Swafford v. State

125 So. 3d 760, 38 Fla. L. Weekly Supp. 793, 2013 WL 5942382, 2013 Fla. LEXIS 2421
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedNovember 7, 2013
DocketNo. SC10-1772
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 125 So. 3d 760 (Swafford 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
Swafford v. State, 125 So. 3d 760, 38 Fla. L. Weekly Supp. 793, 2013 WL 5942382, 2013 Fla. LEXIS 2421 (Fla. 2013).

Opinions

PER CURIAM.

Roy Clifton Swafford, a prisoner under sentence of death, appeals the circuit court’s denial of postconviction relief. He seeks to have his convictions for first-degree murder and sexual battery vacated after newly discovered evidence revealed that there was no seminal fluid found in the victim.1 Specifically, as set forth in his motion for postconviction relief, Swafford alleged and subsequently proved that at the time of trial in 1985, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE)

tested vaginal and anal swabs of the victim and got a positive result for acid phosphatase, a substance characteristically found in seminal fluid. Semen could not be conclusively identified because no spermatozoa were found. The State argued that this circumstantial evidence corroborated that Mr. Swafford had sexually assaulted and murdered the victim.... However, in 2005, FDLE’s testing indicates the opposite— that no acid phosphatase was found and no semen was identified.

The acid phosphatase (AP) evidence was the linchpin of the State’s case that a sexual battery occurred, especially because the victim was found fully clothed and the medical examiner relied on the now-discredited FDLE testing that AP was present in order to conclude that the victim was sexually battered.

Further, this newly discovered evidence also significantly impacts the first-degree murder conviction, since the State built its case on the sexual battery as the motive for the murder and then relied on a statement made by Swafford two months after the murder to demonstrate Swafford’s guilt. Without the evidence that a sexual battery occurred, all that remains linking Swafford to the murder are two lone pieces of evidence: (1) that Swafford was seen with a gun at the location where the murder weapon was later discovered; and (2) that Swafford may have been driving by the location in Daytona Beach where the victim was abducted on the day of the Daytona 500 race, at a time when thousands of visitors had traveled to Daytona Beach for the event. In addition, Swaf-ford’s jury never heard that there was another viable suspect, Michael Walsh, who matched the description of the murderer, who was also in the vicinity of the FINA station where the abduction occurred, who had a vehicle matching the description of the vehicle at the abduction site, who himself had possession of the same type of gun that turned out to be the murder weapon, who was seen in the same location where the police later recovered the murder weapon, and who had the opportunity to abduct and murder the victim.

In light of the evidence presented at trial, and considering the cumulative effect of all evidence that has been developed through Swafford’s postconviction proceedings, we conclude that the totality of the evidence is of “such nature that it would probably produce an acquittal on retrial” [763]*763because the newly discovered evidence “weakens the case against [the defendant] so as to give rise to a reasonable doubt as to his culpability.” Jones v. State (Jones II), 709 So.2d 512, 523, 526 (Fla.1998) (quoting Jones v. State (Jones I), 678 So.2d 809, 315 (Fla.1996)).

Accordingly, we reverse the circuit court’s denial of postconviction relief as to Swafford’s convictions for sexual battery and first-degree murder, vacate the respective convictions and sentences, including the sentence of death, and remand for a new trial. Further, it would appear on the record currently before us that there would be insufficient evidence for the charge of sexual battery to be presented to the jury, and on remand the trial court should consider whether a judgment of acquittal should be granted on the sexual battery charge.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Swafford was convicted of the 1982 sexual battery and first-degree murder of Brenda Rucker and was sentenced, respectively, to life imprisonment and death based on a theory of the case that the victim had been kidnapped, sexually battered, and then murdered. We previously recounted the evidence presented to the jury as follows:

The evidence showed that on the morning of Sunday, February 14, 1982, the victim was at work at the FINA gas station and store on the corner of U.S. Highway No. 1 and Granada Avenue in Ormond Beach, Florida. Two witnesses saw her there at 5:40 and 6:17 a.m. A third -witness, who said he arrived at the station at around 6:20, found no attendant on duty although the store was open and the lights were on. At 6:27 a.m., the police were called, and an officer arrived at the station a few minutes later.
On February 15, 1982, the victim’s body was found in a wooded area by a dirt road, about six miles from the FINA Station. She had been shot nine times, with two shots directly to the head. The cause of death was loss of blood from a shot to the chest. Based on trauma, lacerations, and seminal fluid in the victim’s body, the medical examiner concluded that she had been sexually battered. Holes in the victim’s clothing corresponding to the bullet wounds to her torso indicated that she was fully clothed when shot. The number of bullet wounds and the type of weapon used indicated that the killer had to stop and reload the gun at least once. Several bullets and fragments were recovered from the body.
Swafford and four companions drove from Nashville, Tennessee, to Daytona Beach, Florida, departing Nashville at about midnight on Friday, February 12 and arriving in Daytona Beach at about noon the next day. After setting up camp in a state park, Swafford and some others went out for the evening, arriving back at the campground at about midnight. Then, according to the testimony at trial, Swafford took the car and went out again, not to return until early Sunday morning.
State’s witness Patricia Atwell, a dancer at a bar called the Shingle Shack, testified that Swafford was there with his friends on Saturday night, that they left at around midnight, and that Swaf-ford returned alone at about 1:00 a.m. Sunday. When Atwell finished working at 3:00 a.m., she left the Shingle Shack with Swafford. They spent the rest of the night together at the home of Swaf-ford’s friend. At about 6:00 a.m., he returned her to the Shingle Shack and left, driving north on U.S. 1, a course that would have taken him by the FINA [764]*764station. In the light traffic conditions of early Sunday morning, the FINA station was about four minutes away from the Shingle Shack. According to Swafford’s travelling companions, he returned to the campsite around daybreak. The court took judicial notice of the fact that sunrise took place on the date in question at 7:04 a.m.
On Sunday Swafford and his friends attended an auto race in Daytona Beach. That evening they went back to the Shingle Shack, where one of the party got into a dispute with some other people over money he had paid in the expectation of receiving some drugs. Swafford displayed a gun and got the money back. The police were called, and Swafford deposited the gun in a trash can in one of the restrooms. The police seized the gun, and ballistics tests performed later conclusively established that Swafford’s gun was the gun used to kill the victim. The evidence also showed that Swafford had had the gun for some time. Although the gun was not tested until more than a year after the murder, after authorities received a tip concerning Swafford’s possible involvement, evidence established the chain of police custody and the identification of the gun.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 So. 3d 760, 38 Fla. L. Weekly Supp. 793, 2013 WL 5942382, 2013 Fla. LEXIS 2421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swafford-v-state-fla-2013.