DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA
FOURTH DISTRICT
ANTHONY FERRARI,
Appellant,
v.
STATE OF FLORIDA,
Appellee.
No. 4D14-464
[November 21, 2018]
Appeal from the Circuit Court for the Seventeenth Judicial Circuit,
Broward County; Ilona M. Holmes, Judge; L.T. Case No. 05015875CF10B.
Carey Haughwout, Public Defender, and Paul Edward Petillo, Assistant
Public Defender, West Palm Beach, for appellant.
Pamela Jo Bondi, Attorney General, Tallahassee, and Melanie Dale
Surber, Assistant Attorney General, West Palm Beach, for appellee.
ON MOTION FOR REHEARING
WARNER, J.
We grant the State’s motion for rehearing, vacate our prior opinion, and
substitute the following in its place.
In this appeal from his conviction for first degree murder and
conspiracy to commit first degree murder, appellant raises multiple issues.
We find two require reversal. First, the trial court denied appellant’s
motion to suppress historical cell-site location information (CSLI). In
Carpenter v. United States, 138 S. Ct. 2206, 2217 (2018), the United States
Supreme Court held that accessing historical cell phone location
information constitutes a search under the Fourth Amendment requiring
a warrant and probable cause. Here, because the state acquired the CSLI
without a warrant issued on probable cause, the court erred in denying
the motion to suppress. Second, the court held that a mid-trial revelation
of discovery that the State failed to disclose did not amount to a
Richardson 1 violation. We hold that the State’s failure to comply with its
obligations under Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.220, by neglecting
to disclose the substance of a codefendant’s statements as well as the
existence of exculpatory statements by another witness, constituted a
discovery violation. On these grounds we reverse and remand for a new
trial.
In 2005, the State charged appellant Anthony Ferrari, along with his
codefendants Anthony Moscatiello and James Fiorillo, with the 2001
murder of Gus Boulis. Fiorillo pled to the charges in 2012, and a trial
involving Moscatiello and Ferrari commenced in 2013. Moscatiello’s
attorney became ill during trial, and his trial was severed. Trial continued
against Ferrari. Moscatiello was later tried, convicted, and sentenced upon
the same essential testimony as was presented in the trial of Ferrari.
Moscatiello appealed, and this court reversed his conviction for a new trial.
Moscatiello v. State, 43 Fla. L. Weekly D1257 (Fla. 4th DCA June 6, 2018).
In our opinion, we extensively recited the facts, which are the essential
facts of this appeal as well. We therefore repeat those facts for this opinion.
We also add facts specifically relevant to Ferrari’s trial. Furthermore, we
will discuss additional facts within the issues to which they are relevant.
The Murder
On February 6, 2001, Gus Boulis, a successful
businessman, left his office in Broward County around 9 p.m.
As he was heading south on Miami Road, a car stopped in
front of him. Boulis stopped his vehicle, and another car
pulled in behind Boulis so that he was boxed in. An innocent
bystander was in a third car that stopped behind the first two
cars. A red Jetta pulled up behind the bystander’s car. While
they were all stopped in a row, a black Mustang came from
the opposite direction, and pulled up next to Boulis’s vehicle.
Someone in the Mustang fired several shots, killing Boulis.
After the shooting, the bystander noticed that the red Jetta
behind him drove off the road around him, and then took off.
Later, he saw the red Jetta circling the block, perhaps looking
for him. The bystander memorized the partial tag number of
the temporary tag on the Mustang and, when he got home,
called 911. Testimony revealed that both the Mustang and
the Jetta were owned by Anthony “Little Tony” Ferrari, [the
appellant] in this case.
1
Richardson v. State, 246 So. 2d 771 (Fla. 1971).
2
The next day Dwayne Nicholson, an employee [or
contractor] of Ferrari, called to report his knowledge about the
murder. Eventually, he gave several statements implicating
both Ferrari and Anthony “Big Tony” Moscatiello (appellant)
in the murder. Thus, from 2001, the authorities knew of
evidence connecting appellant to the murder. It took an
additional four years for them to gather all the evidence and
indict [Moscatiello], along with Ferrari and James Fiorillo,
another employee of Ferrari, for the murder.
The State’s theory of the case was that Moscatiello and
Ferrari were hired by Adam Kidan to protect him from Boulis,
from whom Kidan had purchased a business. For reasons
somewhat unclear, Moscatiello determined that Boulis needed
to be killed so that Moscatiello and Ferrari would not lose the
protection payments from Kidan. The complicated story
commences with the sale of the business from Boulis to Kidan.
While there was some documentary evidence supporting
meetings and payments, the direct testimony linking
Moscatiello [and Ferrari] to the crime all came from witnesses
each of whom received substantial benefits for their
testimony.
The Prelude to the Murder
The victim, Gus Boulis, had become successful as the
owner of Miami Subs sandwich shops before founding
SunCruz Casinos, a fleet of gambling casino boats.
Eventually, the Attorney General’s office advised Boulis that
he had to sell SunCruz because he wasn’t an American citizen
when he started the business. As a result, Boulis sold the
business to Adam Kidan and Jack Abramoff. Boulis received
$23 million in cash and was supposed to get another $20
million, which he never received. The business relationship
between Boulis and Kidan soured. Kidan was afraid that
Boulis might harm him in retaliation for lack of payment, so
he reached out to his connections in New York, and asked
Moscatiello to assist him. Kidan wanted the word out that he,
Kidan, had “connections.” Moscatiello introduced Kidan to
Ferrari in Miami to provide security or protection. Ferrari
bragged to people that he was John Gotti’s nephew and head
of the Gambino family in Florida.1 For this protection, Kidan
entered into a deal with Moscatiello for Moscatiello to be a
“consultant” supplying beverages and paper goods for the
3
gambling casino boat. Through Ferrari’s business in Miami,
Ferrari would arrange for Kidan’s protection. Kidan paid
Moscatiello monthly for the protection.
In November 2000, Moscatiello flew to Miami. Ferrari
brought along Dwayne Nicholson and several other
bodyguards as security to pick up Moscatiello from the
airport. Ferrari, Moscatiello, and Nicholson rode in one
vehicle, while the rest of the security team rode in others.
While they were driving to a hotel, Nicholson testified that
Ferrari and Moscatiello discussed the fact that they did not
want to pay Boulis the extra money he was owed on the sale
of Sun Cruz. Ferrari responded that Nicholson would take
care of Boulis. Moscatiello turned to Nicholson and said,
“Now, you know what he means . . . we need Gus killed. Are
you able to do it?” Nicholson did not say anything, because
he thought he would be killed if he didn’t agree. Ferrari had
previously asked him whether he would kill Boulis, and
Nicholson had declined.
The next day, Ferrari and Nicholson picked up Moscatiello
and drove to the SunCruz office to show Nicholson the office,
the ships, and the vehicle that Boulis drove. Moscatiello said
that Boulis had to be taken care of prior to an upcoming court
date. After Moscatiello was dropped off, Nicholson again
complained to Ferrari that he wasn’t going to kill Boulis.
Ferrari told him just to surveil Boulis, and he would figure out
later what to do.
Meanwhile, Kidan became frustrated with his relationship
with Ferrari and his protection service. While Kidan was out
of the country, he terminated his relationship with Ferrari.
That same day, Boulis was killed.
The Murder and its Aftermath
James Fiorillo was another assistant to Ferrari, who was
more like a son to him. Fiorillo did multiple errands for Ferrari
and other tasks. On the day of the murder, Fiorillo arrived at
Ferrari’s home in a black Mustang belonging to Ferrari, which
Fiorillo frequently drove. He then switched vehicles with
Ferrari. Ferrari drove away, and Ferrari’s girlfriend followed
in his red Jetta. Fiorillo also had access to several of Ferrari’s
phones.
4
Although the innocent bystander witnessed the murder, he
could not identify anyone in any of the vehicles. The partial
license number he obtained did match up to the black
Mustang. Thus, no independent witness testified as to who
was present at the scene. However, Fiorillo knew about the
murder and what occurred.
Fiorillo went to Ferrari’s home after the murder. Ferrari
gave him a bag containing a gun, which Fiorillo disposed of.
Fiorillo also drove the Mustang to a repair shop. The next day,
Fiorillo met with Ferrari and Moscatiello at a hotel.
Moscatiello told Fiorillo to drive to New York and to report the
Mustang as stolen, which he did. In New York, Fiorillo met
with Moscatiello. When Moscatiello asked for the details of
the events leading up to the murder and the murder itself,
Moscatiello became very angry. He told Fiorillo to stay in New
York, and Ferrari’s girlfriend allowed Fiorillo to stay with her
for a week there, after which he stayed in a hotel. Fiorillo
worked for Moscatiello for a while and then returned to Florida
sometime in April. Ultimately, Fiorillo was arrested and
charged with conspiracy to commit murder for which the State
was seeking the death penalty, as the State originally believed
that he was the shooter. He reached a plea deal in which he
agreed to testify against Moscatiello and Ferrari in exchange
for a six-year prison sentence.
When Kidan returned to Florida after the murder, he met
Moscatiello in his hotel room and asked if he knew what
happened. Moscatiello said, “Yes, it was very unfortunate, it
wasn’t supposed to happen that way.” Moscatiello admitted
that it was his decision. He explained that the plan was to
kidnap Boulis, kill him, and bury his body on a farm where
he would not be found for years. Kidan asked who was
involved, and Moscatiello told him that the shooter came down
from New York and went home on Amtrak. Fiorillo drove the
car, and Ferrari was in another car. Kidan knew that a
Mustang had been used in the murder and he knew Fiorillo
had one, so he asked Moscatiello if that was the same car.
Moscatiello told him it was the same Mustang. Kidan
complained that that car should not have been used.
Kidan had made significant payments to both Moscatiello
and Ferrari for protection. In June 2001, Kidan made a last
5
payment, and then SunCruz went into bankruptcy. Later,
Kidan was being investigated by the FBI in connection with
the murder. In April 2004, Kidan met Moscatiello in New York
and explained that he was being investigated by the
government. He told Moscatiello that he thought someone
was cooperating with the government. Kidan asked about the
shooter, and Moscatiello told him that the shooter had died
after he was shot in a deli in Boca Raton. Kidan googled the
incident and discovered that the man who had been shot was
named John Gurino.2
Kidan was convicted of wire fraud in connection with the
SunCruz purchase and sale and went to prison in 2006. He
contacted law enforcement about cooperating in the Boulis
murder investigation in 2006, and his original sentence of five
years was cut to twenty-seven months. He testified against
[Ferrari] at the trial, giving details of the SunCruz sale and
Moscatiello’s [and Ferrari’s] activities.
Nicholson Contacts Law Enforcement and Investigation
Commences
The day after the murder, Nicholson was watching the
news and saw that Gus Boulis had been killed, and police
were looking for a black Mustang. Nicholson knew that
Fiorillo usually drove the Mustang. He was afraid that he
might be killed next, so he called Crime Stoppers. He was put
in touch with law enforcement, and gave a statement to Fort
Lauderdale police on February 9, 2001.
Police asked Nicholson to call Ferrari by phone, which they
attempted to record without success. Then police asked him
to meet with Ferrari while wear[ing] a listening device hidden
inside a beeper. When Nicholson met with Ferrari, Ferrari
grabbed the beeper and asked about it. Nicholson told him
his girlfriend had given it to him to keep track of him.
Thereafter, Nicholson tried to avoid Ferrari, although he
was still owed money for his work for Ferrari. Around
Memorial Day, another of Ferrari’s assistants, Ben Potter,
came by Nicholson’s house to tell him that Ferrari wanted to
speak to him. Nicholson, Fiorillo, and Potter drove to Ferrari’s
mother’s house in Venice, Florida. On the way, Fiorillo asked
Nicholson if he (Nicholson) was going to kill him (Fiorillo).
6
Nicholson responded that he thought Fiorillo and Potter were
going to kill him (Nicholson). At Ferrari’s mother’s home,
Ferrari told Fiorillo that he was “running his mouth” too
much, referring to Fiorillo’s recent trip to New York.
Sometime after Memorial Day, Nicholson confronted
Ferrari about money Ferrari still owed him for his services.
Ferrari called Moscatiello about the money, and put the call
on speaker phone. When Ferrari asked him about the money,
Moscatiello answered, “F*ck those n****rs, just kill them.”
Nicholson never got his money.
Nicholson was never charged with any crime as a result of
his interactions with Ferrari and Moscatiello. He received a
six figure Crime Stopper’s reward for his assistance. He also
testified against Moscatiello.
The State’s Other Evidence [ ]
In 2007, several years after Moscatiello and Ferrari had
been charged, Joseph Marley wrote a letter to the state
attorney offering information regarding Moscatiello. Marley
had been in custody in the county jail for over two years on a
drug trafficking charge. His crimes could have resulted in a
seventy-five year sentence. Looking for leniency, he
negotiated a plea in exchange for his information and
testimony, which allowed him to be sentenced to time served
and to be released upon pleading to the charges.
Marley was a limousine driver in New York, and would
hang out at clubs owned by John Gotti. He would see
Moscatiello at those clubs. Marley used to work for Anthony
and Michael Gurino, who were cousins of John Gurino, who
became the suspected gunman in the Boulis murder. About
six weeks after the Boulis murder, Marley ran into John
Gurino at the Coconut Creek casino. Gurino kissed him and
said he (Gurino) had a new nickname, “SunCruz Kid.” At first
Marley didn’t know what he was talking about, and Gurino
said “Don’t you read the papers?” Then it dawned on Marley
that he was referring to the murder of Gus Boulis, which he
had seen reports of on television. Marley asked, “Was that
you?” Gurino looked at him with a smirk, which Marley
interpreted as a “yeah.” And, Marley said, “What were you
doing, shaking him down?” Gurino laughed and said,
7
“Something like that. I got the work from Moscatiello.” In
2003, John Gurino was himself murdered in a Boca Raton
deli.
The State also read the testimony of Nick DiMaggio, who
was in a federal witness protection program and unavailable.
He had testified in prior proceedings involving the Boulis
murder. DiMaggio was a lifetime criminal and had known
Moscatiello his whole life. He also knew John Gurino, who
was his best friend. In 2000 or 2001, Moscatiello had asked
DiMaggio to stop by his house in New York. During their
meeting, Moscatiello offered him $100,000 to go to Florida and
kill Gus Boulis. Moscatiello explained that Boulis was making
a lot of problems with a gambling business and a lot of money
was at stake. DiMaggio was insulted because he was being
asked to kill someone for money rather than for “principle.”
He left the meeting and told Gurino about the offer. Later, he
became aware that Boulis was in fact killed when he received
a news article about the murder, sent to him by Gurino. A
few weeks later, DiMaggio spoke with Moscatiello in New York,
and Moscatiello told him “he took care of it.” However, Gurino
never told DiMaggio that he had shot Boulis, and DiMaggio
would have been shocked if he did, as Gurino lived by the
same principles as DiMaggio. DiMaggio testified as part of a
plea negotiation, which required him to testify in this case and
others. For his testimony in various proceedings, including
this one, the government did not charge him with multiple
crimes, which included murders. He was held in custody for
nearly seven years, but at sentencing, he received a sentence
of only a year. He was released to the witness protection
program.
Finally, Paul Brandreth, a convicted felon in federal prison
for a drug crime and for second degree murder in a state
prosecution, testified that he was approached by Ferrari to kill
three people, including a black man (Nicholson) and a woman
(Ferrari’s girlfriend), both of whom lived in South Florida, and
a person in a hotel in Yonkers (Fiorillo), for whom law
enforcement was looking. Ferrari needed Brandreth to get to
Fiorillo before the investigators did. Brandreth travelled to
New York and stayed with Fiorillo, ostensibly for Fiorillo’s
protection. When Brandreth arrived, he was picked up at the
airport by Moscatiello. Moscatiello said to him, “so you’re the
one, kid, huh? You’re the one, nothing but a f*cking hat trick
8
for you. Nothing but a Trifecta.” Brandreth knew he was
referring to the three people Brandreth was supposed to
“whack.” He asked Moscatiello for his money. Moscatiello
replied, “What do you mean? I thought the other Tony took
care of you.” Brandreth told him he needed a “paintbrush”
which was code for a gun. Moscatiello said that he didn’t have
a gun, but he had “a shotgun from a fed job he did one time.”
Moscatiello told him to wait for a phone call, but not to kill
Fiorillo at the hotel because he owned the hotel. Brandreth
stayed with Fiorillo, but never got a phone call or gun. He
returned to Florida. In 2012, he was visited by two officers
while he was in prison for murder and federal charges. In his
state murder case, prosecutors agreed to have his state
sentence terminate when his federal sentence terminated in
exchange for his testimony in this case, significantly reducing
his prison time.
____________________
1 John Gotti was the boss of the Gambino crime family in New York.
2 This
was later confirmed, through testimony at trial, from the man
who shot Gurino at the deli.
Id. at *1-5.
Evidence at Ferrari’s Trial of His Cars, Cell Phones, and Guns
The State presented evidence that Ferrari owned many different types
of cell phones, including Nextel phones that could be used like walkie-
talkies. Nicholson testified that Ferrari used at least four different cell
phones. Other people in Ferrari’s orbit, including Nicholson and Fiorillo,
used the phones. Ferrari also had a lot of cars, and Ferrari let Fiorillo
drive his Ford Mustang. Ferrari parked the cars at the parking garage by
his office. In January 2001, Ferrari got a case of handguns from
Nicholson, including a .380 handgun that was the same type of gun used
to kill Boulis. Fiorillo and Ferrari used the guns at a shooting range.
Nicholson also testified that before Boulis died, Kidan gave Ferrari a gun.
A special agent for the Secret Service and a member of the FBI violent
crimes task force testified regarding telephone calls made from Ferrari’s
cell phones. Cell phones must be in communication with a tower to receive
phone calls or messages and to transfer data. Phone companies record
people’s historical cell-site location information (“CSLI”), which can be
imported onto a mapping program to show the location of the towers that
received the phone’s data at certain times. The agent analyzed the CSLI
9
from the night of the murder for two of Ferrari’s cell phones, and he put
the technical data on a map. On the night of the murder, the phones were
used near Boulis’s office, and they did not move location from 6:40 p.m.
to 9:19 p.m. Just after 9:00 p.m., the phones made a series of calls to
each other, and the phones began moving south and east towards Miami
Beach, in different routes but close together.
Ferrari’s Defense
Ferrari testified at his trial. Ferrari met Nicholson through business,
and he had known Moscatiello for a long time. He knew Adam Kidan, “the
devil himself,” but not Joseph Marley, John Gurino, or Nick DiMaggio. In
September 2000, Moscatiello told Ferrari that he was going to do business
with Kidan, and Moscatiello wanted Ferrari to find a warehouse in Florida
for Moscatiello’s wine business. Moscatiello told Ferrari that Kidan wanted
to hire security to watch the Sun Cruz boats, and Ferrari reached out to
Darryl Wysinger. Beginning in December 2000, Kidan began paying
Ferrari $25,000 a month for security, even though Ferrari admitted that
he knew nothing about running a security company. Ferrari obtained
advice from an outside security consultant, Mark Martin, who specialized
in covert security cameras and listening devices. Kidan hired Martin to
install listening equipment in Boulis’s offices.
Ferrari testified that he was watching his daughter when Boulis died,
and a friend of his was at his house. On that night, Fiorillo came to
Ferrari’s condo after dark to pick up the Mustang. Fiorillo left, but he
returned at about 12:30 a.m., hysterically crying and stating that he just
killed Boulis. Nicholson arrived and told Fiorillo to keep his mouth shut,
but Fiorillo confessed in front of another of Ferrari’s friends. Ferrari never
asked Nicholson or Fiorillo to kill Boulis. Also, he never asked Brandreth
to kill Fiorillo. Ferrari testified that he did not confess to Kidan, and Kidan
and Nicholson used Fiorillo, who had a drug habit, to kill Boulis. Ferrari
further testified that Kidan was the “mastermind” behind the murder. He
denied that Nicholson was in the vehicle in November when Moscatiello
came to Florida. Nicholson was lying and was involved in the murder.
Ferrari had at least ten cars. As mentioned above, all of the cars were
kept at the parking garage at Ferrari’s office, and the keys were kept inside
his office. Ferrari bought the Mustang for Fiorillo to drive because he did
not want Fiorillo to drive his other cars. Ferrari admitted that he had three
or four Nextel phones under his company’s name, and he had three other
phones under either a second company’s name or his business associate’s
10
name. Ferrari testified that Fiorillo and Nicholson had access to his cars,
phones, and offices.
Ferrari met Brandreth at the car repair shop that he used. Although
Ferrari admitted that he loaned Brandreth $1,100, Ferrari did not hire
Brandreth to kill Fiorillo. With respect to the meeting at his mother’s
house in Venice, Florida, Ferrari testified that he had Potter bring
Nicholson and Fiorillo to his mother’s house because Fiorillo told
Nicholson how McDonald’s makes its deposits, and Nicholson used that
information to rob Ferrari’s wife, a McDonald’s manager. Ferrari made
additional, specific denials to the other claims raised by the State’s
witnesses. On cross-examination, the prosecutor elicited over objection
that Ferrari had not made any of these statements to investigators before
his trial testimony.
After closing argument, the jury found Ferrari guilty of first degree
murder and conspiracy to commit first degree murder. The court
sentenced Ferrari to life in prison without parole for the murder charge
and to thirty consecutive years for conspiracy to commit murder. Ferrari
timely appeals.
Analysis
I. Suppression of CSLI Data
Ferrari challenges the denial of his motion to suppress the historical
CSLI data from two of his cell phones, which showed their location on the
night of the murder. In 2001, the State, upon the request of the
investigating detective, subpoenaed the records of one cell phone company
for the historical CSLI on these two cell phones. That company faxed the
CSLI to the police without contesting the subpoena. The FBI agent later
testified about these subpoenaed records at trial. Before requesting the
CSLI from this company through the subpoena, another cell phone
company had refused to provide similar records without a court order, and
the court had issued an order requiring the production of the CSLI from
that company. Ferrari unsuccessfully moved to suppress the subpoenaed
historical CSLI data. Appellant challenges the denial of the suppression
of the CSLI data obtained by subpoena, arguing that the State violated
section 934.23, Florida Statutes, and the Fourth Amendment.
In Carpenter v. United States, 138 S. Ct. 2206, 2221 (2018), the
Supreme Court held that historical CSLI data is protected by the Fourth
Amendment, and thus, the government’s acquisition of such data
constitutes a search which requires a warrant supported by probable
11
cause. The Supreme Court’s opinion is binding upon Florida courts under
article I, section 12 of the Florida Constitution, and an appellate court
applies the law in effect at the time of its decision. See State v. Glatzmayer,
789 So. 2d 297, 303 n.10 (Fla. 2001). Therefore, the acquisition of the
CSLI records without a warrant based upon probable cause violated
Ferrari’s Fourth Amendment rights.
The State, however, contends that even if CSLI data is protected under
the Fourth Amendment, the investigator’s acquisition of the data in this
case should be protected by the “good faith” exception to the exclusionary
rule. We disagree.
The “good faith” exception avoids the exclusion of the results of a
warrantless search where the police conduct an objectively reasonable
search based upon binding decisional law, see Davis v. United States, 564
U.S. 229 (2011), or in reasonable reliance on an applicable statute, even if
that statute is later held to be unconstitutional, see Illinois v. Krull, 480
U.S. 340 (1987). In this case, the search occurred in 2001. At that time,
no binding decisional law existed determining that CSLI data was not
within Fourth Amendment protection and thus exempt from the warrant
requirement. In fact, CSLI data is never mentioned in reported decisions
in that time period. When denying Ferrari’s motion to suppress, the trial
court relied on our decision in Mitchell v. State, 25 So. 3d 632, 635 (Fla.
4th DCA 2009), which held that a person has no expectation of privacy in
historical CSLI. However, that decision was several years after the search,
and even in that opinion, we noted that the case law concerning historical
CSLI was unsettled. Id. at 634. Thus, the detective had no case law on
which to rely in his decision not to secure a warrant or court order for the
historical CSLI. Instead, the detective obtained the information by way of
subpoena. In fact, the detective did not even cite any statute in the request
for issuance of the subpoena.
The trial court found that section 934.23(1) 2 required a court order or
a warrant to obtain electronic communication information, and it was
undisputed that a warrant had not been obtained. While the court cited
section 934.23(1) in its order denying the motion to suppress, Ferrari cited
2 Section 934.23(1), Florida Statutes (2001) (emphasis added), provides:
(1) An investigative or law enforcement officer may require the
disclosure by a provider of electronic communication service of the
contents of an electronic communication that has been in electronic
storage in an electronic communications system for 180 days or less
only pursuant to a warrant issued by the judge of a court of
competent jurisdiction.
12
to section 934.23(4)(b) in his motion. Section 934.23(4)(b), Florida
Statutes (2001), provides that information pertaining to a subscriber, not
including the contents of an electronic communication, must be obtained
by warrant, court order, or consent of the subscriber. 3
We need not determine which subsection applies, because the officer
did not comply with either subsection and did not obtain a warrant or
court order. Thus, he was not acting in reasonable reliance on a statute.
In addition, the other carrier specifically told the officer that he needed a
court order to secure the CSLI data, which order the officer obtained. This
was before the officer requested a subpoena for the CSLI from the subject
cell phone company. Given both the law enforcement officer’s failure to
follow the statute and the officer’s knowledge of the other company’s
express objection to producing CSLI without a court order, the state
cannot meet the good faith exception.
In Tracey v. State, 152 So. 3d 504, 525-26 (Fla. 2014), the Florida
Supreme Court held that real time CSLI data was protected by the Fourth
Amendment, and thus, its use by law enforcement constituted a search
which required a warrant based upon probable cause. There, the
detectives had obtained an order pursuant to section 934.33 authorizing
a pen register, but then they used that order to obtain real time CSLI given
off by the petitioner’s cell phone. Id. at 507-09. Our supreme court
rejected the application of the good faith exception to the exclusionary rule
because there was no binding appellate precedent or court order on which
law enforcement could objectively rely. Id. at 526. Similarly, the Supreme
Court held in Carpenter that an order authorizing acquisition of historical
CSLI issued pursuant to the federal Stored Communications Act did not
satisfy the Fourth Amendment because the order was based upon
reasonable suspicion and not probable cause. 138 S. Ct. at 2221. The
Supreme Court did not hold that the officers acted in good faith in using
3 Section 934.23(4)(b)(1.)-(3.), Florida Statutes (2001), provides:
A provider of electronic communication service or remote computing
service shall disclose a record or other information pertaining to a
subscriber to or customer of such service, not including the
contents of communications covered by subsection (1) or
subsection (2), to an investigative or law enforcement officer only
when the investigative or law enforcement officer:
1. Obtains a warrant issued by the judge of a court of competent
jurisdiction;
2. Obtains a court order for such disclosure under subsection (5);
or
3. Has the consent of the subscriber or customer to such disclosure.
13
the SCA. Indeed, the message of the Supreme Court is unmistakable to
law enforcement: “Before compelling a wireless carrier to turn over a
subscriber’s CSLI, the Government’s obligation is a familiar one—get a
warrant.” Id. In both these cases, the court did not apply the good faith
exception where a court order was involved, albeit issued without probable
cause. Where there is not even an attempt to obtain a court order, as
required by statute, there is no good faith attempt to comply with the
dictates of law and the Constitution.
For these reasons, we hold that under Carpenter, the historical CSLI
data was protected by the Fourth Amendment. The acquisition of this data
without a warrant based on probable cause constituted an illegal search
pursuant to the Fourth Amendment. Further, the good faith exception to
the exclusionary rule does not apply because the State was not relying on
binding precedent or clearly applicable statutes in obtaining the data.
II. Richardson Discovery Issue
Ferrari challenges the trial court’s mid-trial denial of his Richardson
challenge. During the cross-examination of Nicholson, the defense
discovered the existence of multiple tapes and statements by Fiorillo and
others, which were referred to aptly by the court as “bombshell” discovery.
Because we conclude that a Richardson violation occurred and the
revelation of the discovery could have changed the strategy of the defense,
we are compelled to reverse.
In response to a question in cross-examination, Nicholson mentioned
that he had worn a wire during one of his conversations with Fiorillo. This
revelation surprised both the prosecutor and defense. The court excused
the jury and began to conduct a Richardson hearing. Nicholson testified
that the police wired his van, and the police recorded his conversations
with Fiorillo on only one occasion. The court recessed for the evening and
told the prosecutor that he needed to investigate if there were any reports
about the recordings.
When the court reconvened the next day, the defense attorneys
informed the court that they had called Dohn Williams, Fiorillo’s former
attorney, who told them that he had ordered “all of the tapes of all of the
statements” from the Ft. Lauderdale Police Department five or six years
before the trial. The tapes were still in Williams’s office, and defense
attorneys brought about nine of the seventy-five to eighty tapes to court.
Several of the tapes involved Nicholson’s contacts with Fiorillo, and the
defense attorney stated that there was “not a single police report that is
14
filed in this case that would have even alerted us to that.” There were at
least one or two tapes from Nicholson’s conversation with Fiorillo in
August 2001. The prosecutor reported that a detective wired Nicholson’s
van, but the detective never authored a report about the wiring because
he believed that it was covered in Nicholson’s statements. The prosecutor
did not see anything about it in either Nicholson’s statements or the
detective’s reports.
Ferrari’s attorney asked for the court to un-sequester the jury so that
he could listen to the tapes with Ferrari. He stated that Williams did not
bring up the tapes when he deposed Nicholson, and Williams “must have
forgotten about them somehow.” The attorney said that in one of the
tapes, Nicholson told Fiorillo that “they think I’m involved.” Although this
may have been a comment to induce Fiorillo to incriminate himself,
Nicholson’s statement would have been helpful to impeach Nicholson. The
court required the attorney to continue his cross-examination of
Nicholson, after which the court would adjourn for a day and a half for the
attorneys to listen to the tapes.
At the renewed hearing, defense counsel produced five of thirteen tapes
which he had the court reporter transcribe and several un-transcribed
tapes. One of the un-transcribed tapes consisted of a statement by a
Curtis Jackson, who said that he came down from Detroit to help kill
Boulis. Jackson said a man in Gainesville paid to have Boulis killed. On
another tape, Orlando Torrens, who worked for Fiorillo, said that Fiorillo
confessed to him that he killed Boulis. Counsel argued that there was a
Richardson violation and asked the court to grant a continuance so that
he could complete discovery. Ferrari’s attorney wished to depose Orlando
Torrens and to re-depose Fiorillo, and he stated that he thought they had
“gone from a potential discovery violation to a Brady violation, and maybe
both.”
During the hearing, the State produced a letter from February 22, 2006,
in which Williams wrote to one of the detectives that he was sending him
seventy-five blank cassette tapes “so that [he] might obtain copies of the
tape-recorded statements set forth in the attached evidence property forms
that were supplied in discovery.” The prosecutor argued the letter proved
Williams received the police property forms in discovery from the State,
which indicated that there were seventy-five different tapes, and the
property receipts listed Torrens’s “sworn, taped statement.” On the letter,
Williams cc’d Moscatiello’s attorney and Ferrari’s prior attorney. Because
defense counsel had the property receipts and Williams’s letter, the State
argued there was no discovery violation. In addition, the prosecutor
produced a 2009 supplemental discovery regarding tapes of jail cell
15
conversations of Ferrari and Fiorillo, which included an agreement that
one copy of the tapes would be supplied to Williams who would copy it for
the other defense attorneys.
The trial court found that no Richardson violation had occurred
because Williams was the “point person” for distributing discovery to the
other defense attorneys. The court relied on the 2009 discovery to
establish this agreement. The court assumed Williams did not tell the
attorneys about the tapes because “there was nothing worth while or
evidentiary on these tapes.” Because no one contested that Williams was
the “lead defense in getting the tapes and DVDs” in 2009, and because
Williams had the other tapes listed in the police property receipt from 2006
to 2013, the court found no discovery violation.
Defense counsel, however, did object to the court’s characterization
that Williams was authorized to act for them as to the distribution of the
2006 tape request. They also requested a mistrial and/or continuance to
allow them to listen to all the tapes with their clients. Defense counsel
then proffered Williams’s testimony that there was no agreement between
him and other defense counsel with respect to the tapes received in 2006,
and he did not have the responsibility to notify anyone about the tapes.
The court denied all motions, finding that Williams put the attorneys of
record on notice of the existence of the tapes when he requested them.
When a trial court learns of a possible discovery violation, “the court
must conduct a Richardson hearing to inquire about the circumstances
surrounding” the State’s discovery violation, and it must ascertain the
possible prejudice to the defendant. Cuminotto v. State, 101 So. 3d 930,
936 (Fla. 4th DCA 2012) (citing Jones v. State, 32 So. 3d 706, 710 (Fla.
4th DCA 2010)). If the court finds a discovery violation, it must determine
if the violation was: (1) inadvertent or willful; (2) trivial or substantial; and
(3) whether it resulted in prejudice or harm to the defendant. Richardson
v. State, 246 So. 2d 771, 774-45 (Fla. 1971).
The parties dispute the standard of review for the trial court’s findings.
The State contends that the trial court’s ruling is reviewed for an abuse of
discretion, while Ferrari contends that where the finding is based upon
facts or an erroneous interpretation of the law, the review should be de
novo. Richardson’s three prongs “are reviewed for an abuse of discretion,
but this discretion can be exercised only following a proper inquiry.”
Goldsmith v. State, 182 So. 3d 824, 827 (Fla. 4th DCA 2016) (quoting
Brown v. State, 165 So. 3d 726, 729 (Fla. 4th DCA 2015)). In Curry v.
State, 1 So. 3d 394, 398 (Fla. 1st DCA 2009), the court noted that various
16
issues are presented as to whether there was a discovery violation,
necessitating different standards:
The threshold question in all of these cases is whether there
was a discovery violation. This might be a factual issue, for
example if the dispute is whether the evidence was or was not
disclosed. In that event, a hearing would be needed to resolve
the dispute. It is possible that the issue might present only a
question of law, for example, if the alleged violation turns on
the interpretation of a rule. In that case, the need for a
hearing would depend on the resolution of the issue. If the
court correctly determined that there was no violation, there
would be no need for a hearing. But if a discovery violation
has occurred, the trial court is required by law to grant a
Richardson hearing. The court cannot simply exercise its
discretion to deny a hearing.
If a court incorrectly concluded there was no violation and failed to address
each of Richardson’s three prongs, the Richardson hearing was
inadequate. Goldsmith, 182 So. 3d at 827. A court’s finding that there
was no violation must be supported by the record. Knight v. State, 76 So.
3d 879, 888 (Fla. 2011). To the extent the trial court’s rulings involve
interpretation of the rules, we review those de novo. To the extent that the
court’s rulings rely on a factual predicate, we review the record for
competent substantial evidence to support the trial court’s findings.
The discovery rules facilitate truth-finding and “avoid trial by surprise
or ambush.” Scipio v. State, 928 So. 2d 1138, 1144 (Fla. 2006). “Because
full and fair discovery is essential to these important goals, we have
repeatedly emphasized not only compliance with the technical provisions
of the discovery rules, but also adherence to the purpose and spirit of those
rules in both the criminal and civil context.” Id.
The State’s obligations in the production of discovery are extensive.
Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.220(b)(1)(A) requires the prosecutor
to disclose “the names and addresses of all persons known to the
prosecutor to have information that may be relevant to any offense charged
or any defense thereto . . . ;” any written or recorded statements of its listed
witnesses; and “any written or recorded statements and the substance of
any oral statements made by a codefendant.” Fla. R. Crim. P.
3.220(b)(1)(B), (b)(1)(D). The prosecutor must also disclose any “material
information” that negates the defendant’s guilt. Fla. R. Crim. P.
3.220(b)(4); see Perdomo v. State, 565 So. 2d 1375, 1376 (Fla. 2d DCA
1990) (finding evidence of “debatable exculpatory value” should be
17
disclosed, and thus, the State should have disclosed its possession of the
defendant’s clothes even though the State believed that the evidence had
been stolen). The State must either be aware of the evidence, must possess
the evidence, or must be “charged with constructive knowledge and
possession of evidence withheld by state agents, including law
enforcement officers.” Fla. R. Crim. P. 3.220(b)(1); see Jones v. State, 32
So. 3d 706, 708-11 (Fla. 4th DCA 2010) (finding that although the
prosecutor disclosed the defendant’s threat towards the victim as soon as
he learned of it, the prosecutor could have been charged with the
knowledge of the defendant’s statement because a deputy knew about the
threat, and the defendant was procedurally prejudiced by the court’s
failure to conduct an adequate Richardson hearing to determine if the
discovery violation prejudiced the defendant’s ability to prepare for trial).
Here, the State is charged with the knowledge of the tapes in the
possession of the police.
In Blatch v. State, 495 So. 2d 1203, 1204 (Fla. 4th DCA 1986) (quoting
Odoms v. State, 431 So. 2d 1041 (Fla. 4th DCA 1983)) (emphasis in
original), we explained that “[t]he state has an affirmative duty, upon
demand, to furnish full discovery” to the defense. There, the State had
disclosed exculpatory statements of the defendant, but it had failed to
provide an inculpatory statement made by the defendant that it sought to
use at trial. Id. In reversing, this Court held that the State must provide
the defense with the substance of a defendant’s statements, and it cannot
merely supply the name of a person to whom the statement may have been
made:
The trial court ruled that the defense, having been advised of
the names of the officers, had an obligation to depose them.
This is not the law. See Lavigne v. State, 349 So. 2d 178 (Fla.
1st DCA 1977). The law requires the disclosure of the
substance of any statements made and known by the state to
exist as well as the identity of the person to whom it was made.
Id. (emphasis added); see also Kucher v. State, 758 So. 2d 1165, 1166 (Fla.
2d DCA 2000) (finding the State committed a discovery violation by failing
to provide defense with oral statement of defendant, even though the
State’s discovery notice had stated that there were statements by the
defendant; “[t]he fact that defense counsel has been provided the witness's
name and fails to depose the witness does not excuse prosecution's failure
to inform the defense of a statement made by the defendant to which the
witness will testify.”).
18
The State had the obligation of providing to the defense the substance
of any statements by a codefendant, as well as any exculpatory
information. Fiorillo was a codefendant until 2012, at which point he
accepted a plea deal. In its discovery responses, the State failed to provide
the substance of Fiorillo’s statements to Nicholson, and it never disclosed
the statement by Fiorillo to Oscar Torrens in which Fiorillo confessed to
murdering Boulis. The State also did not provide the exculpatory
statement by Curtis Jackson. While statements between Nicholson and
Fiorillo are mentioned in the property receipts from the Fort Lauderdale
Police, the statement from Torrens in the property receipts does not reveal
any substance or information that the statement contains a confession by
a codefendant. Moreover, the property receipts listing all the statements
and tapes never mention the Curtis Jackson statement at all. Neither
Torrens nor Jackson are listed in the State’s response to discovery.
The State failed to abide by its obligations under the rules in responding
to discovery. Thus, it committed a discovery violation. The court, however,
found no discovery violation, because the tapes of the statements were
provided to the attorney for Fiorillo, a codefendant. Similar to what
occurred in Blatch, this was insufficient to satisfy the State’s obligation, as
the substance of the statements was never revealed so that any defendant
would know of the relevance or importance of the statements. Just as
Blatch concluded that it was not the defendant’s obligation to depose an
officer to determine whether the defendant had made any statements,
here, it was not the defendant’s obligation to depose Torrens to discover
Fiorillo’s confession to the murder. It is the State’s affirmative obligation
to inform the defense of the substance of those statements. The State not
only failed to comply with the technical requirements of the rules, it failed
to adhere to their “purpose and spirit.” Scipio, 928 So. 2d at 1144. The
trial court erred as a matter of law in determining that the State sufficiently
complied with its discovery obligations by providing copies of the
voluminous statements in discovery where the State failed to provide the
substance of those statements. 4
We further conclude that the court’s determination that no Richardson
violation occurred because the tapes of the various statements were
delivered to a codefendant’s attorney is also not supported by the evidence
4 This should not be an onerous obligation on the State. For instance, if there
was a tape of a conversation between Nicholson and Fiorillo in which Fiorillo
states that he killed Boulis, all that would be required is to note that fact. It
could have identified the statement of Oscar Torrens that Fiorillo confessed to
him that he killed Boulis.
19
presented. While there was an apparent agreement in 2009 that Fiorillo’s
attorney would receive the copy of jailhouse conversations to distribute to
all of the defense attorneys, no such agreement was in place in 2006 when
Fiorillo’s attorney obtained the tapes from the police. Fiorillo’s attorney
was not acting as an agent for Ferrari.
“If the trial court incorrectly concludes that there was no discovery
violation and fails to address each of the three prongs of Richardson, the
Richardson hearing is inadequate.” Goldsmith, 182 So. 3d at 827.
However, a discovery violation is subject to a harmless error analysis. Id.
at 828. A Richardson violation is harmless error “only if an appellate court
can determine, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defense was not
procedurally prejudiced,” and the State has the heavy burden to show the
lack of procedural prejudice. Id. (citations omitted). The Florida Supreme
Court held the following:
In determining whether a Richardson violation is harmless,
the appellate court must consider whether there is a
reasonable possibility that the discovery violation
procedurally prejudiced the defense. As used in this context,
the defense is procedurally prejudiced if there is a reasonable
possibility that the defendant's trial preparation or strategy
would have been materially different had the violation not
occurred. Trial preparation or strategy should be considered
materially different if it reasonably could have benefited the
defendant. . . . In other words, only if the appellate court can
say beyond a reasonable doubt that the defense was not
procedurally prejudiced by the discovery violation can the
error be considered harmless.
....
We recognize that in the vast majority of cases it will be readily
apparent that the record is insufficient to support a finding of
harmless error. . . .
State v. Schopp, 653 So. 2d 1016, 1020-21 (Fla. 1995).
On this record, it seems rather obvious that the discovery violation
procedurally prejudiced Ferrari. Fiorillo testified that he was not at the
murder scene, yet his multiple confessions to Nicholson and Torrens
would have impeached his testimony and thus his credibility. It may also
have changed defense counsel’s strategy in having Ferrari testify because
other evidence would have been available as to Fiorillo’s involvement in
20
the murder. Further, the fact that Curtis Jackson stated that he was hired
by a person in Gainesville to murder Boulis could have revealed a whole
different line of inquiry to support Ferrari’s defense that he was not
involved in the Boulis murder. In any event, it is the State’s burden to
show that the defense was not prejudiced. The State has not met its
burden, and therefore, reversal is required.
III. Additional Issues
While we affirm on the remaining issues raised, we address briefly the
claim that the prosecutor improperly commented, in cross-examination
and in closing argument, on Ferrari’s post-arrest silence. During cross-
examination, the prosecutor extensively questioned Ferrari about why he
had not told anyone about Fiorillo’s confession to him or Nicholson’s
involvement. While defense counsel objected to the prosecutor’s question
about whether Ferrari ever had reported to any law enforcement, the trial
court overruled the objection. Furthermore, many of the prosecutor’s
questions were directed to the time directly after the murder. During
closing argument, the prosecutor commented twice on the fact Ferrari was
making his claims of Fiorillo’s confession twelve and a half years after the
murder. Counsel did object, but the court overruled his objection and
denied the motion for mistrial.
Under Florida law, the State cannot “comment on a defendant’s
postarrest silence whether o[r] not the silence was induced by Miranda
warnings.” State v. Hoggins, 718 So. 2d 761, 769 (Fla. 1988) (alteration
added, emphasis added); see Webb v. State, 347 So. 2d 1054, 1056 (Fla.
4th DCA 1977). However, the State may impeach a defendant with his or
her pre-arrest, pre-Miranda silence. Hoggins, 718 So. 2d at 770 (“Florida
courts have found, consistent with the United States Supreme Court in
Jenkins [v. Anderson, 447 U.S. 231 (1980)], that prearrest, pre-Miranda
silence can be used to impeach a defendant.”) Therefore, the trial court
did not err in allowing the prosecutor’s questions to Ferrari about whether
he had reported to the police that Fiorillo had confessed to the murder, as
many of the questions were directed at pre-arrest, pre-Miranda silence.
Furthermore, we conclude that because of Ferrari’s failure to object to
most of the prosecutor’s comments, particularly those which may have
implicated post-arrest silence, the issue was not properly preserved. See
Rao v. State, 52 So. 3d 40 (Fla. 4th DCA 2010) (finding the prosecutor’s
comments on pre-arrest silence did not violate any constitutional rights;
while the State did make an improper comment on the defendant’s post-
arrest right to remain silent, the defendant did not preserve the issue, and
even if he did, any error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt).
21
Conclusion
The trial court erred in denying the motion to suppress the CSLI, as it
was obtained without a warrant based upon probable cause. The court
also erred in concluding that the State had not committed a Richardson
discovery violation when it failed to provide the substance of a
codefendant’s statements and other exculpatory statements. Ferrari was
prejudiced in his preparations for trial by these violations. Based upon
the foregoing, we reverse the conviction of appellant and remand for a new
trial.
GROSS and TAYLOR, JJ., concur.
22