Rao v. State

52 So. 3d 40, 2010 Fla. App. LEXIS 19091, 2010 WL 5093132
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedDecember 15, 2010
Docket4D07-4879
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 52 So. 3d 40 (Rao 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
Rao v. State, 52 So. 3d 40, 2010 Fla. App. LEXIS 19091, 2010 WL 5093132 (Fla. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

WARNER, J.

Brendan Rao appeals his conviction for first degree murder. He raises three issues on appeal, arguing that (1) the court erred in allowing a witness to testify that he was engaged in satanic worship in high school, where the evidence was inadmissible as showing only bad character; (2) the court erred by admitting gruesome pictures of the victim’s burned body which were highly prejudicial; and (3) fundamental error occurred in closing argument when the prosecutor commented on his right of silence. We affirm on all issues, finding that in context the court did not abuse its discretion in admitting the single reference to satanic worship. Alternatively, it was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. Further, the pictures were properly admitted to explain the cause of death. Finally, the prosecutor made only one comment which could be considered a comment on silence, but it did not constitute fundamental error.

On April 5, 2000, police received a call about smoke coming from a dumpster and upon investigation discovered the charred body of Matthew Collins inside the dumpster. An autopsy revealed that the victim’s death was not caused by the fire, but rather was caused by a combination of head trauma and strangulation. Ligatures were found around his neck. A few days later Detective Stone received a phone call from Christine Grace, who worked with the victim at a music store. As a result, police investigated the phone records of the victim, which showed that in the last hours of his life the victim had made sever *42 al calls to the defendant, Brendan Rao. The police interviewed Rao and made further investigation, but no arrests were forthcoming at that time. After investigation, the case remained unsolved.

In 2004 after the original investigator retired, Detective Curcio took over the Collins murder investigation. Curcio re-interviewed individuals involved in the initial investigation, including Mark Lichten-berg, a classmate of Rao’s, who was a suspect in the case. During their interview, Detective Curcio asked Liehtenberg to use the detective’s cell phone to call the home phone number of Brendan Rao. Rao didn’t answer. Instead, Liehtenberg left the detective’s phone number and a message saying who he was and asking him to call back. Two days later Rao actually called Curcio’s phone, and Curcio, portraying himself as Mark Liehtenberg, recorded the phone call. Acting as Li-chtenberg, Curcio told Rao that the police had re-interviewed him in reference to the murder. During the conversation, Rao appeared unaware that he was not talking to the real Liehtenberg. Rao denied having talked further to the police and cautioned Curcio not to talk to anyone. Rao told Curcio that the case was entirely circumstantial and as long as he kept out of trouble, no one would know, because “nobody was there.” Rao never directly referred to the murder or made any directly inculpatory statement but continued to repeat that Curcio (posing as Liehtenberg) should not say anything if interviewed. Rao also encouraged him to get out of town if necessary.

Two months later, the police arrested Rao. During Curcio’s interview of Rao, Rao requested to contact his mother. Curcio left the interview room and allowed Rao to use his cell phone to call his mother. Rao’s conversations with his mother were recorded and played at trial. In them, Rao first explained that the police had arrested him and what would happen to him. He asked her to bring him some clothes and then told her what monies she could have of his, as he was supporting her. He told her that there was nothing for her to say because he had never spoken “about it” to his mother. The conversations went on for a considerable period of time.

At trial, three witnesses testified that Rao had admitted the murder to them. Christine Grace testified that she worked with Collins, Liehtenberg and Rao at Mars Music store. Rao would talk to her and tell her about himself. Over objection, she was allowed to tell the jury that he had told her he was “into satanic worship” in high school, and that “he hadn’t done anything serious but liked to mess around with fire.” Rao told her that Collins had robbed Rao’s home, taking a pound of marijuana, Rao’s favorite guitar, and money. Rao claimed that Collins was the only one who knew where Rao kept his stash of marijuana and that Collins loved Rao’s guitar. Although Rao asked Grace not to tell anyone about what he had revealed, when she learned during a meeting at work a few months later that Collins had been missing for a week and heard that a body had been found in a dumpster, she called police and gave a statement.

A second witness, Jacob Condell, knew Rao from high school. He testified that on April 25, 2000, he was at Rao’s home, and they smoked marijuana. Rao told Condell that a kid named Matt had stolen stuff from Rao’s house three times and that he had wound up dead. Rao also commented that “it was just something that had to be done.” Condell asked Rao what he did with the body, and Rao mentioned that he *43 “touched the body” 1 and that his only mistake was not screwing up the dental records for identification purposes. Cold-well also gave a statement to the police.

Finally, Candice Moreland testified that she met Rao in high school in 1995. They were close friends and had a sexual relationship. In the summer of 2000 Rao told her that he murdered someone. He told her a coworker of his had robbed his house not once, but twice. Rao, Lichtenberg (whom she also knew from school), and another male coerced the victim back to Rao’s cottage where he strangled him. Then they put his body in the trunk of a car, dumped it in a garbage bin, and set it on fire. Rao told Moreland that he had been the one to strangle Collins. More-land was impeached on her delay in reporting the crime to the police and her substantial drug use, including her intoxication at the time she first reported the crime to the police.

Dr. Lisa Flannagan, the medical examiner, testified that the victim died prior to being burned. She could determine this based on the absence of soot in the victim’s internal airways and a negative carbon monoxide level in his blood. In addition to the strangulation she determined that there had been a blow to the head because of the hemorrhage she found between the membrane and the skull. In her testimony she used photos of the charred body to show the ligatures around the victim’s neck as well as to explain the hemorrhage. The photos were admitted over the defense objection, the court finding that they assisted the medical examiner in the explanation of the cause of death.

The jury found Rao guilty of first degree murder. The court sentenced him to life in prison, and he appeals.

Rao first contends that the trial court erred in allowing Grace to testify that Rao told her he was engaged in satanic worship in high school. He argues that the evidence did not tend to prove or disprove any material fact and was admitted simply to show bad character. The standard of review for admissibility of evidence is abuse of discretion. Nardone v. State, 798 So.2d 870, 874 (Fla. 4th DCA 2001).

Had the witness testified only that Rao was formerly engaged in satanic worship, we would agree that this evidence was irrelevant, tending only to prove bad character.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 So. 3d 40, 2010 Fla. App. LEXIS 19091, 2010 WL 5093132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rao-v-state-fladistctapp-2010.