McGowan v. State

139 So. 3d 934, 2014 WL 2197729, 2014 Fla. App. LEXIS 8075
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedMay 28, 2014
DocketNo. 4D12-2311
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 139 So. 3d 934 (McGowan v. State) 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
McGowan v. State, 139 So. 3d 934, 2014 WL 2197729, 2014 Fla. App. LEXIS 8075 (Fla. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

WARNER, J.

Appellant was charged, tried, and convicted of the crime of leaving the scene of a crash involving injury to or death of a person.1 He claims that the trial court [935]*935erred in denying his motion for judgment of acquittal because the state failed to prove that he knew or should have known that he hit a pedestrian. Based upon the totality of the circumstances and the unusual facts of this case, we agree and reverse.

At trial the following evidence was presented. Around 8:20 a.m. on the morning of November 3, 2010, a road ranger2 patrolled 1-595 east of 1-95 in Broward County. He described the night as very dark. He noticed a couple of cars swerve around something in the middle of the westbound lanes of the highway. When he got close to the object, he realized that a person was standing in the middle lane of traffic. The person, a woman, appeared to be bending down to pick up something.

It was later learned that the woman, who was disabled with dementia, had been reported missing from her home the day before. Somehow she had wandered onto 1-595 in the early morning hours. She was African-American with a dark complexion, and she was wearing camouflage pants and a green shirt.

The road ranger immediately pulled off the road onto the shoulder just beyond where he saw the woman. He turned on his flashers and started screaming at her to get her attention. As he did so, he saw a car approaching in his rearview mirrors, coming from 1-95 southbound onto 1-595 westbound. Just as he made eye contact with her, she was hit by the vehicle and flew into the air. The road ranger could see the vehicle, which he described as a white sedan, leaving the scene and moving from the middle lane, where it had struck the woman, to the far left lane.

The road ranger did not see any other vehicles hit the woman, because he stated that he went into shock and did not see anything else. He testified, “I just went in shock, I could not believe that I seen [sic] a person flying in the air the way that person fly.” The road ranger did not see an eighteen-wheel tractor trailer rig run over the woman, although the driver stopped. When later questioned by the investigating highway patrol officer, the tractor-trailer driver said that he thought he had hit an animal. The road ranger eventually maneuvered his truck into the roadway to try to protect the woman’s body from further oncoming traffic.

At about the same time, appellant was driving west on 1-595. He had finished his shift at work, stopped by his girlfriend’s apartment to watch a movie, and was driving to his home in Plantation. He was driving a grey Dodge minivan. Around 3:40 a.m. he texted his girlfriend: “On 95 a truck fell off the back of a truck and wrecked the front passenger side of my car and went through the windshield. It didnt stop, so neither did i. Im shaken up as shit.” Later, his girlfriend testified that he told her that he thought a “piece of wood or something” had fallen off the back of a truck and hit his car.

It is significant that, at trial, the road ranger identified a picture of a white sedan as the type of vehicle that he saw strike the victim. He was also shown pictures of appellant’s grey Dodge minivan and testified that it was not the vehicle that he saw hit the victim.

Corporal Victor Luquis, a Florida Highway Patrol traffic homicide investigator, arrived on the scene of the accident around 4 a.m. He interviewed the road ranger and learned that the vehicle which [936]*936had struck the woman had left the scene. The officer saw debris in the road and observed the eighteen-wheel tractor trailer parked on the right shoulder of westbound 1-595. There was no front-end damage to the eighteen-wheeler, and Corporal Luquis did not see blood splatter on it. He determined that the woman was on the ground when the eighteen-wheeler ran over her and that her body had been dragged.

As he was investigating, he received a call from his communications center relaying an anonymous 911 call. The caller reported seeing a white Lexus hit a person on 1-595 and exit on University Boulevard, where the caller saw the driver remove his license tag. The call had been inadvertently dropped by the 911 dispatcher, so no further information was available. Nevertheless, the corporal did put out a BOLO (a “be on the lookout” alert) for such a vehicle. He did not make any investigation of the debris at the scene to determine whether it came from a Lexus or similar white sedan.

The on-scene investigation continued for over three hours. Around the time Corporal Luquis was wrapping up at the scene, he received a call that appellant’s father, a captain with the City of Plantation Police, had reported that his son’s vehicle may have been in an accident involving a pedestrian on 1-595. Corporal Luquis went to appellant’s residence and observed his Dodge minivan. Visually, he thought that the glass debris he had gathered from the scene looked like it was from the same headlight as appellant’s vehicle. The passenger side of the windshield had a gaping hole in it with spider fractures covering the entire passenger side. The right headlamp was destroyed. By this time it was daylight, and the corporal could see strands of hair and dried blood in the window of the van. He took photos of the minivan, took samples of the blood and hair, and had the vehicle transported as evidence. DNA tests confirmed that the blood and hair were that of the female victim. No further examination or inspection was made of appellant’s car or the debris found at the scene.

The corporal did make some investigation of the 911 caller who reported seeing the white Lexus hit the pedestrian. This information fit the description of the vehicle provided by the road ranger at the scene. The corporal examined the evidence of that call but was unable to locate that caller. He admitted he did not include the 911 call about the Lexus in his report. He ruled out the Lexus being involved in this incident because he could not find it, and because the caller had reported seeing a white male when the victim was an African-American female. Furthermore, the DNA match of the victim’s blood on appellant’s vehicle and damage to it convinced him that it was the “primary vehicle” in the incident. He admitted, however, that it would be possible for a small car going 71 miles an hour to hit a person and have the person clear the smaller car and land on the car behind it.

The corporal decided on his own not to pursue the investigation of the Lexus, without disclosing the information in his report or in the probable cause affidavit. The state was unaware of this information at the time appellant was arrested ten months after the accident. It was not until two weeks before trial was set that Corporal Luquis disclosed the evidence about the Lexus to the state and defense.3

[937]*937The medical examiner determined that the cause of the victim’s death was “multiple blunt force trauma.” This included the severance of some of her limbs. The examiner could not tell, however, which impact killed the victim.

After the state rested, the defense moved for a judgment of acquittal on the grounds that the state had failed to prove both that the crash involving appellant’s vehicle resulted in injury or death to the victim and that the defendant knew or should have known that he hit a person. The court denied the motion.

The defense called appellant’s father as a witness.

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Related

Kenneth Lee Manhard v. State of Florida
District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2019
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207 So. 3d 1019 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2017)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
139 So. 3d 934, 2014 WL 2197729, 2014 Fla. App. LEXIS 8075, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgowan-v-state-fladistctapp-2014.