Puglisi v. State

56 So. 3d 787, 2010 Fla. App. LEXIS 19465, 2010 WL 5173843
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedDecember 22, 2010
DocketNo. 4D08-3056
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 56 So. 3d 787 (Puglisi 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
Puglisi v. State, 56 So. 3d 787, 2010 Fla. App. LEXIS 19465, 2010 WL 5173843 (Fla. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinions

POLEN, J.

Appellant, Vincent Puglisi, appeals the trial court’s order adjudicating him guilty of first degree murder (Count I) and armed robbery (Count II) and sentencing him to life imprisonment without parole as to Count I and thirty years imprisonment as to Count II, to run concurrently. This court has jurisdiction. Fla. R.App. P. 9.140(b)(1)(A).

Puglisi and his co-defendant, Rex Ditto, were charged with first degree murder and armed robbery for events occurring on February 5, 2006. Following a jury trial, Puglisi was found guilty as charged. Having thoroughly reviewed the record, we hold that none of the errors complained of by Puglisi on appeal warrants reversal by this court.

At a hearing on Puglisi’s motion to suppress statements and physical evidence, [789]*789Officer Christopher Crawford of the Boyn-ton Beach Police Department testified regarding his investigation of the death of Alan Shalleck. While at the crime scene (Shalleck’s mobile home) on February 7, 2006, Crawford found that Puglisi had recently called Shalleck’s phone. Crawford contacted Puglisi, told him he found Pugli-si’s number in Shalleck’s phone and that Crawford was investigating an incident that occurred with Shalleck. Crawford did not say Shalleck had been murdered. Pu-glisi suggested that Crawford meet him at his place of work, Chook’s Chicken, at 4:00 p.m. the following day.

The next day, Crawford and Investigator Brian Anderson went together to Chook’s Chicken, which was located in Broward County. Crawford and Anderson travelled in Anderson’s unmarked police car which looks like a normal civilian car. The officers were dressed in civilian dress clothing. Crawford introduced himself and Anderson to Puglisi and explained that they were investigating the death of Shal-leck and asked whether Puglisi would be willing to help them with the investigation. Puglisi replied that he would come and speak with the investigators so long as his boss was okay with him leaving work. After gaining the employer’s permission, Pu-glisi accompanied the officers back to the Boynton Beach Police Department.

Both Crawford and Puglisi’s employer testified that, at all times, Crawford’s tone was conversational. There was no physical contact between the officers and Pugli-si and Puglisi acted on his own free will in leaving with the officers and interacting with them. Puglisi was with the officers for the remainder of the day and that night was placed under arrest for the murder of Shalleck after Ditto implicated Puglisi and Puglisi himself confessed. Before an initial interview, Crawford read Puglisi his Miranda1 warnings from a Boynton Beach Police Department Miranda card, and Pu-glisi stated he understood his rights and signed the card. Before a subsequent interview later that evening, Crawford confirmed that Puglisi understood his rights and still wanted to give a statement to the police.

In his first tape recorded statement, Pu-glisi explained that he had met Shalleck about a year earlier through an ad in a gay magazine. Both Shalleck and Puglisi were gay and had a casual sexual relationship until about a month or two before Shal-leck’s death. Shalleck invited Puglisi to come over on Super Bowl Sunday, but Puglisi declined. Instead, Puglisi said he worked on Super Bowl Sunday until about 8:00 p.m. and then went to a restaurant with Rex Ditto, 29, whom Puglisi was dating. Puglisi said he and Ditto went to Puglisi’s home after the game ended and spent the night together. When the officers told Puglisi that Shalleck had been murdered in his home, Puglisi responded that Ditto could have done something like that. Puglisi had seen Ditto cleaning the front seat of a Ford Explorer with bleach on February 6 and also saw Ditto burning clothing, keys, documents, and the like on that night.

In a second tape-recorded statement, taken after Ditto confessed and implicated Puglisi in his confession, Puglisi confessed to taking part in the murder. Puglisi told Crawford that he had arranged to meet Shalleck around 11:30 pm. on Super Bowl Sunday. After having dinner with Ditto and watching the game, Puglisi and Ditto drove to Shalleck’s home in Puglisi’s vehicle. When they arrived, they went inside and watched TV. After a while, Shalleck told Ditto he wanted to have sex with him and asked him to go in his bedroom and [790]*790undress. Ditto returned wearing nothing but his underwear. Ditto laid across Shal-leck’s lap and Shalleck pulled off his underwear and spanked him.

Shalleck told Ditto to go back into his bedroom and Shalleck followed. Shalleck called Puglisi into the room, and when Puglisi walked in he saw Shalleck performing oral sex on Ditto. Ditto “freaked out” and began strangling Shalleck. Ditto asked Puglisi to help him. Ditto pushed Shalleck to the floor and started beating him in the head with a paddle. Blood covered the paddle and was “going everywhere.” Ditto asked Puglisi to hold Shal-leck down, and Puglisi took a pillow and held it over Shalleck’s face. Ditto told Puglisi he was going to the kitchen to get a knife and soon returned with a knife and began stabbing Shalleck repeatedly. Pu-glisi estimated that Ditto stabbed Shalleck a hundred times. The first knife broke, and Ditto went to the kitchen to get another knife. Ditto returned to the bedroom and stabbed Shalleck until that knife broke too. When Ditto left to get a third knife, Puglisi left the room because he could no longer watch. Puglisi never stabbed Shal-leck himself because he did not “have the nerve” to do it.

After Puglisi left the room, Ditto eventually came out and told Puglisi that Shal-leck was dead. Ditto suggested dumping Shalleck’s body in Alligator Alley. The men put the body in two garbage bags and dragged him to the car, but Shalleck was too heavy for the men to lift into the car. The men left Shalleck’s body in the driveway.

The men put the paddle and the knife in a garbage bag to take with them. The men also took a Fossil watch and a ring and some change from the house. Ditto wrote himself a check in the amount of $450 from Shalleck’s checkbook. The men pawned the ring, and Ditto kept the watch for himself. Puglisi and Ditto had discussed robbing Shalleck while they were at dinner. According to Puglisi, that was Ditto’s plan. Puglisi later threw the garbage bag containing the knives in the in-tracoastal in Fort Lauderdale. Puglisi stated that he was in love with Ditto and went along -with Ditto’s plan to rob and kill Shalleck because he did not “realize the seriousness of the consequences.”

Investigator Anderson reiterated most of Crawford’s testimony regarding their initial meeting with Puglisi, the manner of contact, and their time together in the police vehicle and at the police station. Anderson patted Puglisi down prior to entering the interrogation room with him for purposes of officer safety.

The trial court denied the motion, on the grounds that Puglisi was not in custody when he spoke to the police and his statements and consent were voluntarily and knowingly given. Puglisi’s renewed objection to admission of the evidence at trial was overruled.

In addition to the evidence adduced at the hearing on the motion to suppress, the following was proven during trial. On Monday, February 6, 2006, the day after the Super Bowl, a maintenance man at the Royal Manor Mobile Home Park noticed some trash bags on the driveway at a residence. When the bags had not been moved the next day, he investigated and discovered Shalleck’s body beneath the bags.

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Related

Puglisi v. State
112 So. 3d 1196 (Supreme Court of Florida, 2013)
Puglisi v. State
56 So. 3d 787 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2010)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 So. 3d 787, 2010 Fla. App. LEXIS 19465, 2010 WL 5173843, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/puglisi-v-state-fladistctapp-2010.