LUKE CHAMBERLAIN v. STATE OF FLORIDA

254 So. 3d 1027
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedSeptember 12, 2018
Docket15-4048
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 254 So. 3d 1027 (LUKE CHAMBERLAIN 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
LUKE CHAMBERLAIN v. STATE OF FLORIDA, 254 So. 3d 1027 (Fla. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA FOURTH DISTRICT

LUKE CHAMBERLAIN, Appellant,

v.

STATE OF FLORIDA, Appellee.

No. 4D15-4048

[September 12, 2018]

Appeal from the Circuit Court for the Seventeenth Judicial Circuit, Broward County; Martin J. Bidwill, Judge; L.T. Case No. 11014892CF10A.

Carey Haughwout, Public Defender, and Paul Edward Petillo, Assistant Public Defender, West Palm Beach, for appellant.

Pamela Jo Bondi, Attorney General, Tallahassee, and Melynda L. Melear, Assistant Attorney General, West Palm Beach, for appellee.

WARNER, J.

Appellant challenges his conviction and sentence for first degree murder. He raises multiple issues on appeal. We conclude that no reversible error has occurred, but we write to address one issue: whether the trial court erred in determining that the defense was not prejudiced by the State’s failure to reveal fingerprint testing prior to trial and in concluding that no Richardson 1 violation occurred when the State conducted further DNA testing during trial. While we hold that a discovery violation did occur in each instance, we agree with the trial court that the defense was not prejudiced, and thus, the court’s error in finding no discovery violation was harmless. We therefore affirm the conviction and sentence.

The victim, Antoine Gracius, was a cook at TGI Fridays in Pembroke Pines. On the evening of his murder he worked the late shift. When the restaurant closed, Gracius left through the front door and was attacked as

1 Richardson v. State, 246 So. 2d 771 (Fla. 1971). he walked to his car. Gracius was stabbed multiple times. After he was stabbed, he tried to go back to the restaurant.

Another employee came out when Gracius banged on the door. Gracius said to him, “Get the tag.” The employee looked and saw a dark colored or black minivan or SUV, speeding away and heading south on University Drive. However, the car’s lights were not on, so there was no tag light. He didn’t get the tag number, but he remembered scratches or some kind of linear damage on the right-hand side of the car. He ran back to Gracius, who said, “They stabbed me.”

The manager of the restaurant saw Gracius stumbling and bleeding heavily. He heard the squeal of tires and saw a black minivan speeding away. He noticed that there was damage on the back, sliding door of the car’s passenger-side. He saw a person in the passenger seat that he believed was African American. He could not provide a description of the driver.

Gracius was transported to the hospital where he died of his injuries.

A second employee at TGIF left the restaurant about twenty minutes prior to Gracius leaving and was talking to another employee in his car behind the restaurant. A man banged on the window, holding his arm behind his back, and asked for money. This second employee described the man as being a white male with a bald head and blue eyes. The man tried to get the second employee to roll his window down. The employee became frightened, told him he didn’t have any money, started his car, and drove away. Four months later, police placed a photo of the defendant, Chamberlain, in a lineup, and the employee picked him as the person who had asked for money that night. Once identified, the investigators located Chamberlain and obtained DNA samples from both him and his fiancée. When confronted by his fiancée as to his involvement in the murder, he told her he did not remember whether he had killed someone. The fiancée also had a van similar to the van seen at the murder scene. The investigators were able to locate that van and process it, but they found no evidence tying it to the murder.

At the crime scene, investigators found a broken piece of yellow metal jewelry on the running board of Gracius’s car. Another piece was found on the ground in Gracius’s parking space. Gracius wore a similar necklace. A separate silver necklace was also found. Police found a black South Pole T-shirt at the scene in a pool of blood, as well as two separate drops of blood twenty feet from where Gracius stopped after the stabbing. A DNA expert testified that these blood drops matched the defendant

2 Chamberlain’s DNA. The black shirt found at the scene had Chamberlain’s fiancée’s DNA on it at the collar. The fiancée testified that she had given Chamberlain South Pole T-shirts, but she wore them around the house because he did not wear them. There was a mixture of DNA on the silver chain, but Chamberlain was excluded from contributing to the DNA on it. The mixture was most likely the DNA of Gracius and another unknown person. DNA from the right arm of the black shirt could have been a mixture of DNA from Chamberlain, his fiancée, and Gracius. On cross-examination, the defense brought out that the swabs of Gracius’s fingernails revealed no DNA of Chamberlain, nor was any of Chamberlain’s DNA found on any other part of Gracius’s body.

In opening statements, defense counsel suggested that Gracius was not a victim of a robbery and murder, but he may have struggled with someone he knew—someone was “targeting” Gracius. Particularly, he pointed to the silver chain which did not belong to Gracius and had a mixture of Gracius’s DNA and some unknown person’s DNA, but not Chamberlain’s. He also tied this unknown person to the manager’s statement that he saw an African American in the passenger seat of the getaway van, and the video showed a white arm in the window on the driver’s side. He told the jury that an African American had come up to Gracius’s co-worker in a restaurant several days after the murder and told him that one of his friends had killed Gracius. Briefly, defense counsel suggested that the State might maintain that the unknown DNA on the silver chain could be that of restaurant employees who may have picked up the chain, but there was no evidence that the State would produce, as the employees never were asked to give DNA samples to exclude them as contributors. While there was a lot of disparate evidence, including video and DNA evidence, there was no fingerprint evidence, no forensic evidence found in the fiancée’s van, and no eyewitnesses. There were significant gaps in the evidence, which meant that the State would fail to prove its case.

In addition, during opening statement, defense counsel noted that there were fingerprints on Gracius’s vehicle, but the State had never tested those prints. Although the defense knew that several latent fingerprints had been taken in the investigation, the State had failed to inform the defense that an expert had examined these prints and determined that they were insufficient to identify. Because of the defense argument, the State sought to call its expert examiner, even though he had not been listed as a witness. Defense objected, and the court conducted a Richardson inquiry. While it found that the failure to provide the examiner’s report (which was verbal, not written) was inadvertent, the defense was harmed by the omission. Rather than exclude the State’s expert from testifying, the court

3 granted a month’s continuance to the defense to depose the expert and to obtain, if necessary, its own expert.

During the recess in the trial, the State conducted further DNA testing of the employees of TGI Fridays who may have touched the silver necklace. None of them were found to have contributed to the DNA on the necklace. Once the testing was completed, the defense was immediately notified.

At the resumption of the trial, the defense made a Richardson objection to the additional testing. It claimed that this prejudiced them by requiring them to change their theory of defense, which was the State’s lack of evidence. Now the State had produced new evidence mid-trial.

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254 So. 3d 1027, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luke-chamberlain-v-state-of-florida-fladistctapp-2018.