Roger Allen Rozzelle v. Secretary, Florida Department of Corrections

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedFebruary 29, 2012
Docket10-13595
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Roger Allen Rozzelle v. Secretary, Florida Department of Corrections, (11th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

[PUBLISH]

IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT FILED ________________________ U.S. COURT OF APPEALS ELEVENTH CIRCUIT No. 10-13595 FEB 29, 2012 ________________________ JOHN LEY CLERK D.C. Docket No. 3:07-cv-00347-RV-EMT

ROGER ALLEN ROZZELLE,

Petitioner-Appellant,

versus

SECRETARY, FLORIDA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS,

Respondent-Appellee.

________________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Florida ________________________

(February 29, 2012)

Before HULL, MARCUS and BLACK, Circuit Judges. PER CURIAM:

Roger Allen Rozzelle appeals the district court’s denial of his untimely 28

U.S.C. § 2254 petition challenging his Florida second-degree murder conviction.

After review and oral argument, we affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

An information charged Petitioner Rozzelle with one count of second-

degree murder, in violation of Florida Statutes § 782.04(2). This appeal centers

around the “depraved mind” mens rea in § 782.04(2), which defines second-degree

murder as “[t]he unlawful killing of a human being, when perpetrated by any act

imminently dangerous to another and evincing a depraved mind regardless of

human life, although without any premeditated design to effect the death of any

particular individual.” Fla. Stat. § 782.04(2). In a 1999 trial, a jury convicted

Rozzelle of second-degree murder. We review the abundant trial evidence

establishing that Rozzelle brutally beat and killed the victim, Greg Leier.

A. 1999 Trial and Conviction

On July 17, 1998, Petitioner Rozzelle and his girlfriend, Andrea Barnes,

checked into room 225 of a motel in Fort Walton Beach, Florida. At the motel,

they met the victim, Greg Leier, who was staying next door in room 226. Leier

had arrived several days earlier and had lent his car and credit cards to Tracey

2 Feagin, who was staying at a nearby motel with her boyfriend, Corey Cox.

At 5:00 p.m., Petitioner Rozzelle went to a bar to meet his brother, Anthony

Rozzelle. Barnes stayed behind at the motel. Petitioner’s brother Anthony

testified that Petitioner stayed with him at the bar until 6:00 p.m., when Petitioner

left to check on Barnes. Around 6:00 p.m., Petitioner Rozzelle returned to the

motel, where he saw Leier and Barnes in what Petitioner believed to be a sexual

encounter.1 Petitioner claimed that he “[k]nocked them out.”

Petitioner Rozzelle returned to the bar and told his brother Anthony that

Petitioner had “caught” Barnes with Leier, “cold-cocked” both of them,

“[k]nocked them out,” and dragged Barnes to his room and locked the door.

Anthony testified that Petitioner was “[n]ot excited” when he described these

events. The brothers stayed at the bar until about 9:00 p.m. Anthony drove

Petitioner part of the way back to the motel, then “let him have his car and go on

his way.” Anthony told Petitioner to go back to the motel and go to sleep and

“don’t get in trouble and don’t go to jail.”

Around 9:00 p.m., Rozzelle returned to the motel and observed Leier and

Barnes standing together on the motel balcony. Rozzelle then beat Leier and

1 The record does not clearly show where Leier and Barnes were when Rozzelle first saw them together after he returned to the motel around 6:00 p.m.

3 Barnes again. Leier died from his injuries that night.

That same evening, witnesses Adley Boudreaux and Dawn Cortie were

staying in room 221. Both Boudreaux and Cortie testified that around 8:00 or 8:30

p.m., they were at the motel pool and saw Petitioner Rozzelle drive up, get out of

his car quickly, run up the stairs, and beat on the door to room 226, demanding to

be let in. At some point, Boudreaux left the pool and returned to room 221. On

his way, he saw Petitioner Rozzelle enter room 226. Then Boudreaux heard a

female voice “hollering, something about, stop, stop, you know. Don’t do that.

Leave him alone.” Boudreaux went into his room.

Motel employee Harish Chauhan testified that the occupant of room 226

phoned the motel front desk asking for security. Minutes later, Chauhan left the

motel office and observed Leier, whose face was covered with blood, walking

down the stairs. Leier asked Chauhan to call the police. Chauhan returned to the

motel office and asked another motel employee to call the police.

At 9:26 p.m., police officer John Burritt responded to the call of battery-

already-occurred. He arrived at the motel at 9:28 p.m. As he stepped out of the

patrol car, Officer Burritt heard a voice say, “I’m over here.” The victim Leier

approached Officer Burritt from the shadows of the ground floor of the motel.

Burritt described Leier as having suffered a brutal beating. Leier was “staggering

4 and hunched over,” had “blood pouring out of his mouth” and his head “almost

looked twice the size of a normal human being” due to “massive swelling.”

Burritt testified, “I was shocked because I’d never seen anybody beaten so badly

in my life.” Burritt explained that “[y]ou could tell he was in severe pain and he

was having difficulty breathing and having difficulty talking.” Leier told Officer

Burritt that the person who beat him was upstairs and brought Burritt to room 225.

Leier said, “he’s in there.” Officer Burritt sent Leier to room 226 and knocked on

the door to room 225. Petitioner Rozzelle answered. Officer Burritt saw Barnes

in the room, and she was bleeding.

Officer Mary Blythe Williams arrived at the motel shortly after Officer

Burritt. Officer Williams testified that Barnes “had blood all over her face, around

her nose.” According to Officer Williams, Barnes’s “teeth had been knocked out

to just below the gumline” so that “[t]here was just a little tiny bit of white

showing up underneath her gumline.”

Officer Burritt arrested Petitioner Rozzelle at the motel. Burritt testified

that as he and Rozzelle walked past Leier’s room, Rozzelle looked in and stated,

“that’s right, you motherfucker, I kicked your ass, I caught you fucking my old

lady, I kicked your ass.” Officer Williams also heard Rozzelle make this

statement. Officer Burritt put Rozzelle in the back of Burritt’s patrol car and

5 transported Rozzelle to the police station. Officer Burritt testified that, during the

trip, Rozzelle stated, “I caught that guy fucking my old lady and I beat the hell out

of him. I’m from the old school and he had it coming.”

At the police station, Petitioner Rozzelle made a taped statement that was

introduced at trial. In the statement, Rozzelle said, “I love this woman,” and he

“whupped [Leier’s] ass” after seeing Leier and Barnes together after returning

from the bar the second time and “didn’t have no second thoughts about it.”

Rozzelle continued:

You’re lucky this [foot] wouldn’t fit up his ass or it would have been there, too. That’s all I can say. The guy got — he deserved an ass whupping, and I put one on him and I don’t feel sorry about it. The only thing that I didn’t do to that motherfucker is throw him off the balcony, and if I had probably thought about it, I would have done that, too.

In his taped statement, Rozzelle stated that he had used only his fists to beat Leier.

Rozzelle struck Leier with “[a] couple of good left hooks . . . probably three or

four . . .

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