Thomas v. State
This text of 838 So. 2d 1192 (Thomas v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Clifford Earl THOMAS, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Florida, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Second District.
*1193 James Marion Moorman, Public Defender, and Brad Permar, Assistant Public Defender, Bartow, for Appellant.
Charlie Crist, Attorney General, Tallahassee, and Michele Taylor, Assistant Attorney General, Tampa, for Appellee.
BLUE, Chief Judge.
Clifford Earl Thomas appeals his conviction for attempted second-degree murder. Because the trial court improperly commented on evidence critical to the defense, we reverse and remand for a new trial.
Around midnight on August 17, 1999, Mariam Knight Gloster was discovered lying on the ground naked and bloodied with multiple stab wounds. Thomas was charged with attempted second-degree murder. At trial, evidence was introduced showing three different versions of how Thomas spent that evening. According to Gloster, who was a reluctant witness, she was stabbed from behind by an assailant who said nothing before attacking her. There was a lot of tussling for the knife, and Gloster was stabbed eleven to fourteen times. Gloster did not know how her clothes came off, and she denied that the attack occurred during a prostitution-for-drugs encounter. Gloster admitted smoking crack cocaine and drinking several beers prior to the attack. When Gloster was found, she said that someone named "Tim" stabbed her. Later, Gloster identified Thomas from a photopack. She said that she knew him from high school in the 1980's. The neighbors who found Gloster and the responding emergency personnel testified that it was pitch dark in the area where Gloster was found, while Gloster and a law enforcement officer testified that there was some light.
In a tape-recorded statement to law enforcement, Thomas said that Gloster asked if he wanted to have sex with her in exchange *1194 for drugs. Thomas did not have any drugs but he offered her $10. Then, when Thomas told Gloster that he did not have any money, he said that Gloster came at him with a knife. According to Thomas's taped statement, Gloster fell on the knife. Although they struggled, Thomas said he never touched the knife, and he could not explain the number of stab wounds, other than by saying that Gloster kept coming at him and he kept pushing her hand away.
At trial, Thomas recanted his statement to the police. He denied any involvement with Gloster, denied stabbing her, and said that he was home all night. His mother and one sister also testified that Thomas was home that evening, which was another sister's birthday. Thomas's mother testified that she and Thomas watched TV in the living room from approximately 9:30 p.m. until she fell asleep at 12:30 a.m. She said Thomas was on the couch when she went to sleep and he was on the couch dressed in the same clothes when she woke up the next morning. His sister testified that Thomas was on the couch when she went to bed around 10:00 p.m. and was still there, in the same clothes, when she woke up the next morning. She testified that she knew he did not leave during the night because she would have heard a bell that sounds when the door is opened. Thomas and his family all denied that he ever used the nickname Tim. The evidence showed that Thomas and his family lived about seven miles from where Gloster was attacked and that Thomas did not have a car at that time.
In explaining his apparent confession, Thomas testified that he had a conversation with the police before the tape recorder was turned on. The interrogating officer denied any unrecorded conversation but later admitted that there was a brief exchange before the tape was started. According to Thomas, the police told him everything that was going on, told him that Gloster was a known prostitute and drug dealer, and said that Thomas would get off on a lesser charge if he claimed self-defense.[1] Thomas, who has an eleventh-grade education, said that he denied the charges but then confessed because he could not pay for an attorney and he was told by the police that it was the only way he was going to get out. From this brief summary, it is apparent that the defense needed to establish the unrecorded conversation to invalidate Thomas's recorded confession.
During the defense's cross-examination of the interrogating officer, the following occurred:
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: You indicated to Mr. Thomas that he was going to be arrested unless he told you he did this in self-defense?
[WITNESS]: No. I don't remember that conversation. I remember I told him he was already arrested. That's what I just read here [in the transcript of the taped statement].
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: And you told him that he wasthe only way he was going to get out of it was to say he did it in self-defense?
[WITNESS]: He didn't know he was going to get out of it.
[PROSECUTOR]: Judge, I would object. This is argumentative, and I don't think it's in the transcript.
THE COURT: Sustained.
CONTINUED CROSS-EXAMINATION *1195 [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Did you indicate to him that the only way he would get some sort of bond to get out of jail was if he said he did it in self-defense?
[WITNESS]: I just listened to the tape, and I didn't see that in there.
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Did you indicate to him at any point that Miriam Gloster was a prostitute and was using drugs?
[PROSECUTOR]: Judge, I would object.
THE COURT: Sustain the objection.
[Defense Counsel], stay with the nature of the conversations between the two.
(Emphasis added.) Defense counsel objected, moved for a mistrial, and requested "some sort of instruction to the jury at this point in that you just said the jury heard the conversations between the two. It's going to be our position that they didn't hear the entire conversations between the two...." The trial court refused, stating that it would give an instruction if the evidence later indicated that such a conversation happened. During the second day of this two-day trial, Thomas testified in his defense and detailed the unrecorded conversation that preceded his taped statement. Recalled in the defense case, the interrogating officer admitted that there was a minor exchange of words before the tape recorder was started but denied that anything of substance was said. Defense counsel did not renew his request for a curative instruction regarding the trial court's statement the previous day.
By its comment for defense counsel to stay within the nature of the conversation between the two, the trial court strayed into a factual issue for the jury's determinationnamely, whether there was an unrecorded conversation that preceded Thomas's alleged confession. Section 90.106, Florida Statutes (2001), prohibits a trial judge from summing up the evidence or commenting to the jury on the weight of the evidence, a witness's credibility, or a defendant's guilt. A defendant is "entitled to a fair trial in accordance with law and with precedents established through the years. One of the oldest of these under our system is an inhibition against any comment by the judge on the evidence in the case." Raulerson v. State, 102 So.2d 281, 285 (Fla.1958).
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838 So. 2d 1192, 2003 WL 201335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-state-fladistctapp-2003.