Margaret A. Allen v. State of Florida

CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedApril 17, 2014
DocketSC11-1206
StatusPublished

This text of Margaret A. Allen v. State of Florida (Margaret A. Allen 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
Margaret A. Allen v. State of Florida, (Fla. 2014).

Opinion

Supreme Court of Florida ____________

No. SC11-1206 ____________

MARGARET A. ALLEN, Appellant,

vs.

STATE OF FLORIDA, Appellee.

[July 11, 2013] CORRECTED OPINION

PER CURIAM.

This case is before the Court on appeal from a judgment of convictions of

first-degree murder and kidnapping and a sentence of death. We have jurisdiction.

See art. V, § 3(b)(1), Fla. Const. For the reasons that follow, we affirm Allen’s

convictions and sentences.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On March 8, 2005, Margaret A. Allen was indicted for the first-degree

murder and kidnapping of Wenda Wright. Wright’s domestic partner, Johnny

Dublin, last saw Wright leaving his home with Allen. Wright never returned

home. A few days after Wright went missing, Quintin Allen, Margaret Allen’s co- defendant and the State’s main witness turned himself in to the police and told the

police about the events that led up to Wright’s death. Quintin also took the police

to the location in which he, Allen, and James Martin buried Wright’s body.

Guilt Phase

A jury trial commenced on September 13, 2010. Johnny Dublin testified for

the State. Dublin testified that on the day Wright went missing, Allen came to

Dublin and Wright’s house and whispered something into Wright’s ear. In

response, Wright and Allen left the house together. A little while later, Allen

returned to Dublin’s house and told Dublin that Wright stole about $2000 of

Allen’s money and Allen asked Dublin if she could search his house. Dublin

obliged and Allen searched Dublin’s house. Dublin testified that he noticed that

Allen had scratches on her when she came back to his house. Dublin asked Allen

where Wright was, and Allen responded that she was still at Allen’s house. Dublin

testified that the next day, Allen came back to his house and asked him where

Wright was. Dublin testified that Quintin was with Allen.

Quintin Allen testified for the State. He acknowledged that he was serving a

fifteen-year sentence of incarceration followed by five years’ probation for his

guilty plea for second-degree murder based on his involvement in Wright’s

murder. Quintin testified that he was at Allen’s house on the day of the murder

when Allen noticed that her purse was missing. Allen left her house and told

-2- Quintin to stay with her children. Allen returned to her house with Wright and

asked Quintin to come inside. Allen told Quintin that Wright must have stolen

Allen’s purse because Wright was the only person at Allen’s house before the

purse went missing. Allen and Quintin searched for the purse. Allen left the house

again and told Quintin not to let Wright leave if she tried. At one point while

Allen was gone, Wright tried to leave; Quintin told Wright that Allen wanted her to

stay, and Wright obliged.

Upon Allen’s return, Quintin plaited Allen’s hair. Quintin testified that at

one point Wright started crying and begged Allen to let her go home. Wright

attempted to leave Allen’s house and Allen hit Wright on the head; Wright fell to

the ground. Quintin testified that Allen had a gun and told him that if he did not

help her with Wright, she would shoot him, so Quintin held Wright down on the

floor. While he held Wright down, Allen found chemicals including bleach,

fingernail polish remover, rubbing alcohol and hair spritz and poured them all onto

Wright’s face. At one point, one of Allen’s children walked into the room in

which this was taking place, and Allen told the child to rip off a piece of duct tape

for Allen. Allen attempted to put the duct tape over Wright’s mouth, but because

Wright’s face was wet from the chemicals that were poured on her face, the duct

tape would not stick to her skin. Allen retrieved belts from her closet and beat

Wright with them. Quintin then tied Wright’s feet together with one of the belts.

-3- Quintin testified that at that point Wright was not struggling. Allen then put one of

the belts around Wright’s neck and pulled. At one point, Wright said, “Please,

stop. Please stop. I am going to piss myself.” Wright’s body started shaking and

after about three minutes, Wright did not move. Allen then told Quintin to get

some sheets to tie Wright’s hands together in case Wright woke up.

Quintin left soon after the incident. Allen called Quintin throughout the

night, but he did not answer her calls. The next day, Allen found Quintin at the

barbershop. Quintin testified that Allen still had the gun. Quintin got into the

truck that Allen was driving; James Martin was also in the truck. Allen told

Quintin that Wright was dead. Allen then told Quintin that he had to help her get

rid of the body.

Allen, Quintin, and Martin drove to Lowe’s to buy plywood to help move

Wright’s body from inside the house into the truck. They also borrowed a dolly

hand truck from a local shop to help move the body. Quintin testified that upon

returning to Allen’s house, Wright’s body had been moved from where he had last

seen her and had been wrapped in Allen’s carpet. They were eventually able to get

Wright’s body into the truck. Then, all three took shovels from Allen’s mother’s

tool shed and drove to an area off of the highway to dump Wright’s body. Quintin

and Martin dug a hole while Allen stood as a lookout. They placed Wright’s body

in the hole, covered the hole with debris, and took the carpet with them. They

-4- threw the carpet into a dumpster outside of a truck stop and picked up Allen’s

daughter from school. Quintin went to the police and turned himself in. Quintin

also took the police to the place where Wright’s body had been buried.

James Martin testified that he was sentenced to sixty months’ incarceration

for his participation in hiding Wright’s body. Martin testified that on the day of

the murder, he was at Allen’s house helping her repair a car. Allen asked Martin to

help her search for her purse, and Martin did. He testified that he left Allen’s

house around 10 p.m. to get a starter belt for the car. Martin finished repairing the

car and asked Allen if she had any cocaine. She did not, so Martin left Allen’s

house, found cocaine, came back to Allen’s house, and smoked it. Martin testified

that when he got back from finding the cocaine, Wright was the only one at Allen’s

house. Martin testified that the timing of the events of the day was unclear because

he had been high. Martin testified that he slept at Allen’s house until the morning

and got a ride from Allen when she took her children to school. At that point,

Allen told Martin that she needed help. Allen and Martin went back to Allen’s

house, and Martin saw Wright’s body. Martin testified that Allen told him, “He

must have hit her too hard.” Martin testified that he noticed a bandana tied around

Wright’s hands.

Allen told Martin that they had to bury Wright’s body. Allen sent Martin to

Allen’s brother’s house to borrow a truck. Martin testified that the truck was never

-5- found by police. Martin testified that the entire plan, including getting the

plywood at Lowe’s was Allen’s idea. Martin testified that he was the only smoker

of the group, and he dumped all of the ashtrays out of the car after they buried the

body. When they got back to Allen’s house, Quintin left, and Martin cleaned the

nylon strap that had been used to secure the carpet around Wright’s body. Martin

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