Smith v. State

7 So. 3d 473, 2009 Fla. LEXIS 405, 2009 WL 702262
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMarch 19, 2009
DocketSC05-703
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 7 So. 3d 473 (Smith 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.

Bluebook
Smith v. State, 7 So. 3d 473, 2009 Fla. LEXIS 405, 2009 WL 702262 (Fla. 2009).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This case is before the Court on appeal from a judgment of first-degree murder and a sentence of death as well as convictions for a number of other offenses. We have jurisdiction. See art. V, § 3(b)(1), Fla. Const. For the reasons explained below, we affirm both the convictions and the death sentence.

*479 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In December 2000, Corey “Bubba” Smith and seven other individuals were indicted by a Miami-Dade County grand jury in a seventeen-count indictment for crimes committed in connection with the John Doe organization. Smith was alleged to be the leader of the group and named in fourteen counts of the indictment, including conspiracy to engage in a criminal enterprise, engaging in a criminal enterprise, conspiracy to traffic in marijuana, conspiracy to traffic in cocaine, five counts of first-degree murder for the deaths of Leon Hadley, Cynthia Brown, Jackie Pope, Angel Wilson, and Melvin Lipscomb, four counts of conspiracy to commit murder, and second-degree murder for the death of Marlon Beneby.

The John Doe organization had been the subject of a joint state and federal task force. 1 The task force surveillance included pen registers on several phones, followed by wiretaps on the phones of Smith and his second-in-command, Latravis Gal-lashaw. The wiretaps recorded calls on Gallashaw’s cell phone (which was registered to Smith) and Smith’s landline at his residence. These wiretap recordings and transcripts of the recordings were admitted into evidence at Smith’s trial.

The state criminal conspiracy count was based on the operation of the John Doe organization, a criminal enterprise that processed, packaged, and distributed powder and crack cocaine and marijuana in the Liberty City area of Miami-Dade County over a six-year period from July 1994 through January 1999. At its peak, the John Doe organization operated seven “holes,” locations where they distributed drugs. The holes had two different names, John Doe and No Fear, to keep people from knowing that all of them belonged to one organization. The group also packaged their drugs in different colored bags to confuse the police and others about the extent of the John Doe enterprise.

Smith’s trial took place in October 2005, with jury selection and the guilt phase of trial lasting over thirty days. The State called eighty-four witnesses. The defense called one witness, the attorney who had represented Smith on a previous first-degree murder charge in the death of Dominique Johnson. Smith did not testify.

The court ordered additional courtroom security for the trial, including a second magnetometer (metal detector) on the seventh floor of the courthouse and required potential jurors, attorneys, and spectators to pass through the magnetometer before entering the courtroom. Two armed police officers searched all individuals, including jurors, who entered the hallway outside the courtroom. Multiple armed police officers were stationed inside and outside the courtroom. Smith was required to wear a stun belt. Spectators had to present photo identification before being admitted to the courtroom.

During jury selection, Smith’s mother Willie Mae Smith was asked to leave the courtroom when the rule was invoked. When the mother passed the seventy potential jurors assembled in the hallway she said, “God bless you and have a blessed day.” When this remark was reported to the court the next day, the judge questioned the jurors about the mother’s comment and whether it would have an effect on their ability to be fair to Corey Smith. Many of the venire members did not hear *480 the comment at all. Of those who did hear it, only a few expressed any concerns about the comment or felt it would affect their decision-making. In light of these responses by the venire, the court denied the defense’s motion to have the panel stricken. The court entered a written order that Smith’s mother was not to have contact with the jurors, not to enter the building unless called as a witness, and not to come within 1000 feet of the building.

The State’s witnesses during the guilt phase of trial fell into three categories: (1) professional witnesses such as police officers and investigators, crime scene technicians, medical examiners, and forensic experts; (2) witnesses who provided legal identification of the homicide victims or who had personal knowledge of the circumstances surrounding the various homicides and acts of violence; and (3) members of the John Doe organization or Smith’s associates who connected him to the homicides and the drug enterprise. Because Smith’s trial involved a number of separate charges, the facts regarding each will be discussed separately below, including the facts pertinent to Smith’s appellate claims. These facts were developed through witness testimony and evidence presented at trial.

Drug Enterprise and Organization

A number of witnesses who had been involved in John Doe testified about the organization and operation of the seven drug holes. According to their testimony, Smith was the head of John Doe, Latravis Gallashaw was the second-in-command, and Julian Mitchell was the third. Smith started out as a member of the Lynch Mob, a drug group that predated John Doe in the same neighborhood. The leader of this group was Mark Roundtree, who had both a friend and mentor relationship with Smith. Smith opened his own drug hole across the street from his mother’s house on Northwest 58th Street and 15th Avenue in 1994. Smith engaged in intimidation and violence to take over other drug spots or to run competitors out of business.

Each drug hole employed a number of workers, including a “bombman” who sold the drugs, a “watchout” who looked out for the police and marketed the drugs by yelling slogans to potential customers, a “gunman” who kept the peace and enforced the rules, and a “street lieutenant” who dropped off drugs and collected money. In addition, John Doe also employed “ta-blemen” who processed and packaged the drugs for street sale, “turnover lieutenants” who tracked the money to provide a count for paying the workers, and “enforcers” or “hit men” who carried out the group’s violence. The employees worked regular shifts at their jobs and were paid in cash by the lieutenants.

Various witnesses and documentary evidence also revealed a type of accounting system through tally sheets which enabled John Doe to keep track of how much and what kind of drugs were sold and how much money was collected and paid out. Letter codes were used to indicate the type of drug and the size of the bags. Witnesses also testified that workers at the drug holes were permitted to buy guns that they might be offered by individuals and pay for them with John Doe money. The guns were kept by the workers at the holes. However, the workers had to get special permission to buy machine guns, which were stashed in a special location and not kept by the general drug hole workers.

When a drug unit officer attempted to conduct a controlled buy at the residence of Antonio Allen in September 1998, Allen was alerted when the officer’s radio made a transmission. Allen was arrested with over 500 bags of cocaine, a .380-caliber *481 semiautomatic gun with a four-inch barrel, and $922 in cash.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 So. 3d 473, 2009 Fla. LEXIS 405, 2009 WL 702262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-state-fla-2009.