Tina Lasonya Brown v. State of Florida
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
Date FiledJuly 16, 2026
DocketSC2024-0931
StatusPublished
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Full Opinion
Supreme Court of Florida
____________
No. SC2024-0931
____________
TINA LASONYA BROWN,
Appellant,
vs.
STATE OF FLORIDA,
Appellee.
July 16, 2026
FRANCIS, J.
Tina Brown, a prisoner under sentence of death, appeals the
denial of her successive motion for postconviction relief and motion
for public records, which are ultimately aimed at discrediting the
trial testimony of co-perpetrator, Heather Lee. We affirm. 1
I.
A. Background
In 2010, Brown, Brown’s sixteen-year-old daughter Britnee
Miller, and Heather Lee kidnapped Audreanna Zimmerman, beat
1. We have jurisdiction. See art. V, § 3(b)(1), Fla. Const.
her with a crowbar, stunned her with a stun gun, and set her on
fire. As part of a plea to second-degree murder, one of the
perpetrators, Lee, testified in Brown’s trial that she, Brown, Miller,
and Zimmerman were initially good friends, but the relationship
with Zimmerman became volatile after Miller discovered
Zimmerman was having a sexual affair with her boyfriend.
According to Lee, Miller attacked Zimmerman one day, and
Zimmerman defended herself with a stun gun. Lee later told Brown
that Zimmerman used a stun gun on her daughter and reported
that Brown said she was “going to get” Zimmerman. Brown v. State
(Brown I), 143 So. 3d 392, 395 (Fla. 2014). An inmate housed with
Brown in jail, Corie Doyle, corroborated Lee’s testimony, testifying
that Brown said she told Miller, “don’t worry, I’ll take care of it”
after hearing about the stun gun altercation. Id. at 403.
M.A., a thirteen-year-old friend of Miller’s, testified at trial that
on the day Zimmerman was killed, she was present when Brown
initiated the attack on Zimmerman with a stun gun and used the
stun gun on her multiple times. She also testified that Brown
forced Zimmerman into the trunk of the car and thought that Miller
drove the car away with Brown and Lee inside.
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Lee’s testimony about what happened before driving the car
away was consistent with M.A.’s, and she further testified to what
happened after they drove away. 2 Lee testified that they drove
Zimmerman to the woods where Brown and Miller beat Zimmerman
with a crowbar. Brown then poured gasoline on a still conscious
Zimmerman, set her on fire, and watched as the screaming
Zimmerman burned. Brown, Miller, and Lee left, and Zimmerman
was able to walk to a nearby home for help. She told a responding
EMT that Brown and Lee were her attackers and gave him their
addresses. Later inside an ambulance, she told the paramedic that
Brown, Miller, and Lee poured gasoline on her and set her on fire.
Zimmerman ultimately succumbed to her injuries and died sixteen
days later.
At trial, Brown’s cellmate, Doyle, further testified that Brown
admitted she, Miller, and Lee “picked up the victim and beat her up
and ta[s]ed her and set her on fire.” Brown v. State (Brown II), 304
So. 3d 243, 253 (Fla. 2020). Doyle testified that Brown also told her
that Lee was there but “didn’t have anything to do with it.” Id.
2. Though Lee testified that Brown was driving.
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Additionally, the State presented forensic evidence showing
Brown’s DNA was found on the stun gun.
Based on the foregoing evidence, the State argued that Brown
initiated the entire criminal episode and had the sole motive to
murder Zimmerman, which was revenge on Zimmerman for using a
stun gun on her daughter, Miller. The State also argued that,
based on Lee’s testimony, it was Brown and only Brown who killed
Zimmerman by dousing her with gasoline and lighting her on fire.
In arguing for the death penalty, the State argued that Brown had
the greatest level of involvement in the crime.
Brown was convicted of first-degree murder and, following a
unanimous jury recommendation, sentenced to death. The trial
court found the following aggravators: (1) the murder was
committed in a cold, calculated, and premeditated manner without
any pretense of moral or legal justification (CCP) (great weight); (2)
the murder was especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel (HAC) (great
weight); and (3) the murder was committed while Brown was
engaged in the commission of a kidnapping (significant weight). We
affirmed her conviction and sentence on appeal. See Brown I, 143
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So. 3d at 395. 3 Notably during the Spencer4 hearing, Brown
admitted she participated in Zimmerman’s murder.
In 2015, Brown filed her initial motion for postconviction relief.
Following an evidentiary hearing, the trial court denied all claims,
including a claim of ineffective assistance of trial counsel for failing
to adequately challenge the State’s guilt phase evidence through
cross-examination of witnesses Lee and Doyle, and a claim of newly
discovered evidence related to (a) Lee’s credibility as a witness and
(b) her more central role in instigating the murder. 5
We affirmed the denial of Brown’s postconviction claims
concerning Lee’s role and her credibility because while “the
additional impeachment of Lee might result in a lesser sentence at a
3. Brown also presented mitigation evidence, which is further
discussed under Section II of this opinion.
4. Spencer v. State, 615 So. 2d 688 (Fla. 1993).
5. Brown specifically pointed to an email from Lee’s trial
attorney, which was disclosed to Brown’s counsel without
authorization; posttrial confessions by Lee to fellow inmates; and
evidence of Lee’s pattern of violence against individuals, like the
victim, who engaged in affairs with Lee’s partners. Additionally,
Brown presented evidence of Lee’s potential motive: that Lee’s
husband, Darren Lee, had an affair with both Zimmerman and
Brown, meaning Lee may have had a motive for the murder.
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retrial,” we could not say “that it would probably result in a lesser
sentence.” See Brown II, 304 So. 3d at 277. 6 This was because of
the overwhelming evidence that Brown had a significant role in the
murder, which included forensic evidence, the victim’s dying
declaration, and the eyewitness testimony of M.A. concerning
Brown’s role as the initial aggressor in her trailer. And we noted
that were there a retrial, the jury would hear Brown’s Spencer
hearing admission.
We also denied Brown’s habeas petition in which she asserted
that appellate counsel was ineffective for failing to challenge the
prosecutor’s statements to the jury concerning Doyle. Id. at 279-
80.7
6. On appeal, Brown raised the following ineffective assistance
of trial counsel (IAC) claims: (1) IAC during jury selection for failing
to strike juror Taylor for cause; (2) IAC during the guilt phase for (a)
failing to adequately challenge the State’s evidence through cross-
examination of witnesses Heather Lee and Corie Doyle and (b)
failing to present witnesses Darren Lee, Terrance Woods, and Nicole
Henderson for purposes of impeachment; (3) IAC during the penalty
phase for (a) failing to conduct a reasonably competent mitigation
investigation and present adequate mitigation and (b) failing to
consult and present additional mental health experts; and (4) she
was denied a fundamentally fair trial based on cumulative IAC
during the guilt and penalty phases.
7. In her habeas petition, Brown also raised a claim of
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B. Successive Postconviction Motion & Evidentiary Hearing
Brown filed a successive motion for postconviction relief in
August 2022, raising a newly discovered evidence claim centered on
the recantation of prosecution trial witness Doyle (Brown’s cellmate)
and the supporting affidavit and testimony of Latoria Frazier
(Doyle’s former cellmate who also knows Lee).8
Brown attached an affidavit from Doyle to her postconviction
motion. In the affidavit, Doyle claimed Lee threatened her in prison
to get her to testify that Brown’s motive for the crime was a fight
between Miller and Zimmerman over a boy and that Lee was not
involved in the murder but knew about it. Doyle further claimed in
her affidavit that, contrary to her trial testimony, Lee told her that
she was involved in Zimmerman’s death. Doyle claimed Lee told
her that both she and Brown attacked Zimmerman with a taser
(stun gun). Doyle also claimed that Lee held onto Zimmerman’s
ineffective assistance of appellate counsel for failing to challenge the
prosecutor’s unobjected-to statement during closing that Brown is a
“cold-blooded murderer.” Id. at 279.
8. Brown also attached the affidavit of Iris Moreland, who was
previously housed with Lee. Lee told her that she bought the gas
used in the murder and that the “bitch deserved to die.”
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hair in the car during the kidnapping and stunned her whenever
she pleaded to be released, but in a later corrected affidavit, Doyle
struck the sentence about Lee holding Zimmerman’s hair. 9
Frazier’s affidavit stated that Doyle told her in the early 2010s
that Lee asked Doyle to testify in Lee’s case and lie in court. Frazier
advised Doyle not to do it and to stay away from Lee.
Brown argued in her motion that Doyle’s recantation would
probably result in an acquittal on retrial or a lesser sentence at a
new penalty phase. In support of a lesser sentence, Brown also
attached the reports of three mitigation experts to her motion.
The postconviction court granted an evidentiary hearing. After
having received derivative use immunity, Doyle testified in
contradiction to her trial testimony that Brown never spoke to her
about her case while they were incarcerated together. Instead,
Doyle claimed that she overheard Brown talking to Miller and other
inmates about the case and thought she heard Brown say that the
9. There are two affidavits by Doyle: the one attached to the
motion, which contains corrections to the spelling of Frazier’s name,
and a corrected affidavit admitted during the evidentiary hearing.
The corrected affidavit contains multiple corrections with some
sentences totally struck-through.
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murder was motivated by an incident between the victim and Miller,
though she could not remember specifics. She testified that Lee
threatened her in prison and instructed her to lie about Brown on
Lee’s behalf. She said she did not recant earlier because she was
still afraid of Lee and felt uncomfortable talking with defense
investigators about the case. She finally recanted to Brown’s
federal investigator, Nels Roderwald, in late 2021 because he
“seemed genuine” and she felt comfortable with him.
However, when questioned about her affidavit, Doyle testified
that she did not know the document she signed for Roderwald was
an affidavit, that she did not read it before signing, and that
Roderwald did not go over each line with her. Instead, she testified
that Roderwald pressured her into making a statement and into
saying certain things, such as that it was Lee’s husband who was
the motivating factor in the murder. When the State cross-
examined Doyle about her past untruthfulness, Doyle threatened to
“just . . . say I don’t remember anything anymore.” She also said
she could not remember everything she was being questioned about
because it had been many years since the events in question and
she had done many drugs since then.
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Frazier testified that she knew Doyle from the streets and was
incarcerated with her in the Escambia County Jail from 2010 to
2012. She testified that in 2010, Doyle came to her cell crying and
told her that Lee was trying to get Doyle to lie in court for her.
Frazier acknowledged that Doyle never gave her details on what Lee
wanted her to lie about. She also testified that Roderwald was the
first person she told about this situation in 2022. Additionally,
Frazier acknowledged she wrote a letter for Lee’s sentencing
hearing, saying Lee was a good person, though she claimed she did
not know that Lee had bullied Doyle and asked her to lie back then.
Roderwald testified that he spoke with Doyle approximately
four times beginning in late November 2021. He initially noted that
Doyle was inconsistent with her trial testimony about previously
knowing Lee and why she was in jail. A week later, Doyle told
Roderwald that Lee had threatened her to get her to testify in
Brown’s case. Roderwald prepared an affidavit and asked Doyle to
read it. Doyle corrected a misspelling in the affidavit and signed it
after being placed under oath. Roderwald denied having pressured
Doyle to sign the affidavit.
Defense investigators, Jayson Shannon, Emily Collins, and
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Zachary Stern, testified about their earlier contact with Doyle.
Shannon and Collins testified that they contacted Doyle in 2018
while she was out of jail and interviewed her to determine if her trial
testimony was truthful. Shannon said that Doyle made some
statements to him that were inconsistent with her trial testimony,
though he could not recall what those were specifically. Collins
said that the interview lasted about twenty minutes, but she
believed Doyle would not change her trial testimony. Shannon
testified that he attempted a second interview with Doyle, but she
seemed erratic and to be under the influence of something. Stern
also testified that a few years earlier, when he interviewed Doyle
several times at the Escambia County Jail in 2016, she appeared
scared, uncooperative, and would not speak with him. 10
Brown also presented additional mitigation evidence from
10. Brown also presented the testimony of several other
inmate witnesses: (1) Moreland, who testified consistently with her
affidavit that she overheard Lee say she bought the gas used to kill
Zimmerman and that Zimmerman deserved to die; (2) Lee, who
claimed she had never met Doyle, never threatened anyone, and
that Zimmerman’s murder had nothing to do with her husband;
and (3) Brittany Dean, a former bunkmate of Lee’s, who testified
that Lee said both she and Brown beat on Zimmerman and put her
in the car, and that Lee threatened to burn other inmates.
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three expert witnesses: (1) Elizabeth Campbell, a law professor who
researches and works with victims of human trafficking, who
testified about the negative effects Brown suffered as a result of
being trafficked and prostituted as a minor by her father and
stepmother in exchange for drugs; (2) Dr. Micah Johnson, a
sociologist and assistant professor, who testified that Brown had
PTSD and an altered decision-making process resulting from her
exposure to an extreme degree of trauma and household and
community disadvantage; and (3) Dr. Yenys Castillo, a clinical and
forensic psychologist, who opined that Brown suffered hidden incest
in her family and an environment where women were expected to
submit and be quiet, which affected her ability to love and trust
others; and she opined that she suffered multiple head injuries that
would make her susceptible to traumatic brain injury, the effects of
which can include difficulty regulating emotions, tolerating distress,
planning, and remembering things.
C. Postconviction Order
The postconviction court denied Brown’s successive
postconviction motion, finding first that the newly discovered
evidence claim was untimely. The court reasoned that Frazier’s
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evidence could have been discovered well before 2022 with due
diligence because Frazier wrote a letter for Lee’s sentencing in 2012,
a decade earlier. The court also reasoned that Doyle’s recantation
could have been discovered earlier with due diligence given that the
defense team met with her many times over the years and she had
previously made statements inconsistent with her trial testimony.
The postconviction court also concluded that even if the claim
was timely, Doyle’s testimony was not credible based on Doyle’s
failure to provide a credible reason for recanting her testimony
years later, the efforts Doyle made at the hearing to disclaim her
affidavit, the fact that Doyle had five previous felony convictions
including one for a crime of dishonesty, and Doyle’s “defensive and
antagonistic” demeanor at the evidentiary hearing.
Even if timely and credible, the postconviction court
determined that the newly discovered evidence would probably not
produce an acquittal at retrial or a lesser sentence given the
evidence of Brown’s DNA on the stun gun, the victim’s dying
declaration, M.A.’s testimony that Brown was the primary aggressor
at the trailer, and Brown’s own incriminating statements about her
participation in the murder that she made at the Spencer hearing
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and to others. The court also determined that the additional
mitigation evidence was not enough for a jury to find that Brown
was a minor participant and not the primary aggressor. The court
further reasoned that the additional mitigation evidence was largely
cumulative to the mitigation evidence presented at trial and
Brown’s initial postconviction proceedings and did not overcome the
finding that Brown’s decision to murder the victim was the result of
cool and calm reflection.
Brown now appeals the order denying her successive
postconviction motion, as well as the order denying her motion for
public records seeking recordings of Lee’s jailhouse phone calls. As
explained below, we affirm the postconviction court’s orders.
II.
On appeal, Brown asks this Court to remand for a new penalty
phase and does not argue for a new trial. Thus, we address only
whether the postconviction court erred in finding that Brown was
not entitled to a new penalty phase.
A. Newly Discovered Evidence Claim
“This Court applies a mixed standard of review to a lower
court’s rulings on newly discovered evidence claims after an
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evidentiary hearing. It reviews findings of fact and credibility
determinations for competent, substantial evidence and it reviews
the application of law to the facts de novo.” Sheppard v. State, 338
So. 3d 803, 825 (Fla. 2022) (citing Marek v. State, 14 So. 3d 985,
990 (Fla. 2009)).
“To succeed on a claim of newly discovered evidence, [a]
defendant must establish [the] two prongs” from Jones v. State
(Jones II), 709 So. 2d 512, 521 (Fla. 1998). Sheppard, 338 So. 3d at
825. “First, the evidence must not have been known by the trial
court, the party, or counsel at the time of trial, and it must appear
that the defendant or defense counsel could not have known of it by
the use of diligence.” Calhoun v. State, 376 So. 3d 583, 585 (Fla.
2023) (quoting Marek, 14 So. 3d at 990). Second, “[w]hen a claim of
newly discovered evidence is based upon the recantation of
testimony by a witness for the prosecution, the second prong of
Jones II is met only where the defendant first establishes that the
recanted testimony is truthful.” Spann v. State, 91 So. 3d 812, 822
(Fla. 2012) (citing Davis v. State, 26 So. 3d 519, 526 (Fla. 2009)). If
the recanted testimony is truthful, then the court must determine
“whether the newly discovered evidence ‘would probably yield a less
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severe sentence’ on resentencing.” Brown II, 304 So. 3d at 273
(quoting Swafford v. State, 125 So. 3d 760, 767 (Fla. 2013)).
1. Timeliness
“Any motion to vacate judgment of conviction and sentence of
death must be filed by the defendant within 1 year after the
judgment and sentence become final.” Fla. R. Crim. P. 3.851(d)(1).
Among the enumerated exceptions to this one-year requirement is a
claim of newly discovered evidence, which must meet the first prong
of Jones II by alleging that “the facts on which the claim is
predicated were unknown to the movant or the movant’s attorney
and could not have been ascertained by the exercise of due
diligence.” Fla. R. Crim. P. 3.851(d)(2)(A).
As to Frazier’s testimony, we agree with the postconviction
court’s finding that Brown’s newly discovered evidence claim was
untimely. Because Frazier wrote a letter in support of Lee for her
sentencing in 2012, Frazier has been known and available to the
defense for over a decade and could have been discovered earlier
with due diligence.
However, we disagree with the postconviction court that
Doyle’s recantation could have been discovered earlier with due
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diligence because Doyle did not decide to recant until December 12,
2021. Davis, 26 So. 3d at 528 (holding that recanted testimony is
“discovered” when “the witness chooses to recant” (emphasis
omitted)). Thus, the fact that Brown may have been aware of some
vague inconsistencies and did not call Doyle as a witness at
Brown’s initial postconviction evidentiary hearing does not affect
when the recanted testimony became discoverable. See Burns v.
State, 858 So. 2d 1229, 1230 (Fla. 1st DCA 2003) (“Even though the
appellant knew at trial that the codefendant was lying, the
appellant could not have gotten the codefendant to admit that he
was lying earlier, and thus the recantation is newly discovered
evidence that could not have been obtained earlier with due
diligence.”). Thus, the first prong of Jones II is satisfied as to
Doyle’s so-called recantation.
2. Credibility
Because Doyle was a prosecution witness, the second prong of
Jones II cannot be satisfied unless Doyle’s recantation and new
testimony is found to be truthful. See Spann, 91 So. 3d at 822. In
considering the credibility of a witness, we give great deference to
the trial judge’s assessment of the witness’s demeanor and other
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first-hand observations. See State v. Spaziano, 692 So. 2d 174, 178
(Fla. 1997) (“[T]he trial judge is there and has a superior vantage
point to see and hear the witnesses presenting the conflicting
testimony.”); Spann, 91 So. 3d at 825 (“[I]n determining whether the
record supports the trial court’s finding that the recantation was
not credible, we give great deference to the trial judge’s observations
concerning [the recanting witness’s] demeanor.”).
Whether Doyle gave a credible reason for why she chose to
recant, 11 we find that competent, substantial evidence supports the
postconviction court’s findings that “Doyle gave contradictory
statements and made efforts to disclaim her affidavit, and her
testimony failed to solidify how she would testify at a retrial.” At
the evidentiary hearing, the record reflects Doyle testified that she
did not know that she signed an affidavit and did not read it, except
11. The postconviction court reasoned Doyle failed to give a
credible reason because she testified inconsistently, citing that she
did not recant in 2018 because she did not feel comfortable
speaking to investigators, yet she decided to recant in 2021 because
a new investigator, Roderwald, “seemed genuine.” But feeling more
comfortable with a new investigator is not necessarily inconsistent.
She also testified that she gave false testimony at Brown’s trial
because of her fear of Lee, though, at the evidentiary hearing, she
testified that she was still afraid of Lee. But finding the courage to
do something while afraid is not necessarily inconsistent.
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where she corrected Frazier’s name. She also recanted some of the
statements in the affidavit. Doyle claimed Roderwald did not go
over each line with her and, ultimately, a corrected affidavit was
submitted for the hearing showing multiple sentences stricken.
Doyle testified that for the statements in the affidavit she did not
understand, she either put a line through or underlined the
statements. She also testified that “[Roderwald] led [her] into saying
certain things,” such as “it was [Lee’s] husband” that was the
motivating factor in the murder. Roderwald denied pressuring her.
Further, the record supports the postconviction court’s finding
that Doyle was less than a credible witness due to (a) her
willingness to “just say she did not remember anything anymore” as
a defense to cross-examination and (b) her lack of recollection
based on her years of drug abuse. We defer, of course, to the
postconviction court’s finding that Doyle’s demeanor was “defensive
and antagonistic.” See Spann, 91 So. 3d at 825.
Based on this record, we find no error in the postconviction
court’s finding that Doyle’s recantation was not credible and agree
that Doyle’s potential new testimony was never solidified.
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3. Probability of a Life Sentence
Having found no error in the postconviction court’s
determination that Doyle’s unsolidified recantation was not
credible, we need not consider whether the postconviction court
erred in finding this evidence would not probably result in a lesser
sentence following a new penalty phase. But even if we did, we find
no error in the postconviction court’s order.
Under Jones II, “when the penalty phase is at issue, the
second prong requires a determination of whether the newly
discovered evidence ‘would probably yield a less severe sentence’ on
resentencing.” Brown II, 304 So. 3d at 273 (quoting Swafford, 125
So. 3d at 767). This requires a “consideration of ‘whether the
evidence goes to the merits of the case or whether it constitutes
impeachment evidence,’ ‘whether the evidence is cumulative to
other evidence in the case,’ and ‘the materiality and relevance of the
evidence and any inconsistencies in the newly discovered
evidence.’ ” Id. (quoting Jones II, 709 So. 2d at 521). When
evaluating these factors,
this Court considers it in conjunction with not only the
evidence already presented at trial but also any new
evidence the movant has developed in postconviction
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proceedings that could be introduced at a new trial,
including evidence that has not been considered on its
own because it was the subject of a procedurally barred
claim.
Id. (citing Hildwin v. State, 141 So. 3d 1178, 1181, 1184 (Fla.
2014)).
Brown argues that the newly discovered evidence of Doyle’s
recantation and Frazier’s corroborating statements, in addition to
other evidence developed in the instant and prior postconviction
proceedings, has a likelihood of resulting in a life sentence because
the evidence shows that Lee’s culpability is heightened and that
Brown’s is reduced, compared to the State’s position at trial. Brown
also argues that the testimony of her additional mitigation
witnesses shows that she was less culpable due to her childhood
trauma and mental health, and that this mitigation evidence would
outweigh the CCP aggravator, likely resulting in a life sentence
following a new penalty phase.
Even crediting all this evidence and assuming it would be
admitted at a new penalty phase, this evidence does not overcome
the other evidence showing that Brown was the ringleader. M.A.
testified that Brown was the initial aggressor who started the attack
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on Zimmerman at Brown’s trailer, then forced Zimmerman to the
car. And forensic evidence showed that Brown’s DNA was found on
the stun gun. Thus, independent of the testimony of Lee and Doyle,
even if Lee played a greater role in helping to murder Zimmerman,
the evidence still supports the conclusion that Brown was the
primary aggressor.
Further, the additional mitigation evidence showing that
Brown was a victim of sex trafficking, incest, violence, and trauma
is not likely to overcome the CCP aggravator because it is largely
cumulative to the evidence Brown presented to her initial penalty
phase jury through psychologist Dr. Elaine Bailey. Dr. Bailey
talked about the stressors and cumulative trauma Brown
experienced, including her sexual victimization, that affected Brown
at the time of the murder. 12 On the other hand, the State’s expert,
12. See Brown II, 304 So. 3d at 266 n.9 (“Dr. Bailey testified
during the penalty phase to the ‘stressors’ that would have affected
Brown at the time of the crime, including ‘repeated traumas,
addictions, abusive relationships, exposure to violence, a lot of
sexual victimization, both in childhood being prostituted and
adulthood[,] [and a] lot of community negative influence and crime,
and [she explained that] all of those things c[a]me together.’ Dr.
Bailey also testified that Brown’s childhood experiences would have
affected her into adulthood, that trauma affects brain development,
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Dr. John Bingham, presented testimony supporting the CCP
aggravator, telling the jury that he found no indication that Brown’s
anger and rage inhibited her ability to discern right from wrong or
her ability to engage in preplanning. 13 Additionally, none of this
would overcome the weighty HAC aggravator, which is supported by
the gruesome record facts in this case—the victim was beaten with
a crowbar, stunned repeatedly, then set on fire and left to die,
ultimately succumbing to those injuries sixteen days later.
Thus, we affirm the postconviction court’s finding that Doyle’s
recantation is not credible, but even if it were, this evidence would
not probably result in a lesser sentence at a new penalty phase.
B. Public Records Claim
Brown also challenges the postconviction court’s denial of her
and that ‘[t]he bottom line is trauma is cumulative.’ ” (alterations in
original)).
13. Dr. Bingham also found no indication that Brown’s anger
and rage inhibited her ability to think and process information
rationally and clearly. He testified that during the entirety of the
criminal episode, Brown exhibited preplanning, direction, and goal-
orientation, which shows that Brown’s decision to murder
Zimmerman was the product of cool and calm reflection, not an act
prompted by emotional frenzy, panic, or a fit of rage. Brown I, 143
So. 3d at 403.
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public records request for copies of jailhouse calls between Lee and
Doyle, which she argued were relevant to Doyle’s credibility. We
need not address the merits of this issue, however, because, even if
the recordings could bolster Doyle’s credibility, Doyle’s unsolidified
recantation would probably not result in a lesser sentence for
Brown given the overwhelming evidence of Brown’s guilt, the
gruesome nature of the crime, and the evidence showing Brown was
the primary aggressor.
III.
For the reasons above, we affirm the postconviction court’s
denial of Brown’s successive postconviction motion and request for
public records.
It is so ordered.
COURIEL, C.J., and LABARGA, MUÑIZ, GROSSHANS, and
SASSO, JJ., concur.
TANENBAUM, J., did not participate.
NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING MOTION
AND, IF FILED, DETERMINED.
An Appeal from the Circuit Court in and for Escambia County,
Gary Lee Bergosh, Judge
Case No. 172010CF001608XXXAXX
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Dawn B. Macready, Capital Collateral Regional Counsel, and
Chelsea Shirley, Assistant Capital Collateral Regional Counsel,
Northern Region, Tallahassee, Florida,
for Appellant
James Uthmeier, Attorney General, Tallahassee, Florida, and
Stephen D. Ake, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Tampa, Florida,
for Appellee
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