Sager v. State
This text of 699 So. 2d 619 (Sager v. State) 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.
Opinion
Robert John SAGER, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Florida, Appellee.
Supreme Court of Florida.
*620 James A. Boyko of James A. Boyko, P.A., New Port Richey, for Appellant.
Robert A. Butterworth, Attorney General, and Robert J. Landry, Assistant Attorney General, Tampa, for Appellee.
PER CURIAM.
We have on appeal the judgment and sentence of the trial court imposing the death penalty upon Robert John Sager. We have jurisdiction. Art. V, § 3(b)(1), Fla. Const. For the reasons expressed below, we affirm Sager's first-degree murder conviction but vacate his death sentence and remand for imposition of a sentence of life imprisonment without possibility of parole for twenty-five years.
The facts of this murder are more fully set out in Voorhees v. State, 699 So.2d 602 (Fla. 1997). Briefly, Sager and Donald Voorhees were drinking with Audrey Steven Bostic on January 3, 1992, in Bostic's residence. After Sager and Bostic started to fight, Voorhees and Sager tied Bostic to a chair with telephone cords and searched the residence for things to steal. Bostic was making noise, and Sager and Voorhees continued beating Bostic while he was tied in an attempt to keep him quiet. Next, Bostic was dragged into the bedroom by his feet and was stabbed in the throat. Bostic died as a result of these injuries.
Sager and Voorhees left Bostic's residence, and the two drove to Jacksonville in Bostic's car with Bostic's remaining cash, automated *621 teller machine (ATM) card, and telephone calling card. On the way, they stopped at several ATMs and tried unsuccessfully to withdraw money from Bostic's account. In Jacksonville, Sager told another person that he and Voorhees had beaten a man and stolen his car. The two then headed for Madison, Mississippi, and during their trip, they made several long-distance telephone calls using the victim's telephone calling card.
In the late afternoon on January 8, Sager and Voorhees accepted an offer from officers in Wayne County, Mississippi, to come to the county jail and get dry clothes and a hot meal while their clothes were washed. Voorhees and Sager did not bring any identification with them. During the ride to the police station in the officers' car, Voorhees and Sager were not handcuffed. Once at the station, although not formally arrested, the two filled out arrest cards with fictitious names, addresses, and social security numbers. While the two spent the night in jail in the same cell, Mississippi officers ran a check on the names given, and the search revealed nothing.
At around seven the next morning, Voorhees was told that neither he nor Sager could leave the jail until each provided the officers with a true identification. By 12:30 that afternoon, Sager had told Mississippi officers his real name, which was verified; however, Sager had not left the jail. Voorhees called a friend in Jacksonville in an attempt to prove his identity, and the friend told an officer in Mississippi that the man in the station in Mississippi was Donald Voorhees and that a police officer from Pasco County, Florida, was looking for Voorhees and Sager in an attempt to ask them about a murder in Pasco County. The Mississippi officer told Voorhees and Sager that they could not leave until he found out what the Pasco County officers wanted. He then placed Voorhees and Sager in separate cells and allowed Voorhees to tell Sager about the Pasco County officers coming to talk to them about a murder.
Sager approached a Mississippi officer at around eight that night and stated that he wanted to talk about a murder in Florida. Sager was advised that an officer would talk to him and would tape the conversation. Sager agreed, and after Sager was apprised of his Miranda rights, Sager confessed to the murder. When officers from Pasco County arrived at the jail sometime after midnight, they too apprised Sager of his Miranda rights, and Sager again confessed to slitting the victim's throat.
After a jury trial, Sager was convicted of first-degree murder. Thereafter, a sentencing proceeding was held, and the jury recommended death by a vote of eight to four. Finding two aggravators[1] and four mitigators,[2] the trial court followed the jury's recommendation and sentenced Sager to death.
On appeal to this Court, Sager raises twelve issues.[3] The first two issues concern *622 the question of whether the trial court abused its discretion in denying Sager's motion to suppress. In accordance with our decision in Voorhees v. State, 699 So.2d 602 (Fla.1997), we hold that the trial court properly found Sager's statements to both the Mississippi and Pasco County officers sufficiently purged of any unlawful taint from the period of illegal detention to make them admissible under both the constitutions of Florida and the United States.[4]
In Sager's next three issues, Sager contends that the trial court abused its discretion in not allowing Sager to introduce testimony in the guilt phase of the trial which would have shown that Voorhees admitted to both Pasco County officers and a fellow inmate in Mississippi that Voorhees was the one who slit Bostic's throat. The trial court found this testimony inadmissible in the guilt phase of the trial under section 90.804(2)(c), Florida Statutes (1991), on the basis that these statements did not exonerate Sager but rather tended only to lessen his responsibility. Sager claims that this testimony, coupled with the medical-expert testimony at trial, would have provided a basis upon which the jury could have concluded that Sager did not have a homicidal intent and that therefore Sager was not guilty of first-degree murder.
As we held in Voorhees concerning the admission of Sager's statements in which he admitted to slashing the victim's throat, we agree that it was error for the trial court not to admit Voorhees' statements in the guilt phase of Sager's trial.[5] However, in light of the instructions given to the jury and the other properly introduced evidence at trial, we find beyond a reasonable doubt that the error complained of did not contribute to the guilty verdict. The jury in this case was instructed on both first-degree premeditated and felony murder, and there was overwhelming evidence that Sager was guilty of first-degree felony murder. See § 782.04, Fla.Stat. (1991). Sager admitted in his confession that after hitting and kicking the victim, he tied the victim's hands and feet with phone cord. Further, Sager admitted that while the victim was tied up, he knocked some furniture over looking for things to steal and took the victim's cash and wallet from his pants' pockets. This was consistent with the evidence adduced at trial which showed that the victim's house was ransacked and that the pockets of the victim's pants were turned inside out and were empty. Voorhees' statements did not contradict the evidence that Sager actively participated in the crime, but rather, the statements tended to support it. Voorhees stated that both he and Sager tied the victim to a chair, tried to gag him with a flag, beat the victim, and searched the victim's apartment for things to steal. Additionally, after the victim's throat was slit, the evidence showed that Sager and Voorhees took the victim's car, ATM card, and telephone calling card; that they drove to several ATMs, where they attempted to withdraw money from the victim's bank account; and that they used the victim's calling card.
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699 So. 2d 619, 1997 WL 348108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sager-v-state-fla-1997.