Khadafy Kareem Mullens v. State of Florida

197 So. 3d 16, 41 Fla. L. Weekly Supp. 279, 2016 Fla. LEXIS 1255, 2016 WL 3348429
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 16, 2016
DocketSC13-1824
StatusPublished
Cited by70 cases

This text of 197 So. 3d 16 (Khadafy Kareem Mullens 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
Khadafy Kareem Mullens v. State of Florida, 197 So. 3d 16, 41 Fla. L. Weekly Supp. 279, 2016 Fla. LEXIS 1255, 2016 WL 3348429 (Fla. 2016).

Opinions

PER CURIAM.

Khadafy Kareem Mullens pleaded guilty to two counts of first-degree murder for the murders of Mohammad Uddin and Ronald Hayworth, and one count of attempted first-degree murder of Albert Barton, After Mullens waived his right to a penalty phase proceeding by a jury, the trial court sentenced Mullens to death for the murders of Uddin and Hayworth and life imprisonment for the attempted murder of Barton. Mullens- now appeals his sentences. We have jurisdiction. See art. V, § 3(b)(1), Fla. Const.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The Central Food Mart in St. Peters-burg was a convenience store equipped with a visible, but inoperative videocassette recording device (VCR), as well as at least seven other concealed devices that recorded and captured the events that occurred in the store on the evening of August 17, 2008. Spencer Peeples and Mul-lens entered the store on that evening and initiated a robbery of Uddin, the clerk who was working in the store that evening. Peeples brandished a gun and together with Mullens, demanded money from the cash register. At one point, Peeples tucked his hand into his shirt to prevent his fingerprint? from. being left on the register. While the three men stood behind the counter as Uddin opened the register, Hayworth entered the store and stood quietly at the counter.

After Peeples and Mullens removed cash from the register, they asked Uddin about the inoperative VCR equipment. Peeples removed the equipment and handed it to Mullens, who placed it in a plastic bag. Peeples returned to the counter, filled another plastic bag with lottery tickets, and handed a small.box.to Hayworth across the counter at Hayworth’s request. Hayworth- left the counter to approach the door, but did not exit the store. Peeples and Mullens dragged Uddin from the counter to the entrance of the store and at gunpoint demanded the keys to. Uddin’s car, but Uddin refused. The three men returned to the counter where Peeples took a green carton of Newport cigarettes and handed it to Mullens, who placed it in a plastic bag. As Peeples- continued to [21]*21demand the keys from Uddin, Mullens walked around the store and spoke to Hayworth before returning. to the store entrance. Peeples eventually obtained the keys from Uddin, handed the gun to Mul-lens, and indicated that he would return shortly with Uddin’s car before he exited.

Mullens stood in front of the.door and alternatively looked outside the door and back at the counter at Uddin.' When Mul-lens opened the door and leaned outside, Uddin reached for a telephone and dialed a number. Mullens saw the movement and ran toward him with the gun pointed at Uddin. Mullens pushed Uddin back toward the phone and struggled with Uddin before shooting Uddin. oncé in the head.

Mullens then walked ■ away from the counter and grabbed the arm of Hayworth, who had remained in the store but was not standing in front of the door or blocking Mullens’s exit. Mullens pushed Hayworth to the floor and shot him in the head as well. As Mullens exited the store, he placed the gun in his pocket. Barton then opened the door of the stores but balked as Mullens attempted to pull him into- the store. Barton and Mullens struggled and Mullens fired several shots at Barton. Barton eventually fell to the ground and crawled away, at which point Mullens abandoned Barton and picked up the bag full of lottery tickets before he exited the store. ...

After reviewing footage from the operative surveillance equipment, officers issued a “Be On The Lookout” notice with a description of Peeples, Mullens, and Ud-din’s stolen car. Peeples was arrested driving Uddin’s car in the early morning of August 18, and he gave a voluntary statement to officers. Officers also recovered from Uddin’s car a cylinder from ¡a revolver and a pack of Newport cigarettes! In his statement, Peeples indicated that he only intended to commit a robbery, not murder. Peeples also consented to a search of his apartment, from which officers recovered the lottery tickets, VCR equipment, and clothing that matched that worn by both of the assailants in the video recordings. . Detectives Rodney Tower and Brian Taylor later saw-Mullens in an alley and arrested him because they recognized him from the surveillance footage. When Mullens was arrested, officers searched him and found lottery tickets with serial numbers that matched those taken from the store.

On September 4, 2008, á grand jury indicted Mullens and Peeples on two counts of first-degree murder and one count of attempted first-degree murder, although the joint indictments were eventually severed. Between July and September 2011, a hearing was conducted to determine whether Mullens was competent to proceed. Dr. Jill Poorman testified that in her opinion, Mullens was competent to proceed, although' Dr. Scot Machlus offered an opinion to the contrary. Dr. Peter Bursten, a psychologist, opined that while Mullens suffered from antisocial personality disorder, he did not display any symptoms consistent -with an Axis I disorder. Bursten also offered an opinion that Mullens was malingering. However, Dr. Machlus testified that in his opinion it would be difficult for someone of Mullens’s intelligence’level and behavioral patterns to malinger. The trial court orally found that Mullens was competent to proceed. On April 29, 2013, Mullens pleaded guilty to the first-degree murders of Uddin and Hayworth and the attempted first-degree murder of Barton. During the penalty phase, he waived the right to present evidence to a jury,1 and aggravating and miti[22]*22gating evidence was received by the trial court.

During the testimony of Detective Tower, the State introduced video recordings and still photographs obtained from the surveillance cameras. Defense counsel objected that the State could not establish a sufficient foundation for this evidence to be admitted through Tower, who did not immediately respond to the crime scene and did not know how the footage was downloaded into an accessible format. Law enforcement personnel from the City of St. Petersburg were initially unable to access the surveillance footage. Tower contacted Robert Dematti of Able Solutions, who assisted law enforcement personnel in retrieving and accessing the surveillance footage. The court admitted the material into evidence over the objections of defense counsel.

The State also presented testimony from Detective Taylor, who interviewed eyewitnesses and supervised the search of Pee-ples’s apartment. One witness, Russell Watson, informed Taylor that an individual, later identified as Peeples, had approached him earlier that day, indicated that Peeples was armed, and invited him to participate in the robbery of the Central Food Mart. Watson declined, but observed Peeples enter the convenience store later that day. Another witness informed Taylor that she watched a driver in Uddin’s gray Toyota Camry, which had been parked in front of the store that day, drive away from the store, make a U-turn, and return to the store. Officer Willard Smith also testified that the serial numbers of the lottery tickets found in Mullens’s possession matched those registered to the Central Food Mart. Dr. Jon Thogmartin, the medical examiner, also testified that the cause of death for both Uddin and Hayworth was a gunshot wound to the head, and that while Uddin lost consciousness immediately, there was a possibility that Hayworth did not. The State did not present testimony from Dematti, who assisted law enforcement with the surveillance footage, or Barton, the surviving witness.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
197 So. 3d 16, 41 Fla. L. Weekly Supp. 279, 2016 Fla. LEXIS 1255, 2016 WL 3348429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/khadafy-kareem-mullens-v-state-of-florida-fla-2016.