Hall v. State, 84-1742

Decision Date03 July 1985
Docket NumberNo. 84-1742,84-1742
Citation10 Fla. L. Weekly 1651,477 So.2d 572
Parties10 Fla. L. Weekly 1651 Kerry Dean HALL, Appellant, v. STATE of Florida, Appellee.
CourtFlorida District Court of Appeals

Richard L. Jorandby, Public Defender, and Tatjana Ostapoff, Asst. Public Defender, West Palm Beach, for appellant.

Jim Smith, Atty. Gen., Tallahassee, and Georgiana Jimenez-Orosa, Asst. Atty. Gen., West Palm Beach, for appellee.

GLICKSTEIN, Judge.

Defendant/appellant was indicted on two counts: first degree murder and robbery with a deadly weapon. Upon trial the jury found him guilty on both counts. The trial court likewise adjudicated him and, following the jury's recommendation, sentenced him on the murder count to a life term with a twenty-five year mandatory minimum, and a concurrent life term on the robbery with a deadly weapon count. Hall's motion for a new trial was unsuccessful. We reverse his convictions and sentences but certify a question of great public importance which arises out of the relevant issues.

The facts show that appellant and his friend, Jason Deaton were male prostitutes. They lived at a Fort Lauderdale motel along with three runaway fourteen and fifteen-year-old girls, whom they had met at the beach.

Santi Campanella, a Rhode Island businessman, arrived in Fort Lauderdale on business on May 26, 1983. He stayed on the company yacht and at the Pier 66 Hotel and drove a leased 1982 Chrysler New Yorker bearing Florida registration tag DMC 175. Hall met Campanella on May 27. On or about the same day, Hall and Deaton discussed leaving Fort Lauderdale, for which they needed a car and money. The girls wanted to leave Fort Lauderdale because the police were harassing them. Hall said he knew a rich guy who had a car. A plan was made for Hall and Deaton to meet Campanella and kill him in order to take his car and his money. Hall would arrange to meet Campanella and ask him to take Deaton along and drop him at Sears Town for a trick. Deaton would use an electrical lamp cord to strangle him. This was discussed in the presence of two of the girls. The next day the plan was rediscussed in the presence of all three girls. Deaton would ride behind Campanella and would strangle him to death with the lamp cord after they arrived at Sears Town. Two of the girls saw Hall, Deaton and Campanella drive away from their motel. Deaton was in the back seat behind Campanella, who was driving.

Campanella's business associates last saw him the afternoon of May 28, 1983. Two days later he was reported to the police as missing.

Later in the evening of May 28, 1983, Hall and Deaton returned to the motel in Campanella's car. The girls testified there was blood in various places inside the car and on Hall and Deaton. The defendant/appellant Hall and Deaton wiped up the blood and the five drove off in Campanella's car to Tennessee. Hall had family there and knew a place to dispose of Campanella's body, which was in the trunk.

During the drive Hall and Deaton described the killing to the three girls. Deaton said when the three men arrived at the Sears Town parking lot, Deaton, sitting behind Campanella, put the electrical cord around Campanella's neck and pulled it tight, and made Campanella move to the front passenger's seat, while Hall went around to the driver's seat. Hall held the cord while Deaton moved to the other side of the car. Campanella begged for his life. Campanella moaned and groaned as Deaton tightened the cord. Hall and Deaton beat on his chest, face and throat and blood started gushing from Campanella's mouth. Deaton and Hall laughed and joked as Deaton told the story. After Campanella died, the pair threw his body into the trunk. Hall told the girls they took $80, an American Express card and a watch from Campanella. Deaton was wearing the watch. Hall had the money and the credit card. He used the credit card during the trip.

When the group arrived in the Knoxville area they stopped at Hall's grandmother's house, then drove on to two shallow wells Hall knew about. The body with the electrical cord around its neck was dumped in the second well. They then drove to a river or lake where the two men washed blood from their arms and wiped out blood from the trunk with a pair of Deaton's shorts. Criminal investigator Sirmans testified he found a floor mat, a Chrysler lug wrench and a pair of bloody swimming trunks there. The blood type matched that of Campanella.

The three runaway girls all testified as to the repeated use by Hall of the victim's American Express card to purchase items for himself and all of the grisly group after dumping Campanella's body in the well. One of the girls even testified that Hall practiced the victim's signature while in the vehicle.

On May 30, 1983, the group attempted to buy clothes at a woman's clothing store at a Tennessee shopping mall. A salesperson described the five. Hall tried to use the American Express card. The clerk asked for identification, and Hall said he left his driver's license in the car and would go get it. The group left the credit card in the store's possession and drove on to Arkansas. The three girls were picked up for trespassing and loitering at an Arkansas truck stop and were sent home. Hall and Deaton drove off when the girls were arrested. All three girls positively identified Hall as the person who planned Campanella's killing with Deaton. They testified Hall knew Campanella and called him to meet them so that Deaton could kill him and they could steal his car and leave Florida. All said they did not get in touch with the authorities when they learned of the killing out of fear of Hall and Deaton, and because they didn't think they would be believed.

On June 8, 1983, Hall and Deaton went to an Oak Ridge shopping center and sold a camera at a camera store for $100. Police had received a report concerning a suspicious vehicle in the parking lot. Officer Duckett was dispatched there to investigate. He and other officers observed the maroon Chrysler New Yorker with the Florida registration tag DMC 175. Deaton was seen in the vehicle. When Hall returned to the car with the $100 and began to drive away the police stopped the car and ordered the occupants out of the car. The two identified themselves respectively as Jason Deaton and Jeffrey Lyn Spradlin. The latter subsequently was identified as Kerry Dean Hall. Camera store personnel later identified Hall as the person they had done business with from a photo array.

Hall and Deaton were given their Miranda rights as soon as they were out of the car, and were taken to the Oak Ridge police station. Duckett again gave Hall his Miranda rights before he and Officer Fount interviewed Hall at the police station. Hall indicated he understood his rights, and signed a rights form "Jeff Spradlin." Hall claimed he knew nothing about the source of the car or of Santi Campanella. He claimed Deaton picked him up in the car in Fort Lauderdale to drive him to a job in Texas.

Duckett called the Fort Lauderdale police department and informed Detective Rice the Oak Ridge police had the car rented by Campanella and had two suspects in custody. The missing car had been noticed to police around the country by computer network. Officer Duckett had grasped from his conversation that Spradlin knew the area well, and after learning from Detective Rice about the persons suspected of the crime contacted the Loudon County sheriff's department for a description of Kerry Dean Hall. Officer Jessen went over to the Oak Ridge jail and personally identified Spradlin as Kerry Dean Hall.

Fort Lauderdale officers Rice and Patterson flew to Knoxville and were taken to the Oak Ridge police station by Officer Duckett. With Duckett and Foust the two Fort Lauderdale officers briefly met with the suspects. Rice and Patterson introduced themselves, told the suspects...

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7 cases
  • Smith v. State
    • United States
    • Florida Supreme Court
    • 24 Diciembre 1986
    ...courts seem to disagree. These courts have increasingly chafed under the yoke Richardson has imposed upon them. See Hall v. State, 477 So.2d 572, 576 (Fla. 4th DCA 1985); R.R., 476 So.2d at 220; Lavigne, 349 So.2d at 180-81 (Boyer, C.J., concurring). In the words of the Third District Court......
  • State v. Hall
    • United States
    • Florida Supreme Court
    • 9 Julio 1987
    ...TO CONDUCT A RICHARDSON INQUIRY IS, IN THE OPINION OF THE REVIEWING COURT, HARMLESS ERROR BEYOND A REASONABLE DOUBT? Hall v. State, 477 So.2d 572, 576 (Fla. 4th DCA 1985). This Court has jurisdiction pursuant to article V, section 3(b)(4), Florida Constitution. We recently answered this que......
  • Brown v. State
    • United States
    • Florida District Court of Appeals
    • 12 Septiembre 1985
    ...subject to the harmless error rule, and is reversible as a matter of law, Cumbie v. State, 345 So.2d 1061 (Fla.1977); Hall v. State, 477 So.2d 572 (Fla. 4th DCA 1985), and any such examination should "explore reasonable alternatives to the drastic remedy of [witness] exclusion, in an effort......
  • R. v. State, 84-62
    • United States
    • Florida District Court of Appeals
    • 30 Julio 1985
    ...status not occupied by errors which concern the most serious of constitutional rights, 9 we join the fourth district, Hall v. State, 477 So.2d 572 (Fla. 4th DCA 1985) 10, in submitting the issue for reconsideration by the Supreme Court. 11 Accordingly, pursuant to Article V, Section 3 (b)(4......
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