district court on all issues raised on appeal.

I.

The factual information and procedural history that follow are derived from the record before the state post-conviction courts that adjudicated Martinez’s state *917 petition and from Martinez’s federal petition filed in the district court.

A.

Martinez first met the alleged victim in this case, D.G.D., over the internet in early summer 2006. At the time, the two were both minors; D.G.D. was fourteen years old, and Martinez was seventeen years old. D.G.D.’s parents did not approve of their daughter’s relationship with Martinez, so throughout the summer, Martinez and D.G.D. met without her parents’ knowledge. More often than not, the two would meet alone, although they sometimes saw each other in social settings with others in their hometown of Sebring, Florida. At some point during the summer, the relationship became sexual, although Martinez and D.G.D. never had sexual intercourse. That fall, Martinez began college at the University of South Florida (“USF”) and continued to communicate with D.G.D. through phone calls and the internet. Martinez turned eighteen on October 29, 2006. D.G.D. alleges that two days later, on Tuesday, October 31, 2006, she met Martinez in the woods near her house, and the two engaged in sexual contact short of intercourse.

D.G.D. claims that a friend of Martinez’s drove Martinez from USF’s campus in Tampa, Florida, to meet with D.G.D. in Sebring, Florida, the night of October 31. According to D.G.D., Martinez’s friend, Diana Derek (“Derek”), got lost on her way to pick Martinez up after the encounter, and D.G.D. spoke with Derek on Martinez’s cellphone to give Derek directions to their location. A police report in the record states that Derek gave a similar account to the police shortly after the incident, and that her cellphone records indicated that eight calls were placed between Derek’s cellphone and Martinez’s cellphone on October 31, 2006. The last call was placed .at 11:26 PM, less than half an hour after D.G.D. states that the sexual contact occurred. This is the final alleged meeting between Martinez and D.G.D. and the only assertion of sexual contact between the two after Martinez turned eighteen.

B.

D.G.D’s parents first reported the October 31, 2006, incident to law enforcement on November 13, 2006. They also sought a restraining order against Martinez for stalking D.G.D, which was denied. After an investigation that consisted of interviews with D.G.D., Martinez, and several witnesses, including Derek, law enforcement declined to initiate criminal proceedings against Martinez because there was insufficient evidence to file charges against him. At D.G.D.’s parents’ request, the investigation was re-opened in November 2007.

Law enforcement interviewed Martinez once again on December 10, 2007. The interview lasted several hours and was not recorded, but at some point, Martinez admitted that he had engaged in sexual corn-tact with D.G.D. after his eighteenth birthday. Martinez later contended that this confession was coerced because law enforcement represented to him that if he admitted to the sexual contact, “the incident would be put to bed and no adverse consequence would follow.” The next day, on December 11, 2007, Martinez contacted law enforcement and recanted his previous statement by denying any sexual contact with D.G.D. after his eighteenth birthday. Martinez also asserted an alibi for October 31, 2006, stating that he would not have been in Sebring, Florida, visiting D.G.D. because it was homecoming week at USF. However, he told the investigator that he did not know of any witnesses who could corroborate that alibi.

*918 In early 2008, Martinez’s family retained attorney Robert Gray (“Gray”) to represent him. Martinez was charged by information on February 21, 2008, with lewd or lascivious battery under Fla. Stat. § 800.04(4)(a), for sexual contact that occurred between October 31, 2006, and November 1, 2006. At the time the alleged offense occurred, the statute provided that anyone who “engage[d] in sexual activity with a person 12 years of age or older but less than 16 years of age” was guilty of lewd or lascivious battery and could be imprisoned for a maximum of fifteen years and required to register as a sex offender. On October 29, 2008, Martinez entered a plea of nob contendere at a plea hearing, which the trial court accepted after reviewing with Martinez his signed plea form.

The court again discussed Martinez’s plea at his sentencing hearing on January 28, 2009. When the prosecutor noted that Martinez had denied any sexual activity with D.G.D. in his sex offender evaluation, Martinez replied that he was innocent and that he had confessed to law enforcement because he wanted to bring an end to the criminal proceeding and the harassment he had experienced due to that proceeding. Gray then represented to the court that he had reviewed the potential constitutional challenge to Martinez’s confession with Martinez and that he was able to provide “information regarding witnesses which would tend to cast doubt upon .the circumstances that [were] alleged.” However, Gray also stated that Martinez preferred to enter the nolo contendere plea than to proceed to trial and risk incarceration, a statement that Martinez affirmed. Thus, on February 5, 2009, pursuant to the plea agreement, Martinez was sentenced as a youthful offender to two years’ community control and four years’ probation and was required to register as a sex offender.

Martinez did not then appeal his conviction but on March 20, 2009, filed a motion in the trial court to reduce or modify his sentence under Fla. R. Crim. P. 3.800(c). The motion was denied after a hearing on March 24, 2009. On October 30, 2009, Martinez, through counsel, filed a motion for post-conviction relief under Fla. R. Crim. P. 3.850. In this motion, Martinez asserted, among other claims, that Gray had provided ineffective assistance of counsel by not pursuing an alibi defense on Martinez’s behalf. In support of his motion, Martinez attached sworn affidavits from Derek and another fellow USF student that, according to Martinez,- prove that he did not meet with D.G.D. on October 31, 2006, but was instead nearly one hundred miles away on the campus of USF for its homecoming week at the time of the alleged sexual contact.

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684 F. App'x 915, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jorge-emmanuel-martinez-v-secretary-florida-department-of-corrections-ca11-2017.