Joshua David Lee v. State of Florida

268 So. 3d 904
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedApril 3, 2019
Docket17-1469
StatusPublished

This text of 268 So. 3d 904 (Joshua David Lee 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
Joshua David Lee v. State of Florida, 268 So. 3d 904 (Fla. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL STATE OF FLORIDA _____________________________

No. 1D17-1469 _____________________________

JOSHUA DAVID LEE,

Appellant,

v.

STATE OF FLORIDA,

Appellee. ___________________________

On appeal from the Circuit Court for Bay County. Kathleen Dekker, Senior Judge.

April 3, 2019

KELSEY, J.

Appellant, convicted of aggravated stalking, claims the trial court improperly admitted into evidence his victim’s 911 call and three of his jail calls to the victim. He argues that without this evidence, he could not have been convicted of aggravated stalking. We find no legal error or abuse of discretion, and affirm.

Aggravated Stalking

Aggravated stalking occurs when a person “willfully, maliciously, and repeatedly follows, harasses, or cyberstalks another person and makes a credible threat to that person.” § 784.048(3), Fla. Stat. (2016). To “harass” is “to engage in a course of conduct directed at a specific person which causes substantial emotional distress to that person and serves no legitimate purpose.” § 784.048(1)(a). “‘Course of conduct’ means a pattern of conduct composed of a series of acts over a period of time, however short, which evidences a continuity of purpose.” § 784.048(1)(b). To “cyberstalk” is “to engage in a course of conduct to communicate, or to cause to be communicated, words, images, or language by or through the use of electronic mail or electronic communication, directed at a specific person, causing substantial emotional distress to that person and serving no legitimate purpose.” § 784.048(1)(d). A minimum of two acts is required to establish stalking. Pickett v. Copeland, 236 So. 3d 1142, 1144–45 (Fla. 1st DCA 2018) (citing Carter v. Malken, 207 So. 3d 891, 894 (Fla. 4th DCA 2017)).

Appellant’s Texts to the Victim

At trial the State introduced photographs a deputy sheriff took of three text messages on the victim’s phone. A 12:28 p.m. message from the victim to Appellant said “Im [sic] calling the sheriff.” At 3:12, Appellant replied, “Call the g*dd*n sheriff. See if a piece of paper [no-contact order] stops me from treating you the way you deserve. Trust me you’ll be getting yours.” A second incoming message from Appellant at 3:14 said, “You f*ing whore. You are gonna die today.” Both the deputy and the victim authenticated these photographed messages at trial.

911 Call

Appellant was subject to a court order that he have no contact with his ex-girlfriend. She called 911 on an evening when she said Appellant had been sending her “death threats all day” in text messages and twelve to fifteen voice mail messages that were “very explicit, very, very scary.” She said Appellant had given her an ultimatum: meet with him that evening, or wait a few days and he would break down her door and “cut out [her] throat with a paring knife.” She asked the dispatcher to “make it urgent” because she had agreed to Appellant’s demand that she meet him to talk, and she had “flushed him out” and wanted him picked up at the pre-arranged meeting place. She said she could not go home, because “he will bust in the door.” She said she had made arrangements for herself and her daughter to spend the night at friends’ homes out of fear of Appellant. While on the phone with the dispatcher, the victim had started following a deputy in traffic in hopes of getting immediate help, but the

2 dispatcher instructed the victim to park in a safe place and await a deputy dispatched specifically for her call.

A deputy responding to the 911 call found the victim “distraught and in fear for her life.” This deputy photographed some of the text messages on the victim’s cell phone. This deputy did not locate or apprehend Appellant at that time; but within about an hour, the victim flagged down another deputy and asked for a ride back to her car, repeating her concerns about Appellant. When they arrived at her car, Appellant walked up. The second deputy testified that the victim “seemed panic stricken” upon seeing Appellant, and that Appellant seemed impaired. This deputy separated Appellant and the victim, and called for the first deputy to respond to the scene. Appellant was arrested for aggravated stalking.

Jail Calls

Three recorded jail calls between Appellant and the victim were introduced into evidence, the first two within moments of each other the evening of Appellant’s arrest, shortly after he had been booked into jail; and the third call several weeks later. By stipulation, counsel had redacted material deemed potentially prejudicial to Appellant. In the first call, Appellant was angry and claimed that he had merely wanted to meet the victim for dinner and to talk. The victim summarized Appellant’s threats in explicit language very similar to what she had used in the 911 call, which she testified at trial was the truth: “You were the one telling me that if I didn’t go with you that you were going to destroy my bike and my car and my house and you’re going to cut my throat out with a paring knife, you would p*ss into my neck and watch me gurgle and die.” That call ended when someone came to fingerprint Appellant, and Appellant immediately called her back. In the second call, after discussing damage Appellant had apparently caused to the victim’s motorcycle, which Appellant denied causing, Appellant told the victim she had “f*d up majorly this time.”

Although there were 47 recorded jail calls between the two, the only additional one admitted at trial occurred several weeks after Appellant was arrested. Appellant apologized: “I’m sorry for saying all that s*t to you. You know I didn’t mean any of that, I 3 was just upset.” He claimed that on the day of his arrest, he had been sleep-deprived, had drunk some vodka, and “I don’t even remember what I wrote to you. And then, or what I was calling and saying. I don’t really, I don’t know what I did.” The victim repeated that she “was absolutely terrified, it was worse than anything you can imagine.” Appellant apologized again: “Well, like I said, I’m sorry, I didn’t mean anything by that. You know I would never do anything like that.” He repeated that he only wanted to meet up with the victim that evening to so they could have dinner together.

Evidentiary Objections

Appellant objected to the 911 call and the jail calls on grounds of confrontation clause and hearsay. The defense also made a boilerplate objection at the close of evidence: “And if we can go ahead now and renew all objections and evidentiary rulings.” The victim’s testifying at trial resolved the confrontation clause objections, and the trial judge overruled the hearsay objections.

As to the 911 call, the trial judge had listened to the recording before trial and concluded that it was admissible as an excited utterance. The judge described the victim’s speech as “very fast . . . abnormally fast,” with an “[o]ccasional stutter” and a “fairly fast” breathing pattern. The judge noted that “she was so upset that she was trying to follow a deputy” even though she had no idea where that deputy was going, and was so afraid to go home that she “was upset and wanting urgently to get assistance . . . In other words, she was seeking safety.” The judge noted that in context, the victim was not merely reporting a past crime, but was concerned for her safety against an upcoming confrontation with Appellant: “It was, you’ve got to get to him because he’s after me. . . . It was a cry for help.” The judge interpreted the victim’s statements about death threats not as planting contrived information, but rather given genuinely in response to the 911 operator’s questioning.

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Related

Jackson v. State
25 So. 3d 518 (Supreme Court of Florida, 2009)
Brand v. Florida Power Corp.
633 So. 2d 504 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1994)
Shaw v. Shaw
334 So. 2d 13 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1976)
Werley v. State
814 So. 2d 1159 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2002)
Hudson v. State
992 So. 2d 96 (Supreme Court of Florida, 2008)
Edmond v. State
559 So. 2d 85 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1990)
Rolle v. State
215 So. 3d 75 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2016)
Powell v. State
99 So. 3d 570 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2012)
Carter v. Malken
207 So. 3d 891 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2017)
Pickett v. Copeland
236 So. 3d 1142 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2018)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
268 So. 3d 904, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joshua-david-lee-v-state-of-florida-fladistctapp-2019.