Rodney Renard Newberry v. State of Florida

CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedDecember 12, 2019
DocketSC18-1133
StatusPublished

This text of Rodney Renard Newberry v. State of Florida (Rodney Renard Newberry 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
Rodney Renard Newberry v. State of Florida, (Fla. 2019).

Opinion

Supreme Court of Florida ____________

No. SC18-1133 ____________

RODNEY RENARD NEWBERRY, Appellant,

vs.

STATE OF FLORIDA, Appellee.

December 12, 2019

PER CURIAM.

This case is before the Court on direct appeal from a resentencing.1 Rodney

Newberry appeals his sentence of death for the 2009 first-degree murder of Terrese

Pernell Stevens. For the reasons we explain, we affirm Newberry’s death sentence.

I. BACKGROUND

We set forth the following facts in Newberry’s first direct appeal:

On December 28, 2009, Defendant [Newberry] set out to commit an armed robbery of a to-be-determined member of the Jacksonville community who happened to be located in whatever vulnerable circumstance provided Defendant the most advantageous opportunity for gain. Defendant was joined by James Phillips, who is

1. We have jurisdiction. See art. V, § 3(b)(1), Fla. Const. approximately eighteen (18) years Defendant’s junior, and Robert Anderson, who is approximately seventeen (17) years Defendant’s junior. Both Phillips and Anderson claim to have participated in the scheme because each feared Defendant. Further, each testified that neither had any intention of joining Defendant in the shooting and killing of any human being. When the Defendant and his accomplices assembled, Phillips had two firearms, an AK–47 and a MAC–11. Defendant had his own gun, a .357 magnum. Once in the car together, Defendant took possession of the AK–47, along with his .357 magnum. Anderson had the MAC–11. The three men proceeded to drive to the desired location to begin their search. Phillips apparently drove because he had a valid driver’s license. Defendant, Phillips[,] and Anderson began prowling Duval County in the area surrounding Myrtle Avenue. After some time, and unable to find a suitable victim to rob, Defendant suggested, and the others agreed, to move their hunt to the region around Pearl Street. Tragically, at approximately 7:20 p.m. on that fateful day, Terrese Pernell Stevens was spotted at Club Steppin’ Out. When Defendant spotted Mr. Stevens’s car in the parking lot, he told Phillips to stop the car. Defendant directed Phillips to go inside the club, locate Mr. Stevens, and “chirp” Defendant to let him know when Mr. Stevens was leaving the club. While Phillips was in the club, and before he alerted Defendant, Defendant had Anderson move the car. Anderson was in the driver’s seat when Defendant’s phone chirped. He started the car and Defendant, sitting in the front passenger seat and stretching his foot across the car, pressed Anderson’s foot down on the gas pedal to make the car go faster. Anderson stopped the car a few feet from Mr. Stevens’s car. After [Anderson] parked the car, Defendant got out of the car with the AK–47 and ran to the driver’s side of Mr. Stevens’s car. Defendant yelled at Mr. Stevens to “give it up, and if you make one {explicative} move I’ll put it on my daddy that I’m going

-2- to kill you.” At that time, Anderson got out of the car with the MAC–11 and stayed by the driver’s side, never firing the gun. Without warning, and leaving Mr. Stevens little or no time to comply with Defendant’s demands, Defendant fired twelve shots from the AK–47 [after, as Anderson testified at trial, Mr. Stevens said “please don’t, don’t, don’t, don’t kill me”]. Mr. Stevens was killed. Defendant got back in the car, and before Phillips returned to the car, Anderson and Defendant drove [away]. As they drove, Defendant offered Anderson money that he took from Mr. Stevens. At first, Anderson refused the money because it had blood on it, but eventually he took $75.00 from Defendant. Phillips, who stayed in the club when he heard the gunshots, left the club after the police arrived. [After the shooting, Phillips] called a friend for a ride, and [later met up with Newberry and Anderson]. Both men gave Phillips $20.00 of the money Defendant took from Mr. Stevens. The owner of Club Steppin’ Out testified that she was inside the club at the time of the shooting and, although she did not see the shooting, she heard the gunshots and called the police. Law enforcement officers who responded to the scene testified that the victim was lying across the front seat of his vehicle and that they recovered twelve 7.62 x 39 mm rifle casings from the scene. No weapons were recovered by law enforcement. In the months following the crime, Michelle Massey, who saw Newberry, Phillips, and Anderson with guns earlier in the day on the day of the murder and whose phone Newberry was using on the day of the murder, assisted police with obtaining information that led to Newberry being charged with the victim’s murder. Prior to Newberry’s trial, Anderson and Phillips both pled guilty to second- degree murder and armed robbery for their roles in the crime. Anderson also pled guilty to possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. Neither had been sentenced at the time of Newberry’s trial, at which they both testified that Newberry shot the victim.

Newberry v. State, 214 So. 3d 562, 563-65 (Fla. 2017) (alterations in original)

(footnotes omitted) (quoting trial court’s order).

-3- The jury found Newberry “guilty of first-degree premeditated and felony

murder and armed robbery and further found that Newberry ‘discharged a firearm

causing death or great bodily harm during the commission of the offense.’ ” Id. at

565. This Court “affirm[ed] the conviction but vacate[d] the death sentence and

remand[ed] for a new penalty phase,” concluding that “Newberry’s [first] death

sentence violate[d] Hurst[2].” Id. at 563, 567.

During the second penalty phase proceeding, the State presented the

testimony of thirteen witnesses in addition to four victim impact witnesses. Four

of the witnesses presented were the victims of Newberry’s four prior violent

felonies. 3 Further, the State presented certified copies of Newberry’s prior

convictions. The State also presented photographs of Mr. Stevens, the victim in

this case, as a child and as an adult with his family.

2. Hurst v. Florida, 136 S. Ct. 616 (2016); Hurst v. State, 202 So. 3d 40 (Fla. 2016).

3. Newberry’s four prior violent felony convictions stem from three different incidents. First, Newberry pled nolo contendere to the aggravated battery of a victim he shot six times. Second, Newberry pled nolo contendere to the aggravated assault of his former girlfriend and mother of his four children. Third, Newberry was convicted of the attempted first-degree murder of two police officers, both of whom Newberry shot. Newberry’s crimes against the police officers occurred after Newberry murdered Mr. Stevens, the victim in this case, when the officers attempted to approach Newberry on the street for a purpose unrelated to Mr. Stevens’s murder. Newberry was tried and convicted for the crimes against the police officers before he was tried for Mr. Stevens’s murder.

-4- The defense presented the testimony of six witnesses, including Newberry’s

former girlfriend and mother of his four children (and also the victim of one of

Newberry’s prior violent felonies), Newberry’s cousin, Newberry’s daughters, and

two expert witnesses. In addition, the defense introduced photos of Newberry with

his family, as well as cards he sent to family members while he was incarcerated,

and Newberry’s school records. Further, the defense presented the judgment and

sentence forms for the convictions of Robert Anderson and James Phillips for their

roles in Mr. Stevens’s murder.

The defense presented the expert testimony of Dr. Stephen Bloomfield.

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