Walker v. State

957 So. 2d 560, 2007 WL 1286619
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMay 3, 2007
DocketSC04-2381
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 957 So. 2d 560 (Walker 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
Walker v. State, 957 So. 2d 560, 2007 WL 1286619 (Fla. 2007).

Opinion

957 So.2d 560 (2007)

Robert Shannon WALKER, II, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Florida, Appellee.

No. SC04-2381.

Supreme Court of Florida.

May 3, 2007.

*564 Baya Harrison, Monticello, Florida, for Appellant.

Bill McCollum, Attorney General, Tallahassee, Florida and Barbara C. Davis, Assistant Attorney General, Daytona Beach, Florida, for Appellee.

PER CURIAM.

Robert Shannon Walker, II appeals his 2004 convictions and death sentence for the assault, kidnapping, and murder of David Hamman. We have jurisdiction. See art. V, § 3(b)(1), Fla. Const. For the reasons expressed below, we affirm Walker's convictions and death sentence.

*565 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

This case involves the drug-related beating, torture, kidnapping, and ultimate execution of David Hamman at the hands of Robert Shannon Walker, II. The evidence presented during Walker's trial revealed the following facts.

In the late evening hours of January 26, 2003, the victim, David "Opie" Hamman, arrived at the second-floor apartment of Joel Gibson in the city of Palm Bay, located in Brevard County, Florida. Accompanying Hamman were two women, Leslie Ritter and Hamman's girlfriend, Loriann Gibson.[1] The appellant, Robert Shannon Walker, II, was waiting inside the apartment with his girlfriend, Leigh Valorie Ford, and Joel Gibson.

Immediately after Hamman entered Joel's apartment, Walker and Ford viciously attacked Hamman, beating him with various objects including the head of a metal Maglite flashlight, a baton type weapon, and a blackjack. Although not actively participating, Joel seemed to be supervising the attack. The attack on Hamman was drug-related.[2] About a half hour into the attack, Joel, Walker, and Ford forced Hamman to strip down to only his socks to ensure he was not wearing a wire because they suspected that Hamman was a Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) agent.[3] They also forced Ritter and Loriann Gibson to strip down to their underwear in order to check for wires but permitted the women to redress.

After being searched, the women went to the back bedroom. They last saw Hamman lying on a bloody sheet on the living room floor, naked, with one of his eyes halfway hanging out. There was blood all over the apartment. From the back bedroom, the women heard Walker and Ford asking Hamman, "Are you ready to die?" and heard Joel saying Hamman was going to die that night. They also heard Hamman plead for his life and scream, "Please, stop, I don't want to die. Please don't kill me. It hurts."

The attack on Hamman at Joel's apartment lasted between two and three hours. Sometime around midnight, Hamman tried to escape.[4] While Walker and Ford were *566 distracted, Hamman ran out of the apartment and made his way down the stairs, leaving a trail of blood behind him. When Walker and Ford discovered Hamman had escaped, Ford said, "Get the bag and stuff and put them in the trunk," and "get the tarp and lay it in the trunk." Hamman made it a short distance down the road leading away from Joel's apartment before being caught by Walker and Ford. He had left drops of blood on the parking lot and the road at the point where Walker and Ford caught him, near the apartment mailboxes.[5]

Walker and Ford put the tarp in the trunk of Ford's automobile and forced Hamman to get in. Walker told Ford to find a remote spot to take Hamman. Ford drove her car with Hamman in the trunk, and Walker drove Hamman's pickup truck. On the way, they stopped at the house of Joel Gibson's girlfriend, Lisa Protz. Protz saw that Walker had a gun. Walker asked Protz for gasoline, rope, and tape, but she only gave him tape. A few minutes later, Ford arrived, and not long after that, Joel called on Protz's phone. While talking to Joel, Walker wrapped the tape around his fingers.

Walker and Ford then left and drove to a remote area down a dirt road just outside the gates to the Tom Lawton Recreation Area, a state park. At some point between Joel Gibson's apartment and the park, Hamman's hands were bound behind his back with a plastic cable tie. Just outside the park gates, Hamman was taken out of the trunk and forced to lie down with his back on the ground. Walker then shot Hamman six times in the face with a Llama .45 pistol. Walker left Hamman on the road and drove back to Joel Gibson's apartment.[6]

At Joel Gibson's apartment, Walker asked Ritter and Loriann Gibson to take him to Georgia. They obliged Walker, and the three drove north on Interstate 95 in Hamman's truck, with Loriann at the wheel.[7] When they reached Jacksonville, instead of continuing to head north to Georgia, Loriann turned onto Interstate 10. When they reached Live Oak, Walker had Loriann exit and pull into a gas station so he could purchase a map. When Walker exited the truck without the keys and, incidentally, his shoes, Gibson drove away. Walker was later found barefoot and crying at the gas station by a "Good Samaritan," William Davis. Mr. Davis purchased shoes for Walker and took Walker to the bus station where he gave Walker money for a bus ticket.

In the meantime, Loriann and Ritter drove back to Interstate 10 and found Officer Bobby Boren, who was running radar for the Department of Transportation in a marked vehicle. Loriann and Ritter frantically relayed the events of the previous night and their escape from Walker that morning. Officer Boren then requested back-up from the Live Oak city police and the Suwannee County Sheriff's office. When back-up arrived, a "be on the lookout" (BOLO) was issued for a possible murder suspect matching Walker's description. The Suwannee County Sheriff's office also contacted Brevard County police to advise that they were holding *567 possible witnesses to a murder in Brevard County the night before.

Brevard County officers were already at the crime scene when they received the call from Suwannee County. Hamman's body was discovered earlier that morning, just before 6 a.m., by Steven Roeske of the St. Johns River Water Management District on the road outside the gates to the Tom Lawton Recreation Area. Hamman was found lying face up in a pool of blood, halfway on and halfway off the road. His hands were bound behind his back, and he was totally naked with the exception of the socks on his feet. Just before noon, Brevard County Sheriff's agents Alex Herrera and Lou Heyn left for Live Oak to interview Ritter and Loriann. A few hours earlier, sometime between 9 and 10 a.m., Walker was apprehended at the Live Oak bus station by Live Oak Police Officer Charles Tompkins and Suwannee County Deputy, Corporal David Manning.[8] Walker was taken directly to the county jail. Agents Herrera and Heyn arrived in Live Oak later that afternoon and interviewed Loriann and Ritter. Sometime after 7 p.m., the agents interviewed Walker.

After waiving his Miranda[9] rights and signing a waiver-of-rights form, Walker gave a taped statement to Agents Herrera and Heyn in which he confessed to beating, kidnapping, and shooting David Hamman. Walker admitted to beating Hamman with a Maglite flashlight when Hamman arrived at Joel's apartment but claimed that they mainly argued. Walker said that he made Hamman sit on the couch and questioned Hamman about being wired and about being a "cop." He told Hamman to strip, and Hamman complied. Walker claimed that he hit Hamman only three to four more times before Hamman ran naked from the apartment. Walker explained he "just wanted to slap the piss out of [Hamman] because he scared me."

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Bluebook (online)
957 So. 2d 560, 2007 WL 1286619, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-state-fla-2007.