Title: Jimenez v. State

State: florida

Issuer: Florida Supreme Court

Document:

Supreme Court of Florida 
 
 
____________ 
 
No. SC18-1247 
____________ 
 
JOSE ANTONIO JIMENEZ, 
Appellant, 
 
vs. 
 
STATE OF FLORIDA, 
Appellee. 
 
____________ 
 
No. SC18-1321 
____________ 
 
JOSE ANTONIO JIMENEZ, 
Appellant, 
 
vs. 
 
STATE OF FLORIDA, 
Appellee. 
 
October 4, 2018 
 
PER CURIAM. 
 
Jose Antonio Jimenez, a prisoner under sentence of death and an active 
death warrant, has filed two appeals in this Court since Governor Scott signed his 
death warrant on July 18, 2018.  Collectively, Jimenez appeals the postconviction 
 
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court’s orders summarily denying his fifth and sixth successive motions for 
postconviction relief filed under Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.851, the 
postconviction court’s order denying his motion to amend his sixth successive 
postconviction motion, and the postconviction court’s order denying his motion to 
correct illegal sentence filed under Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.800(a).  
We have jurisdiction.  See art. V, § 3(b)(1), Fla. Const.  For the reasons below, we 
affirm the denials of all four motions and lift the stay of execution entered on 
August 10, 2018. 
BACKGROUND 
On October 2, 1992, Jimenez beat and stabbed to death 63-year-old Phyllis 
Minas in her home in Dade County, Florida.  Jimenez v. State, 703 So. 2d 437, 438 
(Fla. 1997), cert. denied, 523 U.S. 1123 (1998).  Jimenez’s jury found him guilty 
of burglary with an assault and battery in an occupied dwelling and first-degree 
murder, and he was subsequently sentenced to death for the murder consistent with 
his penalty phase jury’s unanimous recommendation.  Id.  We previously described 
the facts of the incident as follows: 
During the attack [Minas’s] neighbors heard her cry, “Oh God!  Oh 
my God!” and tried to enter her apartment through the unlocked front 
door.  Jimenez slammed the door shut, locked the locks on the door, 
and fled the apartment by exiting onto the bedroom balcony, crossing 
over to a neighbor’s balcony and then dropping to the ground.  Rescue 
workers arrived several minutes after Jimenez inflicted the wounds, 
and Minas was still alive.  After changing his clothes and cleaning 
 
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himself up, Jimenez spoke to neighbors in the hallway and asked one 
of them if he could use her telephone to call a cab.   
Jimenez’s fingerprint matched the one lifted from the interior 
surface of the front door to Minas’s apartment, and the police arrested 
him three days later at his parents’ home in Miami Beach. 
 
Id.  We upheld Jimenez’s convictions and sentence of death on direct appeal, and 
they became final in 1998 when the United States Supreme Court denied certiorari.  
Id. at 442; Jimenez v. Florida, 523 U.S. 1123 (1998).   
Since then, Jimenez has engaged in extensive litigation in both state and 
federal court, none of which has resulted in relief from his convictions or sentence 
of death.  As relevant to the claims raised in these proceedings, in 2001, we upheld 
the denial of Jimenez’s initial postconviction motion.  Jimenez v. State, 810 So. 2d 
511, 513 (Fla. 2001).  Thereafter, we affirmed the denial of Jimenez’s first 
successive postconviction motion, which Jimenez filed in April 2005.  Jimenez v. 
State, 997 So. 2d 1056 (Fla. 2008).  Additionally, Jimenez sought relief in federal 
court pursuant to a petition for writ of habeas corpus, the district court denied 
relief, and the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals denied Jimenez’s request for a 
certificate of appealability.  Jimenez v. Fla. Dep’t of Corr., 481 F.3d 1337, 1340-
41 (11th Cir.), cert. denied, 552 U.S. 1029 (2007). 
 
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Governor Scott signed Jimenez’s death warrant on July 18, 2018.1  
Thereafter, Jimenez filed several requests for public records to numerous agencies, 
including a request for additional public records pursuant to Florida Rule of 
Criminal Procedure 3.852(h)(3) to the City of North Miami Police Department 
(NMPD), which was the agency that investigated the victim’s murder and, three 
days later, arrested Jimenez.  Collateral counsel had not “previously requested 
public records” from NMPD (or any other agency), which is a prerequisite for a 
request for additional records pursuant to rule 3.852(h)(3).  See Fla. R. Crim. P. 
3.852(h)(3); see also Hannon v. State, 228 So. 3d 505, 511 (Fla.), cert. denied, 138 
S. Ct. 441 (2017).  NMPD had, however, more than 18 years before Jimenez’s 
post-warrant records request, submitted records to the repository pursuant to the 
provisions of rule 3.852(h) that apply to cases like Jimenez’s, in which the mandate 
affirming the conviction and sentence of death was issued prior to rule 3.852’s 
effective date of October 1, 1998.  See Fla. R. Crim. P. 3.852(h)(1).  Although 
NMPD objected to and the postconviction court ultimately denied Jimenez’s public 
records request to NMPD, NMPD sent its entire, unredacted file to the repository 
as a courtesy before the postconviction court entered its denial order so that there 
could be a comparison between it and NMPD’s prior submission.  The repository 
                                          
 
1.  Jimenez’s execution was scheduled for 27 days later, on August 14, 2018, 
but this Court subsequently stayed his execution. 
 
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received NMPD’s submission on July 25, 2018, and on July 30, 2018, Jimenez 
obtained an order from the postconviction court allowing him to access those 
records, even though they had not been redacted, subject to a prohibition against 
releasing any confidential or exempt records without permission from the 
postconviction court.  The records repository began emailing Jimenez’s counsel the 
records that same day and also sent Jimenez’s counsel a CD containing the records 
(over 1,000 pages), which was received the next day, July 31, 2018.   
During the same time period that Jimenez was reviewing NMPD’s post-
warrant records submission, he was also litigating in the postconviction court his 
fifth successive postconviction motion and a motion to correct illegal sentence, 
both of which Jimenez filed after the Governor signed his death warrant.  After 
holding a Huff2 hearing, the postconviction court summarily denied Jimenez’s fifth 
successive postconviction motion and denied his motion to correct illegal sentence 
on July 31, 2018.  Jimenez appealed the denials to this Court on August 1, 2018.   
On the same day, August 1, 2018, during their review of NMPD’s post-
warrant records submission, Jimenez’s counsel and his investigator saw 
handwritten documents that they did not recognize.  The investigator then traveled 
to the repository to compare the 2018 submission against NMPD’s prior 
submission, and Jimenez’s counsel ultimately confirmed that 81 pages of 
                                          
 
2.  Huff v. State, 622 So. 2d 982 (Fla. 1993). 
 
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handwritten records had not previously been disclosed.  Jimenez’s counsel further 
confirmed that there was no indication in NMPD’s prior submission that records 
had been withheld or public records exemptions claimed.   
On August 6, 2018, without first seeking leave from this Court’s post-
warrant scheduling order—which required all proceedings in the postconviction 
court to be completed by July 31, 2018—Jimenez filed in the postconviction court 
his sixth successive postconviction motion raising one claim with several 
subclaims in which he argued that NMPD’s post-warrant records submission 
includes newly discovered evidence that demonstrates Brady,3 Giglio,4 due 
process, and discovery violations that singularly and cumulatively entitle him to 
relief from his convictions and death sentence or, at minimum, an evidentiary 
hearing.  After the postconviction court held a Huff hearing, Jimenez sought to 
amend his sixth successive postconviction motion to add a new subclaim as well as 
additional allegations regarding other of his subclaims.  On August 9, 2018, the 
postconviction court denied Jimenez’s motion to amend and summarily denied his 
sixth successive postconviction motion, stating in both denial orders that it would 
not entertain rehearing.   
                                          
 
3.  Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963). 
 
4.  Giglio v. United States, 405 U.S. 150 (1972). 
 
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On August 10, 2018, Jimenez appealed to this Court the summary denial of 
his sixth successive postconviction motion and the denial of his motion to amend.  
Thereafter, we stayed Jimenez’s execution and amended nunc pro tunc the July 31, 
2018, deadline for completing proceedings before the postconviction court to the 
date that they had actually been completed, August 10, 2018.  In so doing, we 
prohibited additional filings in the postconviction court by either party without 
prior leave of this Court.     
 
Presently pending before this Court are (1) Jimenez’s first post-warrant 
appeal, in which Jimenez challenges the summary denial of his fifth successive 
postconviction motion and the denial of his motion to correct illegal sentence; and 
(2) Jimenez’s second post-warrant appeal, in which Jimenez challenges the 
summary denial of his sixth successive postconviction motion and the denial of his 
motion to amend.  We address them in turn. 
ANALYSIS 
I.  First Post-Warrant Appeal 
A.  Fifth Successive Postconviction Motion 
In appealing the summary denial of his fifth successive postconviction 
motion, Jimenez raises four claims: (1) that he was denied access to public records 
necessary and relevant to framing and prosecuting his postconviction claims; (2) 
that he is entitled to an evidentiary hearing on his claim that Florida’s use of 
 
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etomidate as the first of three drugs in its lethal injection procedure places him at 
substantial risk of serious harm in violation of the Eighth Amendment and article I, 
section 17 of the Florida Constitution; (3) that Florida’s continued use of a three-
drug protocol instead of a one-drug protocol constitutes cruel and unusual 
punishment in light of evolving standards of decency; and (4) that executing him 
after he has spent more than 23 years on death row constitutes cruel and unusual 
punishment in light of evolving standards of decency.  None of these claims 
warrants relief. 
(1) Public Records 
 
Jimenez first challenges the postconviction court’s denial of his requests for 
certain public records pursuant to Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.852(h)(3) 
and (i),5 which he claims are necessary and relevant to framing and prosecuting his 
                                          
 
5.  “[R]ecords requests under Rule 3.852(h) are limited to persons and 
agencies who were the recipients of a public records request at the time the 
defendant began his or her postconviction odyssey; whereas, records requests 
under Rule 3.852(i) must show how the requested records relate to a colorable 
claim for postconviction relief and good cause as to why the public records request 
was not made until after the death warrant was signed.”  Hannon, 228 So. 3d at 
511 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted); see also Fla. R. Crim. P. 
3.852(i)(2)(C) (listing as one condition of the trial court’s ordering the production 
of additional public records that “the additional public records sought are either 
relevant to the subject matter of a proceeding under rule 3.851 or appear 
reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence”); Fla. R. 
Crim. P. 3.852(k)(1) (limiting the scope of production “under any part of this rule,” 
in pertinent part, to public records that are “either relevant to the subject matter of 
the proceeding under rule 3.851 or are reasonably calculated to lead to the 
discovery of admissible evidence”). 
 
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postconviction claims.  “We review rulings on public records requests pursuant to 
Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.852 for abuse of discretion,” Hannon, 228 
So. 3d at 511, and find none here.  
Jimenez first argues that the postconviction court erred by denying his rule 
3.852(h)(3) request to the Florida Department of Corrections (DOC) on the ground 
that “the records are overbroad, burdensome, and not related to a colorable claim.”6  
Jimenez relies on this Court’s decision in Muhammad v. State, 132 So. 3d 176, 201 
(Fla. 2013), for the proposition that it is an abuse of discretion to deny an inmate 
“his own inmate and medical records.”  However, unlike Muhammad’s counsel, 
who “had made previous requests for these records from the DOC, and [following 
the signing of Muhammad’s death warrant] sought an update of his inmate and 
medical files,” id., Jimenez’s collateral counsel had not previously requested public 
records from DOC as required by the plain language of rule 3.852(h)(3). 
                                          
 
 
6.  Jimenez’s request to DOC states, in pertinent part, that  
[t]he public records requested are for any files, records, reports, 
letters, memoranda, notes, drafts and/or electronic mail in the 
possession or control of [DOC] pertaining to Mr. Jimenez that were 
received or produced by [DOC] since Mr. Jimenez’s previous request; 
and or any documents that were, for any reason, not produced 
previously. 
 
 
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Collateral counsel does not deny the absence of a prior records request to 
DOC.  Rather, he argues that rule 3.852 relieved him of that obligation because it 
established the records repository.  However, this argument is contrary to the plain 
language of rule 3.852(h)(3), which limits the request for production of additional 
public records under that subdivision to “a person or agency from which collateral 
counsel has previously requested public records.”  Fla. R. Crim. P. 3.852(h)(3); see 
also Rolling v. State, 944 So. 2d 176, 181 (Fla. 2006) (“Because there is no 
evidence in the record that Rolling has ever requested records from the Medical 
Examiner’s Office or the Department of Corrections before his [post-warrant 
request], we find that the trial court was correct in denying his claim without an 
evidentiary hearing.”); Sims v. State, 753 So. 2d 66, 70 (Fla. 2000) (“The use [in 
rule 3.852(h)(3)] of the past tense and such words and phrases as ‘requested,’ 
‘previously,’ ‘received,’ ‘produced,’ ‘previous request,’ and ‘produced previously’ 
are not happenstance.”). 
Moreover, unlike the public records request at issue in Muhammad, 
Jimenez’s request to DOC did not specifically identify the records requested, or 
provide any context as to how those records were relevant to a potential, colorable 
claim.  Cf. Muhammad, 132 So. 3d at 201 (affirming the denial of “overly broad” 
requests under rule 3.852(h)(3) that “did not clearly demonstrate how the records 
were relevant to a colorable claim”).  The record nevertheless shows that DOC 
 
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produced, as a courtesy, Jimenez’s medical and psychological records, which had 
previously been produced to different counsel in 2015 in connection with 
Jimenez’s clemency proceedings.  While Jimenez argues that his inmate file might 
reveal a basis to challenge his competency to be executed, even though Jimenez 
acknowledged receipt of his medical and psychological records in the fifth 
successive postconviction motion at issue, he did not allege that claim.  Nor has he 
explained how his inmate file would be relevant to the claims he did raise in his 
motion, or the claims he subsequently raised in his sixth successive postconviction 
motion discussed below.  Cf. Sims, 753 So. 2d at 69 (explaining that rule 3.852 “is 
a discovery rule for public records production ancillary to proceedings pursuant to 
rules 3.850 and 3.851”).   
On these facts, holding that the postconviction court abused its discretion in 
denying Jimenez’s eleventh-hour request would be antithetical to the purpose of 
rule 3.852(h)(3).  See id. at 70 (explaining that rule 3.852(h)(3) is “not intended to 
be a procedure authorizing a fishing expedition for records unrelated to a colorable 
claim for postconviction relief” but rather “provide[s] for the production of public 
records from persons and agencies who were the recipients of a public records 
request at the time the defendant began his or her postconviction odyssey”).  
Accordingly, we affirm the postconviction court’s denial of Jimenez’s request to 
DOC pursuant to rule 3.852(h)(3). 
 
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We also find no abuse of discretion in the postconviction court’s denial of 
requests for additional records from DOC, the Florida Department of Law 
Enforcement (FDLE), and the District Eight Medical Examiner pursuant to rule 
3.852(i), which Jimenez requested in support of his challenges to Florida’s current 
lethal injection protocol.  Specifically, although the postconviction court ordered 
DOC and FDLE to produce checklists, logs, and documents memorializing the 
execution of Eric Branch, Jimenez claims that the postconviction court erred by 
denying his requests for records related to the selection of drugs, creation of the 
protocol, alternatives to the current protocol, reasons for the recent changes that 
have been made, including to the positioning of inmates in the death chamber and 
the mitten-like coverings that are placed on their hands, and the records of three 
other executions besides Branch’s using the current protocol (Mark James Asay, 
Cary Michael Lambrix, and Patrick Hannon).   
Recently, in finding no abuse of discretion in the denial of a similar request, 
we explained that “[t]he current injection protocol was fully considered and 
approved of in Asay VI,”7 and “production of records relating to lethal injection are 
‘unlikely to lead to a colorable claim for relief [when] the challenge to the 
constitutionality of lethal injection as currently administered in Florida has been 
fully considered and rejected by the Court.’ ”  Hannon, 228 So. 3d at 511-12 
                                          
 
7.  Asay v. State (Asay VI), 224 So. 3d 695 (Fla. 2017). 
 
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(quoting Walton v. State, 3 So. 3d 1000, 1014 (Fla. 2009)); see also Correll v. 
State, 184 So. 3d 478, 492 (Fla. 2015) (holding public records request “for the 
autopsy records of twenty-one inmates is not only unduly burdensome, but also 
unlikely to lead to a colorable claim because the records would not establish when 
the inmates became unconscious, or whether they experienced pain during their 
executions”); Muhammad, 132 So. 3d at 203 (“[R]equests related to actions of 
lethal injection personnel in past executions do not relate to a colorable claim 
concerning future executions because there is a presumption that members of the 
executive branch will perform their duties properly.”).  We likewise find no abuse 
of discretion here. 
(2) Use of Etomidate 
 
Jimenez next argues that the postconviction court erred in summarily 
denying his claim that Florida’s use of etomidate as the first of three drugs in its 
lethal injection procedure places him at substantial risk of serious harm in violation 
of the Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution and article I, section 17 
of the Florida Constitution.  We disagree. 
Claims raised under rule 3.851 “ ‘may be summarily denied when they are 
legally insufficient . . . or are positively refuted by the record.’  Because a 
postconviction court’s decision whether to grant an evidentiary hearing on a rule 
3.851 motion is ultimately based on written materials before the court, its ruling is 
 
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tantamount to a pure question of law, subject to de novo review.”  Marek v. State, 
8 So. 3d 1123, 1127 (Fla. 2009) (quoting Connor v. State, 979 So. 2d 852, 868 
(Fla. 2007)).  Further, “[c]onclusory and speculative allegations are insufficient to 
warrant an [e]videntiary [h]earing.”  Knight v. State, 923 So. 2d 387, 399 (Fla. 
2005) (quoting order denying amended motion for postconviction relief). 
In Asay VI, we fully considered and approved of the current lethal injection 
procedure, which replaced midazolam with etomidate as the first drug in the three-
drug protocol.  In so doing, we held that competent, substantial evidence supported 
the postconviction court’s finding after an evidentiary hearing that Asay had failed 
to make the showing required to prevail on a method of execution challenge under 
the Eighth Amendment pursuant to the United States Supreme Court’s decision in 
Glossip v. Gross, 135 S. Ct. 2726, 2737 (2015).  Asay VI, 224 So. 3d at 701 (“In 
Glossip, the Supreme Court provided that a condemned prisoner must: (1) establish 
that the method of execution presents a substantial and imminent risk that is sure or 
very likely to cause serious illness and needless suffering and (2) identify a known 
and available alternative method of execution that entails a significantly less severe 
risk of pain.”).   
Jimenez argues that events that transpired during Eric Branch’s February 
2018 execution constitute new evidence requiring reconsideration of the 
 
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constitutionality of lethal injection as currently administered in Florida.8  
Specifically, Jimenez argues that screaming and body movements during Branch’s 
execution show that Jimenez will experience severe pain on injection of the first 
drug in the protocol—etomidate—and that etomidate may not render Jimenez fully 
unconscious for the entire period of the execution, thereby placing him at 
substantial risk of serious harm.   
However, it is impossible to know whether Branch’s actions were in protest 
of his execution or a reaction to etomidate, such as the “transient venous pain on 
injection and transient skeletal movements, including myoclonus” recognized 
among the “most frequent adverse reactions” in Asay VI, 224 So. 3d at 701.  
Moreover, the record indicates that the required consciousness check was 
performed before the subsequent administration of the second and third drugs.   
                                          
 
8.  In its order summarily denying relief on this claim, the postconviction 
court explained the relevant facts from Branch’s execution: 
 
Shortly before the execution process began, Branch gave a statement 
calling Governor Rick Scott and Attorney General Bondi “cowards” 
for failing to execute him in person.  As the administration of the 
etomidate commenced, Branch released a guttural yell or scream.  He 
then yelled out “murderers” three times.  Branch’s legs were moving, 
his head moved, and his body was shaking.  He calmed down within a 
minute.  The appropriate consciousness check was performed before 
the subsequent administration of the second and third drugs.  
 
 
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In sum, Jimenez’s speculative and conclusory allegations regarding Branch’s 
execution are insufficient to require revisiting our holding in Asay VI approving the 
constitutionality of lethal injection as currently administered in Florida over the 
challenge that the use of etomidate as the first drug in the lethal injection protocol 
presents a substantial risk of serious harm.9  Cf. Hannon, 228 So. 3d at 508-09 
(affirming postconviction court’s summary denial of challenge to constitutionality 
of the current lethal injection protocol approved in Asay VI where “Hannon 
presented no new evidence that would require us to reconsider our recent approval 
of the three-drug protocol”). 
(3) Three-Drug Protocol 
 
Jimenez next argues that Florida’s continued use of a three-drug protocol 
instead of a one-drug protocol constitutes cruel and unusual punishment in light of 
evolving standards of decency.  However, “we have consistently rejected [the] 
                                          
 
9.  Jimenez could not prevail on his challenge to the current protocol in any 
event because he has also failed to meet his burden under Glossip to “identify a 
known and available alternative method of execution that entails a significantly 
less severe risk of pain.”  Asay VI, 224 So. 3d at 701 (citing Glossip, 135 S. Ct. at 
2737).  His proposed alternative—replacing the three-drug protocol with one drug, 
pentobarbital or compounded pentobarbital—relies on a drug that is not readily 
available and has been previously rejected by this Court as speculative.  See id. at 
702.  To the extent Jimenez suggests switching back to midazolam, this Court 
rejected the argument that the substitution of etomidate for midazolam violates the 
Eighth Amendment in Asay VI.  Finally, although Jimenez proposes switching 
from lethal injection to nitrogen gas, his fifth successive postconviction motion 
states that he “has not had adequate time to research and consult with an expert 
about this method.” 
 
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challenge that the DOC should substitute the current three-drug protocol with a 
one-drug protocol.”  Hannon, 228 So. 3d at 509 (citing Asay VI, 224 So. 3d at 702; 
Muhammad, 132 So. 3d at 196-97); see also Muhammad, 132 So. 3d at 197 
(“Florida is not obligated to adopt an alternative method of execution without a 
determination that Florida’s current three-drug protocol is unconstitutional.”).  
Accordingly, the postconviction court properly denied this claim.   
(4) Length of Time on Death Row 
In his final claim in the appeal of the denial of his fifth successive 
postconviction motion, Jimenez argues that, because he has spent over 23 years on 
death row, adding his execution to that punishment constitutes cruel and unusual 
punishment in light of evolving standards of decency.  We have consistently 
rejected this argument and decline to recede from our long-standing precedent in 
Jimenez’s case.  See, e.g., Lambrix v. State, 217 So. 3d 977, 988 (Fla.), cert. 
denied, 138 S. Ct. 312 (2017) (denying relief on claim “that the totality of the 
punishment the State has imposed on [the capital defendant], which now includes 
not just execution, but also more than three decades of being on death row, violates 
the Eighth Amendment” and citing numerous cases demonstrating that “[t]his 
Court has consistently rejected this claim”).  Accordingly, we affirm the 
postconviction court’s denial of relief on this claim. 
 
 
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B.  Motion to Correct Illegal Sentence 
Jimenez also appeals the postconviction court’s denial of his rule 3.800(a) 
motion to correct illegal sentence.10  Jimenez argues that his life sentence for 
burglary with an assault and battery in an occupied dwelling is illegal in light of 
this Court’s decision in Delgado v. State, 776 So. 2d 233 (Fla. 2000), in which this 
Court receded from the interpretation of the burglary statute that it had used to 
affirm Jimenez’s burglary conviction on direct appeal.  We previously denied 
Jimenez relief pursuant to Delgado in affirming the denial of his initial 
postconviction motion, see Jimenez, 810 So. 2d at 512-13, and we reject his 
attempt to misuse rule 3.800(a) to revive arguments that are procedurally barred.  
See also Jimenez, 481 F.3d at 1340, 1340, 1342-43 (denying Jimenez’s application 
for a certificate of appealability to appeal the district court’s denial of his federal 
habeas claim that this Court’s “refusal on collateral review to apply a subsequent 
construction of the burglary statute to the conduct for which Jimenez was 
convicted violated due process and the Eighth Amendment prohibition against the 
arbitrary and capricious imposition of a death sentence” because the claim was 
                                          
 
10.  The standard of review is de novo.  See Williams v. State, 235 So. 3d 
962, 963 (Fla. 5th DCA 2017) (“The error to be corrected in a rule 3.800(a) motion 
must be apparent from the face of the record.  Johnson v. State, 60 So. 3d 1045, 
1049 (Fla. 2011).  Accordingly, such a motion cannot require an evidentiary 
hearing.  Id.  As no evidentiary hearing is required or permitted, this Court is 
presented with pure issues of law on appeal, and applies the de novo standard of 
review.”). 
 
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procedurally barred and because, even without the procedural bar, “Jimenez did 
not make a substantial showing that [this Court’s] refusal to apply retroactively an 
interpretation of the burglary statute violated his constitutional rights”).  
Accordingly, we affirm the postconviction court’s denial of relief. 
II.  Second Post-Warrant Appeal 
 
Jimenez’s second post-warrant appeal challenges the postconviction court’s 
summary denial of his sixth successive postconviction motion, in which Jimenez 
raised claims of Brady, Giglio, discovery, and due process violations arising from 
alleged newly discovered evidence contained within 81 pages of investigatory and 
trial preparation materials recently disclosed by NMPD.  In addition, Jimenez 
appeals the postconviction court’s denial of his motion to amend his sixth 
successive postconviction motion to add a new subclaim and additional argument 
regarding other of his subclaims.  We address the motion to amend first, followed 
by the sixth successive postconviction motion.   
A.  Motion to Amend 
“[E]ven accepting for the sake of argument that the circuit court erred in 
denying the motion [to amend], any such error would clearly be harmless.”  
Zakrzewski v. State, No. SC11-1896, 115 So. 3d 1004 (Fla. Nov. 9, 2012) (table).  
Jimenez’s claims are based upon written materials contained in NMPD’s post-
warrant records submission that “this Court is just as capable as the trial court of 
 
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assessing.”  Johnson v. State, 44 So. 3d 51, 72 n.18 (Fla. 2010).  As explained 
below, even giving Jimenez the benefit of his proposed amendments, none of his 
claims warrants relief.  Accordingly, we affirm the denial of Jimenez’s motion to 
amend and find no error in the postconviction court’s refusal to allow rehearing for 
claims that are conclusively refuted by the record and, thus, due to be summarily 
denied. 
B.  Sixth Successive Postconviction Motion 
 
Jimenez next appeals the postconviction court’s summary denial of his sixth 
successive postconviction motion.  Giving Jimenez the benefit of the additional 
subclaim and arguments presented in his motion to amend, Jimenez raises the 
following seven subclaims, which he alleges arise from records that were 
previously undisclosed by NMPD: (1) handwritten detective notes of an interview 
with Jimenez’s and the victim’s neighbor that occurred before the neighbor gave 
her sworn, recorded statement evince a Brady violation; (2) handwritten detective 
notes from an interview with Jimenez’s former girlfriend regarding her daughter’s 
relationship with the victim evince a Brady violation; (3) handwritten notes by 
NMPD Detectives Diecidue and Ojeda taken during their interview with Jimenez 
on the day of his arrest evince Brady, Giglio, discovery, and due process 
violations; (4) handwritten detective notes regarding, and correspondence from, 
jailhouse informant Jeffrey Allen evince a Brady violation; (5) a fax coversheet 
 
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showing communication between NMPD and private investigator Steve Sessler on 
October 16, 1992, evince a Brady violation; (6) handwritten detective notes 
showing contact information for cab driver Anwar Ali and the content of a 
September 1993 interview with Ali evince a Brady violation; and (7) handwritten 
notes that appear to be trial preparation materials for Detective Ojeda evince a 
Brady violation.  Jimenez contends that, singularly and cumulatively, these alleged 
violations entitle him to relief from his convictions and sentence of death, or at the 
very least require an evidentiary hearing.  
Before analyzing each of Jimenez’s subclaims, we address the standards that 
govern our review.   
Timeliness 
Before this Court may reach the merits of any subclaim within Jimenez’s 
sixth successive postconviction, he must first establish that it is timely.  A rule 
3.851 motion for postconviction relief must generally be filed within one year after 
the judgment and sentence are finalized.  See Fla. R. Crim. P. 3.851(d)(1).  A 
motion filed after the expiration of this time period is procedurally barred unless 
one of the following circumstances exists: 
(A) the facts on which the claim is predicated were unknown to 
the movant or the movant’s attorney and could not have been 
ascertained by the exercise of due diligence, or 
(B) the fundamental constitutional right asserted was not 
established within the period provided for in subdivision (d)(1) and 
has been held to apply retroactively, or 
 
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(C) postconviction counsel, through neglect, failed to file the 
motion. 
 
Fla. R. Crim. P. 3.851(d)(2). 
   
Jimenez filed the sixth successive rule 3.851 motion at issue on August 6, 
2018, well beyond the one-year time period limitation after his judgment and 
sentence became final on May 18, 1998, when the United States Supreme Court 
denied certiorari.  However, Jimenez argues that his motion is timely under rule 
3.851 because the 81 pages of investigatory and trial preparation materials that 
NMPD disclosed in response to Jimenez’s post-warrant public records request 
constitute newly discovered evidence.  “To be considered timely filed as newly 
discovered evidence, the rule 3.851 motion was required to have been filed within 
one year of the date upon which the claim became discoverable through due 
diligence.”  Jimenez, 997 So. 2d at 1064 (citing Mills v. State, 684 So. 2d 801, 804-
05 (Fla. 1996)).   
If Jimenez is correct that the claims in his sixth successive postconviction 
motion do, in fact, arise from newly discovered evidence (which, as addressed 
below, they do not) and are, therefore, timely (which, as addressed below, they are 
not), several standards nevertheless stand between Jimenez and the relief he seeks. 
Brady 
 
 
The first standard at issue in this appeal applies to Jimenez’s claims that 
information contained in NMPD’s 2018 post-warrant disclosure shows violations 
 
- 23 - 
of Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963), as well as the State’s discovery 
obligations under the Florida Rules of Criminal Procedure.  Brady requires the 
State “to disclose material information within its possession or control that is 
favorable to the defense.”  Taylor v. State, 62 So. 3d 1101, 1114 (Fla. 2011).  To 
establish a Brady claim,  
the defendant must demonstrate that (1) favorable evidence, either 
exculpatory or impeaching, (2) was willfully or inadvertently 
suppressed by the State, and (3) because the evidence was material, 
the defendant was prejudiced.  Strickler v. Greene, 527 U.S. 263, 281-
82 (1999); Way v. State, 760 So. 2d 903, 910 (Fla. 2000).  To meet the 
materiality prong, the defendant must demonstrate “a reasonable 
probability that, had the evidence been disclosed to the defense, the 
result of the proceeding would have been different.”  Way, 760 So. 2d 
at 913 (quoting United States v. Bagley, 473 U.S. [667,] 682 
[(1985))].  A reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to 
undermine this Court’s confidence in the outcome.  Id.; see also 
Strickler, 527 U.S. at 290.  However, in making this determination, a 
court cannot “simply discount[] the inculpatory evidence in light of 
the undisclosed evidence and determin[e] if the remaining evidence is 
sufficient.”  Franqui v. State, 59 So. 3d 82, 102 (Fla. 2011).  “It is the 
net effect of the evidence that must be assessed.”  Jones v. State, 709 
So. 2d 512, 521 (Fla. 1998). 
 
Mosley v. State, 209 So. 3d 1248, 1258-59 (Fla. 2016) (quoting Mungin v. 
State, 79 So. 3d 726, 734 (Fla. 2011)).  
Furthermore, to assess materiality where more than one Brady violation is 
alleged, pursuant to Kyles v. Whitley, 514 U.S. 419 (1995),  
[i]n making the materiality determination, a court must first 
“evaluate the tendency and force of the undisclosed evidence item by 
item” before separately “evaluat[ing] its cumulative effect.”  See 
[Kyles, 514 U.S.] at 436 n.10 (“We evaluate the tendency and force of 
 
- 24 - 
the undisclosed evidence item by item; there is no other way.  We 
evaluate its cumulative effect for purposes of materiality separately 
and at the end of the discussion . . . .”).  “Considering the undisclosed 
evidence cumulatively means adding up the force of it all and 
weighing it against the totality of the evidence that was introduced at 
the trial.”  Smith [v. Sec’y, Dep’t of Corr.], 572 F.3d [1327,] 1334 
[(11th Cir. 2009)].  “A ‘reasonable probability’ of a different result 
exists when the government’s evidentiary suppressions, viewed 
cumulatively, undermine confidence in the guilty verdict.”  Id. (citing 
Kyles, 514 U.S. at 434, 436 & n.10, 437). 
 
Smith v. State, 235 So. 3d 265, 269 (Fla. 2017). 
 
 
Jimenez also makes the related argument that the Brady violations he claims 
are reflected in NMPD’s post-warrant disclosure show that the State failed to 
comply with its discovery obligations.  As this Court has explained, “when 
discovery violations are proven in motions for postconviction relief[,] . . . [t]he test 
for measuring the effect of the failure to disclose exculpatory evidence, regardless 
of whether such failure constitutes a discovery violation, is [the same that applies 
to a Brady violation, namely] whether there is a reasonable probability that ‘had 
the evidence been disclosed to the defense, the result of the proceeding would have 
been different.’ ”  Duest v. Dugger, 555 So. 2d 849, 851 (Fla. 1990) (quoting 
United States v. Bagley, 473 U.S. 667, 682 (1985)).  Moreover, the defendant’s 
“personal knowledge” of the evidence claimed to represent a Brady violation 
“would in and of itself defeat his Brady claim, since by definition such evidence 
would not have been unlawfully ‘suppressed’ by the State.”  Gorham v. State, 494 
So. 2d 211, 212 n.* (Fla. 1986). 
 
- 25 - 
Giglio 
The next standard at issue applies to Jimenez’s claim that the State violated 
Giglio v. United States, 405 U.S. 150 (1972).  “By contrast to an allegation of 
suppression of evidence under Brady, a Giglio claim is based on the prosecutor’s 
knowing presentation at trial of false testimony against the defendant.”  Guzman v. 
State, 868 So. 2d 498, 506 (Fla. 2003).  To establish a Giglio violation,  
“[A] defendant must show that: (1) the prosecutor presented or failed 
to correct false testimony; (2) the prosecutor knew the testimony was 
false; and (3) the false evidence was material.”  Rhodes v. State, 986 
So. 2d 501, 508-09 (Fla. 2008).  As to the knowledge prong, in 
Guzman . . . , [this Court has] clarified that Giglio is satisfied where 
the lead detective testifies falsely at trial because the “knowledge of 
the detective . . . is imputed to the prosecutor who tried the case.”  Id. 
at 505. 
The materiality prong of Giglio is more defense-friendly than in 
a Brady claim.  See Davis v. State, 26 So. 3d 519, 532 (Fla. 2009) 
(“[T]he standard applied under the third prong of the Giglio test is 
more defense friendly than the test . . . applied to a violation under 
Brady.”).  While under Brady, evidence is material if a defendant can 
show “a reasonable probability that . . . the result . . . would have been 
different,” Way, 760 So. 2d at 913 (emphasis added), under Giglio, the 
evidence is considered material simply “if there is any reasonable 
possibility that it could have affected the jury’s verdict.”  Rhodes, 986 
So. 2d at 509 (emphasis added). 
 
Mosley, 209 So. 3d at 1259 (quoting Mungin, 79 So. 3d at 738). 
   
Further, the cumulative analysis used to evaluate materiality under the Brady 
standard also applies to Giglio claims.  See Smith v. Sec’y, Dep’t of Corr., 572 F.3d 
1327, 1334 (11th Cir. 2009) (“Considering the undisclosed evidence cumulatively 
means adding up the force of it all and weighing it against the totality of the 
 
- 26 - 
evidence that was introduced at the trial.  That is the way a court decides if its 
confidence in the guilty verdict is undermined where a suppressed-evidence type of 
Brady claim is involved, or if the suppression was harmless beyond a reasonable 
doubt where a Giglio type of Brady claim is involved.”).   
And, similar to the way in which a defendant’s personal knowledge of 
information allegedly “suppressed” is fatal to a Brady claim, see Gorham, 494 So. 
2d at 212 n.*, a Giglio claim “based on information that the defendant and defense 
counsel had at the time of trial” is barred.  Moore v. State, 132 So. 3d 718, 724 
(Fla. 2013). 
Due Process 
 
Jimenez argues that the same new evidence within NMPD’s post-warrant 
disclosure that he contends supports his Brady and Giglio claims also shows that 
the State violated his right to due process by misleading both his defense counsel 
and his jury.  See Alcorta v. Texas, 355 U.S. 28, 31-32 (1957) (holding that it 
violates due process for a prosecutor to intentionally mislead the defense and jury 
in a material way).  In support of this argument, Jimenez relies primarily on Garcia 
v. State, 622 So. 2d 1325, 1331 (Fla. 1993), in which this Court explained that, 
“while the State is free to argue to the jury any theory of the crime that is 
reasonably supported by the evidence, it may not subvert the truth-seeking function 
of the trial by obtaining a conviction or sentence based on deliberate obfuscation of 
 
- 27 - 
relevant facts.”  See also generally Banks v. Dretke, 540 U.S. 668, 696 (2004) (“A 
rule thus declaring ‘prosecutor may hide, defendant must seek,’ is not tenable in a 
system constitutionally bound to accord defendants due process. . . .  Prosecutors’ 
dishonest conduct or unwarranted concealment should attract no judicial 
approbation.”); Johnson v. State, 44 So. 3d 51, 53 (Fla. 2010) (“[S]ociety’s search 
for the truth is the polestar that guides all judicial inquiry, and when the State 
knowingly presents false testimony or misleading argument to the court, the State 
casts an impenetrable cloud over that polestar.”); Waterhouse v. State, 82 So. 3d 
84, 104 n.11 (Fla. 2012) (“[A]ttorneys and judges should be able to rely upon the 
veracity of a police report.”).   
However, as with the other due-process-based claims (i.e., Brady and 
Giglio), a defendant who knows that his jury is being misled cannot adopt an “I’ll 
deal with it later” approach.  See Fla. R. Crim. P. 3.851(d)(2); cf. also Ferrell v. 
State, 29 So. 3d 959, 977 (Fla. 2010) (holding claim that “the State violated Giglio 
when, during closing argument, the prosecutor misled the jury . . . actually presents 
a substantive claim of improper closing argument, which should have been raised 
on direct appeal, and is thus procedurally barred”).   
Review of Summary Denial 
Finally, Jimenez’s argument that the postconviction court should have 
granted him an evidentiary hearing implicates the standard applicable to our review 
 
- 28 - 
of a summary denial.  A postconviction motion may be summarily denied only 
“[i]f the motion, files, and records in the case conclusively show that the movant is 
entitled to no relief.”  Fla. R. Crim. P. 3.851(f)(5)(B), (h)(6); see also Parker v. 
State, 904 So. 2d 370, 376 (Fla. 2005) (“As a general proposition, a defendant is 
entitled to an evidentiary hearing on any well-pled allegations in a motion for 
postconviction relief unless (1) the motion, files, and records in the case 
conclusively show that the prisoner is entitled to no relief, or (2) the motion or a 
particular claim is legally insufficient.”).  “Because a postconviction court’s 
decision whether to grant an evidentiary hearing on a rule 3.851 motion is 
ultimately based on written materials before the court, its ruling is tantamount to a 
pure question of law, subject to de novo review.”  Marek v. State, 8 So. 3d 1123, 
1127 (Fla. 2009).  In reviewing a trial court’s summary denial, “this Court must 
accept the defendant’s allegations as true to the extent that they are not 
conclusively refuted by the record.”  Tompkins v. State, 994 So. 2d 1072, 1081 
(Fla. 2008).  However, mere conclusory allegations do not warrant an evidentiary 
hearing.  Anderson v. State, 220 So. 3d 1133, 1142 (Fla. 2017); see also LeCroy v. 
Dugger, 727 So. 2d 236, 238 (Fla. 1998) (“[S]peculation and conjecture about 
what . . . letters and notes and opinions and cryptic references may suggest is not 
sufficient to warrant an evidentiary hearing, much less relief.”) (quoting trial 
court’s order). 
 
- 29 - 
As explained below, application of these standards to Jimenez’s subclaims 
makes clear that Jimenez is not entitled to relief on these claims.   
(1) Virginia Taranco, the neighbor 
In his first subclaim, Jimenez argues that the State committed a Brady 
violation when it failed to disclose information with respect to the victim’s 
neighbor, Virginia Taranco, who provided a taped, sworn statement following the 
murder, was deposed prior to trial, and testified at trial.  Jimenez claims that the 
previously undisclosed notes reveal “a previously unknown interview of Ms. 
Taranco before the taped statement began” during which Taranco exonerated 
Jimenez by “saying that while she was at Ms. Minas’ door investigating the sounds 
that she had heard, she observed Mr. Jimenez come down from the third floor . . . 
while the assailant is still inside . . . [meaning that] Mr. Jimenez could not possibly 
have been the assailant.”  Contrary to Jimenez’s assertion, the fact that this 
interview occurred was disclosed to Jimenez in discovery prior to trial, and the 
notes reveal that Taranco recounted the relevant facts in the preliminary interview 
exactly as she did in the taped interview, in her deposition, and at trial, which was 
not exonerating.     
The notes start with five lines that have an “X” marked over them and are 
lined through.  Those five lines, which form the basis for this subclaim, are plainly 
legible despite the cross-through, and read:   
 
- 30 - 
Heard one bang, went to investigate   
Heard second bang.  While at door  
observed [defendant] coming from Third Floor  
was wearing no hat First observed on  
ground Floor with baseball hat 
 
The remainder of the detective’s notes reflect that the detective had Taranco restart 
her account at the beginning, chronologically, from when she first observed 
Jimenez on the ground floor, prior to the murder, and describe Taranco seeing 
Jimenez coming down to the second floor (where the victim’s apartment was 
located) from the third floor (where Jimenez’s apartment was located) when 
Taranco was waiting for the police, not when she was at the victim’s door hearing 
noises and seeing the victim’s door being pushed shut from the inside.   
This subclaim is procedurally barred, as this evidence is not newly 
discovered.  The record establishes that Jimenez has known of the existence of 
Taranco’s pre-interview since before trial because it was mentioned in her sworn 
taped statement—a transcript of which was provided to trial counsel in discovery 
and included in NMPD’s original submission to the records repository more than 
18 years before the successive postconviction motion at issue was filed.11  Further 
                                          
 
 
11.  In the sworn taped statement of Taranco on October 7, 1992, Detective 
Ojeda states that he and Detective Diecidue spoke with Taranco immediately prior 
to beginning the taped interview.  He said, “[W]e spoke to you natural before we 
went on tape and interviewed you.  And we spoke to you about the homicide and 
what role you played in it on October 2nd.” 
 
- 31 - 
underscoring Jimenez’s knowledge that Taranco was interviewed before giving her 
sworn taped statement, defense counsel expressly referenced the pre-interview at 
trial during his cross-examination of Taranco.  Although Jimenez claims that he 
was not aware that the page of handwritten notes existed, he was already aware of 
the information contained in the page of notes, as none of it is new or previously 
unknown information inconsistent with Taranco’s sworn statement or her trial 
testimony.   
Even if this subclaim were not procedurally barred, it is without merit.  The 
first prong under Brady is not satisfied because this allegedly suppressed 
information is neither exculpatory nor impeaching.  The crossed-out lines describe 
Taranco hearing two bangs, investigating the noises, standing at the victim’s door, 
and two encounters with the defendant, without any mention of how much time 
passed between these events.  These lines of notes do not reveal any facts that are 
inconsistent with the rest of the page of notes or with Taranco’s trial testimony, 
which was that she saw Jimenez twice on the evening of the victim’s murder.  
First, Taranco testified that she saw Jimenez in the parking lot at approximately 
7:55 p.m.  Second, Taranco testified that she saw Jimenez coming down the stairs 
to the second floor from the third floor somewhere between 8:20 and 8:22 p.m., 
after she had already called the police, which Taranco testified was at least 10 to 
15 minutes after she heard the noises coming from inside the victim’s apartment.  
 
- 32 - 
The crossed-out lines of the notes do not show that Jimenez was with Taranco at 
the victim’s door while the attack was ongoing inside the victim’s apartment, 
which would be exculpatory.  Rather, these lines are almost identical to Taranco’s 
trial testimony since hearing two bangs and observing Jimenez coming from the 
third floor while Taranco stood at the victim’s door is consistent with the events 
and timeline articulated at trial.12   
Accordingly, because this subclaim is both procedurally barred and without 
merit we affirm the postconviction court’s summary denial. 
(2) Yvette Imhoff, Jimenez’s former girlfriend 
Jimenez next argues that the State committed a Brady violation when it 
failed to disclose information with respect to a phone interview of Jimenez’s 
former live-in girlfriend, Yvette Imhoff.  The State allegedly failed to provide a 
page of handwritten notes from an October 7, 1992, telephonic interview between 
Detective Ojeda and Imhoff.  The page of notes contains a sentence that states, 
“Phyllis became friends w/ daughter.”  Imhoff did not testify at trial, but the 
                                          
 
12.  Besides Detective Ojeda, Taranco is the only other person implicated by 
Jimenez’s claims who testified at trial.  Jimenez’s frequent use of the phrase 
“Giglio/Brady claims” in his briefs filed in this Court, coupled with his argument 
that the notes from Taranco’s pre-interview may be true while her trial testimony 
may not be, makes it unclear whether Jimenez is also arguing that the notes 
demonstrate that the State knowingly presented false testimony by Taranco in 
violation of Giglio.  To the extent Jimenez is making this claim, because the notes 
do not show that Taranco’s trial testimony was false, they do not evince a Giglio 
violation.  See Mosley, 209 So. 3d at 1259. 
 
- 33 - 
written report by Detective Ojeda regarding his interview with Imhoff (which was 
previously disclosed) states that, in response to his question as to whether Jimenez 
or Imhoff ever knew the victim, Imhoff stated that she knew that her daughter had 
become friends with a lady downstairs, but that her daughter never mentioned her 
name.  Jimenez claims that the sentence in the notes is newly discovered evidence 
that the person whom Imhoff’s daughter became friends with was the victim and is 
Brady material because it is exculpatory.  He asserts that the fact that the victim 
had a friendship with Jimenez’s former girlfriend’s daughter, and that Jimenez 
knew about it, shows that Jimenez had a positive relationship with the victim and 
that he had been inside her apartment on occasion—which explains his fingerprint 
on the inside of the victim’s front door.   
This subclaim is procedurally barred.  Detective Ojeda’s previously 
disclosed report expressly mentions the phone interview and the fact that Imhoff 
stated that her daughter had made friends with a lady downstairs.  Moreover, 
Imhoff’s statement was not without context, as Detective Ojeda’s report plainly 
states that Imhoff gave this answer in response to his question of whether either 
she or Jimenez ever knew the victim.  To the extent it is not clear from the context 
that the report’s reference to a “lady downstairs” is in reference to the victim, with 
due diligence, Jimenez could have followed up years ago and discovered this 
information.  In any event, if Jimenez had a good relationship with the victim and 
 
- 34 - 
had been inside the victim’s apartment on previous occasions, this would not be 
newly discovered evidence because Jimenez would have known it all along.  Cf. 
Jimenez, 997 So. 2d at 1068 (concluding that “[t]he presence of Jimenez inside [the 
victim’s] unit on other occasions is necessarily based on his own personal 
knowledge of his actions,” which is not “newly discovered evidence”). 
Even without the procedural bar, however, the subclaim is without merit.  
The first prong under Brady is not satisfied because this allegedly suppressed 
information is not exculpatory.  The handwritten sentence relied upon by Jimenez 
does not provide any information regarding whether Jimenez actually knew that his 
former girlfriend’s daughter had befriended the victim.  Nor does it show that 
Jimenez had any relationship with the victim whatsoever, let alone a good 
relationship.  Moreover, the sentence does not relate in any way to the allegation 
that Jimenez had been inside the victim’s apartment on other occasions, prior to the 
victim’s murder.  Nor does the sentence have any impeachment value.  Imhoff did 
not testify at trial.  Moreover, Detective Ojeda did not testify regarding his 
interview with Imhoff.  Nor is Detective Ojeda’s report from Imhoff’s interview, in 
which it was clear that he was asking Imhoff about any contact that she or Jimenez 
had with the victim, viewed through the lens of his notes, which expressly 
references the victim’s name, impeaching in the sense that it shows NMPD’s 
 
- 35 - 
investigation was not a search for the truth.  Accordingly, there was not a Brady 
violation.13  We affirm the postconviction court’s summary denial of this subclaim. 
(3) Jimenez’s Statements to Detectives Diecidue and Ojeda 
In his third subclaim, Jimenez argues that NMPD’s post-warrant disclosure 
of notes taken by Detectives Diecidue and Ojeda during their interview of Jimenez 
on the day of his arrest establish Brady, Giglio, discovery, and due process 
violations that entitle him to relief from his convictions and sentence of death, or, 
minimally, to an evidentiary hearing.  This subclaim is procedurally barred and, in 
any event, without merit. 
The notes at issue indicate that they were taken during an interview of 
Jimenez by Detective Diecidue at 2:50 p.m. on an unspecified date and during an 
interview of Jimenez by Detective Ojeda at 3:55 p.m. on an unspecified date, 
                                          
 
13.  In this subclaim, Jimenez points out that the notes regarding Imhoff’s 
interview also contain the phrase “wh/van unk span/male.”  However, beyond 
referencing this fact in a footnote in his motion below, Jimenez did not argue how 
this note entitles him to relief, and it is still not clear whether or how he contends it 
does.  Nevertheless, that Jimenez knew of the existence of and, thus, had the ability 
to follow up on the presence of a white van in connection with this case is clear 
from a review of the trial transcript.  A police officer (Officer Cardona) had been 
assigned to investigate a white van seen in the parking complex of the apartment 
near the victim’s balcony, and, although this officer did not testify at trial, she 
wrote a report and gave a deposition about her investigation.  Further, at trial, 
testimony regarding a white van being parked under the victim’s balcony ranged 
from witnesses who saw the van, witnesses who said they did not see it, and 
witnesses who were alleged to have made inconsistent statements as to whether 
they saw it or not.  This is not newly discovered evidence.  
 
- 36 - 
which Jimenez argues was October 5, 1992, as his arrest occurred at approximately 
3:55 p.m. on that date.  The notes suggest that Jimenez told Detective Diecidue that 
he knocked on the victim’s door at approximately 7:00 p.m. on the evening of the 
murder to use her phone, but that she was using the phone, and that he later used a 
phone to call a cab at approximately 8:00 p.m., went downstairs to meet the cab, 
and saw the police.  The notes also indicate that Jimenez talked to Detective Ojeda 
about the various residents of the apartment complex, telling him which residents 
lived in which apartments; disclosed that he had a “problem” with one of his 
neighbors (not the victim) because of “music”; and told Detective Ojeda what he 
was wearing on the day of the murder.14   
Jimenez’s claim is procedurally barred.  The fact that these statements were 
made by Jimenez and the fact that the detectives took notes while Jimenez made 
them is not newly discovered evidence because Jimenez necessarily had personal 
knowledge of these facts and because the detectives generally disclosed the 
substance of the conversations that occurred prior to Jimenez invoking his rights 
                                          
 
14.  Detective Ojeda’s notes also reference the time of 8:00 p.m., a cab, and 
“Vig,” which Jimenez suggests is shorthand for “Virginia.”  Testimony at trial 
showed that Jimenez used his neighbor Virginia Taranco’s phone to call a taxi after 
Taranco had called the police upon becoming concerned for the victim’s welfare. 
 
 
- 37 - 
under Miranda.15  See Fla. R. Crim. P. 3.851(d)(2); cf. Jimenez, 997 So. 2d at 
1068.  
Moreover, even without the procedural bar, Jimenez would not be entitled to 
relief on the merits.  Although the record reveals that, despite being asked during 
their pre-trial depositions, both detectives failed to disclose the full content of 
Jimenez’s statements to them (and also failed to document the full substance of 
those statements in their reports),16 Jimenez has failed to establish Brady’s third 
prong of materiality.  There is no reasonable probability that had the jury heard the 
information contained in the detectives’ notes the result of the proceeding would 
have been different.  Jimenez’s cooperation or lack thereof was not a feature of the 
State’s case, and the value of Jimenez’s statements concerning his interaction with 
the victim is limited.  They do not show a close relationship between Jimenez and 
the victim or put Jimenez inside the victim’s apartment in a position to leave his 
fingerprint on the inside of the victim’s front door at any time other than during the 
murder when witnesses testified that the door was pushed shut and locked from the 
                                          
 
15.  Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966). 
 
16.  The applicable discovery rule did not require the State to provide the 
detectives’ notes to Jimenez.  See Fla. R. Crim. P. 3.220(b)(1)(B).  However, 
because these notes show the substance of statements made orally by Jimenez, the 
defendant, the State did have a discovery obligation to reveal their contents, 
regardless of whether they constitute Brady material or evince a Giglio or other 
due-process violation.  See Fla. R. Crim. P. 3.220(b)(1)(C). 
 
- 38 - 
inside around the same time as another witness identified Jimenez dropping down 
from a balcony beside the victim’s balcony.  Adding up the force of the 
information concerning Jimenez’s alleged cooperation with law enforcement and 
his statements concerning innocent contact with the victim or her apartment and 
weighing it against the totality of the evidence that was introduced at the trial, there 
is no reasonable probability of a different outcome.  Our confidence in the outcome 
is not undermined.  See Mosley, 209 So. 3d at 1258-59. 
Nor has Jimenez proven a Giglio or due process violation.  In his initial 
brief, Jimenez contends that “the lies and misrepresentations by Detectives Ojeda 
and Diecidue in their pretrial deposition testimony and in their police reports 
violated due process and amounted to a Giglio violation” and demonstrate that the 
State obscured relevant facts in order to obtain his convictions and sentence.  We 
disagree. 
Jimenez’s allegations of false testimony and misleading argument by the 
State implicate Giglio’s prohibition against the State’s knowing presentation of 
false testimony, to the extent that false testimony was actually presented at trial.  
See Jimenez, 997 So. 2d at 1070 (explaining that “supposed false testimony” that is 
“not presented during the trial . . . cannot form the basis for a Giglio claim”).  To 
the extent Jimenez’s allegation that the State obscured the relevant facts to obtain 
his convictions and sentence are based on the State’s arguments during his trial, 
 
- 39 - 
they implicate the due-process protection against the State’s misleading the jury (or 
the court).  See Ferrell, 29 So. 3d at 977 (concluding that the claim that “the State 
violated Giglio when, during closing argument, the prosecutor misled the jury . . . 
actually presents a substantive claim of improper closing argument”); see also 
Evans v. State, 177 So. 3d 1219, 1234 (Fla. 2015) (explaining that a preserved 
challenge to the prosecutor’s improper closing arguments is reviewed for harmless 
error); Garcia, 622 So. 2d at 1331 (“[W]hile the State is free to argue to the jury 
any theory of the crime that is reasonably supported by the evidence, it may not 
subvert the truth-seeking function of the trial by obtaining a conviction or sentence 
based on deliberate obfuscation of relevant facts.”).  Regardless of how the claim is 
classified, however, assuming, as we do here, that there is no preservation issue or 
other procedural bar, entitlement to relief is measured by whether the knowing 
presentation of false testimony or misleading argument was harmless beyond a 
reasonable doubt.  See Guzman, 941 So. 2d at 1050 (explaining that “the test of 
materiality under Giglio. . . . is the same as the harmless error test,” which 
“requires the State to prove that there is no reasonable possibility that the error 
contributed to the conviction”) (internal quotation marks omitted); see also Mosley, 
209 So. 3d at 1259 (“[U]nder Giglio, the evidence is considered material simply if 
there is any reasonable possibility that it could have affected the jury’s verdict.”) 
(internal quotation marks omitted).  
 
- 40 - 
Here, while the detectives only revealed that they received “basic 
information” from Jimenez in their reports and depositions, meaning that the State 
necessarily failed to disclose the full substance of Jimenez’s oral statements, it is 
clear that no false testimony was presented at trial.  Only Detective Ojeda testified 
at trial, and he did not testify about Jimenez’s cooperation or lack thereof with 
police during his interview.  In fact, Detective Ojeda did not testify to any 
statements Jimenez made during his interview based on the State’s agreement in 
connection with Jimenez’s motion to suppress any statements made during that 
interview.  Thus, because no testimony was presented at trial on these subjects, 
there is no Giglio violation.  See Jimenez, 997 So. 2d at 1070 (explaining that 
“supposed false testimony” that is “not presented during the trial . . . cannot form 
the basis for a Giglio claim”). 
Assuming, arguendo, that any argument by the prosecutor at trial was 
misleading in light of Jimenez’s statements to detectives that might evince his 
cooperation with law enforcement or innocent contact with the victim or her 
apartment, Jimenez would still not be entitled to relief. 
Considering the cumulative effect of what Jimenez contends was misleading 
argument in light of the totality of the evidence introduced at trial, there is no 
reasonable possibility that the force of any misleading argument by the State 
concerning Jimenez’s alleged cooperation with law enforcement—which was not a 
 
- 41 - 
feature at trial—added to the force of any misleading argument by the State 
concerning Jimenez’s innocent contact with the victim or her apartment—where 
there was no evidence that Jimenez, even by his own statement, ever actually used 
the victim’s phone or was otherwise ever in the position to innocently leave his 
fingerprint on the inside of the victim’s front door—could have affected the jury’s 
verdict.  See Smith, 572 F.3d at 1334. 
Thus, even if Jimenez’s subclaim regarding the recently disclosed detective 
notes of his interview by NMPD detectives were not procedurally barred, he would 
not be entitled to relief on the merits.  Accordingly, we affirm the postconviction 
court’s summary denial of this subclaim. 
(4) Inmate Jeffrey Allen 
Jimenez next argues that NMPD’s 2018 records submission shows that the 
State committed a Brady violation by failing to disclose information with respect 
to Jeffrey Allen.  Allen is an inmate who was housed with and who informed upon 
Jimenez but who did not testify against Jimenez at trial.  See Jimenez, 997 So. 2d at 
1071.  The State allegedly failed to provide handwritten notes from a March 15, 
1993, interview between Detective Diecidue and Allen; a February 8, 1993, phone 
message from Allen for “Pearce”; a note from Detective Ojeda dated February 9 of 
an unspecified year indicating that he “spoke with” Allen; and multiple pages of 
handwritten letters from Allen.  Jimenez alleges that these documents indicate that 
 
- 42 - 
Allen was acting as a state agent when incarcerated with Jimenez in violation of 
the Sixth Amendment, before the March 15, 1993, date that Detective Diecidue 
stated in a 1995 deposition was his first and only contact with Allen.  Jimenez 
claims that these notes and letters constitute Brady material because they could 
have been used to impeach Detective Diecidue.  Jimenez also argues that the 
documents can be used as impeachment evidence to show that the investigation 
was not a search for truth.   
This subclaim is procedurally barred.  The State previously disclosed a 
report by Detective Diecidue reflecting that, prior to his March 15, 1993, 
interview, “Allen had called several times and advised that he had information 
relating to this investigation.”  Further, Jimenez’s former counsel deposed Allen on 
March 11, 1998, at which time Allen stated that he had written notes and several 
letters about his knowledge of the murder and given them to Detectives Ojeda and 
Diecidue.  At this deposition, Allen stated that he met with the detectives more 
than once and also referenced phone calls with them.  Collateral counsel could 
have made a specific public records request to NMPD to obtain Allen’s letters and 
notes but did not do so, and in any event, the police reports in this case describe the 
information that Allen provided to the detectives.  There is thus no new evidence 
that was unavailable to Jimenez by the exercise of due diligence.   
 
- 43 - 
Even without the procedural bar, this subclaim is without merit.  The first 
prong under Brady is not satisfied because this information is not impeaching.  
Defense counsel could not have used these documents at trial for impeachment as 
evidence of prior inconsistent statements, because neither Allen nor Detective 
Diecidue testified at trial, and Detective Ojeda did not mention Allen in his trial 
testimony.  Nor could the documents have been used at trial to impeach Detective 
Ojeda for bias or to impeach the caliber of the police investigation, because they do 
not contain information that shows partiality on the part of the police department.  
Nor is the information exculpatory, as Allen’s status as a jailhouse informant for 
the State and unilateral communication attempting to benefit from that status have 
no bearing on the guilt or innocence of Jimenez, and Allen did not testify at trial.  
Accordingly, there was not a Brady violation.  We affirm the postconviction 
court’s summary denial of this subclaim. 
(5) Steve Sessler, the private investigator 
Jimenez’s next subclaim concerns a fax coversheet contained in NMPD’s 
post-warrant records disclosure that shows contact between law enforcement and a 
private investigator named Steve Sessler on October 16, 1992 (14 days after the 
victim’s murder).  Jimenez raised a related claim in 2005, in his first successive 
postconviction motion, concerning NMPD’s collaboration with Sessler.  Prior to 
the 1992 Minas murder at issue here, Sessler had investigated Jimenez in 
 
- 44 - 
connection with the October 1990 death of Marie Debas.  Sessler had been hired 
by Debas’s boyfriend, Manuel Calderon, whom Jimenez alleged was a member of 
a drug cartel and had a vendetta against him because Jimenez previously had an 
affair with Debas.17  In Jimenez’s 2005 motion, he alleged that the State had 
committed a Brady violation by failing to disclose that Sessler provided NMPD 
with information he had gathered in connection with the Debas case, which 
Jimenez alleged caused NMPD to unfairly target him for the Minas murder.   
This Court affirmed the denial of Jimenez’s 2005 claim, concluding that it 
was procedurally barred because it was not based on newly discovered evidence: 
[I]t had long been common knowledge that the North Miami Police 
Department was given information that originated from the 
investigation orchestrated by Calderon. . . .  [W]hen Jimenez’s trial 
counsel deposed Detective Diecidue on December 13, 1995, he 
confirmed that Sessler had provided him with information concerning 
Jimenez’s possible involvement in the death of Debas while the 
investigation for the murder of Minas was ongoing. 
 
Jimenez, 997 So. 2d at 1069.  Additionally, this Court concluded that, even if the 
claim were not procedurally barred, it would be without merit because Jimenez 
could not establish the materiality prong of a Brady claim: 
If evidence of Calderon’s influence had been presented during the 
trial, this would have opened the door to potentially damaging 
evidence concerning Jimenez’s involvement in the death of Debas.  
                                          
 
 
17.  After Jimenez’s convictions and sentence in this case, Jimenez pled 
guilty to the second-degree murder of Debas, whose death had been ruled an 
accidental drug overdose before Sessler’s involvement. 
 
- 45 - 
Thus, there is not a reasonable probability that if this information with 
regard to the influence of Calderon had been disclosed to Jimenez, the 
jury would have reached an alternative verdict. 
 
Id. at 1070 (concluding, further, that Jimenez’s Giglio claim relating to Calderon’s 
influence was “without merit” because the “supposed false testimony was not 
presented during the trial, so it cannot form the basis for a Giglio claim”). 
Jimenez’s present claim adds only that he has discovered within NMPD’s 
2018 records submission a fax coversheet showing that Sessler communicated with 
NMPD on October 16, 1992, two weeks into the investigation of the Minas 
murder.  Jimenez asserts that this communication shows the influence of Sessler 
and Calderon on the investigation very early in the case.  This is not new evidence.  
Accordingly, this claim is procedurally barred.  It also fails on the merits for the 
reason that this Court previously articulated in affirming the denial of the Brady 
and Giglio claims related to Sessler that Jimenez raised in his first successive 
postconviction motion filed in 2005.  See id. at 1069-70.  Accordingly, we affirm 
the postconviction court’s summary denial of this subclaim. 
(6) Anwar Ali, the cab driver 
Jimenez also claims that NMPD’s post-warrant disclosure contains new 
Brady material related to Anwar Ali, the cab driver who responded to Jimenez’s 
call for a taxi on the night of the victim’s murder but who never picked up Jimenez 
and, instead, picked up a man with a bleeding face several minutes and blocks 
 
- 46 - 
away from the apartment complex where the victim was murdered.  The 
postconviction court properly summarily denied this claim, which is procedurally 
barred and without merit. 
In affirming the denial of Jimenez’s first successive postconviction motion, 
this Court found procedurally barred, and alternatively meritless, Jimenez’s claim 
that the State had committed a Brady violation by failing to disclose that it had 
repeatedly attempted to get Ali to identify Jimenez as the man with the bleeding 
face, even though Ali said the man was not Jimenez, essentially harassing him, and 
that these efforts had resulted in Ali’s refusal to involve himself in this case 
further.  Jimenez, 997 So. 2d at 1064-65.   
In the claim at issue here, Jimenez does not suggest that NMPD’s disclosure 
goes to the substance of the testimony that Ali would have had to offer had he 
testified at trial, namely “that he picked up a person, who stated that he had been 
mugged and was bleeding from the face, approximately sixteen blocks from the 
crime scene and approximately thirty minutes after the murder.”  Id. at 1065.  
Rather, Jimenez claims that NMPD’s failure to provide him, before trial, with Ali’s 
address and phone number—which NMPD’s recent disclosure indicates it had—at 
a time when Jimenez was trying to secure Ali’s trial testimony is new evidence that 
amounts to a Brady violation.  Jimenez further argues that law enforcement’s 
 
- 47 - 
deceit with respect to the handling of Ali is new evidence of valuable impeachment 
because it shows the investigation was not a search for the truth.   
Jimenez’s arguments are procedurally barred.  That NMPD had Ali’s contact 
information is not new evidence.  Although Jimenez was unsuccessful in his 
attempt to subpoena Ali to testify at trial, there is plentiful evidence establishing 
that, with the exercise of due diligence, the defense could have contacted Ali.  For 
example, defense counsel knew that the State had been able to contact Ali, as 
defense counsel extensively questioned both Detectives Ojeda and Diecidue about 
Ali during their respective pre-trial depositions.  Further, during Detective Ojeda’s 
deposition, defense counsel informed Detective Ojeda about statements regarding 
picking up a man with a bleeding face that Ali had allegedly made to an 
investigator for the defense (who also clearly had contact with Ali), and Detective 
Ojeda stated that he was going to follow up.  With the exercise of due diligence, 
defense counsel could have, too. 
The fact that Detective Diecidue wrote down Ali’s name and phone number 
is also not new evidence since Jimenez knew that the detective had been in contact 
with Ali.  While Jimenez claims that this notation reflects that Detective Diecidue 
interviewed Ali but chose not to take notes because the information Ali provided 
was favorable to Jimenez, the notes do not indicate that they are from an interview 
with Ali.  But, even accepting for the sake of argument that Jimenez is correct, this 
 
- 48 - 
is also not new evidence.  If it actually occurred, whatever impeachment value 
Detective Diecidue’s decision to document only a name and number may have had 
is part and parcel of the impeachment value inherent in Detective Diecidue’s “lost” 
report of Ali’s interview discussed by both Detectives Diecidue and Ojeda in their 
pre-trial depositions, which is not new because Jimenez has known about the “lost” 
report since 1993.   
Similarly, although Jimenez argues that Detective Ojeda never disclosed that 
he had an interview with Ali, the recently disclosed notes suggest that Detective 
Ojeda followed up with Ali after his July 1993 deposition, just as he told defense 
counsel at the deposition he was going to do.18  The notes are consistent with the 
information the State previously disclosed to Jimenez and with other information 
that it is clear from Detective Ojeda’s deposition Jimenez already had and, in fact, 
alerted the State to (i.e., Ali’s description of encountering the man with the 
bleeding face).  Thus, these notes are not new evidence.   
Finally, even without the procedural bar, Ali’s testimony would not have 
been exculpatory or impeaching as required to establish the first prong of Brady for 
                                          
 
18.  Although Detective Ojeda’s notes do not include the year, they identify 
the month as September.  Because the victim was murdered in October of 1992, an 
interview in September in connection with the murder investigation would 
necessarily have had to have occurred at least a year after the victim’s murder, in 
September 1993, which also necessarily would have been after Detective Ojeda’s 
July 1993 deposition. 
 
- 49 - 
the reasons we previously expressed.  See Jimenez, 997 So. 2d at 1065 (explaining 
that Ali’s account of picking up the man with the bleeding face blocks away from 
the crime scene and thirty minutes after the victim’s murder “would not have 
logically connected the person that he picked up in his cab to the murder” or 
“impeach[ed] any of the evidence presented by the State during the trial”).  
Accordingly, we affirm the postconviction court’s summary denial of this 
subclaim. 
(7) Detective Ojeda’s trial preparatory materials 
Finally, Jimenez argues that an 11-page document that he claims was written 
by the prosecutor to prepare for Detective Ojeda’s trial testimony, and which the 
postconviction court denied Jimenez leave to address in his successive 
postconviction motion, is new evidence of a Brady violation.  Had his motion to 
amend been granted, Jimenez would have argued that this document—which he 
acknowledges is consistent with Detective Ojeda’s trial testimony—is undisclosed 
impeachment evidence.  Even assuming for the sake of argument that the 
postconviction court should have granted Jimenez’s motion to amend, this claim is 
both procedurally barred and conclusively refuted by the record.  See Zakrzewski, 
115 So. 3d 1004. 
“[P]rosecutors are permitted to discuss testimony with witnesses . . . .”  
Hartley v. State, 990 So. 2d 1008, 1015 (Fla. 2008).  Although trial preparatory 
 
- 50 - 
materials that are exculpatory or impeaching because, for example, they “reveal[] 
coaching by the prosecutor[, contain] conflicting accounts of the witness’s 
testimony,” or “indicate any testimony contrary to that presented at trial” can give 
rise to Brady claims, Tompkins v. State, 872 So. 2d 230, 239 (Fla. 2003), the 
document at issue in this case is neither exculpatory nor impeaching.  Rather, it 
contains answers to questions that are consistent with Detective Ojeda’s reports 
and deposition testimony, which were available to Jimenez before trial.  Therefore, 
it contains nothing new.  Cf. Mills v. State, 507 So. 2d 602, 604 (Fla. 1987) (“Our 
examination does not show that the State put words in this witness’[s] mouth.  
Even though some of the questions [the State provided to its witness] contained 
answers to those questions, there is no evidence that these answers emanated from 
any source other than the witness.”). 
Furthermore, the record conclusively refutes Jimenez’s speculation of 
nefarious intent on behalf of the State in terms of the prosecutor somehow working 
with Detective Ojeda to keep information about a white van from the jury because 
the word “out” was written in the margin next to questions regarding the van.  
Before Detective Ojeda testified at trial, the prosecutor asked another NMPD 
officer, Officer Sidd, a question concerning whether Officer Cardona’s 
investigation of the white van led her to conclude that the individuals in the van 
were not involved in the murder that is virtually identical to the question denoted 
 
- 51 - 
with the word “out” in the document at issue, and the trial court sustained defense 
counsel’s objection.  In other words, it was not the prosecutor but the trial court 
that (properly) kept this (hearsay) testimony “out,” although the jury was permitted 
to hear testimony from at least four witnesses, three of whom were law 
enforcement officers, relating to the white van. 
Accordingly, even if the recently disclosed document presents anything new, 
on the merits, because the document is neither exculpatory nor impeaching, it fails 
under the first prong of Brady. 
In conclusion, all seven of the subclaims that Jimenez raised or sought to 
raise in his sixth successive postconviction motion are procedurally barred and, in 
any event, without merit.  Although Jimenez argues that the postconviction court 
did not properly consider the force of all of the Brady and Giglio violations 
evinced in the new evidence when it assessed materiality, there is no newly 
discovered evidence in NMPD’s post-warrant submission.  Accordingly, all of 
Jimenez’s claims are procedurally barred and due to be summarily denied on that 
basis alone.  To the extent our alternative merits analysis reached materiality for 
the Brady violations alleged in Jimenez’s third and fifth subclaims, adding up the 
force of Jimenez’s own statements—that do not place him in the position to 
innocently leave his fingerprint on the inside of the victim’s front door or put him 
cooperating with law enforcement in any way that mattered to the evidence 
 
- 52 - 
actually presented at trial—plus the force of a fax coversheet showing a 
Sessler/Calderon connection to NMPD’s investigation of the victim’s murder—
that if introduced would open the door to damaging evidence concerning Jimenez’s 
involvement in another person’s death—and weighing it against the totality of the 
evidence introduced at trial, this evidence could not “reasonably be taken to put the 
whole case in such a different light as to undermine confidence in the verdict.”  
Smith, 235 So. 3d at 268-69 (quoting Kyles, 514 U.S. at 435).  Further, although 
we alternatively reached materiality for the Giglio/due process argument Jimenez 
raised in his third subclaim with respect to the State’s arguments concerning 
Jimenez’s innocent contact with the victim or her apartment and his cooperation 
with detectives during his interview, there are no additional instances of false 
testimony or misleading argument to consider cumulatively with the materiality 
analysis we already conducted for that subclaim.  Jimenez is not entitled to relief, 
singularly or cumulatively, on his allegations that NMPD’s post-warrant records 
disclosure evinces Brady, Giglio, due process, and discovery violations. 
CONCLUSION 
For the reasons above, we affirm the postconviction court’s orders 
summarily denying Jimenez’s fifth and sixth successive postconviction motions 
pursuant to rule 3.851, the postconviction court’s order denying Jimenez’s motion 
to correct illegal sentence pursuant to rule 3.800(a), and the postconviction court’s 
 
- 53 - 
order denying Jimenez’s motion to amend his sixth successive postconviction 
motion.  We further lift the stay of execution entered on August 10, 2018.  No 
rehearing will be entertained by this Court, and the mandate shall issue 
immediately.  
 
It is so ordered. 
CANADY, C.J., and POLSTON, LABARGA, and LAWSON, JJ., concur. 
LEWIS, J., concurs in result. 
PARIENTE, J., concurs in part and dissents in part with an opinion, in which 
QUINCE, J., concurs. 
 
PARIENTE, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part. 
I agree that Jimenez is not entitled to relief on his second post-warrant 
appeal regarding newly discovered evidence (No. SC18-1321).  See majority op. at 
19-52.19  However, I dissent from affirming the postconviction court’s denial of 
Jimenez’s first post-warrant appeal regarding Florida’s lethal injection protocol 
(No. SC18-1247).  See majority op. at 7-17.  For the reasons explained below, I 
would reverse and remand for an evidentiary hearing on these claims. 
 
 
                                          
 
 
19.  As to the majority’s discussion of this issue, I reiterate the importance of 
“express[ing] the prejudice prong of Brady [v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963),] in 
terms of a probability sufficient ‘to undermine confidence in the verdict’ and not a 
reasonable probability of a different result.”  Pittman v. State, 90 So. 3d 794, 822 
(Fla. 2011) (Pariente, J., concurring in result) (quoting Strickler v. Greene, 527 
U.S. 263, 290 (1999)). 
 
- 54 - 
Florida’s Lethal Injection Protocol 
For the fifth time since this Court’s decision in Asay VI,20 Florida will 
execute a death-sentenced defendant using a lethal injection protocol that the 
defendant argues is in violation of the Eighth Amendment to the United States 
Constitution.  See majority op. at 13.  Indeed, the majority relies on Asay VI to 
deny Jimenez relief on these claims.  See majority op. at 14-15.  However, Jimenez 
challenges Florida’s lethal injection protocol in light of new and troubling 
information, specifically regarding Florida’s most recent execution, which, at the 
very least, should be fully developed at an evidentiary hearing.  I disagree with the 
majority that Jimenez’s claims “are insufficient to require revisiting our holding in 
Asay VI.”  Majority op. at 16. 
In my dissenting opinion in Asay VI, I explained that Asay was 
unconstitutionally denied access to documents that may have supported his claim 
that Florida’s new lethal injection protocol—which replaced midazolam with 
etomidate as the first drug in the protocol, intended to induce unconsciousness—
violates the Eighth Amendment’s bar against cruel and unusual punishment.  224 
So. 3d at 705-08 (Pariente, J., dissenting).  Although Asay VI is now final, Jimenez 
presents new, additional evidence from the executions Florida has performed since 
that decision—Mark Asay on August 24, 2017, Michael Lambrix on October 6, 
                                          
 
 
20.  Asay v. State (Asay VI), 224 So. 3d 695 (Fla. 2017). 
 
- 55 - 
2017, Patrick Hannon on November 8, 2017, and Eric Branch on February 22, 
2018—regarding the possibility that the lethal injection protocol subjects the 
defendant to cruel and unusual punishment. 
As to the administration of the first drug in the lethal injection protocol, 
etomidate, the postconviction court wrote in its order denying Jimenez’s motion: 
“As the administration of the etomidate commenced, Branch released a guttural 
yell or scream. . . .  Branch’s legs were moving, his head moved, and his body was 
shaking.”  Order, at 4.21  His body “continued to shake and his chest was heaving 
for another four minutes.”  Initial Br., at 38.  The postconviction court noted and 
the majority accepts that all of this took place “before the consciousness check was 
performed before the subsequent administration of the second and third drugs.”  
Order, at 4; majority op. at 15.  Dr. Lubarsky, “an experienced anesthesiologist,” 
Initial Br., at 29, opined that this was “indicative of insufficient anesthetic depth 
prior to the administration of the second and third drugs.”  Id. at 38. 
As to the second and third drugs, Jimenez alleges that—according to Dr. 
Lubarsky’s review of Florida’s lethal injection protocol and records from Branch’s 
execution—Branch had only “1/10th of the clinical dose of etomidate . . . in his 
bloodstream” by the end of the execution process, an amount that is “insufficient to 
                                          
 
 
21.  The postconviction court’s Order Denying Successive Motion to Vacate 
Judgments of Conviction & Sentence is cited herein as “Order.” 
 
- 56 - 
ensure that” he did “not feel the excruciating pain of the second and third 
drugs.”  Id. at 31.  In Dr. Lubarsky’s opinion, Branch’s scream was “objective 
evidence” of his “experiencing significant pain during [the] execution,” id. at 35—
not “in protest of his execution or a reaction to etomidate.”  Majority op. at 15.  Of 
course, this information was unknown when this Court rejected Asay’s challenge 
to the new lethal injection protocol.   
In my view, this new information makes it impossible to allow another 
execution to proceed without thoroughly reviewing whether Florida’s lethal 
injection protocol subjects defendants to a substantial risk of pain, in violation of 
the Eighth Amendment.  Thus, I would reverse and remand for an evidentiary 
hearing. 
Further, I reiterate my long-standing concern that a one-drug protocol has a 
greater likelihood of reducing any substantial risk of pain.  Specifically, Florida’s 
continued use of a paralytic agent, such as rocuronium bromide, could lead to a 
situation where defendants like Jimenez are entirely aware of the execution, 
including the attendant extreme pain and suffering, but unable to inform anyone of 
or indicate such awareness.  See Initial Br., at 49.  I again urge the executive 
branch to adopt a one-drug protocol to avoid this unconstitutional risk.  See Asay 
 
- 57 - 
VI, 224 So. 3d at 705 (Pariente, J., dissenting) (quoting Schwab v. State, 973 So. 2d 
427, 429 (Fla. 2007) (Pariente, J., concurring)).22   
Short Warrant Period 
Finally, I note the seriously constricted warrant period in this case.  As the 
majority explains, Governor Scott signed Jimenez’s death warrant on July 18, 
2018, scheduling his execution for 27 days later—August 14, 2018.  Majority op. 
at 4 & n.1.  The original scheduling order determined July 31, 2018, as the 
“deadline for completing proceedings before the postconviction court.”  Majority 
op. at 7. 
This extremely short warrant period created a fire drill approach to the 
review of Jimenez’s claims.  It was not until after the postconviction court denied 
Jimenez’s sixth successive postconviction motion (filed on August 6, 2018) that 
this Court entered a stay of execution.  See majority op. at 6.  The postconviction 
court and Jimenez’s attorneys were forced to race against the clock in reviewing 
and presenting all of Jimenez’s claims, respectively.  But for this Court entering a 
                                          
 
 
22.  Indeed, it appears that many other states that still impose the death 
penalty have adopted one-drug protocols.  Eight states—Arizona, Georgia, Idaho, 
Missouri, Ohio, South Dakota, Texas, and Washington—have used a single-drug 
method for executions.  Six other states—Arkansas, California, Kentucky, 
Louisiana, North Carolina, and Tennessee—have announced plans to use a one-
drug protocol.  Death Penalty Info. Ctr., State by State Lethal Injection, 
https://deathpenaltyinfo.org/state-lethal-injection (last visited Aug. 6, 2018). 
 
- 58 - 
stay of execution as a result of Jimenez’s second post-warrant appeal, this Court 
would have also had inadequate time to thoroughly review his claims.   
While I realize that all proceedings should be completed by the time the 
Governor signs a death warrant, some claims, such as those challenging the 
execution method, cannot be raised or evaluated until the signing of the death 
warrant.  At the least, defendants must have adequate time to investigate and raise 
and courts must have adequate time to properly review these warrant-based claims.  
Since executions resumed in Florida after Hurst, the judicial system—the 
circuit courts, this Court, and the United States Supreme Court—has been faced 
with increasingly short warrant periods, the shortest being the one in this case—a 
mere 27 days.23  However, the Legislature—tasked with providing “the method, 
the means, and the instrumentalities for executing death sentences imposed by the 
courts pursuant to the law,” Abdool v. Bondi, 141 So. 3d 529, 543 (Fla. 2014) 
(quoting Blitch v. Buchanan, 131 So. 151, 155 (Fla. 1930))—has determined that a 
warrant period of 180 days is reasonable.  See § 922.052(2)(b), Fla. Stat. (2018); 
Abdool, 141 So. 3d at 544.  Thus, I urge the Executive branch, in setting warrant 
                                          
 
 
23.  The warrant period for Asay’s execution was 52 days.  Asay VI, 224 So. 
3d at 699.  The warrant period for Lambrix’s execution was 34 days.  Lambrix v. 
State, 227 So. 3d 112, 112 (Fla. 2017).  The warrant period for Hannon’s execution 
was 33 days.  Hannon v. State, 228 So. 3d 505, 508 (Fla. 2017).  The warrant 
period for Eric Branch’s execution was 34 days.  Branch v. State, 236 So. 3d 981, 
983-84 (Fla. 2018). 
 
- 59 - 
periods, to consider the judicial proceedings that must be completed before the date 
of execution. 
CONCLUSION 
For these reasons, while I agree that Jimenez is not entitled to relief on his 
newly discovered evidence claims, I would reverse and remand for an evidentiary 
hearing on his claims challenging Florida’s lethal injection protocol. 
QUINCE, J., concurs.    
An Appeal from the Circuit Court in and for Miami-Dade County,  
Richard L. Hersch, Judge - Case No. 131992CF0341560001XX 
 
Martin J. McClain and Linda McDermott of McClain & McDermott, P.A., Wilton 
Manors, Florida, 
 
 
for Appellant 
 
Pamela Jo Bondi, Attorney General, Tallahassee, Florida, Lisa-Marie Lerner, 
Assistant Attorney General, West Palm Beach, Florida, and Melissa Roca Shaw, 
Assistant Attorney General, Miami, Florida, 
 
 
for Appellee