Supreme Court of Florida
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No. SC17-2062
____________
MESAC DAMAS,
Appellant,
vs.
STATE OF FLORIDA,
Appellee.
December 28, 2018
PER CURIAM.
This case is before the Court on appeal from a judgment of convictions of
first-degree murder and six sentences of death. We have jurisdiction. See art. V,
§ 3(b)(1), Fla. Const. For the reasons discussed below, we affirm the convictions
and sentences.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Overview
Appellant Mesac Damas (Damas) was indicted on six counts of first-degree
premeditated murder for the killing of his wife, Guerline, and their five children in
September 2009. The names and ages of the children were: Meshach (nine years
old), Maven (six years old), Marven (five years old), Megan (three years old), and
Morgan (nineteen months old). Damas killed the victims at their Naples home by
cutting their throats. Damas admitted to a reporter from the Naples Daily News
that he killed his wife and children, and he also gave three statements—two were
given to a special agent of the United States Department of State Diplomatic
Security Service and a third was given to members of the Collier County Sheriff’s
Office.1 Miranda2 warnings were provided to Damas before each statement and
Damas waived his rights. Most of the facts with respect to the crimes were
compiled from these statements.
During the trial court proceedings, Damas expressed a desire to represent
himself. However, after a Faretta3 inquiry, the trial court denied the request.
Damas pleaded guilty to the crimes and waived his right to a penalty-phase jury.
He also waived his right to present evidence in mitigation. After allowing defense
1. The statements to the special agent were only summarized in writing by
the agent, but the statement to Collier County law enforcement was both recorded
and transcribed. Where the transcription differs from the recording, we rely upon
the recording as the most authoritative source.
2. Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966).
3. Faretta v. California, 422 U.S. 806 (1975).
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counsel to make a presentation pursuant to Koon v. Dugger, 619 So. 2d 246 (Fla.
1993), 4 the trial court imposed sentences of death for each of the murders.
Background, the Crimes, and the Confessions
Damas and Guerline dated for many years before they married in April
2006. Meshach, Maven, Marven, and Megan were born prior to the marriage,
while Morgan was born after the marriage. According to Damas, he and Guerline
began to argue after the marriage. He became jealous and suspected Guerline of
having an affair. He visited her job and checked her cellular telephone. On
January 2, 2009, during an argument about her purported unfaithfulness, Damas
slapped Guerline while she was holding infant Morgan, and Guerline dropped the
child on the floor. Guerline called the police, and Damas was arrested and charged
with misdemeanor battery. He was given a bond, but was ordered to have no
contact with Guerline as a condition of his release.5 Nonetheless, he sent her
4. See Koon, 619 So. 2d at 250 (“When a defendant, against his counsel’s
advice, refuses to permit the presentation of mitigating evidence in the penalty
phase, counsel must inform the court on the record of the defendant’s decision.
Counsel must indicate whether, based on his investigation, he reasonably believes
there to be mitigating evidence that could be presented and what that evidence
would be. The court should then require the defendant to confirm on the record
that his counsel has discussed these matters with him, and despite counsel’s
recommendation, he wishes to waive presentation of penalty phase evidence.”).
5. In the months following the misdemeanor charge, Damas attended
parenting classes and anger management classes at the David Lawrence Center in
an effort to be allowed to see the children.
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flowers almost every day. Further, he would use his key to enter the residence so
that he could apologize to Guerline and see the children.
According to Damas, as time passed, Guerline became concerned because
the Department of Children and Families (DCF) “got involved” as a result of the
domestic violence incident and was “trying to take the kids away from her.”
Guerline changed the locks so that Damas could no longer enter the residence, but
Damas would drive by after his restaurant shift ended at 3 a.m., using a friend’s car
so the police would not know he was violating the no-contact order. He would sit
in the car, watching Guerline and thinking about the children. One day, when he
“couldn’t take it no more,” he broke a window while Guerline was home and
entered the residence to see the children. Guerline and the children eventually
moved out of the residence where the domestic violence incident occurred and into
the townhouse where the murders occurred.
The no-contact order was subsequently lifted and, toward the end of March
2009, Guerline allowed Damas to move in with her and the children.6 Damas
pleaded no contest to the battery charge and was placed on twelve months’
probation. Although Guerline allowed Damas to move in, she told him she did not
forgive him and she planned to divorce him. Guerline informed Damas that her
6. According to Damas, Guerline asked the court to lift the no-contact order
because the children loved him and were asking for him.
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mother stated that if she ever took Damas back, she (the mother) would never
speak to Guerline again. When Damas asked Guerline if she would leave him, she
stated, “I don’t know what I’m going to do. My mom [is] probably right . . . like I
told you before I’m going to leave you. I’m going to divorce you.” Damas
responded, “Baby let me tell you something. . . . If you ever say that again I will
kill your mom. I will kill you. I will kill myself.” 7
On Wednesday, September 16, 2009, Guerline informed Damas that if he
struck her again, she would make sure he spent the rest of his life in prison and he
would never see the children again. Contemplating Guerline leaving him for
someone else and not being allowed to see his children, Damas thought about
killing himself and her:
[A]nd then that’s when the devil start coming out of me. He was like,
“Oh, why don’t you just kill yourself? Kill her and then kill yourself”
you know, “Let your parents, whatever, take care of the kids.” But I
was like, “But I love the kids and when I die how am I going to know
if they [are] okay.”
Also that day, a DCF employee visited and met with Guerline without Damas.
Damas recounted to the special agent his belief that “[t]hey were setting me up for
7. This comment was made by Damas in his statement to Collier County
law enforcement. However, his statement to the special agent reflects a similar
comment: “Her mom and sister been talking [to] her. Saying to divorce [me]. I
said ‘Divorce me? I f[***]ing kill you!’ ” It is not clear if these are comments that
were made at different times, or if Damas was paraphrasing the same comment.
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failure. [Guerline] was asking her how she can divorce me. . . . I was so pissed off
. . . the fact [that] she betrayed me like that.” (fourth alteration in original). That
night, Guerline informed Damas she would help him finish the probation classes,
and then she would divorce him.
On the morning of Thursday, September 17, 2009, Damas followed Guerline
to her job, leaving the children at home alone. Guerline and the store manager
threatened to call the police, but Damas said, “If you call the cops they’re going to
arrest me, they’re going to arrest you too because both of us left the kids alone at
the house. They’re going to take the kids away from us. I know you love the kids
too, right?” Guerline returned home after working less than four hours. She asked
Damas to sign some papers that had arrived in the mail. Before she left the
townhouse to return to work, she stated she would not come home that evening
because she feared Damas “might push me or whatever, beat . . . me.” Damas
responded, “Baby, I’m not going to do anything to you. I love you. You know?
It’s okay. . . . It’s alright. If I touch you I go to jail; you know.”
Guerline returned to the townhouse that afternoon on her work break. A
friend who was visiting Damas at the time witnessed an argument between the two
before Damas left for his work shift, using the friend’s vehicle rather than taking
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his own. 8 The friend agreed to stay and watch the children because Guerline also
left to return to work. At approximately 7 p.m., Guerline arrived home, and the
friend remained to speak with her. During his shift, Damas complained of a
headache and was allowed to leave early. He “clocked out” at 8:42 p.m. Damas
informed the special agent that once he left the restaurant, he was considering
various scenarios:
I said I would go and kill her and myself. But if I kill her[,] custody
of the kids would go [to] her mom. So I wanted to kill her mom so
my mom would have custody. I [was] talking to myself in my car. I
said what if I kill my kids and myself? But what about her? She will
marry again! What if I just kill her? But if they find me[,] they will
take my kids away from me.
Around 9 p.m., Damas’s friend observed his own vehicle drive past the townhouse,
turn around, and leave. The friend entered Damas’s Yukon and followed Damas,
flashing the lights of the Yukon. When Damas stopped, the friend asked Damas
what was wrong, and Damas replied that he thought Guerline was with another
man. The friend and Damas swapped vehicles, and the friend observed Damas
drive away. At approximately 10:30 p.m., Damas purchased duct tape, a filet
knife, and chewing gum.
8. The friend explained to a Collier County detective that Damas left his
GMC Yukon at the townhouse so the friend could load music equipment into it.
However, Damas provided an additional reason for taking the friend’s vehicle—he
wanted to check on Guerline while she was at her job without being recognized.
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On Saturday, September 19, 2009, Guerline’s family filed a missing person
report with the Collier County Sheriff’s Office and requested a welfare check for
Guerline and the children. The family was concerned due to the history of
domestic violence between Damas and Guerline and the children, and the fact that
Guerline had not reported to work, which was out of character for her. The
children also missed school on Friday. Officers met Guerline’s family at the
townhouse to conduct a welfare check, and the landlord unlocked the front door.
Upon entry, the officers observed a red substance that appeared to be blood leaking
from the closed door of a room under the stairway. Believing a violent crime had
been committed and the suspect might still be present, the officers withdrew and
requested backup.
Upon reentry by law enforcement, they opened the door under the stairs and
found Guerline deceased, laying on the floor of a small bathroom with a large area
of dried blood beneath the upper part of her body. Her head was covered with a
black trash bag. Underneath the bag, her neck and mouth had been bound with
duct tape. The upper half of her body was bound with so much duct tape that it
was impossible to discern what she was wearing from the waist up. Her arms were
behind her back and her wrists and hands, palms facing outward, were bound
extensively with duct tape. Her legs were bound with duct tape from just above
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her knees to just above her ankles. Her torso and hands were also loosely wrapped
in an electrical cord. Her throat had been cut through the duct tape.
Law enforcement proceeded to the second floor of the townhouse to check
on the welfare of the children. In one bedroom, law enforcement found
Meshach—the oldest child—deceased on the bed with his throat cut. The knife
wounds nearly encircled his neck. The bed was broken. In another bedroom, law
enforcement found the four remaining children deceased, also with their throats
cut. The lacerations to five-year-old Marven’s throat were so deep that he was
nearly decapitated. Neither Damas nor his vehicle was at the townhouse.
Law enforcement eventually tracked Damas’s vehicle to Miami International
Airport, where he had entered the airport parking garage at 6:40 a.m. on September
18, 2009. Damas paid cash for a one-way ticket to Port-au-Prince, Haiti; the flight
departed at 9:50 a.m. on September 18. He was subsequently apprehended in Port-
au-Prince by the Haitian National Police. While being escorted by law
enforcement, a reporter from the Naples Daily News who was in Haiti asked
Damas, “Did you kill your family?” Damas replied in the affirmative. Damas also
stated that he wanted “death right away” so that he could be buried with his family.
When asked what led him to kill his family, Damas stated that Guerline’s mother
made him do it, referencing “her mom’s spirit, whatever she’s—she’s serving,
whatever she worships.” Damas said he planned to commit suicide after the
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killings, but he did not have the courage to do so. Damas also stated that he
intended to turn himself in, but went to Haiti to say goodbye to his family.
During his statements to the special agent and Collier County law
enforcement, Damas described what happened on the night of the murders, though
the stories are not identical. He stated that after swapping vehicles with his friend,
Damas parked his car by the community swimming pool and proceeded to the back
of the townhome. He watched Guerline through the screened-in lanai for more
than one hour while she spoke on her cellular telephone. According to Damas, she
was laughing and looked happy. At approximately 12:30 a.m., he tore off the
screen door to the lanai and entered the townhouse through the sliding glass door,
which Damas knew he could open because it was not functioning properly. When
Guerline saw him, she screamed and told him not to touch her. Damas punched
her and, at that time, he knew he “was gonna go to jail.” Damas stated that
Guerline was fighting him in the kitchen, “trying to get out [to call] the cops or
whatever. Call a neighbor.” According to Damas, at that point, he pulled her hair
back and cut her throat from behind with a filet knife.9
9. Although Damas contended that he cut Guerline’s throat in the kitchen,
none of the crime scene photographs reflect significant amounts of blood in the
kitchen. Instead, there was a large amount of blood in the bathroom where
Guerline was discovered. Further, in his statement to Collier County law
enforcement, Damas claimed he duct taped Guerline after slicing her throat;
however, this is inconsistent with the testimony of the medical examiner that the
lacerations to Guerline’s throat were made through the duct tape, indicating she
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Damas bound Guerline extensively with duct tape so that she could not call
out and because she was “trying to make noise with her feet that the neighbor next
to us can hear” through the common wall. Because she was still struggling and he
had used all the tape, he further bound her with an extension cord. According to
Damas’s statement to the special agent:
I said I gonna let you live . . . I won’t kill you but I kill all the kids in
front of you! I said I will let you go but I burn the house with me and
kids in it. She want to talk. I remove duct tape . . . she said “I love
you so much.” I said why you lying to me? She said please don’t
hurt the children. I said if you go I looking at 6 years because [you]
will call the cops on me.
(First and second alteration in original.) According to Damas’s statement to
Collier County law enforcement, he dragged Guerline into the bathroom in order to
contain the blood. He then engaged in the following thought process:
And I was trying to, “What am I going to do? Run, call the cops?
Say I killed my wife or something.”
....
I love my children to death. I’m going to jail for life.
....
Death penalty, whatever, electric chair. I’m thinking, thinking.
One o’clock in the morning, two o’clock in the morning. I’m
thinking. I got the knife in my hand still. I said, “Uh I’m to slice my
throat too.” I said, “I’m gonna suffer before I f[***]ing die. I can do
it.” I wasn’t going to kill the kids, man. I still had them to survive,
you know, let them live. So the devil come to me and say, “Who’s
going to taking care of kids?”
was bound before her throat was cut. Moreover, the fact that Damas told the
special agent that Guerline spoke to him after she was bound belies Damas’s
assertion that her throat was cut before she was duct taped.
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Damas proceeded upstairs, where, in his own words, he cut the children’s
throats “one by one.” He first killed Megan, the three-year-old. Damas said that
after he killed Megan, he heard a voice saying, “Good job in doing it.” According
to Damas, when he said he could not continue, a voice told him, “Yes you can.
Keep doing it.” He then killed Marven, the five-year-old, and Maven, the six-year-
old. According to Damas, he decided he could not continue, so he started packing,
planning to leave Meshach and Morgan alive. However, according to Damas,
when he proceeded downstairs:
I see a bunch of blood, my wife laying down. I was like, “Oh my
God.” I digged up carpet and I cover the blood. There was blood
everywhere on my feet. I was like, “Oh my goodness. I’m going to
jail for the rest of my life. They will give me death penalty.” . . . And
then the voice said, “You got two more left. You’re going to die
anyway. You’re going to leave those two behind? Her mom probably
have custody of them.” I said, “Hell no I don’t want her mom get
custody. If I have chance to kill her mom I will drive there or,
whatever. Go to Haiti, kill her mom.” He was like, “Well her mom is
gonna get custody [of] them.” I said, “Hell no” and then I went
upstairs and cut the little one.
Damas stated that nineteen-month-old Morgan was “the easiest one to die.”
However, nine-year-old Meshach struggled. After cutting Meshach’s throat,
Damas watched him bleed to death.
After the murders, Damas changed his bloody clothing, placed the knife—
now bent—in a nightstand in the master bedroom, finished packing a suitcase,
removed money from Guerline’s wallet, and drove to the Miami airport where he
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purchased the one-way ticket to Port-au-Prince. He stated that before he left the
townhouse, he contemplated suicide again, but could not bring himself to cut his
own throat. Instead, he planned to drive into the path of another vehicle.
However, he ultimately continued to the airport.
Damas stated to the special agent, “I know what I did was wrong. Bad
spirits made me do it.” Damas stated that his mother-in-law practices Vodou, and
that she “has been doing voodoo[10] on my ass ever since we been making
children.” According to Damas, because he and Guerline were engaging in
premarital sex, Damas was no longer allowed to be president of his church youth
group, and he left the church. As a result, he did not “have any protection from my
God no more. So anything can happen to me.”
The parties stipulated that the cause of Guerline’s and the children’s deaths
was sharp force injuries to the neck, and the deaths were ruled homicides. On
September 5, 2017, Damas pleaded guilty to six counts of first-degree
premeditated murder, waived his right to a penalty-phase jury, and waived his right
to present evidence in mitigation.
10. The terms “Vodou” and “voodoo” are used interchangeably in the
record.
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Sentencing Hearing
During the sentencing hearing, the trial court first allowed the State to
present evidence to establish the existence of one statutory aggravating factor
beyond a reasonable doubt. The State presented Dr. Manfred Borges, the Deputy
Chief Medical Examiner for the District 20 Medical Examiner’s Office.
Dr. Borges testified that Meshach Damas exhibited “classic defensive injuries” on
his hand and sharp force injuries to his shoulders which could have been defensive
injuries in the way of repelling an attack. Meshach suffered the injuries before he
became unconscious, and the fact that the bed he was laying on was broken was
indicative of a struggle. Dr. Borges testified that five-year-old Marven Damas
exhibited superficial defensive injuries on his hands. Dr. Borges also noted a long
cut down Marven’s face, from the cheek almost to the jaw. He would not describe
this as a defensive injury, but opined that it could have been “just an attempt to get
control of the victim . . . and get the bladed instrument into position.”
While Dr. Borges could not state with any degree of medical certainty how
long it took the victims to die from the sharp force injuries inflicted, it was not
instantaneous. Nonetheless, death would have been very rapid once the blade
reached the major blood vessels in the neck. Dr. Borges testified that for certain
victims, “initiation of the event” to actual death could have lasted minutes. He
gave as examples the extensive binding of Guerline with duct tape, during which it
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was assumed she was trying to defend herself, and the struggling by Meshach, who
sustained “injuries all around the neck.”
The State also presented Collier County crime scene investigator Jessica
Gerster, who recovered a filet knife from a nightstand in the master bedroom of the
townhouse where the murders occurred. Over 180 exhibits were entered into
evidence, including a Pre-Sentence Investigation (PSI) evaluation, crime scene and
autopsy photographs, and Damas’s three statements.
The trial court concluded that, with respect to Guerline, the aggravating
factors that the murder was especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel (HAC) and the
murder was committed in a cold, calculated, and premeditated manner without any
pretense of moral or legal justification (CCP) had been established beyond a
reasonable doubt. With respect to the children, the court found the aggravating
factors that the victims were under the age of twelve (under the age of twelve), and
the victims were particularly vulnerable because Damas stood in a position of
familial or custodial authority over them (familial/custodial authority) had been
established beyond a reasonable doubt. Based upon these “prerequisite findings,”
the court determined that victim impact testimony could be presented.
Guerline’s brother, Mackindy Dieu, read a victim impact statement. Dieu
stated he did not want his “sister’s legacy to be a domestic violence statistic.”
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Rather, he wished for people to know “who she was to me and my family and what
she could have been to this community.” Dieu stated:
Family was most important to Guerline. When others had
nothing, she would always give of herself to ensure everyone was
taken care of and happy. No matter what struggles she went through
in her own life, her thoughts were always of others first.
She had a laugh and a smile that was infectious. Her presence
could fill a room with love and kindness. When you’re with Guerline,
you knew you were important and loved.
Dieu described how Meshach wanted to play football, how Marven was a budding
speller, how Maven was a promising artist, and how Megan and Morgan “were so
young that their opportunities were limitless.” However, “[w]hat should have been
a legacy of our family has been destroyed. An entire generation is gone. What
could have been is gone.”
The court next afforded the defense the opportunity to present evidence that
the aggravating factors presented by the State do not outweigh the mitigating
circumstances. The defense presented Dr. Elizabeth McAlister, who received a
Ph.D. from Yale University in American Studies, with a specialization in
Caribbean religion, and Haiti in particular. Dr. McAlister testified that Haiti is the
poorest country in the western hemisphere. Damas spent his early years in a small
Haitian village, and he grew up during the last decade of the violent regime of
Jean-Claude “Baby Doc” Duvalier. During the regime, a secret police force
encouraged paranoia in the population. Individuals were routinely assassinated in
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the streets, people who dissented from the government disappeared, and a climate
of fear permeated the country. Damas informed Dr. McAlister that both of his
parents were members of this secret police force, which is unusual.
Damas explained that his father left the family to move to the United States
when Damas was five years old. As a result, Damas’s mother relocated the family
to Port-au-Prince to live with members of both the mother’s and the father’s
families. Damas informed Dr. McAlister that he was beaten regularly as a child by
the father’s brothers, and Dr. McAlister testified “corporal punishment is routinely
used to create children who listen to their parents and who are respectful.” When
Damas was ten years old, his mother moved to the United States, leaving him with
his grandmother and his uncles. 11 Family members would move in and out,
creating an “unstable family situation.”
According to Dr. McAlister, the blending of the families in Port-au-Prince
created religious tensions. Members of the mother’s family are largely
practitioners of Vodou. Members of the father’s family had converted to
evangelical Christianity. Dr. McAlister explained that in Vodou, all living things
and inanimate objects contain a spirit or spiritual force, there are a series of spirits
who are available for protection and guidance, and family members inherit these
11. Damas moved to the United States when he was nineteen years old.
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spirits. The spirits are interested in justice, so when a conflict is present, spiritual
force can be engaged to achieve justice. Further, individuals can use spiritual force
to protect themselves and sometimes for aggressive purposes. Haitian evangelical
Christians believe the Vodou spirits are real; however, instead of being inherited
family spirits that can help, Haitian evangelical Christians believe the spirits are
demonic. Damas’s mother converted from Vodou to evangelical Christianity, and
she was “very attuned to aggressive spiritual attack. . . . So the whole family on
both his mother[’s] and father[’s sides] begin to see life through an evangelical
lense [sic] where the devil is always trying to attack the family.”
Dr. McAlister testified there is an understanding in Vodou that an individual
can “throw a force” onto others to attack them, and this force pushes those who are
attacked to do things they otherwise would not have done. There is also the
concept of sending the spirit of a recently deceased person to persecute and attack
a person so that the person attacked self-destructs or wastes away and dies. Damas
told Dr. McAlister he had been cursed by his mother-in-law and a co-worker with
whom he had a dispute, who came from a Haitian village known for its “aggressive
magic in the invisible world.” 12 Dr. McAlister reiterated Damas’s belief that
12. Further, Damas had girlfriends outside of the marriage to Guerline and
some of these girlfriends were married. Therefore, Dr. McAlister conveyed
Damas’s belief that “it would be very likely if the boyfriends or husbands of the
outside women had also engaged in magic . . . against him.”
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because he left the church, he no longer had Jesus to protect him from the demonic
attacks. She concluded that Damas’s “fear of sorcery and malevolent magic played
a huge role in his behavior” because “he feared that people were sending evil spirts
to attack him.” However, she also acknowledged that Damas informed law
enforcement he killed the children because he could not accept Guerline’s mother
receiving custody of them.
The other witness presented by the defense was Dr. Mark Rubino, a
neurologist. Dr. Rubino reviewed Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) and
Positron Emission Tomography (PET) scans performed on Damas in 2014. He
testified the MRI revealed several abnormalities. Dr. Rubino noted portions of
Damas’s brain were atrophied and the ventricles of Damas’s brain were larger than
they should be, with the right ventricle being larger than the left. According to Dr.
Rubino, the PET scan revealed decreased activity with respect to how sections of
Damas’s brain were using available energy in the form of glucose. Dr. Rubino
testified, “Not only is the structure telling you that something is not right, you have
function telling you something is not right.”
Dr. Rubino reviewed the emergency medical services (EMS) report for a
2009 car accident that occurred prior to the murders in which Damas drove off the
road. He noted Damas was unconscious when discovered, so it was not clear if the
accident caused a loss of consciousness or if a loss of consciousness caused the
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accident. Although Dr. Rubino noted the accident could have contributed to
Damas’s brain abnormalities, he opined there were too many abnormalities to be
caused by the accident. Dr. Rubino ultimately concluded that Damas’s MRI was
most compatible with schizophrenia, which involves “a total misread of reality.”
He further explained that the abnormalities in Damas’s brain could have impacted
his behavior in the form of impaired judgment, diminished impulse control, lack of
planning, impaired decision making, and a diminished ability to understand what is
right and wrong.
On cross-examination, Dr. Rubino acknowledged that during his earlier
deposition, he did not mention schizophrenia as a potential issue. He also
conceded that he is not a neuropsychiatrist, a neuropsychologist, or a behavioral
neurologist. When the State noted the hospital records from the car accident
contained no indication that Damas suffered a concussion and that he was
discharged after only two-and-one-half hours, Dr. Rubino responded, “The
evidence [of a concussion] is within the records,” in that Damas suffered
“[h]eadache, spots in his vision, agitation, [and] disorientation.” Finally, the State
returned to Dr. Rubino’s testimony that Damas’s “right brain has less in it than his
left [brain] because the ventricle is large.” Dr. Rubino confirmed the right side of
the brain controls insight, social skills, impulse control, and planning. The
following dialogue then occurred:
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STATE: Dr. Rubino, you indicated that the Defendant showed
an example of lack of planning both based upon the date that the
crime occurred and the date that he fled the United States. Do you
recall that in your deposition?
DR. RUBINO: Yes. I said it [sic] about a week or ten days[,]
along those lines.[13]
STATE: Okay.
DR. RUBINO: Several days.
STATE: Murdering his wife and five children and then leaving
the United States ten days later, is that indicative of lack of planning
on Mr. Damas’[s] part?
DR. RUBINO: Certainly for a first-degree murder where you
plan it, you also plan your get-away if you’re a good planner.
(Emphasis added.)
During the Koon portion of the hearing, defense counsel stated they had
discussed with Damas evidence of possible mitigating circumstances they would
have presented had Damas not waived the presentation of mitigation, and
described that evidence. After the presentation, Damas handed a note to counsel
which stated he would not speak for three days. When the court asked Damas if
defense counsel had reviewed the additional mitigation with him and whether he
desired to have it presented, Damas refused to answer. The next day, Damas still
refused to verbally respond. However, Damas eventually wrote on a sheet of
paper, in pertinent part, “[G]o ahead. Continue your work. May my blood be
13. As previously discussed, Damas was in Haiti within twelve hours of the
murders.
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upon your shoulder. C.O.G.” (Emphasis added.)14 The court determined that
based upon the totality of the circumstances, the requirements of Koon had been
met, and the sentencing process would proceed. When offered the opportunity to
make a statement to the court, Damas remained silent. He also declined to review
the PSI evaluation that had been prepared.
Sentencing Order
On October 27, 2017, the trial court imposed six sentences of death for the
murders of Guerline, Meshach, Maven, Marven, Megan, and Morgan. With
respect to the six victims, the trial court found the prior violent felony and CCP
aggravators, and afforded both great weight. The trial court found the HAC
aggravating factor with respect to Guerline, Meshach, and Marven, and gave great
weight to the aggravator. In addition to other facts, the court noted that Damas
bound Guerline with nearly fifty-five yards of duct tape to keep her from fighting
back and stated, “That act required time.” With respect to the five children, the
trial court found the under the age of twelve and familial/custodial authority
aggravating factors, and afforded both great weight.
With respect to the mitigating circumstances asserted by the defense, the
trial court issued the following findings: (1) the murders were committed while
14. Damas has previously referred to himself as “Child of God.”
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under the influence of an extreme mental or emotional disturbance (not supported
by the greater weight of the evidence); (2) capacity to appreciate the criminality of
conduct or to conform conduct to the requirements of the law was substantially
impaired (not supported by the greater weight of the evidence); (3) history of
mental illness (some weight, but noting “[t]here is nothing in the record to support
a finding that Defendant had ‘a long and well-documented’ history of mental
illness before the murders”); (4) never received treatment for his mental illness
(some weight, but finding “it is more likely than not that Defendant behaved
purposefully during . . . evaluations . . . so as to be found incompetent”);
(5) provided information leading to resolution of the case (some weight);
(6) positive qualities, including being a hard worker, taking responsibility, and
expressing some remorse (some weight); (7) amenable to rehabilitation and a
productive life in prison (little weight); (8) childhood and background of poverty,
domestic abuse, and parental abandonment (moderate weight); (9) prior
involvement in the Haitian Baptist Church; worked diligently to become a United
States citizen; showed improved understanding of parenting techniques and
successfully completed a parenting class at the David Lawrence Center; previously
noted by DCF to be a good and interactive father; positive role model to other
inmates; easily managed in prison; and loves parents, who love him (collectively
given some weight); (10) mutually combative relationship with Guerline (not
- 23 -
mitigating); (11) impact of execution on Damas’s parents (some weight); and
(12) DCF and the David Lawrence Center failed Damas by not recognizing mental
health issues and providing services to him (little weight, and citing previous
findings with respect to Damas’s “alleged mental illnesses”).
This appeal follows.
ANALYSIS
Self-Representation
Damas first asserts that the trial court erred when it declined his request for
self-representation. A criminal defendant has the right to self-representation,
Faretta, 422 U.S. at 819, and a trial court “shall not deny a defendant’s
unequivocal request to represent himself or herself, if the court makes a
determination of record that the defendant has made a knowing and intelligent
waiver of the right to counsel.” Weaver v. State, 894 So. 2d 178, 192 (Fla. 2004)
(quoting Fla. R. Crim. P. 3.111(d)(3)). “[T]he competence that is required of a
defendant seeking to waive his right to counsel is the competence to waive the
right, not the competence to represent himself.” Godinez v. Moran, 509 U.S. 389,
399 (1993). The standard of review with respect to a ruling on a request for self-
representation is abuse of discretion. Holland v. State, 773 So. 2d 1065, 1069 (Fla.
2000).
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Having reviewed the Faretta inquiry that was conducted, we conclude the
trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying Damas’s request for self-
representation. During the inquiry, Damas was uncooperative, refusing to
acknowledge that he even had a lawyer, let alone confirm to the court that he
understood the ways in which counsel could assist him. Damas interrupted and
argued with the court. Instead of answering questions with “yes” or “no”
responses, Damas insisted he just wanted to plead guilty. As a result, Damas
thwarted the trial court’s efforts to conduct the Faretta inquiry to determine
whether he could knowingly and intelligently waive his right to counsel.
Accordingly, this claim is without merit. 15
Doubling of Aggravators
Damas next asserts that the trial court’s finding of both the under the age of
twelve and the familial/custodial authority aggravating factors constitutes improper
15. That being said, we note that it was not appropriate for the trial court to
reference Damas’s “fail[ure] to demonstrate sufficient understanding of the legal
process” as a basis for denying Damas’s request to represent himself. See State v.
Bowen, 698 So. 2d 248, 251 (Fla. 1997) (“[O]nce a court determines that a
competent defendant of his or her own free will has ‘knowingly and intelligently’
waived the right to counsel, the dictates of Faretta are satisfied, the inquiry is over,
and the defendant may proceed unrepresented. The court may not inquire further
into whether the defendant ‘could provide himself with a substantively qualitative
defense,’ for it is within the defendant’s rights, if he or she so chooses, to sit mute
and mount no defense at all.” (citations omitted) (footnote omitted) (quoting
Bowen v. State, 677 So. 2d 863, 864 (Fla. 2d DCA 1996)).
- 25 -
doubling. This claim was not raised by Damas below and, therefore, it is
unpreserved and procedurally barred on appeal. Perez v. State, 919 So. 2d 347,
359 (Fla. 2005) (noting that for an issue to be preserved for appeal, the specific
legal argument must be presented to the lower court).
However, even on the merits, we conclude Damas’s claim is without merit.
This Court has explained:
Improper doubling occurs when both aggravators rely on the
same essential feature or aspect of the crime. Provence v. State, 337
So. 2d 783, 786 (Fla. 1976). However, there is no reason why the
facts in a given case may not support multiple aggravating factors so
long as they are separate and distinct aggravators and not merely
restatements of each other, as in murder committed during a burglary
or robbery and murder for pecuniary gain, or murder committed to
avoid arrest and murder committed to hinder law enforcement.
Banks v. State, 700 So. 2d 363, 367 (Fla. 1997). For example, in Smith v. State, 28
So. 3d 838 (Fla. 2009), we held improper doubling did not occur when the trial
court found as aggravating factors both that the victim was under the age of twelve
and that the murder was committed during the course of a sexual battery upon a
child under the age of twelve:
[T]hese two aggravators are separate and distinct because one is based
exclusively upon the age of the victim and the other is based upon the
commission of a totally separate, different, and additional felony at
the time of the murder (i.e., sexual battery), regardless of whether it is
a child who is the victim of that contemporaneous felony. Indeed, to
conclude that the “in the course of a sexual battery” aggravator cannot
also be found and applied with the “under the age of twelve”
aggravator would produce illogical results. The “committed in the
course of a felony” aggravator lists numerous felonies to which it
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applies, including robbery, burglary, or arson. Under Smith’s
interpretation, if a child dies while the defendant commits arson or a
robbery, two aggravators may be found and applied by the trial court,
simply because the contemporaneous felony does not provide a
specific reference to the age of a child. Conversely, a defendant who
sexually batters and murders a child will only be subject to one
statutory aggravator. Neither a jury nor a sentencing court should be
precluded from considering as an aggravating circumstance that the
murder occurred during the commission of a second violent felony
simply because the defendant murdered a child and the additional
felony includes an age component. Section 921.141(5)(d), Florida
Statutes (2004), lists sexual battery—not sexual battery upon a child
under the age of twelve—as a qualifying crime for application of this
aggravating circumstance, and these two aggravators are not “merely
restatements of each other” and do not rely upon the “same essential
feature or aspect of the crime.” Banks, 700 So. 2d at 367.
Id. at 864.
The under the age of twelve aggravating factor focuses, by its own terms, on
the age of the victim. Conversely, the familial/custodial authority aggravating
factor focuses upon the relationship between the victim and the defendant. Just as
a child under the age of twelve can be murdered by a complete stranger, someone
who is over the age of twelve can be murdered by an individual who stands in a
position of familial or custodial authority over the victim. Accordingly, these
aggravators are not simply restatements of each other.
This interpretation is consistent with our precedent. For example, in
Covington v. State, 228 So. 3d 49, 52, 60 (Fla. 2017), we affirmed three death
sentences where two children and their mother were murdered, and the trial court
separately found and weighed both the under the age of twelve and the familial/
- 27 -
custodial authority aggravators with respect to the children. In that case, the
defendant moved in with his girlfriend—the mother of the children—and “stepped
into the role of having familial or custodial authority over the children by virtue of
the fact that he cared for the children while their mother worked, cooked for them,
cleaned them, disciplined them, encouraged them to eat right, taught [the boy]
about dangerous people in the world, helped potty-train [the girl], and had a
‘parent-like’ relationship with them.” Id. at 62. In concluding that competent
substantial evidence supported the finding of the familial/custodial authority
aggravator, we explained the defendant’s “role as a live-in parental figure to [the
children] heightened their vulnerability to his violent character” and further noted:
[The defendant’s] role as an authority figure over the children
explains why [the girl] allowed [the defendant] to approach her on the
morning of her murder even though she knew he was angry with her.
And [the defendant] was able to approach [the sleeping boy] in his
bed and stab him by virtue of his role as a parental figure in the home.
Id. at 62-63. These statements demonstrate this aggravator focuses upon the
unique elements of trust and abuse of that trust when the defendant has some sort
of power over the victim by virtue of being a relative of, or someone who has
assumed a custodial role with respect to, the victim. Such a relationship is not tied
to whether the victim is under the age of twelve. See also Wall v. State, 238 So. 3d
127, 139 (Fla. 2018) (trial court separately found under the age of twelve and
familial/custodial authority aggravating factors, but merged the under the age of
- 28 -
twelve aggravator with the aggravating factor that the murder occurred during the
course of aggravated child abuse).
Based upon the foregoing, the finding and weighing of both the under the
age of twelve and the familial/custodial authority aggravating factors by the trial
court did not constitute improper doubling. Accordingly, we reject this claim.
Constitutionality of the Death Penalty
In his final challenge, Damas contends that the death penalty violates the
Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution because it is inherently cruel
and unusual. As with the prior issue, this challenge is procedurally barred because
it was not raised before the trial court. Further, in 1976, a majority of the United
States Supreme Court concluded the death penalty does not facially violate the
Eighth Amendment. Gregg v. Georgia, 428 U.S. 153, 169 (1976) (“We now hold
that the punishment of death does not invariably violate the Constitution.” (joint
opinion of Stewart, Powell, and Stevens, JJ.)); see also id. at 226 (“[N]either can I
agree with the petitioner’s other basic argument that the death penalty, however
imposed and for whatever crime, is cruel and unusual punishment.” (White, J.,
concurring in the judgment, and joined by Burger, C.J., and Rehnquist, J.)). The
Supreme Court relied on the joint opinion in Gregg for the proposition that:
Considerations of federalism, as well as respect for the ability of a
legislature to evaluate, in terms of its particular State, the moral
consensus concerning the death penalty and its social utility as a
sanction, require us to conclude, in the absence of more convincing
- 29 -
evidence, that the infliction of death as a punishment for murder is not
without justification and thus is not unconstitutionally severe.
McCleskey v. Kemp, 481 U.S. 279, 302 (1987) (quoting Gregg, 428 U.S. at 186-
87). Thus, absent a statutory change in Florida law, which authorizes capital
punishment, see § 775.082(1)(a), Fla. Stat. (2018), or a holding to the contrary by
the United States Supreme Court, Damas’s broad challenge to the constitutionality
of the death penalty fails.
Guilty Pleas
Although Damas has not challenged his guilty pleas, where a capital
defendant enters a plea to a charge of first-degree murder, and a sentence of death
is imposed,
This Court reviews “the record of a death penalty case to
determine whether the evidence is sufficient to support the murder
conviction.” Winkles v. State, 894 So. 2d 842, 847 (Fla. 2005); see
also Davis v. State, 859 So. 2d 465, 480 (Fla. 2003). However, where
the death penalty is imposed after a defendant has [pleaded] guilty to a
first-degree murder charge, “this Court’s [mandatory] review shifts to
the knowing, intelligent, and voluntary nature of that plea.” Barnes v.
State, 29 So. 3d 1010, 1020 (Fla. 2010), cert. denied, —U.S.—, 131
S. Ct. 234, 178 L. Ed. 2d 155 (2010) (quoting Tanzi v. State, 964 So.
2d 106, 121 (Fla. 2007)). This Court “scrutinize[s] the plea to ensure
that the defendant was made aware of the consequences of his plea,
was apprised of the constitutional rights he was waiving, and
[pleaded] guilty voluntarily.” Winkles, 894 So. 2d at 847 (quoting
Ocha v. State, 826 So. 2d 956, 965 (Fla. 2002)).
Altersberger v. State, 103 So. 3d 122, 128 (Fla. 2012) (second and third alterations
in original); see also Fla. R. App. P. 9.142(a)(5) (noting that the Court shall review
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the sufficiency of the evidence underlying the conviction, regardless of whether it
is raised on appeal).16
Here, the trial court required Damas to execute an affidavit in support of the
guilty pleas (and a waiver of a penalty-phase jury). The trial court further
conducted an extensive colloquy, asking Damas questions such as (1) whether he
knew his date of birth and age; (2) whether he could read, write, and understand
the English language; (3) whether he had ever been treated for a disability that
would interfere with his ability to read, write, or understand the trial court;
(4) whether he agreed with mental health evaluations that concluded he does not
suffer from any mental illness which would impair his capacity to participate in the
proceedings; (5) whether he agreed that his decision to plead guilty, waive jury
proceedings, waive penalty-phase mitigation, and accept death sentences was
freely, intelligently, and voluntarily made, and was not the product of an
underlying mental disorder; and (6) whether he was currently prescribed
medication for an underlying mental illness, or was under the influence of anything
that would interfere with his ability to participate in the proceedings.
The trial court then asked Damas how he wished to plead to each of the six
counts of murder and he responded “guilty.” Damas confirmed he understood that
16. We have reviewed the record and conclude that sufficient evidence
exists to support the six convictions of first-degree premeditated murder.
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by entering a guilty plea, he was giving up the right to a jury trial; the right to hear
the testimony of State witnesses and the right to cross-examine those witnesses; the
right to subpoena and present his own witnesses; the right to remain silent; and the
presumption of innocence. Damas verified that he understood the maximum
sentence for each count was death, while the minimum sentence was life
imprisonment without the possibility of parole. Damas confirmed that he had read
the plea form, discussed it with his counsel, and agreed with the terms and
conditions of the pleas. He confirmed he understood that by pleading guilty, he
was waiving his right to assert any possible defenses, and he was abandoning any
pending or potential motions that could be filed by the defense on his behalf.
Damas stated he was not threatened, coerced, or promised anything in exchange
for the guilty pleas and that, after careful consideration, he wished to plead guilty
because he believed it was in his best interest. Damas averred that he was pleading
guilty because he is guilty.
Based upon the foregoing, we conclude that Damas “was made aware of the
consequences of his plea, was apprised of the constitutional rights he was waiving,
and [pleaded] guilty voluntarily.” Altersberger, 103 So. 3d at 128 (quoting
Winkles, 894 So. 2d at 847). We hold the extensive colloquy conducted by the trial
court and Damas’s responses to the questions asked demonstrate that his guilty
pleas were knowing, intelligent, and voluntary. Id.
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Proportionality
As with the guilty pleas, although Damas does not challenge the
proportionality of his six death sentences, we nonetheless review those sentences
to confirm they are proportionate to other cases in which a sentence of death was
imposed. We have explained:
“In reviewing a death sentence for proportionality, we ensure that the
death penalty is ‘reserved only for those cases where the most
aggravating and least mitigating circumstances exist.’ ” McGirth v.
State, 48 So. 3d 777, 796 (Fla. 2010) (quoting Terry v. State, 668 So.
2d 954, 965 (Fla. 1996)), cert. denied, —U.S.—, 131 S. Ct. 2100, 179
L. Ed. 2d 898 (2010). This Court’s “review on proportionality is not a
comparison between the number of aggravators and mitigators.”
McGirth, 48 So. 3d at 796; see Barnes v. State, 29 So. 3d 1010, 1028
(Fla.), cert. denied, —U.S.—, 131 S. Ct. 234, 178 L. Ed. 2d 155
(2010). Proportionality review requires this Court to engage in a
qualitative review of the “totality of the circumstances and compare
the present case with other capital cases in which this Court has found
that death was a proportionate punishment.” Wright v. State, 19 So.
3d 277, 303 (Fla. 2009) (citing Urbin v. State, 714 So. 2d 411, 416
(Fla. 1998)).
Russ v. State, 73 So. 3d 178, 198-99 (Fla. 2011). Here, the trial court found a total
of five aggravating factors with respect to the six victims: three with respect to
Guerline (HAC, CCP, and prior violent felony); five with respect to Meshach and
Marven (HAC, CCP, prior violent felony, under the age of twelve, and
familial/custodial authority); and four with respect to Maven, Megan, and Morgan
(CCP, prior violent felony, under the age of twelve, and familial/custodial
authority). Each aggravating circumstance was given great weight. In contrast to
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these findings, of the mitigation found by the trial court to be established by the
greater weight of the evidence, only one group—relating to Damas’s “childhood
and background of poverty, domestic abuse, and abandonment by his parents”—
received moderate weight. The other factors were given only some or little weight.
Moreover, qualitatively, HAC, CCP, and prior violent felony are three of the
weightiest aggravating circumstances. Zommer v. State, 31 So. 3d 733, 751 (Fla.
2010).
A review of this Court’s precedent reflects that Damas’s death sentences are
proportionate to other capital cases where the defendant murdered multiple
individuals, including the defendant’s own children or children with whom the
defendant had a custodial relationship. In Wall, 238 So. 3d at 130, we affirmed
two sentences of death where the defendant murdered his fiancée and their five-
week-old son. The trial court found four aggravators with respect to each victim,
including HAC and CCP for the fiancée, and under the age of twelve and
familial/custodial authority with respect to the child. Id. at 139.17 The trial court
found with respect to the murder of the fiancée the mitigating circumstance that the
defendant was under an extreme mental or emotional disturbance and afforded it
17. As previously noted, the under the age of twelve aggravator was merged
with the aggravating factor that the murder occurred while the defendant was
engaged in the commission of aggravated child abuse. 238 So. 3d at 139.
- 34 -
moderate weight. Id. In mitigation as to both murders, the trial court found factors
such as the defendant (1) was abused by his mother and attempted to shield his
siblings from her abuse (slight weight); (2) suffered from mental illness and
received inconsistent mental health treatment from early childhood (some weight);
(3) suffered from significant childhood trauma and abuse (some weight);
(4) experienced prolonged institutionalization from a young age (slight weight);
and (5) had a family pattern of mental illness (very slight weight). Id. at 139-40.
In Covington, 228 So. 3d at 52, we affirmed three sentences of death where
the defendant killed his girlfriend and her two children. With respect to the
girlfriend, the trial court found in aggravation HAC, prior violent felony, and that
the murder was committed while the defendant was on probation. Id. at 60. With
respect to one child, the court found prior violent felony, under the age of twelve,
familial/custodial authority, and the murder was committed while the defendant
was on probation. Id. With respect to the second child, the court found the same
aggravating factors as the first child, but also found HAC. Id. In mitigation, the
trial court found the statutory mitigating circumstances of extreme emotional
disturbance and no significant prior criminal history, and afforded both moderate
weight. Id. Moreover, the trial court found multiple nonstatutory mitigating
circumstances, affording one great weight—the defendant suffered from bipolar
disorder, intermittent explosive disorder, and cocaine and alcohol abuse disorder—
- 35 -
and several others moderate weight, such as that his capacity to conform his
conduct to the requirements of the law was diminished due to his mental illness
and his voluntary use of cocaine and alcohol; he did not resist law enforcement and
cooperated with the detectives during the investigation of the murders; and he
pleaded guilty and acknowledged responsibility, thereby sparing the family of the
victims the trauma of a trial. Id. at 60-61.
In Zakrzewski v. State, 717 So. 2d 488, 490-91 (Fla. 1998), the Court
affirmed three death sentences where the defendant killed his wife and two
children. The trial court found prior violent felony, HAC, and CCP as to all three
murders. Id. at 491. The trial court gave significant weight to the statutory
mitigators that the defendant was under an extreme emotional disturbance at the
time of the murders and had no significant prior criminal history. Id. Moreover, in
addition to other mitigating circumstances that were given lesser weight, the trial
court gave substantial weight to the mitigating circumstances that the defendant
showed severe grief and remorse, and he was a loving father until the offenses. Id.
at 491 nn.1-2. The court also gave significant weight to the mitigating
circumstances that the defendant was an exceptionally hard worker, was on the
dean’s list during his third year of college, and served in an exemplary manner in
the United States Air Force. Id. nn.1-2.
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The present case surpasses the aforementioned cases in total number of
murders and in number of child victims. Moreover, no mitigating factor in this
case found to be established was given great weight, substantial weight, or
significant weight. The trial court only gave one factor moderate weight. Each of
the murders in this case is among the most aggravated and least mitigated. For
example, we note the prolonged physical and emotional torment experienced by
Guerline, who begged for Damas not to hurt the children as he bound her
extensively with duct tape. We also note how Damas carefully considered the
implications of allowing Meshach, Maven, Marven, Megan, and Morgan to live
before he decided to systematically murder them. Based upon the totality of the
circumstances, we hold that each of the death sentences is proportionate.
CONCLUSION
In light of the foregoing, we affirm Damas’s convictions and his six
sentences of death.
It is so ordered.
CANADY, C.J., and PARIENTE, LEWIS, QUINCE, POLSTON, LABARGA,
and LAWSON, JJ., concur.
NO MOTION FOR REHEARING WILL BE ALLOWED.
An Appeal from the Circuit Court in and for Collier County,
Christine Greider, Judge - Case No. 112009CF002298AXXXXX
Valarie Linnen, Atlantic Beach, Florida,
- 37 -
for Appellant
Pamela Jo Bondi, Attorney General, Tallahassee, Florida, and Lisa Martin,
Assistant Attorney General, Tampa, Florida,
for Appellee
- 38 -