Kentrell F. Johnson v. State of Florida

238 So. 3d 726
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMarch 15, 2018
DocketSC14-1966
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 238 So. 3d 726 (Kentrell F. Johnson 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
Kentrell F. Johnson v. State of Florida, 238 So. 3d 726 (Fla. 2018).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Kentrell Feronti Johnson appeals his convictions for the murder and kidnapping of Vincent Binder and his sentence of death. We have jurisdiction. See art. V, § 3(b)(1), Fla. Const. We affirm his convictions. We vacate Johnson's sentence of death and remand for the imposition of a life sentence without eligibility for parole based on Johnson's performance of his part of his agreement with the State.

FACTS

On March 30, 2010, Johnson and codefendants Quentin Truehill 1 and Peter *731 Hughes escaped custody at Avoyelles Parish Sherriff's Office in Marksville, Louisiana. Johnson and his codefendants stole a truck and traveled to Florida, committing a series of violent crimes along the way, including the kidnapping and killing of Vincent Binder.

On the day of their escape, the codefendants stole a black Chevrolet truck with tools, a knife, and a machete inside. At the culmination of their spree, law enforcement discovered the truck in Miami containing the murder weapons and other evidence of their crimes. First, the codefendants stole Leann Williams' purse in front of a Marksville restaurant. Surveillance footage depicted two men rushing from Williams' car to a moving truck. Williams later learned that someone had attempted to use the credit card which had been inside her stolen purse. She identified her recovered belongings at trial.

The codefendants were next spotted April 1, 2010, in Pensacola, Florida. Johnson approached Brenda Jo Brown at the apartments where she worked as a housekeeper. Johnson asked Brown for a cup of water. He followed Brown, uninvited, inside the apartment she entered to retrieve a cup for him. Johnson was flanked by his codefendants, one of whom was carrying a knife. Johnson told Brown, "Do what we want, and you won't get hurt." Brown handed over her money and cell phone before a codefendant bound her with electrical tape. The codefendants led Brown to the kitchen, and one of them struck her in the head several times until she played dead. To Brown's knowledge, Johnson did not participate in the attack except to initiate the encounter. After the codefendants left, Brown found help and was rushed to the hospital. A week after her hospital stay, Brown learned the extent of her injuries when her bandages were removed: three fingers amputated on her right hand, plates in her hand to replace crushed bones, a skull fracture, and two skull lacerations.

The next evening, Johnson approached Mario Rios in a Tallahassee apartment complex parking lot where he asked Rios for the location of the mall and information about local night clubs. Rios moved towards his own car as he spoke to Johnson. Codefendant Truehill jumped from behind Rios' car with a knife drawn. Johnson attempted to keep Rios calm while Truehill tried to rob him. Rios was able to push Truehill away and ran to a friend's apartment without further incident. Rios identified Hughes as the lookout who stood in the center of the parking lot.

Later that evening, Johnson approached Cris Pavlish and her friend behind a Walgreens on Tennessee Street in Tallahassee. Johnson asked them for directions to Miami. Pavlish gave her friend a map to help explain to Johnson how to get to Miami. Johnson walked with Pavlish's friend to the front of the codefendants' stolen truck. As the friend gave Johnson directions, Pavlish attempted to engage Truehill, who was sitting in the back seat with the door open, in conversation. Truehill swung a machete at her. Simultaneously, Hughes left the driver's seat to apprehend the friend at the front of the truck. Truehill demanded Pavlish's purse and attempted to grab her. Pavlish was able to wrench away, but Truehill retained her purse. Pavlish and her friend both managed to escape.

The kidnapping in this case occurred the same evening, April 2, 2010. The victim, Vincent Binder, went to dinner with friends Elizabeth and David Frady and Rebecca Edwards. The victim returned to his friends' shared apartment where they worked on a paper for school. He wore a green striped shirt, blue jeans, and a baseball *732 cap. Edwards offered to drive the victim home when they finished working on the paper, but Binder said he would prefer to walk. Elizabeth Frady became concerned when the victim did not return her calls and text messages the next day because the group had planned to spend time together. After he failed to show up to teach his classes, Elizabeth Frady reported the victim missing on April 8, 2010.

Bank records reflect the victim's outing with his friends on April 2, 2010. In the early hours of April 3, someone used the victim's debit card at Tallahassee convenience stores before moving to Madison County and then to Jacksonville. Transactions continued in Daytona, Fort Pierce, and the Miami-Dade County area. During that time, Shirley Marcus joined the codefendants in Miami for approximately a week of partying. While in Miami, Johnson and his codefendants lost the keys to their stolen truck and abandoned it in a Haulover Beach parking lot.

On April 4, 2010, the victim's debit card was blocked. On April 6, 2010, Marcus drove the codefendants in her truck to a bank where she attempted, on the codefendants' behalf, to withdraw $1,300 from the victim's account at the drive-through window. Truehill gave Marcus the victim's ID, his debit card, and a withdrawal slip to make the transaction. Truehill and Johnson urged Marcus to leave when they felt the transaction was taking too long and after Marcus noticed a security guard near her truck. They returned to Marcus's home, leaving the victim's ID and debit card with the teller at the drive-through window.

Law enforcement traced the suspicious truck from the drive-through to Marcus and went to her home to make contact under the guise of an investigation into a domestic dispute. The codefendants were later arrested in the parking lot of a hotel on April 12, 2010. The codefendants were held in custody in Miami based on their escape from custody in Louisiana.

During the arrest, police searched the shared hotel room and recovered a pair of black Levi jeans, the victim's wallet, a metal machete, and a handsaw with a wooden handle. While searching Marcus's residence, law enforcement found receipts, the license plate from the stolen truck, and blood-stained jeans. Police found a knife with the victim's blood, a bloody washcloth, more receipts, and fingerprints matching all of the codefendants inside the abandoned, stolen truck.

The day of the arrest, April 12, 2010, Tallahassee Police Department investigators Ann Marie Johnson and Greg Wilder met with Johnson while he was in custody in Miami. Johnson had not yet been assigned counsel. Investigators Johnson and Wilder first suggested that Johnson's cooperation could help him avoid the death penalty. Johnson repeatedly indicated that he was not comfortable talking to investigators without counsel. Eventually, he described picking the victim up in Tallahassee, driving with him in the truck, falling asleep, and waking up at some point to find that the victim was no longer in the truck. Johnson told investigators that he did not know where the codefendants were stopped when he realized the victim was missing.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
238 So. 3d 726, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kentrell-f-johnson-v-state-of-florida-fla-2018.