Richard Wallace Rhodes v. State of Florida

CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJuly 2, 2026
DocketSC2024-1099
StatusPublished

This text of Richard Wallace Rhodes v. State of Florida (Richard Wallace Rhodes 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
Richard Wallace Rhodes v. State of Florida, (Fla. 2026).

Opinion

Supreme Court of Florida ____________

No. SC2024-1099 ____________

RICHARD WALLACE RHODES, Appellant,

vs.

STATE OF FLORIDA, Appellee.

July 2, 2026

PER CURIAM.

Richard Wallace Rhodes, convicted of first-degree murder and

sentenced to death, appeals the circuit court’s denial of his

successive motion for postconviction relief under Florida Rule of

Criminal Procedure 3.851. We have jurisdiction. See art. V,

§ 3(b)(1), Fla. Const.; see also State v. Fourth Dist. Ct. of Appeal, 697

So. 2d 70, 71 (Fla. 1997) (holding “that in addition to our appellate

jurisdiction over sentences of death, we have exclusive jurisdiction

to review all types of collateral proceedings in death penalty cases”).

For the reasons explained below, we affirm. I.

On March 2, 1984, a Florida Highway Patrol officer stopped

Rhodes while he was driving a vehicle registered to a woman named

Karen Nieradka. Rhodes v. State (Rhodes I), 547 So. 2d 1201, 1202

(Fla. 1989). Rhodes was arrested for driving without a valid driver’s

license and held at the Citrus County Jail.

Several weeks later, on March 24, Nieradka’s decomposing

body was found in debris being used to construct a berm in St.

Petersburg. The debris came from the Sunset Hotel in Clearwater,

which had been demolished on March 15. Nieradka was identified

through her fingerprints. The medical examiner determined that

manual strangulation was Nieradka’s cause of death and that she

had likely died two to eight weeks earlier. On March 26, detectives

from the Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office interviewed Rhodes at the

Citrus County Jail. During this and subsequent interviews, Rhodes

gave different and sometimes conflicting statements to his

interviewers. He always denied that he raped or killed Nieradka.

After an initial investigation, Rhodes was arrested for the first-

degree murder of Nieradka on April 27. During the ride from the

Citrus County Jail to Pinellas County, Rhodes offered to tell

-2- Detective Steve Porter how Nieradka had died if he could be

guaranteed that he would spend the rest of his life in a mental

health facility. Rhodes then claimed that Nieradka died accidentally

when she fell three stories at the Sunset Hotel.

The case proceeded to a jury trial. At trial, several of Rhodes’s

fellow inmates at the Pinellas and Citrus County Jails were called

as witnesses for the State. Two of those witnesses were Edward

Cottrell and Harvey Duranseau. Both Cottrell and Duranseau

testified about the incriminating statements that Rhodes made to

them. Cottrell testified that Rhodes confessed to murdering

Nieradka. Two other inmates also testified that Rhodes admitted to

killing Nieradka. Rhodes was convicted of first-degree murder and

sentenced to death. Id. at 1203. On direct appeal, this Court

affirmed Rhodes’s conviction but remanded for a new sentencing

proceeding. Id. at 1208. At the new proceeding, Rhodes again

received a death sentence. Rhodes v. State (Rhodes II), 638 So. 2d

920, 923 (Fla. 1994). This Court affirmed the sentence. Id. at 927.

In 2023, Rhodes filed a successive 1 rule 3.851 motion for

1. We affirmed the denial of Rhodes’s two previous postconviction motions. See Rhodes v. State (Rhodes III), 986 So.

-3- postconviction relief, raising several claims. With that motion,

Rhodes attached three affidavits. The first affidavit was from

Duranseau, who claimed that when he was arrested in Citrus

County, the State seized his property. Duranseau claimed that

Detective George Simpson offered his property back if he testified

against Rhodes. The second affidavit, which was also from

Duranseau, made similar allegations. He further claimed that

Simpson took him and his brother, Ronald Jones, who was also in

custody at the Citrus County Jail, to a private room and questioned

them about Rhodes. Duranseau claimed that there, Simpson made

several statements tying Rhodes to the murder and suggested that

the brothers testify for the State. Duranseau claimed that Simpson

told them that he would consider their “help in this matter” in

deciding whether to return their seized property.

The third affidavit was from Cottrell. In this affidavit, Cottrell

claimed that the State directed him to get information from Rhodes.

He claimed that various law enforcement officers and assistant

state attorneys “coached and manipulated” him in the case. He

2d 501 (Fla. 2008); Rhodes v. State (Rhodes IV), 234 So. 3d 554 (Fla. 2018).

-4- stated that they told him what information they needed from

Rhodes, what questions to ask Rhodes, and what to testify about at

Rhodes’s trial. He also asserted that they provided him with key

facts about the case. He added that in exchange for his help with

the case, the assistant state attorneys promised that he would get a

lighter sentence for his own criminal case. He also claimed that he

received commissary items and other benefits at the jail. Cottrell

stated that contrary to his trial testimony, Rhodes told him that he

did not commit the murder. He also claimed that after he was

released from jail, the State wanted him to testify at Rhodes’s

rehearing. He asserted that the defense never contacted him. He

claimed that for resentencing, the State told him what to say but he

refused to do so.

Based on these affidavits, Rhodes moved for postconviction

relief, raising three constitutional claims and one claim of newly

discovered evidence. The postconviction court held an evidentiary

hearing on Rhodes’s claims. Rhodes presented the testimony of

eight witnesses, while the State called six witnesses. Rhodes’s

witnesses consisted of his counsel at resentencing, his original trial

counsel, and six jailhouse witnesses. Both Rhodes’s counsel at

-5- resentencing and his original trial counsel testified that before the

affidavits, they were unaware of Cottrell’s and Duranseau’s claims.

The jailhouse witnesses were Cottrell, Duranseau, and Jones, as

well as Henry Niblack, James Head, and Randall Neeld. Duranseau

testified that while he was at the Citrus County Jail, he stayed in

the same cell block as Rhodes and learned of Rhodes’s pending case

in Pinellas County. At some point, a detective from Citrus County

approached him at the jail. According to Duranseau, the detective

indicated that Duranseau could retrieve some of his property that

the State had seized if he spied on Rhodes. This property allegedly

included a truck, a house trailer, 55 ounces of pure gold, 1,000

ounces of pure silver, and about $14,000 in cash.

At the time when the detective approached him, Rhodes had

said nothing incriminating to Duranseau. Duranseau testified that

the detective told him that Rhodes was “a real rascal” and “a violent

homosexual.” He also claimed that the detective told him that

Rhodes was suspected of “breaking into old women’s houses and

killing them.” Duranseau claimed that the detective gave him a

bottle of liquor at their first meeting with the expectation that he

would get “Rhodes drunk and get admissions from him.”

-6- Duranseau claimed that he followed these instructions. Duranseau

recalled that he did not testify at trial about any of these claims.

Jones testified that it was a police officer named George

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Richard Wallace Rhodes v. State of Florida, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richard-wallace-rhodes-v-state-of-florida-fla-2026.