McInnis v. State of Florida

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedMarch 5, 2025
Docket1D2023-2714
StatusPublished

This text of McInnis v. State of Florida (McInnis 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
McInnis v. State of Florida, (Fla. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL STATE OF FLORIDA _____________________________

No. 1D2023-2714 _____________________________

ANTHONY MALACHI MCINNIS,

Appellant,

v.

STATE OF FLORIDA,

Appellee. _____________________________

On appeal from the Circuit Court for Leon County. Joshua M. Hawkes, Judge.

March 5, 2025

ROWE, J.

Anthony Malachi McInnis appeals his judgment and sentence for first-degree murder and theft. McInnis argues that the trial court erred when it: (1) denied his motion for judgment of acquittal, (2) instructed the jury on the aggressor portion of the standard jury instruction for justifiable use of deadly force, and (3) overruled his objection to the State’s comments during closing arguments. We affirm on all issues and write only to address the trial court’s ruling on the motion for judgment of acquittal. Facts

McInnis and the victim were friends. McInnis visited the victim’s apartment several times a week to play video games, watch television, smoke marijuana, and discuss relationships. But the friendship began to sour. The pair were engaged in a joint venture to sell marijuana. McInnis was the middleman between the victim and their distributor. McInnis believed the victim was going behind his back to buy the product directly from the distributor. Although McInnis complained to his then-girlfriend and their shared roommate about the victim’s actions, he pretended to remain friends with the victim.

On the day of the shooting, McInnis drove to the victim’s apartment in a red sedan rented by McInnis’ girlfriend. Earlier in the day, McInnis texted his girlfriend that he was “about to do some hot shit” and asked her to pray for him. Around noon, when the victim’s friend arrived at the apartment to buy marijuana, he observed that the door to the apartment was uncharacteristically locked and a bright red sedan was parked near the entrance to the apartment. That evening, the victim’s next-door neighbor heard a loud “thud” from the victim’s apartment. The neighbor peered out the window and saw McInnis move a backpack from the victim’s car into the red sedan and then return to the apartment. A few minutes passed before the neighbor saw McInnis leave the apartment again.

Hours later, the victim’s former girlfriend stopped by the apartment to pick up some of her belongings. She found the victim, lying motionless on the bed. She left the apartment, and then called 911 reporting an emergency before hanging up. Officers responded to the apartment and found the victim lying on his bed in a relaxed position, with his right hand resting under his head, legs over the edge of the bed, facing the still-playing television. The victim had been shot twice through the right side of his head. His belongings appeared to have been rummaged through—drawers from his dresser sat on the bed and his belongings were strewn about the apartment. His Apple watch, cell phone, jewelry, locked safe, and security camera were missing from the apartment.

2 Investigators suspected that McInnis was the shooter. Witnesses told the investigators that McInnis was angry with the victim for cutting him out of the marijuana venture and that McInnis’ behavior was unusual on the day of the shooting. They reported that McInnis and his girlfriend had rented a red sedan matching the description of the car parked outside the victim’s apartment on the day of the shooting.

Investigators interviewed McInnis’ roommate. A few weeks after the shooting, she saw a black and beige handgun, an Apple watch, and loose marijuana in the kitchen of the apartment she shared with McInnis. She recognized the Apple watch as similar to the victim’s watch that was missing from his apartment after the shooting. The roommate left the kitchen for a few minutes, and when she returned, the items were gone. She then saw McInnis walking out of the apartment with a trash can.

At the same time, undercover officers from the narcotics unit were surveilling McInnis’ apartment. Officers spotted McInnis leaving the apartment with the trash can. Fearing that McInnis was trying to dispose of evidence from the ongoing homicide investigation, officers moved to detain him. McInnis fled on foot after officers identified themselves as law enforcement and ordered him to stop. Officers tased McInnis and took him in for questioning.

Detectives Sherrie Bennett and Nick Roberts interviewed McInnis. At first, McInnis claimed that he last saw the victim the day before the shooting. McInnis stated that his girlfriend picked him up from the victim’s apartment in a black SUV rental. When pressed about the red sedan parked outside the victim’s apartment on the day of the shooting, McInnis changed his story. He admitted that he was at the victim’s apartment on the day of the shooting, but he alleged that one of the victim’s customers shot the victim while McInnis was outside the apartment.

The detectives challenged McInnis’ explanation and confronted him with information that witnesses identified McInnis as the only person seen leaving the victim’s apartment after the shooting. McInnis finally admitted that he shot the victim—but he claimed that he acted in self-defense. McInnis stated that after

3 hours of smoking marijuana and taking prescription pills, the victim became erratic and angry. The victim was sitting on the bed and began waving a gun at him while threatening to sexually assault McInnis and his girlfriend (who was not present). As the interview continued, McInnis kept changing his account of whether the victim was pointing a gun at him when McInnis fired the gun. When pressed about his conflicting accounts of the incident, McInnis confessed that the shooting was not “an immediate . . . self-defense, but it was self-defense in a sense.” He admitted that he knew where the victim kept his money and safe and that he stole two guns, jewelry, cash, marijuana, the Apple watch, a cellphone, and the locked safe.

While McInnis was being interrogated, officers executed a search warrant on McInnis’ apartment. They found the missing Apple watch, the victim’s jewelry, cash, loose marijuana, and a Recon FMK 9mm semiautomatic handgun. The State charged McInnis with first-degree murder and armed robbery.

Trial

The State presented testimony from several witnesses, including police officers, forensic analysts, and the medical examiner. Officer White testified that when he responded to the 911 call and entered the victim’s apartment, he saw smoke and smelled a strong odor of freshly burnt marijuana. The victim was lying on the bed with his right hand behind his head and his left hand near his waistband. White noticed that the dresser drawers had been pulled out and saw a laptop on the victim’s bed. The State published White’s body-worn camera footage for the jury.

Forensic analyst Jack Williams collected and documented a spent casing and the bullet fired into the victim. He located the casing on the victim’s bed and the bullet under a bloody pillow the victim’s head was resting on. FDLE analyst Elizabeth Richey testified that she matched the casing and bullet recovered from the victim’s apartment to the semiautomatic handgun seized during the search of McInnis’ apartment.

Dr. Anthony Clark performed the autopsy on the victim. The victim tested positive for marijuana and oxymorphone, a narcotic

4 painkiller. Clark noted the presence of blood splatter on the victim’s left palm, indicating that when he was shot, the victim’s hand was open and situated near his shoulder. Clark identified two gunshot wounds—one above the victim’s right ear and another in the right cheek. Both bullets passed through the victim’s skull. Based on the trajectory of the bullets, Dr.

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Related

Walker v. State
957 So. 2d 560 (Supreme Court of Florida, 2007)
Beasley v. State
774 So. 2d 649 (Supreme Court of Florida, 2000)
Asay v. State
580 So. 2d 610 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1991)
Twilegar v. State
42 So. 3d 177 (Supreme Court of Florida, 2010)
McMillian v. State
94 So. 3d 572 (Supreme Court of Florida, 2012)

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Bluebook (online)
McInnis v. State of Florida, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcinnis-v-state-of-florida-fladistctapp-2025.