Tyrone T. Johnson v. State of Florida

CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJuly 11, 2024
DocketSC2023-0055
StatusPublished

This text of Tyrone T. Johnson v. State of Florida (Tyrone T. Johnson v. State of Florida) 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
Tyrone T. Johnson v. State of Florida, (Fla. 2024).

Opinion

Supreme Court of Florida ____________

No. SC2023-0055 ____________

TYRONE T. JOHNSON, Appellant,

vs.

STATE OF FLORIDA, Appellee.

July 11, 2024

COURIEL, J.

Tyrone T. Johnson was convicted of first-degree murder and

sentenced to death for killing Ricky Willis, a 10-year-old boy. This

is Johnson’s direct appeal. 1 He raises seven issues, but none

entitles him to relief. We affirm Johnson’s conviction and sentence.

I

A

At 6:45 p.m. on October 21, 2018, Johnson called 911 from an

East Tampa apartment. He said he had shot his girlfriend

1. We have jurisdiction. See art. V, § 3(b)(1), Fla. Const. Stephanie and her 10-year-old son Ricky. Johnson was still on the

phone when deputies from the Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office

arrived at the scene.

As the deputies approached the apartment, they saw Johnson

sitting on the threshold of the screened porch, “screaming and

crying.” Johnson held a land-line phone receiver and had blood on

his hands. Officers brought him to a police vehicle; though

Johnson came willingly, the officers had to help him walk because

of a recent foot surgery. They took him to the Hillsborough County

Criminal Investigation Division.

Investigators searched the two-bedroom apartment that night.

On the living room floor they found a Glock 22 .40 caliber handgun

and a pocketknife. In the master bedroom, just inside the door,

they found the victims’ bodies lying parallel to each other in a pool

of blood. The victims’ heads blocked the master bathroom door

shut; later, after the bodies were moved, investigators would find

blood spatter matched to Stephanie Willis in that bathroom.

Investigators also found seven shell casings, later matched to

Johnson’s gun, in the master bedroom.

-2- Just outside Ricky’s bedroom, investigators found blood on the

carpet. In Ricky’s bedroom they found a pool of vomit and blood on

the floor. Ricky’s comforter was torn off his twin bed and his toys

were strewn about. Alongside Ricky’s bed, investigators found two

shell casings that were later matched to the Glock. In the wall

under the bed, they found two bullet holes. And under the bed, on

top of a pile of toys, they found a significant amount of blood.

Crime Lab Analyst Vicki Bellino would later testify it was 700 billion

times more likely than not that the blood under Ricky’s bed was

Ricky’s.

As investigators processed the scene, Homicide Detectives

Joseph Florio and Dave Tabor interrogated Johnson at the Criminal

Investigation Division. The detectives conducted the first portion of

the interrogation before reviewing the crime scene evidence. In the

video, Johnson was hyperventilating and agitated. The detectives

spent several minutes calming him down. Eventually Johnson was

Mirandized 2 and gave his version of events.

2. Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966).

-3- Johnson said that he had made dinner for himself and

Stephanie. He changed the TV channel and the two started

arguing. Things escalated. According to Johnson, Stephanie said,

“I see why your son killed his self like a bitch, cause you a bitch.” 3

She started hitting him. Johnson told Stephanie the relationship

was over. He made a video call to his father and asked him to pick

him up the next morning to bring him home to South Carolina.4

Johnson, still using a medical scooter after foot surgery, rolled into

the master bedroom to pack a bag.

Stephanie followed Johnson and continued hitting him. She

knocked him off his scooter. She then lifted a PlayStation in the air

and prepared to strike him. Johnson picked up his Glock, which he

kept loaded alongside his bed, and, in his words, “just started

firing.” Asked how many times he fired, Johnson said he “just kept

firing.”

3. Johnson’s son committed suicide on December 31, 2017, about 10 months before the murders.

4. Johnson’s father was on the video call with Johnson for much of the fight. He would later testify that Johnson called him at 6:36 p.m., and that just before 6:40 p.m., he heard what sounded like two gunshots. The call disconnected soon after.

-4- The detectives asked Johnson what happened to Ricky.

Johnson said Ricky was in the master bedroom during the initial

fight, but at some point, ran out. Ricky came back into the master

bedroom, said, “you hurt my mommy,” and jumped on Johnson.

Johnson said he shoved Ricky off, then “just started firing.” He did

not remember whom he shot first. At another point, Johnson told

the detectives that when Stephanie brandished the PlayStation over

him, Ricky was not in the room. Johnson would give similar

descriptions of the events several times over the course of his hour-

long interrogation.

The detectives reviewed the crime scene evidence later that

night. They returned to the interrogation room and, in a second

recorded interrogation, confronted Johnson about the blood and

shell casings in Ricky’s bedroom. Johnson denied that anything

happened there. Detective Florio replied, “[T]here is . . . evidence to

show that the young man was more than likely trying to get away

from you. There is blood on the bottom of his socks, okay. There is

blood in his bedroom. What it appears is the body was moved. Did

you move that body?” Johnson said he did not. The questioning

continued like this for most of the interrogation, but Johnson

-5- maintained that the shootings happened in the master bedroom.

Johnson also said there would be no reason investigators would

find bullets in Ricky’s wall. This second portion of the interrogation

lasted about 15 minutes.

The autopsies would later show each victim was shot multiple

times at close range. Stephanie Willis had three gunshot wounds:

to the middle of her forehead, a corner of her mouth, and her lower

chest. The medical examiner identified stippling on her arm—small

abrasions that suggested the gun was fired at very close range,

“three feet max.” The wound to Stephanie’s chest had a downward

trajectory; the wound to her forehead, which likely caused her

death, also had what the medical examiner called “kind of a

downward trajectory.” Ricky Willis was shot six times: in his

temple, jaw, arm, collarbone, thigh, and wrist. The medical

examiner said she observed stippling near his wrist. She

characterized the wounds to Ricky’s wrist and arm as defensive.

The cause of Ricky’s death was likely the shot to the temple, which

had an upward trajectory. The medical examiner testified that even

after the other five wounds were inflicted, Ricky would still have

been able to move.

-6- B

On November 8, 2018, a Hillsborough County grand jury

indicted Johnson for the first-degree murder of Ricky Willis

(premeditated and felony murder), second-degree murder of

Stephanie Willis, and aggravated child abuse. The guilt phase of

the trial lasted three days. The State called 19 witnesses and the

defense called none.

Among the State’s first witnesses was Deputy Dalton Lewis,

who arrested Johnson on the night of the murders. Asked what he

took into evidence from Johnson, Deputy Lewis said, “He had a blue

wallet in the back pocket that I secured, had business cards, bank

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