Christopher Jackson v. State of Florida , 241 So. 3d 914 ( 2018 )


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  •              FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL
    STATE OF FLORIDA
    _____________________________
    No. 1D16-1755
    _____________________________
    CHRISTOPHER JACKSON,
    Appellant,
    v.
    STATE OF FLORIDA,
    Appellee.
    _____________________________
    On appeal from the Circuit Court for Leon County.
    Angela C. Dempsey, Judge.
    February 19, 2017
    WINSOR, J.
    Christopher Jackson appeals his convictions and sentences,
    claiming violations of the Fourth, Sixth, and Eighth Amendments.
    More specifically, Jackson argues that the trial court should have
    granted his second motion to suppress, that only a jury could
    determine his status as a Prison Releasee Reoffender (PRR), and that
    his life sentence constitutes cruel and unusual punishment. We
    affirm.
    I.
    Jackson and two others broke into a home and held the home’s
    four occupants at gunpoint. The three assailants forced the victims
    into a bathroom and took turns holding them while the others
    collected valuables. Jackson later claimed one of the victims had
    shorted him some marijuana in a recent sale. He admitted he broke
    into the house but insisted he only intended to take back that
    marijuana. He claimed the other assailants—not he—had stolen the
    other items.
    Among the stolen items was an iPhone, so police quickly looked
    to the “Find My iPhone” application to track the assailants. Armed
    with real-time tracking and the description the victims provided,
    officers broadcast a be-on-the-look-out (BOLO) alert. An officer
    quickly identified a car in the same area as the stolen iPhone, traveling
    in the same direction as the stolen iPhone, and containing people
    matching the assailants’ general descriptions.
    After waiting for backup, the officer stopped the car, removed
    and handcuffed the occupants, and conducted a protective sweep of
    the car. The officer initially saw nothing in plain view but then opened
    the trunk and found marijuana and a revolver with an altered serial
    number. Her decision to open the trunk was consistent with her
    department’s “plus one” rule, under which (she later testified)
    officers always search the trunk of a vehicle during a felony traffic
    stop “to make sure there’s no other occupants either in the vehicle or
    in the trunk.”
    Meanwhile, other officers brought the victims to the traffic-stop
    location. The victims identified Jackson and another male passenger
    as participants in the robbery, and officers arrested those two. Officers
    then searched the car’s passenger compartment incident to arrest, and
    they found several items taken during the robbery including a wallet,
    a handgun, and a victim’s driver’s license. They also found the stolen
    iPhone that led to the quick apprehension.
    The State charged Jackson with burglary of a dwelling,
    aggravated assault, marijuana possession, possession of a firearm
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    with an altered serial number, possession of a firearm by a convicted
    felon, and four counts of armed robbery.
    Jackson, who represented himself at trial, adopted his co-
    defendant’s two motions to suppress. The first motion sought to
    suppress the evidence found in the trunk before the show-up
    identification. The second motion sought to suppress the evidence
    found in the passenger compartment during the search incident to
    arrest.
    The court granted the first motion saying it was “not convinced
    that [the plus-one] rule actually exists” and that it was “ludicrous” for
    officers to believe there could have been someone hiding in the trunk.
    The court also explicitly rejected the State’s argument that the
    evidence should nevertheless be admitted under the inevitable-
    discovery exception, stating that “without the evidence from the
    trunk, there was no basis to detain the individuals and the show-up
    might never have occurred.” After this ruling, the State moved to
    dismiss the charges for marijuana possession and possession of a
    firearm with an altered serial number.
    But in a later hearing on the second motion to suppress, the court
    concluded police were justified in detaining Jackson for the show-up
    and that “the show-up lineup would have occurred irrespective of
    whether the property in the trunk had been found.” The remaining
    counts then proceeded to trial.
    The jury convicted Jackson of burglary of a dwelling, aggravated
    assault, and two counts of armed robbery. At sentencing, the court
    found that Jackson had committed these crimes within three years of
    being released from prison and that he therefore qualified for
    sentencing under the PRR Act. See § 775.082(9), Fla. Stat. (2012).
    Accordingly, the court sentenced Jackson to concurrent life sentences
    with a ten-year mandatory minimum in each of the armed-robbery
    counts, fifteen years’ prison for burglary of a dwelling, and five years’
    prison with a three-year mandatory-minimum sentence for
    aggravated assault.
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    II.
    Jackson’s first argument on appeal is that the court should have
    suppressed the evidence found in the passenger compartment. He
    argues that without the evidence found in the trunk, there was no
    basis for searching the vehicle a second time or for detaining the
    occupants for the show-up identification. In other words, he argues,
    the search of the trunk (which the trial court found illegal) was the
    poisonous tree, and everything later found in the car was the fruit. See
    Oregon v. Elstad, 
    470 U.S. 298
    , 307-09 (1985). We conclude the trial
    court correctly rejected this argument.
    Preliminarily, much of Jackson’s argument focuses on the trial
    court’s conclusion that officers illegally searched the trunk. Jackson
    insists that the trial court’s ruling on that point obligated it to
    suppress evidence found after the trunk’s search. He specifically
    argues that “the trial court’s rulings were inconsistent and arbitrary.”
    The trial court’s order suppressing evidence from the trunk is not
    before us, and we are not obligated to presume the correctness of that
    order’s legal conclusions—even assuming they were inconsistent
    with the court’s later conclusions. The State was authorized to appeal
    the order suppressing evidence from the trunk, Fla. R. App. P.
    9.140(c)(1)(B), but it chose not to—perhaps because it figured it could
    secure a conviction and life sentence with the remaining evidence
    alone. The State is not obligated to appeal adverse suppression
    rulings just to preserve convictions secured despite those rulings. We
    therefore must decide whether the suppression ruling that is before
    us was correct in its own right.
    An officer may conduct an investigative stop when he or she has
    reasonable suspicion that the occupants have committed or are
    committing a crime. Hunter v. State, 
    660 So. 2d 244
    , 249 (Fla. 1995). An
    officer need not personally observe the events giving rise to
    reasonable suspicion, so long as facts are communicated to him by
    another officer or a reliable third party. State v. Bowers, 
    87 So. 3d 704
    ,
    707-08 (Fla. 2012). Courts evaluating whether an investigatory stop
    based on a BOLO was justified consider “(1) the length of time and
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    distance from the offense; (2) route of flight; (3) specificity of the
    description of the vehicle and its occupants; and (4) the source of the
    BOLO information.” 
    Hunter, 660 So. 2d at 249
    .
    These factors weigh overwhelmingly in the State’s favor. The
    robbery occurred at 5:45 a.m., and the officer initiated the stop shortly
    after 6:00 a.m. Officers knew the perpetrators’ exact route because
    they were tracking the stolen iPhone, which was traveling in the same
    vicinity and in the same direction as Jackson’s vehicle. Finally, the
    vehicle contained the same number of occupants as the BOLO
    description, and the officer saw that one of the occupants wore a
    camouflage hat, consistent with the BOLO. Cf. 
    id. (holding that
    officer
    had reasonable suspicion to conduct traffic stop and detain occupants
    for a show-up identification based on BOLO where roughly an hour
    had passed since the crime was committed and BOLO description
    included number and description of occupants).
    Given these facts, officers had reasonable suspicion to stop the
    vehicle and detain the occupants for the show-up identification. Once
    the victims identified Jackson, there was probable cause to arrest him
    (assuming there was no probable cause beforehand). And because
    officers reasonably believed that the vehicle contained evidence of the
    robbery, the subsequent search of the passenger compartment was
    justified as a search incident to arrest. See Arizona v. Gant, 
    556 U.S. 332
    ,
    343-44 (2009).
    The search of the vehicle’s passenger compartment was not a
    violation of the Fourth Amendment.
    III.
    Next, Jackson argues that because his eligibility for sentencing
    under the PRR Act was not found by the jury beyond a reasonable
    doubt, his heightened sentence violated his Sixth-Amendment rights
    in light of Alleyne v. United States, 
    133 S. Ct. 2151
    (2013).
    In Apprendi v. New Jersey, 
    530 U.S. 466
    , 490 (2000), the Supreme
    Court held that any fact that increases a defendant’s statutory
    5
    maximum sentence, other than the fact of a prior conviction, must be
    found by a jury or admitted by the defendant. Then, in Alleyne, the
    Supreme Court extended this rule to apply to any fact that increases
    any mandatory-minimum sentence. 
    Alleyne, 133 S. Ct. at 2155
    . After
    Apprendi but before Alleyne, the Florida Supreme Court upheld the
    constitutionality of the PRR Act, rejecting arguments that the Act
    violated Apprendi. See Robinson v. State, 
    793 So. 2d 891
    , 893 (Fla. 2001).
    Jackson contends that the United States Supreme Court’s Alleyne
    decision effectively overruled the Florida Supreme Court’s Robinson
    decision. He contends that in light of Alleyne, the PRR Act violates the
    Sixth Amendment. But this court explicitly rejected that argument in
    Williams v. State, 
    143 So. 3d 423
    , 424 (Fla. 1st DCA 2014). Jackson
    argues that Williams was wrongly decided, but this panel is bound to
    follow it.
    IV.
    Finally, we reject Jackson’s argument that his life sentence
    violates the Eighth Amendment. The Florida Supreme Court has said
    that “to violate the Cruel and Unusual Punishments Clause, a prison
    sentence must, at least, be grossly disproportionate to the crime.”
    Adaway v. State, 
    902 So. 2d 746
    , 749 (Fla. 2005). A life sentence for
    armed robbery falls well short of that standard. Cf., e.g., Harmelin v.
    Michigan, 
    501 U.S. 957
    (1991) (no Eighth Amendment violation with
    life sentence for drug possession); Rummel v. Estelle, 
    445 U.S. 263
    (1980) (no Eighth Amendment violation with life sentence for
    obtaining money by false pretenses based on recidivist statute). We
    likewise reject Jackson’s argument that his sentence violates the
    Florida Constitution’s prohibition against cruel and unusual
    punishments. See Art. I, § 17, Fla. Const. (noting that Florida provision
    “shall be construed in conformity with decisions of the United States
    Supreme Court which interpret the prohibition against cruel and
    unusual punishment”).
    To the extent Jackson argues his sentence is too harsh because it
    could have been lighter if he committed his crimes twelve days later
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    than he did, his timing does not make his punishment any more
    grossly disproportionate.* It is up to the Legislature to determine
    where the appropriate cutoff for a PRR sentence lies, and the Florida
    Legislature chose three years. See 
    Rummel, 445 U.S. at 285
    (“Like the
    line dividing felony theft from petty larceny, the point at which a
    recidivist will be deemed to have demonstrated the necessary
    propensities and the amount of time that the recidivist will be isolated
    from society are matters largely within the discretion of the punishing
    jurisdiction.”). Regardless, the Florida Supreme Court has held that
    mandatory-minimum sentences under the PRR Act do not violate the
    Eighth Amendment. State v. Cotton, 
    769 So. 2d 345
    , 356 (Fla. 2000)
    (“[T]he [PRR] Act’s mandatory sentencing scheme does not constitute
    ‘cruel or unusual’ punishment.”).
    AFFIRMED.
    BILBREY and M.K. THOMAS, JJ., concur.
    _____________________________
    Not final until disposition of any timely and authorized
    motion under Fla. R. App. P. 9.330 or 9.331.
    _____________________________
    Candice Kaye Brower and Melissa Joy Ford, Tallahassee, for
    Appellant.
    Pamela Jo Bondi, Attorney General, and Kaitlin Weiss, Assistant
    Attorney General, Tallahassee, for Appellee.
    * The PRR Act allows the State to seek enhanced sentences for
    those who commit certain felonies within three years of release from
    prison. See § 775.082(9), Fla. Stat. (2012). Jackson committed his crimes
    just eleven days short of the three-year mark following his release.
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