Vahtiece Alfonzo Kirkman v. State of Florida

CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 11, 2018
DocketSC16-808
StatusPublished

This text of Vahtiece Alfonzo Kirkman v. State of Florida (Vahtiece Alfonzo Kirkman 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
Vahtiece Alfonzo Kirkman v. State of Florida, (Fla. 2018).

Opinion

Supreme Court of Florida ____________

No. SC16-808 ____________

VAHTIECE ALFONZO KIRKMAN, Appellant,

vs.

STATE OF FLORIDA, Appellee.

[January 11, 2018]

PER CURIAM.

Vahtiece Alfonzo Kirkman appeals his conviction and sentence of death for

the first-degree murder of Darice Knowles. The trial judge sentenced Kirkman to

death for the first-degree murder conviction after a jury recommended the death

penalty by a vote of ten to two. We have jurisdiction. See art. V, § 3(b)(1), Fla.

Const. We affirm Kirkman’s conviction, but we vacate the death sentence and

remand for a new penalty phase based on the United States Supreme Court’s

opinion in Hurst v. Florida (Hurst v. Florida), 136 S. Ct. 616 (2016), and this

Court’s opinion on remand in Hurst v. State (Hurst), 202 So. 3d 40 (Fla. 2016),

cert. denied, 137 S. Ct. 2161 (2017). FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On July 30, 2010, approximately four years after first being made aware of

her murder, the Cocoa Police Department found the skeletonized remains of Darice

Knowles, a Bahamian citizen, in a heavily wooded and swampy area in Cocoa,

Florida. The examination of Darice’s remains revealed that her hands and feet had

been bound with duct tape, her mouth had been covered with duct tape, and she

had been buried alive by being covered with concrete and dirt.

Cocoa police were led to the burial site a few days earlier by Christopher

“Dread” Pratt, who had been Darice’s on-again, off-again boyfriend. Pratt, also a

Bahamian citizen, led police to the burial site as part of a plea agreement he

entered into while awaiting trial for his involvement in the separate murder of

Willie Parker. For the Parker murder, Pratt had been indicted years before—in

October 2006—along with Kirkman and a third individual, Jonathan Page.

Under the plea agreement, Pratt would receive a ten-year sentence for the

second-degree murder of Parker, as well as a ten-year sentence for the second-

degree murder of Darice, followed by ten years of probation. The plea agreement

was conditioned on Pratt showing the police where Darice’s body could be located

and on Pratt testifying truthfully against Kirkman in both murder cases. Pratt led

the investigators to the burial area, and on the fifth day of searching, Darice’s

remains were found.

-2- On January 23, 2012, Kirkman was indicted for the first-degree

premeditated murder of Darice Knowles. At trial, Pratt testified that on March 17,

2006, he (Pratt) bound Darice’s hands and feet, taped her mouth, dug a hole, and

buried her alive in a shallow grave in a swampy area off of a dirt road in Cocoa by

covering her with cement1 and dirt. Pratt explained that he did so all at the

direction of, and while in the presence of, Kirkman. Pratt also explained that

Kirkman wanted Darice dead because she had spent the previous night with a

police officer, and Kirkman was concerned she was talking to the police about his

criminal conduct. Pratt further explained that the shovel, cement, and duct tape

used in the murder were all supplied by Kirkman and that Kirkman drove Pratt and

Darice around in Pratt’s rented minivan for approximately thirty to forty minutes

until Kirkman selected the burial location.

On April 8, 2016, the jury convicted Kirkman of first-degree murder. On

April 12, 2016, the jury, by a vote of ten to two, recommended a death sentence.

On April 29, 2016, the trial court sentenced Kirkman to death.

Guilt Phase

The evidence presented at the guilt phase primarily consisted of the

following: codefendant Pratt’s testimony; the testimony of Jovonnie Freeman, the

1. Although we recognize there is a distinction between “cement” and “concrete,” we use the terms interchangeably, as was done at trial.

-3- former law enforcement officer with whom Darice spent her final night; the

testimony of Kirkman’s girlfriend, Tamiko Smith; four recorded jailhouse phone

calls made by Kirkman to Tamiko; the testimony of Officer Eric Austin of the City

of Cocoa Police Department; Kirkman’s recorded interview with Officer Austin;

and video and receipt information from the Home Depot showing Kirkman

purchasing a bag of concrete mix, a shovel, and duct tape on the day of Darice’s

murder.2 The evidence established the following relevant pre- and post-murder

events.

In November 2005, Pratt came to Brevard County, Florida, from the

Bahamas for the specific purpose of dealing in narcotics. When Pratt arrived in

Florida, he rented a gold Chrysler minivan. He then met up with Kirkman, whom

he had previously met through Kirkman’s mother. Pratt saw Kirkman on a daily

basis, which included staying with Kirkman for about two months in Melbourne at

the home of the mother of Kirkman’s child, as well as occasionally staying with

Kirkman in Rockledge at Tamiko’s home. During his time in Florida, Pratt was

introduced by Kirkman to Carlos “Los” Buckner and Tony “Bang” Rogers. Pratt

2. The remaining evidence presented at trial largely consisted of testimony from various individuals—including the officer who found Darice’s remains, a crime scene investigator, a forensic anthropologist, the medical examiner, and a forensic DNA scientist—regarding the burial site, the excavation process, and the testing processes by which Darice’s remains were identified.

-4- also had a brother, Patrick “Bongo” Pratt, who came to Florida from the Bahamas

at the end of March 2006, not long after Darice’s murder.

In the middle of February 2006, Darice, who was twenty-two years old at the

time, came to Florida from the Bahamas to visit Pratt. According to Pratt, he and

Darice used to date when they were in the Bahamas and although they were no

longer boyfriend and girlfriend at the time, they continued a sexual relationship.

Darice stayed with Pratt and Kirkman at the home of Kirkman’s baby’s mother.

On February 28, 2006, two weeks after Darice arrived in Florida, Pratt

participated in a robbery with Kirkman and another individual (Page). During the

course of the robbery, one of the victims, Parker, was murdered.

On or around March 14, 2006, Pratt and Darice moved together to the Dixie

Motel in Cocoa. Soon thereafter, on the night of March 16, 2006, Darice went out

to a local bar where she created a disturbance that prompted a phone call to the

police regarding her disorderly behavior. Officer Freeman of the City of Cocoa

Police Department responded to the call and issued a trespass warning to Darice.3

Officer Freeman then drove Darice back to the Dixie Motel and the two exchanged

3. Freeman, who was no longer with the Cocoa Police Department at the time of the trial, testified that the woman to whom he issued the trespass warning told him that her name was Tamiko Smith but that he later found out the woman was actually Darice. He identified a picture of Darice and testified that Darice was the woman to whom he issued the warning.

-5- phone numbers. After getting off work at 11 p.m. later that same night, Officer

Freeman called Darice and she agreed to go out with him. Officer Freeman

changed into civilian clothes and returned to the Dixie Motel in his personal

vehicle to pick up Darice. Pratt returned to the Dixie Motel around that same time

and saw Darice and Officer Freeman in the vehicle together. Although he did not

know Officer Freeman’s name, Pratt recognized him as the police officer who had

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