Troy M. Tuten v. State of Florida

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedSeptember 29, 2021
Docket20-3671
StatusPublished

This text of Troy M. Tuten v. State of Florida (Troy M. Tuten v. State of Florida) 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.

Bluebook
Troy M. Tuten v. State of Florida, (Fla. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL STATE OF FLORIDA _____________________________

No. 1D20-3671 _____________________________

TROY M. TUTEN,

Appellant,

v.

STATE OF FLORIDA,

Appellee. _____________________________

On appeal from the Circuit Court for Clay County. Michael S. Sharrit, Judge.

September 29, 2021

PER CURIAM.

Appellant, Troy M. Tuten, appeals the trial court’s order denying relief as to six of his claims in his motion for postconviction relief filed pursuant to Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.850. Finding no error in the trial court’s denial of the claims, we affirm the order on appeal.

Trial Proceedings

The State charged Appellant with three counts of sexual battery against A.F., his stepdaughter, attempted capital sexual battery against A.F., lewd or lascivious molestation against A.F., lewd or lascivious conduct against W.F., his stepson, and two counts of lewd or lascivious exhibition against W.F. The offenses allegedly occurred between 2008 and 2015. Appellant moved to suppress the statements he made during a police interview on the basis that they were obtained through threats and promises of leniency made by a detective in the station’s parking lot prior to the interview. In the order denying Appellant’s motion, the trial court found that “the statements which [Appellant] alleges were made by [the detective] in the parking lot prior to the recorded interview were never made.”

During Appellant’s trial, W.F. testified about seeing A.F., who was eleven years of age at the time, performing oral sex on Appellant. He then saw the two “g[e]t in the bed and started doing intercourse.” Appellant had W.F. watch and told him to get himself ready because he was next. There were a “few other times” when W.F. walked in on Appellant and A.F. Appellant told W.F. that he would kill him if he threatened to call the police.

A.F. testified that the first incident with Appellant occurred when she was approximately ten years of age. She explained, “First thing I remember was around close to [Appellant’s] birthday me and my brother were cleaning out the shed and he pulled me aside and asked me to touch his – play with his private area, and I told him, no. I went back to work.” A few weeks later, Appellant called A.F. into his bedroom, “asked [her] to close the door, and [she didn’t] remember all the details but it was the first time [they] ever had any intercourse involving sexual activity.” She testified, “He put his penis into my vagina.” When asked the next thing she remembered, A.F. testified, “I just remember that it – he would call me in there every couple weeks or maybe once a week to ask me to do it with him.” Appellant started having her “give him like hand jobs and blow jobs every now and then, too.” When asked if W.F. ever became involved, A.F. testified, “One time around maybe 11 or 12 [Appellant] called him in there to join in.” A.F. affirmatively responded when asked if Appellant’s behavior continued until she was “about 17.”

When asked on cross-examination about the shed incident and whether Appellant asked her to give him oral sex, A.F. replied, “It wasn’t oral sex. He just asked me to play with his private area.” She testified that W.F. did not watch her and Appellant have sex. When asked if Appellant ever recorded any incidents, she

2 affirmatively responded and testified that it happened in January or February 2015. Appellant used his cell phone, but A.F. “stayed in the room to make sure he deleted it.” After A.F. testified that she would change her brother’s diapers, trial counsel asked, “Now a little off topic here. When you would change Charlie’s diapers you noted that Charlie wasn’t circumcised –." After the prosecutor objected for “relevance,” the trial court asked what the next question was, to which trial counsel replied, “In deposition she said she didn’t know that [Appellant] was circumcised.” The trial court stated, “You can ask her that. I don’t get the point.” The following then transpired:

Court: She doesn’t know what circumcised means?

Trial counsel: I’m assuming she does know what circumcised means because she doesn’t know that [her brother] wasn’t and she doesn’t know if [Appellant] –

Court: What does that have to do with the child?

Trial counsel: Okay. I’ll just move on to the next question.

....

Court: The objection is sustained.

Thereafter, trial counsel asked A.F. whether she had any idea if Appellant was circumcised, to which she replied, “No. I never knew what circumcised was or what it looked like, if it was or not.” Appellant made A.F. and her boyfriend break up in July 2014.

A detective testified that he met Appellant outside the police station before his interview. He read a portion of a letter Appellant wrote in jail twelve days after the interview; Appellant said in part, “I’ve done wrong. I know and I’m sorry for the grief I’ve caused . . . . I made a mistake with the kids and now I could be gone for life. . . . Yes, some things I’m accused of is [sic] true and some are not. I’m not a monster.” Appellant later wrote, “I’m very ashamed of my actions and I beg their forgiveness and I hope one day we can be reunited and my kids can have their daddy. . . . For the stuff we are guilty of trying to get the prosecutor to give us

3 whatever they want by suspend sentence and withhold adjudication and not be registered sex offenders so you can keep your job and we can keep our kids . . . .”

During his police interview, which was played for the jury, Appellant affirmatively responded when asked by the detective if he ever inappropriately touched A.F. Appellant stated that he and A.F.’s mother “showed [A.F.] a couple of things that [they] should have never,” and he admitted that A.F. had performed oral sex on him. When the detective talked about A.F.’s accusations and asked, “Did you guys only have sex the one time or was it more than one time,” Appellant replied, “If it happened at all it might have been when I drank like a wine cooler one night. I don’t think it happened. I seriously don’t. I’m telling the truth. I mean I do not think it happened.” He later stated, “That’s the only time that I can think it might have happened.” When asked how long it lasted, Appellant replied, “If it happened at all seconds.” When another detective asked, “You’re somebody that made a mistake, right,” Appellant replied, “A big mistake.” Appellant later stated, “She’s telling the truth.” He explained, “It happened twice. The first time she was curious and kept asking questions and asked the things that happen. I don’t know why I did it. The second time she threatened me. She said I’ll tell Mom if you don’t.” Appellant denied videotaping any of the encounters. When later asked how many times they had sex, Appellant replied, “I think I’m going to be kind of high on this and say five.” When his questioning resumed, the detective testified that nothing of interest was found on Appellant’s phone. On cross-examination, the detective explained that he and Appellant did not discuss the case outside of the police station.

After the State rested its case, trial counsel told the trial court that he advised Appellant not to testify because of his seven felony convictions and two crimes of dishonesty, inconsistent statements, and “some other letters that he wrote.” Appellant affirmatively responded when asked by the court whether he had the opportunity to discuss “this” with counsel, whether he had enough time to reflect on how he wanted to proceed, and whether he understood that it was ultimately his decision.

4 During the State’s closing argument, the prosecutor argued in part:

If it’s one incident wouldn’t they [A.F. and W.F.] just sit down and make sure that they got the whole thing right?

Why would there be any differences? . . .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Troy M. Tuten v. State of Florida, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/troy-m-tuten-v-state-of-florida-fladistctapp-2021.