Johnathan I. Alcegaire v. State of Florida ( 2021 )


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  •         Supreme Court of Florida
    ____________
    No. SC19-428
    ____________
    JOHNATHAN I. ALCEGAIRE,
    Appellant,
    vs.
    STATE OF FLORIDA,
    Appellee.
    September 9, 2021
    PER CURIAM.
    Johnathan Alcegaire appeals his judgments of conviction of
    first-degree murder and sentences of death. We have jurisdiction.
    See art. V, § 3(b)(1), Fla. Const. Alcegaire was convicted and
    sentenced to death for his role in a 2016 triple homicide in Polk
    County. We affirm Alcegaire’s convictions and sentences.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    The Incident
    The evidence presented at trial established the following. At
    the time of the murders, David Washington, Eneida Branch,
    Angelica Castro, and Felix Campos lived in a residential unit located
    at 2314 East Magnolia Street in Lakeland. The residence was part
    of a triplex multi-unit dwelling. Washington and Branch were
    dating and had lived in the residence the longest. Castro lived in
    the residence for about two days before the murders. Campos, the
    sole survivor of the 2016 incident, met Washington in the summer
    of 2015 and lived with Washington and Branch for about two weeks
    before the murders.
    On the morning of January 6, 2016, all four residents were at
    home. Washington, Branch, and Castro had returned home around
    4 a.m. after a brief trip to Miami. Around 6 a.m., Campos lay in his
    bed, and through the bedroom window, saw a van pull into the
    driveway. Three men got out of the van, knocked on a door leading
    directly from the outside into Washington’s bedroom, and entered
    the residence after Washington opened the door for them.
    Washington and the men then moved from Washington’s
    bedroom into the living room. Campos was able to see into the
    living room because a towel that hung on his bedroom door caused
    the door to remain ajar.
    -2-
    Campos heard the men talking with Washington. Campos
    recognized the men, two of whom were later identified as Alcegaire
    and Jamaal Smith, from a recent visit to the residence. At one
    point, Alcegaire walked into Campos’s bedroom and walked back
    into the living room after attempting to close the bedroom door.
    Shortly thereafter, Smith walked into Campos’s bedroom and shot
    Campos in the face with a nine-millimeter firearm. Smith left
    Campos’s bedroom while Campos remained in bed and bled
    profusely. The bedroom door remained open, and Campos saw
    Smith counting Washington’s money and beating Washington with
    a stool. While Smith was beating Washington, Campos heard
    gunshots in the bedrooms where Castro and Branch were located.
    Campos heard one of the women say, “You shot me.” Her words
    were followed by another gunshot.
    Shortly thereafter, Smith shot Washington, who was the last
    person to be shot. Campos saw Washington get shot once but
    heard two gunshots. The assailants then ransacked the residence
    and took multiple items, including electronic devices and cell
    phones belonging to the victims. Before leaving the residence,
    Smith returned to Campos’s bedroom. Campos pretended to be
    -3-
    dead, and Smith left the room. Once the assailants were gone,
    Campos went to check on his housemates, who were all dead. After
    inspecting his wound in the bathroom, Campos sought help from a
    neighbor and called 911. Campos was admitted to the hospital and
    remained there for several days while receiving treatment for his
    gunshot wound.
    The Autopsies
    The autopsies of Washington, Branch, and Castro revealed
    that each victim died from one or more gunshot wounds.
    Dr. Steven Nelson, the chief medical examiner for Polk, Highlands,
    and Hardee counties, testified that Washington sustained two
    gunshot wounds—one to the left side of his head, and one to the left
    side of his neck. Dr. Nelson recovered a nine-millimeter bullet from
    the gunshot wound to Washington’s neck. Washington’s body also
    showed abrasions, contusions, and lacerations that were consistent
    with having been beaten.
    Branch sustained two nine-millimeter gunshot wounds—one
    to her right cheek, and one behind her left ear. She also sustained
    blunt force trauma. Dr. Nelson recovered a nine-millimeter bullet
    from Branch’s head. According to Dr. Nelson, Branch would have
    -4-
    been able to talk, walk, and move after the gunshot wound to her
    right cheek. The gunshot behind Branch’s left ear was the fatal
    wound.
    Castro sustained a single distant nine-millimeter gunshot
    wound to the back of the head that caused significant brain
    damage. The gunshot wound was consistent with Castro having
    been on the ground with her face down.
    The Murder Investigation
    The sole survivor, Campos, provided physical descriptions of
    the assailants but did not know them by their legal names.
    However, surveillance footage obtained from a store located at the
    corner of U.S. Highway 92 and Fairway Avenue in Lakeland
    identified a van of interest to the investigation, and Campos
    identified the van as the one in the driveway at the time of the
    murders. Additional footage from other local businesses and from
    red light cameras indicated that the van belonged to U-Haul Moving
    & Storage of Dade County, and the van was located in Miami two
    days after the murders.
    The investigation revealed that the murders were drug-related
    and that there was a substantial connection between Washington
    -5-
    and Alcegaire’s brother, Andrew Joseph. The victims’ cell phones
    were found scattered within blocks of the crime scene, and
    information retrieved from Washington’s phone indicated that
    Washington had been traveling back and forth between Lakeland
    and Miami. Washington’s cell phone also contained numerous text
    messages between Washington and Joseph, photos of receipts for
    money sent to Joseph, and Joseph’s address at the Monte Carlo
    apartments in Miami. Washington and Joseph communicated every
    day in the days leading up to the murders.
    Campos testified that Washington was secretive about his
    travels to Miami. On cross-examination, Campos admitted to
    selling drugs for Washington while Washington and the others were
    away on January 5 and 6, and to giving Washington $500 upon
    their return to the residence around 4 a.m. on the morning of
    January 6.
    Further investigation linked Joseph to the U-Haul van and,
    subsequently, to Alcegaire. Rental records, which were
    corroborated by cell phone and bank records, revealed that Joseph
    rented the van at 6:43 p.m. on January 5, the day before the
    -6-
    murders. Nine-millimeter ammunition was found in a latex glove
    inside of the van.
    The lead detective showed Campos a photo lineup containing
    Joseph’s photo. Campos was initially unable to identify Joseph
    from the lineup but later recognized him in a different photo and
    indicated that Joseph previously visited Washington’s residence.
    Joseph was soon arrested while leaving his apartment.
    During a search of Joseph’s apartment, among other items,
    investigators found Alcegaire’s personal belongings and latex gloves
    similar to the one found in the U-Haul van. Based on these
    developments, another photo lineup was prepared with Alcegaire’s
    photo. On January 12, Campos immediately identified Alcegaire,
    stating: “This is the guy that was in the house when I was shot in
    the face and my friends were murdered.”
    Alcegaire was arrested on the same day that Campos identified
    him. At the time of his arrest, Alcegaire was getting a haircut to
    remove dreadlocks that he had been growing for approximately
    eighteen months. After Alcegaire’s arrest, a straw hat was retrieved
    during a search of Joseph’s car. Photos on Alcegaire’s cell phone
    showed him wearing a straw hat just days before the murders.
    -7-
    Further evidence established Alcegaire’s connections to
    Washington, Washington’s residence in Lakeland, and the murders.
    Information retrieved from Washington’s cell phone revealed a text
    message from Washington to Alcegaire dated December 27, 2015,
    containing Washington’s 2314 East Magnolia Street address.
    The same day, Alcegaire traveled to Lakeland. One of
    Washington’s friends testified that he was at Washington’s
    residence on December 27 when Alcegaire and two other men
    visited. During that time, Alcegaire displayed either a nine-
    millimeter or a .40 caliber firearm, and another individual filled a
    latex glove with ammunition. The witness observed that at that
    time, Alcegaire wore his hair in dreadlocks. Campos similarly
    testified that Alcegaire visited Washington’s residence on that date
    and that Alcegaire wore his hair in dreadlocks. Alcegaire’s visit was
    also corroborated by cell phone records. Alcegaire’s cell phone
    utilized the cell phone tower across the street from Washington’s
    residence, and Alcegaire and Washington had phone contact
    eighteen times that day.
    On January 5, 2016, the day before the murders, Alcegaire’s
    cell phone records placed him in the vicinity of the U-Haul rental
    -8-
    location at the time that Joseph rented the van, and in
    communication with Joseph around that time.
    Surveillance footage from the Monte Carlo apartments
    captured the U-Haul van traveling into and out of the apartment
    complex on the evening of January 5 and the morning of January 6.
    On January 5, the U-Haul van entered the apartment gate at 9:41
    p.m., and Alcegaire entered Joseph’s apartment building minutes
    later.
    Around 12:15 a.m. on January 6, Alcegaire drove the U-Haul
    van away from the complex, and he returned about one hour later
    accompanied by Smith. Alcegaire and Smith entered Joseph’s
    apartment, and Joseph, who had left a few hours earlier, returned
    shortly thereafter.
    At 1:45 a.m., Alcegaire and Smith left Joseph’s apartment, and
    surveillance footage showed them on the apartment building
    elevator at 1:48 a.m. Alcegaire was wearing a straw hat and
    carrying zip ties, and Smith was wearing a ball cap. At 1:51 a.m.,
    the U-Haul van exited the complex.
    Toll plaza photos and cell phone tower records corroborated
    the movements of the U-Haul van, which traveled from Miami to
    -9-
    Lakeland on the Florida Turnpike. The U-Haul van was captured in
    multiple toll plaza photos, one of which showed the driver wearing a
    straw hat and the passenger wearing a ball cap. At 2:21 a.m.,
    Alcegaire’s cell phone utilized a cell phone tower near the Cypress
    Creek Toll Plaza. Toll plaza photos also showed the U-Haul van
    traveling southbound later that morning on its return to Miami.
    At 10:40 a.m., Alcegaire and Smith returned to the Monte
    Carlo apartments in the U-Haul van. They entered Joseph’s
    apartment, and at 11:32 a.m., they exited the apartment building
    carrying a white trash bag. Several minutes later, the U-Haul van
    drove out of the complex, followed by Joseph’s car. Rental records
    indicated that the U-Haul van was returned to the rental location
    on January 6 at 12:27 p.m. The van’s odometer indicated that the
    U-Haul van traveled 551 miles during the rental period. An
    investigator testified that the round trip from Miami to Lakeland is
    approximately 508 miles.
    After the murders, Alcegaire attempted to delete his cell phone
    call logs covering the period from November 29, 2015, to January 7,
    2016, but law enforcement was able to recover information from his
    phone. Alcegaire also deleted text messages from his phone that
    - 10 -
    were dated before January 7, 2016. The deleted messages included
    Washington’s December 27 text message to Alcegaire that contained
    the East Magnolia address. Law enforcement also retrieved from
    Alcegaire’s cell phone a history of the following web searches:
    “2314 East Magnolia”; “9 millimeter JHB”; “Is 114 a powerful grain
    for a 9 millimeter bullet?”; “Is there only one West Magnolia Street
    in Lakeland, Florida?”; and “Felix Campos, Felix Campos, 18-year-
    old Lakeland, Florida.” Alcegaire also accessed numerous articles
    relating to the murders.
    Convictions, Penalty Phase, and Sentencing
    At the conclusion of the presentation of evidence during the
    guilt phase, defense counsel moved for a judgment of acquittal. The
    trial court agreed that there was insufficient evidence that Alcegaire
    possessed a firearm and granted a judgment of acquittal only to
    that extent. Alcegaire was ultimately convicted of the following:
    three counts of first-degree murder (under the theories of both
    premeditated and felony murder) for the deaths of Washington,
    Branch, and Castro; the attempted first-degree murder of Campos;
    burglary of a dwelling with assault and/or battery (originally
    indicted for armed burglary of a dwelling with assault and/or
    - 11 -
    battery); conspiracy to commit armed robbery; conspiracy to
    commit first-degree murder; tampering with physical evidence; and
    robbery (originally indicted for armed robbery).
    During the penalty phase, the State sought to prove the
    existence of the following aggravating factors as to each murder:
    (1) prior capital felony convictions for the contemporaneous
    murders of the other victims; (2) the murder was committed for
    pecuniary gain; (3) the murder was committed while engaged in the
    commission of robbery with a firearm; and (4) the murder was cold,
    calculated, and premeditated without any pretense of moral or legal
    justification (CCP). To prove the aggravating factors, the State
    relied on evidence introduced during the guilt phase and on
    Alcegaire’s convictions for first-degree murder and robbery.
    The State also presented victim impact statements on behalf of
    each of the victims. Most of the statements were read by the
    prosecutor. The jury was instructed by the court and cautioned
    during closing arguments that the victim impact evidence was not
    to be considered as an aggravating factor.
    Although Alcegaire insisted that the defense neither present
    mitigating evidence during the penalty phase nor offer a closing
    - 12 -
    argument, the jury was nonetheless instructed on the following
    mitigating circumstances: (1) the defendant was an accomplice in
    the first-degree murder committed by another person and his
    participation was relatively minor; (2) the defendant’s age (twenty-
    five years old) at the time of the murder; and (3) the existence of any
    other factors in the defendant’s character, background, or life or
    circumstances of the offense that would mitigate against the
    imposition of the death penalty. However, the jury did not find that
    these mitigating circumstances were established by the greater
    weight of the evidence. The jury unanimously found each
    aggravating factor as to each murder, and it unanimously
    recommended that Alcegaire be sentenced to death for the murders
    of Washington, Branch, and Castro.
    Alcegaire also refused to allow mitigation to be presented on
    his behalf at his Spencer hearing.1 However, in the defense’s
    sentencing memorandum, counsel argued additional mitigating
    circumstances.
    1. Spencer v. State, 
    615 So. 2d 688
     (Fla. 1993).
    - 13 -
    The trial court detailed its findings in its sentencing order,
    including the following findings as to the aggravating factors for
    each murder: (1) prior capital felony convictions for the
    contemporaneous murders of the other victims (great weight);
    (2) the murder was committed for pecuniary gain; (3) the murder
    was committed while engaged in the commission of robbery with a
    firearm (merged with pecuniary gain and assigned moderate
    weight); and (4) the murder was cold, calculated, and premeditated
    without any pretense of moral or legal justification (CCP) (great
    weight).
    The trial court made the following findings regarding
    mitigating circumstances: (1) the defendant was an accomplice in
    the first-degree murder committed by another person and his
    participation was relatively minor (not established; no weight); (2)
    the defendant’s age (twenty-five years old) at the time of the murder
    (little weight); (3) the defendant acted under extreme distress or
    under the domination of another person (not established, no
    weight); (4) the jury did not hear any mitigation (not established, no
    weight); (5) the defendant is not the individual who caused the
    deaths (established, but no weight); (6) the defendant has
    - 14 -
    maintained an unwavering declaration of innocence (established,
    but no weight); (7) the defendant had good behavior while in the
    county jail awaiting trial (established, little weight); (8) the
    defendant demonstrated good courtroom behavior (established,
    moderate weight); (9) the non-applicability of the remaining
    aggravating factors (established, no weight); and (10) the victim,
    David Washington, was a drug dealer (established, little weight).
    The trial court sentenced Alcegaire to death for each murder.
    Alcegaire was also sentenced as follows for the remaining crimes:
    life imprisonment for the attempted first-degree murder of Campos,
    burglary of a dwelling with assault and/or battery, and conspiracy
    to commit armed robbery; thirty years’ imprisonment for conspiracy
    to commit first-degree murder; five years for tampering with
    physical evidence, and fifteen years for robbery.
    This is Alcegaire’s direct appeal.
    ANALYSIS
    Alcegaire raises five issues in this appeal. Additionally,
    although he does not challenge it here, we consider the sufficiency
    of the evidence on which the State relied to obtain Alcegaire’s
    convictions. We address each issue in turn.
    - 15 -
    I. Motion for New Trial
    Alcegaire challenges the trial court’s summary denial of his
    motion for a new trial. The motion was based on summaries of
    post-trial statements made by Campos. Although the court denied
    the motion in an order dated March 14, 2019, the court questioned
    its jurisdiction to rule on the motion because Alcegaire’s notice of
    appeal was filed three days earlier.
    Indeed, because Alcegaire’s notice of appeal had been filed, the
    trial court did not have jurisdiction to rule on the motion.
    II. Prosecutorial Argument
    Alcegaire also argues that prosecutorial comments made
    during closing argument deprived him of a fair trial. Of the
    comments challenged by Alcegaire, defense counsel objected to only
    one, which occurred during the State’s rebuttal argument. 2 Thus,
    this Court’s review of the remaining comments—to which defense
    counsel did not object—is based on whether those comments
    constituted fundamental error. See Brooks v. State, 
    762 So. 2d 2
    . We consider this comment as a part of the closing
    argument cumulative error analysis in subsection (F) of this issue,
    and separately in issue III.
    - 16 -
    879, 898-99 (Fla. 2000) (“As a general rule, this Court has
    determined that failing to raise a contemporaneous objection when
    improper closing argument comments are made waives any claim
    concerning such comments for appellate review. The sole exception
    to the general rule is where the unobjected-to comments rise to the
    level of fundamental error, which has been defined as error that
    ‘reaches down into the validity of the trial itself to the extent that a
    verdict of guilty could not have been obtained without the
    assistance of the alleged error.’ ”) (citations omitted) (quoting
    McDonald v. State, 
    743 So. 2d 501
    , 505 (Fla. 1999)).
    Alcegaire also argues that the totality of the prosecutor’s
    comments resulted in cumulative error. To evaluate a closing
    argument for cumulative error, “we examine ‘the entire closing
    argument with specific attention to the objected-to . . . and the
    unobjected-to arguments’ in order to determine ‘whether the
    cumulative effect’ of any impropriety deprived [the appellant] of a
    fair trial.” Braddy v. State, 
    111 So. 3d 810
    , 837 (Fla. 2012)
    (omission in original) (quoting Card v. State, 
    803 So. 2d 613
    , 622
    (Fla. 2001)). As we explain, Alcegaire is not entitled to relief.
    - 17 -
    A. Facts Not in Evidence
    Alcegaire argues that in support of the State’s theory that
    Alcegaire acted as one of his brother’s (Joseph’s) soldiers in
    committing the murders, the prosecutor discussed facts not in
    evidence. Alcegaire challenges the prosecutor’s closing argument
    characterization of a conversation between Smith and Washington
    before Washington was shot:
    Felix told you that he gave David a little over $500
    when David came home that early morning. So David
    had money in his pocket. So they don’t search through
    his pockets. I guess they’re not smart enough to realize
    David has money in his pocket. But they find money in
    the home, and they are counting David’s money.
    And David is saying, “I gave all the rest of it to Z or
    Zo. I gave all the rest of it to Z or Zo.”
    But Jamaal Smith is saying “Where is it at? Where
    is the rest of it?”
    They’re there on a mission. They’re there on a
    mission to find what David has.
    Although there was no testimony about the exact words
    exchanged between Washington and Smith, the prosecutor’s
    argument was a fair comment on the evidence. Campos, a witness
    to the altercation between Smith and Washington, testified that
    Smith counted Washington’s money and beat him with a stool. The
    autopsy confirmed that Washington suffered injuries consistent
    - 18 -
    with being beaten. Campos also testified that he remained in
    Lakeland and sold drugs for Washington while Washington,
    Branch, and Castro briefly traveled to Miami, and that he gave
    Washington $500 upon the group’s return home. There is no error
    in the prosecutor’s argument.
    Alcegaire also contends that the prosecutor argued facts not in
    evidence by misrepresenting the relationship between Washington
    and Branch. For instance, Alcegaire argues that the prosecutor
    wrongly referred to Branch as “the love of [Washington’s] life.”
    However, Washington and Branch were dating and lived together.
    Washington referred to Branch as his wife. There is no error in this
    characterization, which was made in response to the defense’s
    suggestion that only one person, Smith, committed the murders.
    The prosecutor’s argument was that if Smith was the only assailant,
    Washington would have been in a better position to overpower
    Smith and save Branch; Washington would not have simply waited
    in the living room while Smith walked away to kill her. The
    prosecutor drew a reasonable inference from the evidence.
    - 19 -
    B. Impermissible Bolstering
    Alcegaire also asserts that the prosecutor improperly bolstered
    Campos’s testimony by (1) explaining Campos’s demeanor on the
    witness stand; (2) telling the jury that Campos feared for his life;
    (3) arguing that Campos worked hard to avoid identifying the wrong
    people when shown photo lineups of possible suspects; and
    (4) suggesting that Campos was in shock after the shootings. We
    address each claim and conclude that each is without merit.
    1. Campos’s demeanor
    Alcegaire argues that the prosecutor improperly bolstered
    Campos’s testimony by suggesting that the way Campos presented
    on the stand was the result of his injury and the failure to get
    proper treatment. The prosecutor argued:
    I know—I anticipate that the Defense is going to get
    up here and ask you not to believe Felix. Felix is a huge
    part of this case. I’m going to ask you to think about
    Felix and how he was in that witness stand. Felix sat
    sideways. He wouldn’t look at anyone. He stared down,
    wouldn’t make eye contact.
    When the doctor testified, I asked him about some
    of the side effects that someone would suffer from an
    injury, and he had indicated some of the things that
    someone would suffer from going through what Felix has
    gone through, especially someone who had not gotten
    any counseling or treatment. I ask you to remember
    that.
    - 20 -
    The trauma physician who treated Campos testified as follows
    with respect to the lasting effects of Campos’s injuries:
    Physically, a lot of jaw injuries, which means he
    would have problems swallowing, problems eating,
    problems with the chewing mostly. He would have some
    nerve injury over that side, which means he wouldn’t be
    able to smile correctly or appropriately. He would have
    problems with just fluid collection in that area, because
    the sweat glands and the salivary glands would have
    been injured also.
    When asked what would happen if someone in Campos’s position
    did not receive treatment, the doctor indicated that the effects of his
    injuries would worsen over time. The prosecutor’s argument was
    framed in a manner consistent with the question posed to the
    treating physician. There is no error in this argument.
    2. Campos’s fear
    Alcegaire also argues that the prosecutor improperly bolstered
    Campos’s testimony by stating that Campos feared for his life. The
    prosecutor’s statement that Campos feared for his life slightly
    differed from Campos’s trial testimony, which was as follows:
    Prosecutor: Now Felix, is the reason that you don’t want
    to be here because you don’t want to be involved in this
    trial?
    Campos: Yes.
    Prosecutor: Is it because you’re afraid?
    Campos: Yes.
    - 21 -
    The jury knew that Campos was the sole surviving witness
    after being shot in the face and left for dead in a residence where
    his three housemates were murdered. Campos indicated that he
    did not want to testify and was afraid. There is no error in the
    prosecutor’s statement, which drew a fair inference from the
    evidence.
    3. Campos’s attempts to identify suspects
    Alcegaire challenges the prosecutor’s comments that Campos
    “worked hard not to pick the wrong people” and that he “does not
    want the wrong people convicted.” There is no error in these
    comments. Law enforcement officers testified about the multiple
    visits with Campos in the days following the incident and the fact
    that Campos did not immediately identify the suspects. The
    prosecutor offered fair comments on the evidence.
    4. Campos in shock after the shooting
    Alcegaire also argues that the prosecutor improperly bolstered
    Campos’s testimony by stating that Campos was in shock after
    being shot. While Alcegaire is correct that there was no medical
    testimony that Campos was in shock, the prosecutor was entitled to
    draw a reasonable inference from the evidence. This evidence
    - 22 -
    established that Campos was at home when his three housemates
    were murdered, and indeed, he was the sole survivor after being
    shot in the face and left for dead. The prosecutor’s comment was
    not improper.
    C. Denigrating the Defense and the Defendant
    Alcegaire also maintains that the prosecutor denigrated him as
    well as defense counsel by (1) suggesting that the defense argument
    “doesn’t fit the bill” and doesn’t match the evidence presented;
    (2) claiming that an argument was absurd; (3) responding to the
    defense counsel’s attack on the State’s circumstantial evidence; and
    (4) offering improper commentary about Alcegaire’s behavior while
    riding in an elevator with Smith hours before the murders. The
    prosecutor’s comments in the first three points fall within the scope
    of reasonable argument, and Alcegaire has failed to establish any
    error, let alone fundamental error. We address the fourth point,
    regarding Alcegaire’s and Smith’s behavior in the elevator, because
    of Alcegaire’s argument that the comments were inflammatory.
    However, we conclude that no error occurred.
    Among the surveillance footage from the Monte Carlo
    apartment complex was a video recording without sound that
    - 23 -
    captured Alcegaire and Smith in an elevator as the two prepared to
    leave the complex and travel to Lakeland. During closing, referring
    to the video, the prosecutor argued: “He [Alcegaire] was in that
    elevator, high-fiving Jamaal Smith, whoop, whoop, excited to come
    to Lakeland to kill these people. They were happy and ready to go
    to come down here and take the lives of these four young people
    who had such futures ahead of them.”
    We disagree with Alcegaire’s argument that the prosecutor
    misrepresented the behavior in the elevator. The video clearly
    demonstrates that Alcegaire and Smith, who were talking and
    smiling, appeared to be excited and in a good mood. Although they
    did not “high-five” one another in the traditional sense, Alcegaire
    and Smith slapped their palms together multiple times, did a hand
    gesture, and shook hands.
    During the brief period of time in the elevator, Alcegaire and
    Smith were in the very process of leaving the apartment building to
    drive to Lakeland where they committed multiple murders. Their
    lighthearted behavior on the elevator reflected none of the gravity of
    the crimes that occurred mere hours later. There was no error in
    the prosecutor’s argument.
    - 24 -
    D. Expressions of Personal Belief and Opinion
    Alcegaire also argues that the prosecutor improperly offered
    personal beliefs and opinions throughout the closing argument by
    using the words “I think.” In particular, Alcegaire challenges the
    prosecutor’s description of him as one of his brother’s soldiers as
    unsupported by the evidence. For instance: “I think Johnathan
    Alcegaire was there because, again, I believe him to be a soldier for
    his brother. I think that he had a job to do, and he came to
    Lakeland to do it.”
    Far from being an expression of improper belief or opinion, the
    evidence presented at trial established that Washington and Joseph
    engaged in drug-related transactions. On the evening of January 5,
    2016, Alcegaire coordinated with Joseph regarding the rental of the
    U-Haul van. Alcegaire drove the van throughout the evening (as
    captured by surveillance footage at the Monte Carlo apartments),
    and he drove the van from Miami to Lakeland and back on the
    morning of January 6. Campos identified Alcegaire as one of the
    assailants that morning; Campos also testified that in an attempt to
    extract money, Washington was beaten before being shot.
    - 25 -
    Alcegaire’s argument is without merit, as the State’s argument was
    a fair comment on the evidence.
    Alcegaire also asserts that the prosecutor improperly opined
    that Campos was in shock after the murders. As we explained in
    subsection B of this issue, the evidence supported the prosecutor’s
    comment.
    E. Justice for the Victims
    Alcegaire argues that the prosecutor improperly argued for
    justice for the victims. The prosecutor said:
    Felix Campos is the reason that we are able to be in
    this courtroom today and the reason that we are able to
    seek justice for David Washington and Stacy Branch and
    Angelica Castro and for our unwilling victim, Felix
    Campos.
    ....
    He’s guilty of all nine counts in that indictment.
    These victims deserve justice. That’s why you’re here.
    I’m asking you to return verdicts of guilty. Thank you so
    much.
    ....
    . . . The biggest mistake they made was letting Felix
    Campos live. And again, justice needs to be served.
    This Court has emphasized the impropriety of using an
    argument that seeks justice for a victim:
    When the State instead uses closing argument to appeal
    to the jury’s sense of outrage at what happened to the
    - 26 -
    victim and asks the jurors to return a verdict that brings
    “justice” to the victim, the State perverts the purpose of
    closing argument and engages in the very type of
    argument that has been repeatedly condemned as
    antithetical to the foundation of our criminal justice
    system that guarantees a fair trial to every accused.
    Cardona v. State, 
    185 So. 3d 514
    , 520 (Fla. 2016). In Cardona, a
    case involving the murder of a three-year-old child and a horrific
    pattern of abuse that preceded the child’s death, the prosecutor
    repeatedly stated the words “justice for Lazaro,” and in fact, used
    the phrase “as the theme of the closing argument.” 
    Id. at 521-22
    .
    Concluding that the prosecutor’s comments “pervaded the
    prosecutor’s closing argument,” we concluded that Cardona was
    entitled to a new trial. 
    Id. at 523
    . Having reviewed the argument in
    its entirety, we conclude that the prosecutor’s comments did not
    become the theme of, nor pervade the closing argument.
    Consequently, Alcegaire is not entitled to relief.
    F. Cumulative Error in Closing Argument
    Alcegaire argues cumulative error with respect to the
    prosecutor’s closing argument. Alcegaire’s argument includes a
    portion of the State’s rebuttal argument that involved the use of a
    demonstrative aid. While we discuss the rebuttal argument claim
    - 27 -
    in issue three, we have considered it here in the context of the
    State’s entire closing argument.
    “We do not review each of the allegedly improper comments in
    isolation; instead, we examine ‘the entire closing argument with
    specific attention to the objected-to . . . and the unobjected-to
    arguments’ in order to determine ‘whether the cumulative effect’ ” of
    those arguments deprived Alcegaire of a fair trial. Braddy v. State,
    
    111 So. 3d 810
    , 837 (Fla. 2012) (quoting Card v. State, 
    803 So. 2d 613
    , 622 (Fla. 2001)). Having carefully reviewed the entirety of the
    State’s closing argument, we conclude that Alcegaire’s cumulative
    error claim is without merit.
    III. Rebuttal Argument and the Use of a Demonstrative Aid
    Evidence introduced at trial revealed that on December 27,
    2015, Alcegaire received a text message from Washington
    containing Washington’s home address, 2314 East Magnolia Street
    in Lakeland. Alcegaire used his cell phone to conduct an internet
    search for that address, and he traveled there from Miami the same
    day. Several days later, on January 3, 2016, Alcegaire used his cell
    phone to search for another address in Lakeland, 2031 West
    Magnolia Street. During witness testimony and closing argument,
    - 28 -
    defense counsel relied on the evidence of Alcegaire’s search for the
    West Magnolia address to suggest that when the murders occurred,
    Alcegaire was at that location, not at Washington’s residence.
    During closing rebuttal argument, the prosecutor showed the
    jury a map depicting both the East Magnolia and West Magnolia
    addresses and argued that it was unlikely that upon arriving in
    Lakeland, Alcegaire went to the West Magnolia address, remained
    there while the murders were occurring, and was picked up
    afterward.3 Defense counsel objected to the use of the map and the
    corresponding argument on the ground that the prosecutor was
    “admitting new evidence that was not before the jury in closing
    arguments.” The trial court overruled the objection. The map was
    received as a court exhibit and was not admitted into evidence.
    The trial court did not err in permitting the use of the map as
    a demonstrative aid. We review trial court rulings on the use of
    demonstrative aids for an abuse of discretion. Davis v. State, 121
    3. The map showed that East Magnolia Street and West
    Magnolia Street are two separate streets, not different ends of the
    same street. Witness testimony established that West Magnolia
    Street was west of East Magnolia Street.
    - 29 -
    So. 3d 462, 488 (Fla. 2013) (quoting Williams v. State, 
    967 So. 2d 735
    , 752 (Fla. 2007)). Although the map depicting the two
    addresses was first shown during rebuttal, the jury heard testimony
    regarding Washington’s East Magnolia address, and it learned that
    before the murders, Alcegaire conducted internet searches for the
    East Magnolia and the West Magnolia addresses. Thus, the
    evidence visually demonstrated on the map was not without
    support in the record.
    Moreover, having reviewed the relevant portions of the record,
    we reject Alcegaire’s argument that the prosecutor deliberately
    offered false or misleading argument in rebuttal. In responding to
    the defense’s assertion that Alcegaire was at 2031 West Magnolia
    Street and not at Washington’s residence when the murders
    occurred, the prosecutor argued that it was unlikely that the
    U-Haul van traveled a route that placed Alcegaire in proximity to
    2031 West Magnolia Street. However, red light camera footage
    demonstrated that after the murders, the van traveled on U.S.
    Highway 92, in the vicinity of the West Magnolia Street address.
    While evidence placed the van in the general area of the West
    Magnolia Street address, as conceded by defense counsel during
    - 30 -
    closing argument, there was a question as to the exact streets the
    van traveled throughout the Lakeland area. The surveillance
    footage captured brief periods of time and did not offer a continuous
    account of the van’s movements to and from the crime scene. The
    trial court did not abuse its discretion in this instance.
    IV. Victim Impact Evidence
    Alcegaire challenges the victim impact evidence offered by the
    State, which consisted of statements from a total of ten witnesses.
    Most of the statements were read by the prosecutor. “Evidence of a
    family member’s grief and suffering due to the loss of the victim is
    evidence of ‘the resultant loss to the community’s members by the
    victim’s death’ permitted by section 921.141(7), and the admission
    of such evidence is consistent with the Supreme Court’s decision in
    Payne v. Tennessee, 
    501 U.S. 808
    , 
    111 S. Ct. 2597
    , 
    115 L. Ed. 2d 720
     (1991).” Victorino v. State, 
    127 So. 3d 478
    , 496 (Fla. 2013).4
    Two statements were offered on behalf of Washington, four
    statements were offered on behalf of Branch, and four statements
    4. The Florida statute governing victim impact evidence is
    now codified in section 921.141(8), Florida Statutes (2020).
    - 31 -
    were offered on behalf of Castro. Before the State began its victim
    impact presentation, defense counsel affirmatively stated that there
    was no objection. Alcegaire’s challenge is without merit.
    Alcegaire’s decision to waive the presentation of mitigation
    during the penalty phase did not alter the State’s right to present
    victim impact testimony, and the presentation of such testimony
    did not render the penalty phase fundamentally unfair. The trial
    court instructed the jury that the victim impact testimony was not
    to be used for finding aggravation and was not to be considered as
    an aggravating factor.
    Moreover, the victim impact statements were relatively short
    and were within the scope of proper victim impact evidence,
    describing each victim’s uniqueness as an individual and the
    resultant loss to the community. Additionally, the victim impact
    testimony was limited to two to four witnesses per victim. In
    Deparvine v. State, 
    995 So. 2d 351
    , 378 (Fla. 2008), the testimony
    of five victim impact witnesses (three representing one victim and
    two representing the other victim) was admissible. See also Farina
    v. State, 
    801 So. 2d 44
    , 52 (Fla. 2001) (no error in the admission of
    victim impact testimony of twelve witnesses for one victim where the
    - 32 -
    testimony stayed within the requirements of Payne v. Tennessee).
    There was no error in the State’s presentation of victim impact
    evidence.
    V. Cumulative Error
    Alcegaire claims that the cumulative effect of the various
    alleged errors deprived him of a fair trial. “However, where the
    alleged errors urged for consideration in a cumulative error analysis
    are individually either procedurally barred or without merit, the
    claim of cumulative error also necessarily fails.” Bush v. State, 
    295 So. 3d 179
    , 214 (Fla. 2020) (quoting Israel v. State, 
    985 So. 2d 510
    ,
    520 (Fla. 2008)).
    VI. Sufficiency of the Evidence
    Alcegaire does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence on
    which the State relied to obtain its convictions. Nonetheless, this
    Court must independently evaluate each death case for the
    sufficiency of the evidence relied upon to convict the defendant.
    See Caylor v. State, 
    78 So. 3d 482
    , 500 (Fla. 2011). “In conducting
    this review, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the
    State to determine whether a rational trier of fact could have found
    the existence of the elements of the crime beyond a reasonable
    - 33 -
    doubt.” Rodgers v. State, 
    948 So. 2d 655
    , 674 (Fla. 2006) (citing
    Bradley v. State, 
    787 So. 2d 732
    , 738 (Fla. 2001)). “[T]he concern
    on appeal must be whether, after all conflicts in the evidence and
    all reasonable inferences therefrom have been resolved in favor of
    the verdict on appeal, there is substantial, competent evidence to
    support the verdict and judgment.” Tibbs v. State, 
    397 So. 2d 1120
    ,
    1123 (1981).
    Alcegaire’s convictions are supported by competent,
    substantial evidence. Alcegaire was a key participant in the crimes
    for which he was convicted. After Joseph rented the U-Haul van on
    January 5 expressly for the purpose of round-trip travel from Miami
    to Washington’s residence in Lakeland, Alcegaire drove the van that
    evening and drove it to and from Lakeland on January 6.
    Surveillance footage—before and after the murders—showed
    Alcegaire driving the van. Alcegaire was also captured on
    surveillance footage with Smith, both in the van and at the Monte
    Carlo apartment complex.
    The testimony of Campos, the lone surviving witness, placed
    Alcegaire at the crime scene during the murders. Campos
    recognized Alcegaire from a recent visit to Washington’s residence,
    - 34 -
    and that visit was corroborated by other witness testimony and by
    data retrieved from cell phone records.
    Alcegaire was seen on surveillance footage wearing a straw hat
    at the Monte Carlo apartments on the morning of the murders. The
    State also introduced recent cell phone photos of Alcegaire wearing
    a straw hat. The driver of the U-Haul van wore a straw hat, and a
    straw hat was later found in the trunk of Joseph’s car.
    After the murders, Alcegaire used his cell phone to conduct
    multiple internet searches related to the murders. He deleted text
    messages, including a text message from Washington containing
    Washington’s address. He also deleted his phone call history from
    his cell phone. At the time of Alcegaire’s arrest, he was changing
    his appearance by having his distinctive dreadlocks removed.
    Competent, substantial evidence supports Alcegaire’s convictions.
    CONCLUSION
    For these reasons, we affirm Alcegaire’s convictions and
    sentences.
    It is so ordered.
    - 35 -
    POLSTON, LABARGA, MUÑIZ, and GROSSHANS, JJ., concur.
    CANADY, C.J., concurs in result with an opinion, in which
    LAWSON and COURIEL, JJ., concur.
    COURIEL, J., concurs in part and concurs in result with an
    opinion, in which LAWSON, J., concurs.
    NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING MOTION
    AND, IF FILED, DETERMINED.
    CANADY, C.J., concurring in result.
    I concur with the decision to affirm Alcegaire’s convictions and
    sentences. On issue III, I would conclude that any errors in the
    prosecutor’s use of the map as a demonstrative aid and in the
    argument based on the map were harmless beyond a reasonable
    doubt. The use of the map and the related arguments followed in
    response to the defense argument that the defendant was never at
    the crime scene but had instead been dropped off before and picked
    up after the murders at another location. This argument by the
    defense is without any factual support in the record; it constitutes
    nothing more than pure speculation. And it is refuted by the
    eyewitness testimony of the surviving victim, which unequivocally
    placed the defendant at the crime scene when the murders were
    committed. Given these circumstances and the whole evidentiary
    - 36 -
    context, it is clear beyond a reasonable doubt that any errors in the
    use of the map and in the related argument were harmless.
    LAWSON and COURIEL, JJ., concur.
    COURIEL, J., concurring as to parts II-VI and concurring in result.
    Even if he could not establish that he had been prejudiced,
    Alcegaire would be entitled to a new trial if the jurors had decided
    his verdict by lot, if the verdict was contrary to law or the weight of
    the evidence, or—and this is the provision at issue here—
    [n]ew and material evidence, which, if introduced at the
    trial would probably have changed the verdict or finding of
    the court, and which the defendant could not with
    reasonable diligence have discovered and produced at the
    trial, ha[d] been discovered.
    Fla. R. Crim. P. 3.600(a)(3); see also Jones v. State, 
    591 So. 2d 911
    (Fla. 1991). The trial court decided Alcegaire was not entitled to a
    new trial on that basis, and we review that decision for abuse of
    discretion. See Consalvo v. State, 
    937 So. 2d 555
    , 562 (Fla. 2006);
    Bell v. State, 
    90 So. 2d 704
    , 705 (Fla. 1956).
    I find none. While Felix Campos’s testimony at trial (that he
    saw Alcegaire inside the residence on the morning of the crime)
    differs from his post-trial statement (that he heard his voice there
    and then, but did not see him), that testimony still puts Alcegaire at
    - 37 -
    the scene of the murder. In that respect, this testimony
    corroborates other evidence in the record, including security
    camera footage showing Alcegaire driving into and out of the
    apartment complex. On these facts, the trial court’s decision to
    deny Alcegaire’s motion for a new trial was not arbitrary, fanciful, or
    unreasonable; we cannot say that no reasonable person would have
    denied it. See Frances v. State, 
    970 So. 2d 806
    , 813 (Fla. 2007).
    Alcegaire argues that “[t]he trial court should have granted
    [his] Motion for New Trial.” It is the State, not Alcegaire, contending
    before us that the trial court lacked jurisdiction to rule on the
    motion. And there is some support for the State’s position, which
    today’s majority adopts. See Philip J. Padovano, Florida Appellate
    Practice § 1:6 (2021 ed.), “Jurisdiction pending review” (“Subject to .
    . . exceptions [not applicable here], the trial court may not address
    the merits of an order or judgment in a criminal case after the filing
    of a notice of appeal. For example, the trial court lacks jurisdiction
    to grant a judgment of acquittal or a new trial after the defendant
    has filed a notice of appeal from the conviction.”).
    But we need not decide that question today to affirm the trial
    court’s decision. Whether for want of jurisdiction or on the basis of
    - 38 -
    the evidence introduced at trial, it was no abuse of discretion to
    deny the motion for a new trial.
    LAWSON, J., concurs.
    An Appeal from the Circuit Court in and for Polk County,
    Jalal A. Harb, Judge
    Case No. 532016CF000284A000XX
    Howard L. “Rex” Dimmig, II, Public Defender, Bartow, Florida, and
    Alice B. Copek, Special Assistant Public Defender, Tenth Judicial
    Circuit, Tallahassee, Florida,
    for Appellant
    Ashley Moody, Attorney General, Tallahassee, Florida, and Timothy
    A. Freeland, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Tampa, Florida,
    for Appellee
    - 39 -