Title: Berry Kessler v. State of Florida

State: florida

Issuer: Florida Supreme Court

Document:

Supreme Court of Florida
 
____________
No. 90,035
____________
BERRY KESSLER,
Appellant,
vs.
STATE OF FLORIDA,
Appellee.
[November 18, 1999]
PER CURIAM.
We have on appeal the judgment and sentence of the trial court imposing the
death penalty upon Berry Kessler.  We have jurisdiction.  Art. V, § 3(b)(1), Fla.
Const.  We reverse the conviction because the trial court failed to allow adequate
screening of prospective jurors concerning pretrial publicity.
Berry Kessler and John Deroo established Custom Craft Cabinetry, a cabinet
manufacturing shop, in Hudson, Florida, in 1990.  A year later, on February 3,
1  Prior to trial on the state charges, Kessler was charged with and convicted of numerous
federal crimes arising from the Deroo murder, including interstate conspiracy to commit murder. 
He was sentenced to life in prison on the federal charges.
2  The court found that the murder was committed in a cold, calculated, and premeditated
manner and was committed for pecuniary gain.
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1991, Deroo's body was found in the shop by Kessler and two friends.  He had
been shot six times in the face.  Based on evidence uncovered in subsequent years,
Kessler was indicted for first-degree murder in May 1994.  Evidence at trial
showed the following:  Kessler had purchased a $500,000 "key man" life insurance
policy on Deroo in March 1990, and then just weeks before the murder had tried to
increase its value to $1,000,000; after Deroo's death, when Kessler was told that
Deroo had not kept up the payments on the policy, Kessler exclaimed, "Oh my
god" (Kessler had been sending Deroo funds to pay the premiums); Kessler
subsequently initiated a scheme to set up another corporation (XTC Leather and
Lace), hire a figurehead ("Bo" Yankee), insure him for up to $1,000,000 as a "key
man," and then murder him; this latter scheme was infiltrated by the FBI and in the
course of this plot Kessler made many inculpatory remarks concerning the Deroo
murder, which were recorded by the FBI.1
Kessler was tried for the Deroo murder, and the FBI tapes were introduced at
trial.  He was convicted as charged.  The trial court pursuant to the jury's nine-to-
three vote sentenced him to death based on two aggravating circumstances,2 two
3  The court found the following:  the defendant's age (he was sixty-nine years old at the
time of the murder, and seventy-five at the time of sentencing); and the defendant's lack of a prior
significant criminal record.  The court gave "slight weight" to each factor.
4  The court found the following:  the defendant would not be a danger to society as a
septuagenarian in prison; the defendant served and was decorated in World War II; the defendant
was married to the same woman for fifty years (although he had been cheating on her for years);
he had raised four children; he is Jewish, attended temple, and was generous to the children at the
synagogue; he was generous in his business (although evidence showed he was "a clever, cunning,
and deceitful wheeler-dealer who was consistently attempting to separate victims from their
assets"); he was gainfully employed but was under financial and emotional stress; he behaved
himself at trial; he can be productive in prison (although he "plotted and planned while in jail
awaiting trial to have key witnesses against him killed"); and his prior convictions were for
nonviolent offenses.  The court gave slight weight to most of these factors.
5  Kessler claims that the trial court erred on the following points:  (1) in denying his for
cause challenge of juror Mengel; (2) in admitting his statements to FBI informant Barkett; (3) in
allowing evidence of other bad acts to become a feature of this trial; (4) in admitting evidence of
his income tax convictions; (5) in admitting evidence that he showed no sympathy when told of
Deroo's death; (6) in denying a mistrial after the prosecutor and witnesses made comments
concerning his federal convictions.
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statutory mitigating circumstances,3 and several nonstatutory mitigating
circumstances.4  Kessler raises six issues on appeal,5 but we find a single claim
dispositive.
Prior to trial, Kessler on September 6, 1996,  filed with the court a three-
page "Motion for Individual and Sequestered Voir Dire," stating in part:
The defendant, by and through undersigned
counsel, respectfully moves this Honorable Court to
order that prospective jurors in this cause be questioned
in voir dire individually and out of the hearing of other
prospective jurors, for the purpose of discerning their . . .
knowledge of the case based upon pre-trial publicity and
asserts the following grounds in support of his motion:
A.  In order to obtain a fair and impartial jury, it is
6  The text of the questionnaire read in full:
1.  Are you familiar with any of the individual(s) whose
name(s) are set forth in this questionnaire?  If yes, please state the
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absolutely essential to inquire of each prospective juror
about his knowledge of the offense, the parties and the
witnesses.  It is necessary to inquire what the veniremen's
knowledge is and to ask questions to determine how that
knowledge will affect his deliberations.
1.  By explaining what he or she has heard about
the charges or what he or she knows about parties or
witnesses, a venireman may very likely impart his
knowledge to the other prospective jurors unless there is
individual, sequestered voir dire.  Such knowledge,
which is often based on opinion, rumors, hearsay, media
coverage and other sources of inadmissible evidence, can
taint the entire venire that is exposed to it and serve to
deny the Defendant a fair trial by an impartial jury.  
2.  Whenever there is believed to be a significant
possibility that individual jurors will be ineligible to
serve because of exposure voir dire shall take place
outside the presence of other chosen and prospective
jurors. 
. . . .
D.  To deny this motion it to deny the Defendant
his right to a fair trial by an impartial jury comprised of a
representative cross-section of the community, in
violation of Amends. V, VI and XIV, United States
Constitution and Art. I, Sect. 2, 9, 16 and 22, Florida
Constitution.
(Citations omitted.)  The court denied the motion and instead required prospective
jurors to complete a brief (i.e., three-question) form asking if they were familiar in
any way with the named individuals or charged crimes.6  The court made no
individual(s) with whom you are familiar.
2.  Have you read or heard anything about any of the above-
named individual(s) or the charges alleged against the above named
defendant?  ____ yes ____no.  If your answer is "yes" please
answer question number 3 below.
3.  If your answer to question 2 was "yes", do you:  (mark
appropriate answer)
____ a. feel that you can put aside anything that you have
read or heard about this case and serve with an open mind and
reach a verdict based only on the law and evidence presented during
the trial?
or 
____ b. feel that, as a result of what you have read or heard
about this case, you will not be able to serve with an open mind and
render an impartial decision based only on the law and the evidence
presented at trial?    
7  The following discussion transpired at voir dire:
MR. EBLE (defense counsel):  I'm going to renew our
request for individual voir dire as far as pretrial publicity based on
the Boggs decision and also the practical matter on behalf of Mr.
Kessler, the Defendant, cannot make an educated decision as to
whether to strike these people for cause or peremptorily based on
information that I'm unaware of.  Just ask them if you know
something and can you be fair.  We need to know what they know
so we can make an objective decision as to whether they're being
truthful to themselves or not as to any other matters that we ask
them questions about.  We may not expect it to take their answers
as gospel, it's obvious that two of these jurors have read the
newspaper article which goes into the federal conviction and the
potential of admissions made by the defendant.  Perhaps I could
give the Court a copy of the newspaper article as an exhibit at this
time in support of our motion.
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provision for private follow-up questioning of jurors who responded affirmatively
to the general questions on the form.  During voir dire, defense counsel renewed
his request for individual and sequestered questioning, and the court again denied
the request.7
THE COURT: . . . And the motion for individual voir dire
is denied.  I've had a chance to read Boggs.  I appreciate you getting
me a copy.  But I remember it differently as opposed to the way
[defense counsel] remembers it.  So you may proceed. 
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On the morning of the second day of voir dire, Tuesday, December 10, 1996,
the St. Petersburg Times newspaper published on the front page of its Pasco
County edition an article concerning the trial.  The title read: "Murder-for-hire trial
starts today."  The subtitle stated: "The state is pursuing charges against a
defendant who has already been convicted in federal court of killing a Hudson
cabinetmaker."  The caption below a picture of Kessler read: "Berry Kessler is
serving a life sentence with no possibility of parole."  The text of the article stated
in part:
The trial is unusual for a number or reasons, chief
among them that Kessler already has been convicted in
federal court in the killing of Hudson cabinetmaker John
Deroo and an Ohio businessman.  Kessler is serving a life
sentence in prison with no possibility of parole.
. . . .
He was arrested two years [after the killing of
Deroo] and convicted of trying to arrange a second hit on
another business partner, who was involved in a
pornography shop with Kessler in Columbus, Ohio.
At the time, Columbus police said Kessler had
been a suspect in at least five other slayings  of business
associates.  The cases have never been solved.
T. Christian Miller, Murder-for-Hire Trial Starts Today, Pasco Times, St.
Petersburg Times, Dec. 10, 1997, at 1B.
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Prior to commencement of voir dire that day, defense counsel asked the
court to poll the venire concerning the newspaper article, and the court refused:
MR. EBLE (defense counsel):  Would the Court
please ask if [prospective jurors] read the St. Pete Times,
or the Court would let us ask them if they're Times
readers?
THE COURT:  I'm not inclined to do that, because
that simply brings up specificity, which only goes back --
I think the standard questionnaire covers it, so your
request is denied.
During the subsequent voir dire, the following discussions took place with
venireperson Mengel:
THE COURT:  . . . Mr. Mengel, do you feel that
you can put aside anything that you may have read or
heard about this case and serve with an open mind and
reach a verdict based only on the law and the evidence
presented during the course of the trial? 
THE COURT:  Yes, sir.
. . . .
THE COURT:  All right.  Thank you, sir.  Mr.
Mengel, is your knowledge concerning this charge based
upon firsthand knowledge, that is, something you actually
saw or heard, or upon secondhand knowledge?
PROSPECTIVE JUROR MENGEL:  Newspaper
this morning.
THE COURT:  All right.  Do you feel you could
set aside – I believe we have already discussed that you
feel you could set aside that and render your verdict
based upon the evidence and the law in this case.
PROSPECTIVE JUROR MENGEL:  Yes.
. . . .
MR. MENSH (prosecutor):  . . . So if you have
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read or heard something on the outside, whether it was in
the morning or yesterday or before, you can assure Judge
Webb that you will put that out of your mind and only
consider the facts and testimony from the witness stand,
coupled with the law that Judge Webb tells you that
applies to them.  Will you do that?
PROSPECTIVE JUROR MENGEL:  Yes.
MR. MENSH:  Mr. Mengel, you indicated that you
read something maybe this morning.  Without going into
it, would you be able to do that, put that aside?
PROSPECTIVE JUROR MENGEL:  Yes, sir.
. . . .
MR. EBLE (defense counsel):  . . . Mr. Mengel,
you also read the newspaper, so I'm going to ask you the
same questions.  Was it today's St. Pete Times?
PROSPECTIVE JUROR MENGEL:  Pasco Times.
MR. EBLE:  And without telling me what the
opinion was, if you formed one, but did you read the
article all the way through?
PROSPECTIVE JUROR MENGEL:  Yes.
MR. EBLE:  When you read the article, did you
form an opinion as to the guilt or innocence of Mr.
Kessler?  Without telling me what, did you form and
opinion at the time you read the article?
PROSPECTIVE JUROR MENGEL:  I didn't form
an opinion me personally, but I assumed that somebody
else had formed an opinion and found him guilty.  I'm
sorry.
MR. EBLE:  But --
PROSPECTIVE JUROR MENGEL:  But I didn't
form an opinion.
MR. EBLE:  Have you not formed an opinion as
you sit here today?
PROSPECTIVE JUROR MENGEL:  No.
MR. EBLE:  Do you presume Mr. Kessler innocent
of the charges against him?
PROSPECTIVE JUROR MENGEL:  Yes.
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MR. EBLE:  You can assure Mr. Kessler and
myself, if you are selected, that you presume him
innocent as we sit here?
PROSPECTIVE JUROR MENGEL:  Yes.
. . . .
MR. EBLE:  Mr. Mengel, I have the same question
of you, sir.  Mr. Kessler's entered a plea of not guilty to
the charges in this Indictment that he effected the death
of John DeRoo from a premeditated design.  Will you
hold the State to that burden if selected as a juror?  
PROSPECTIVE JUROR MENGEL:  Yes, sir. 
After defense counsel exhausted his peremptory challenges, he asked that Mengel
be excused for cause.  The court denied the request and also denied defense
counsel's request for an additional peremptory challenge to strike Mengel, who
ultimately sat on the jury.
Kessler now contends that the court erred in failing to excuse Mengel for
cause.  The State, on the other hand, points out that Mengel said he could put aside
any adverse publicity and render an impartial verdict.  The State argues that the
court ruled properly pursuant to Castro v. State, 644 So. 2d 987 (Fla. 1994), and 
Bundy v. State, 471 So. 2d 9 (Fla. 1985).  We disagree.
The trial court standard for granting an excusal for cause is based on
reasonable doubt:  "The juror should be excused if there is any reasonable doubt
about the juror's ability to render an impartial verdict."  Turner v. State, 645 So. 2d
444, 447 (Fla. 1994).   A trial court's ruling on an excusal for cause will be
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sustained on appeal absent an abuse of discretion.  Castro v. State, 644 So. 2d 987,
990 (Fla. 1994).  Discretion is abused "only where no reasonable man [or woman]
would take the view adopted by the trial court."  Huff v. State, 569 So. 2d 1247,
1249 (Fla. 1990).
We addressed a similar pretrial publicity issue in two recent cases--both
arising in Pasco County--wherein we reversed the capital convictions because the
court refused to allow individual and sequestered voir dire.  See Bolin v. State, 736
So. 2d 1160 (Fla. 1999); Boggs v. State, 667 So. 2d 765 (Fla. 1996).  In Bolin, we
addressed this issue at length:
[W]e hold that the preferred approach for Florida trial
courts is to conduct individual and sequestered voir dire
of prospective jurors whenever, as in Boggs, "the timing
and content" of pretrial publicity creates the probability
that prospective jurors have been exposed to prejudicial
information that will not be admissible at trial.  Clearly,
the timing of the newspaper articles at issue in this case,
which were published two days before and the day of the
voir dire examination, was such that the information
would be fresh in the minds of venirepersons who had
read the articles.  Just as clearly, the content of the
articles stating that the defendant had been convicted in a
prior trial of this same murder, that he had been
convicted in another prior trial of murdering two
Hillsborough County women, and that he had been
sentenced to death was prejudicial and inadmissible
information.  These articles also contained information
about Bolin's former wife's testimony as to Bolin's
confession to her, which was the very information this
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Court had found to be erroneously admitted at Bolin's
prior trial.  This Court had found harmful error in the
admission of this same evidence and had reversed the
conviction and remanded for the instant retrial below. 
Exposure to this information might not require
disqualification of prospective jurors if this information
were going to be introduced into evidence.  However, all
of the foregoing information had been excluded from this
trial on evidentiary grounds.  Moreover, the entire jury
venire likely would have been tainted by knowledge of all
of this inadmissible evidence if the trial judge or counsel
had questioned prospective jurors in the presence of other
venirepersons regarding exposure to pretrial publicity.
We further comment on this issue to provide
guidance to trial judges when confronted with pretrial
publicity in cases in which the death penalty is sought. 
Such publicity is normal in cases with extreme public
interest, and we continue to adhere to our holding that the
decision as to individual and sequestered voir dire is a
discretionary decision for the trial judge.  However, as a
caveat, we advise trial courts that they must consider the
timing and content of the published information in
making the decision as to whether to conduct individual
and sequestered voir dire.  Trial courts must ascertain
whether prospective jurors possess information which is
not admissible in the trial in which they will serve as
jurors and which is so prejudicial to the defendant that
the jurors' knowledge of the information creates doubt as
to whether the jurors can decide the case based solely
upon the evidence that will be admitted at trial.
Bolin, 736 So. 2d at 1165-66 (citations omitted). 
In the present case, we note the following:  (1) The newspaper article in the
St. Petersburg Times was published on the second day of voir dire and thus was
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fresh in jurors' minds; (2) the information contained in the article was
extraordinarily prejudicial (i.e., the article stated that Kessler had already been
convicted in federal court of the present crime, that he was serving a life sentence
without possibility of parole in federal prison for the present crime, that he
additionally had been convicted of trying to arrange a second contract murder of
another businessman, and that he was a suspect in at least five other unsolved
murders of business associates); (3) much of the above information (except the
details of the plot to kill a second businessman) was inadmissible in the present
trial; and (4) juror Mengel read the article in its entirety.
As in both Bolin and Boggs, the circuit court in the present case denied the
defense request for individual and sequestered voir dire.  This prevented defense
counsel from developing an accurate picture of the impact of the article on juror
Mengel, for had counsel attempted to do so the information would have been
broadcast to the entire venire.  Defense counsel, for instance, was unable to gauge
the following:  Whether Mengel had focused closely on the article  when he read it;
whether he had understood and absorbed the details of the article; whether he had
found the article credible; and whether he had experienced a gut-level reaction to
the article.
The State contends that it is enough that Mengel averred that he possessed
8  See also Singer v. State, 109 So.2d 7, 24 (Fla. 1959) ("[Knowledge of inadmissible
information] cannot be erased from the mind as chalk is erased from a blackboard.").
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an open mind and could render a fair verdict based solely on the evidence
presented at trial.  We disagree.  We addressed a similar situation in Reilly v. State,
557 So. 2d 1365 (Fla. 1990), wherein we concluded that it would be unrealistic to
believe that a prospective juror could unring this bell:
The problem is that juror Blackwell knew that a
confession had been given.  This might not require
disqualification if the confession were going to be
introduced into evidence.  Here, however, the confession
had been suppressed.  Thus, juror Blackwell was aware
of a fact that was inadmissible which was for more
damaging to Reilly than anything which was actually
introduced into evidence.  While Mr. Blackwell
subsequently gave the right answers with respect to
whether or not he could be an impartial juror, it is
unrealistic to believe that during the course of
deliberations he could have entirely disregarded his
knowledge of the confession no matter how hard he tried. 
Thus, we conclude that reversible error was committed by
the failure to excuse juror Blackwell for cause.
Reilly, 557 So. 2d at 1367.8  Based on our decisions in Reilly, Boggs, and Bolin we
reiterate the following:  When a prospective juror has been recently exposed to
pretrial media reports containing highly damaging inadmissible information (such
as that in the present case), the preferred practice is to permit individual and
sequestered voir dire to determine the extent of juror bias.
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The case cited for support by the State, Bundy v. State, 471 So. 2d 9 (Fla.
1985), is inapplicable to the present case.  This Court in Bundy was confronted
with the issue of whether the trial court erred in denying the defendant's motion for
change of venue.  Several of the venirepersons who ultimately were seated on the
jury knew of Bundy's convictions for prior murders but had stated they would put
that knowledge aside.  This Court affirmed the denial of the motion, ruling as
follows:
The mere existence of extensive pretrial publicity
is not enough to raise the presumption of unfairness of a
constitutional magnitude. . . .  The mere existence of a
preconceived notion as to guilt or innocence is
insufficient to rebut the presumption of a prospective
jurors' impartiality.  It is sufficient if the juror can lay
aside his opinion or impression and render a verdict
based on the evidence presented in court. . . .  We hold
that Bundy has failed to show that he did not receive a
fair and impartial trial because the setting or time of his
trial was inherently prejudicial.
Bundy, 471 So. 2d at 19-20.  Our ruling in Bundy was in the context of a motion
for change of venue--not a dismissal for cause.  We were deciding in that case
whether the trial should have been held elsewhere--i.e., whether an entire
community should have been summarily excused for cause, so to speak--not
whether an individual juror should have been excused.  The practical and policy
considerations underlying these two issues are vastly different.  The above
9  The State's reliance on Castro v. State, 644 So. 2d 987 (Fla. 1994), is similarly
misplaced.  There, unlike the present case, individual voir dire was conducted to determine the
effect of pretrial publicity.
10  We note that our decision in Boggs, which is directly on point, had been issued months
before voir dire took place in either Bolin or the present case.  Although defense counsel for
Kessler brought Boggs to the attention of the trial court during voir dire, the court rejected our
decision as inapposite.  Both Bolin and the present case were tried by the same circuit court judge
in Pasco County.
11  To assist the court on retrial, we address the remaining issues as follows.  (2) The FBI
did not violate Kessler's right to counsel by obtaining inculpatory statements through the use of
informant Barkett--at the time the statements were made, Kessler was not undergoing custodial
interrogation nor had he been charged with the present crime.  See Kirby v. Illinois, 406 U.S. 682
(1972); Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966).  (3) Evidence of other crimes was not
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language, which properly states the law vis-a-vis change of venue, cannot be lifted
out of context and applied to the present case to trump recent decisions of this
Court that are directly on point.9
Based on the foregoing, we conclude that without individual and sequestered
voir dire the trial court in the present case did not have before it sufficient
information on which to conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that juror Mengel
could render an impartial verdict.  Accordingly, the trial court abused its discretion
in refusing to dismiss Mengel for cause.  As in two other recent Pasco County
cases--Bolin and Boggs--we must reverse this conviction because the trial court
failed to allow adequate screening of jurors concerning pretrial publicity.10
We reverse the conviction, vacate the death sentence, and remand for a new
trial.11
improperly made a feature of the present trial--the probative value of the evidence outweighed its
prejudicial impact.  See Consalvo v. State, 697 So. 2d 805 (Fla. 1996); Heath v. State, 648 So. 2d
660 (Fla. 1994); Wuornos v. State, 644 So. 2d 1000 (Fla. 1994).  (4) The court erred in admitting
further evidence of Kessler's tax convictions--the evidence was irrelevant to any material fact in
issue in the present case.  See Czubak v. State, 570 So. 2d 925 (Fla. 1990).  (5) The court erred in
admitting evidence of Kessler's lack of remorse--any probative value was outweighed by the
prejudicial effect.  See Randolph v. State, 562 So. 2d 331 (Fla. 1990).  (6) The court did not abuse
its discretion in responding to witness statements referring to the federal proceeding--the
references were isolated and inadvertent.  See Merck v. State, 664 So. 2d 939 (Fla. 1995). 
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It is so ordered. 
HARDING, C.J., and SHAW, WELLS, ANSTEAD, PARIENTE, LEWIS and
QUINCE, JJ., concur.
NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING MOTION, AND IF
FILED, DETERMINED.
An Appeal from the Circuit Court in and for Pasco County,
William R. Webb, Judge - Case No. 9401015CFAWS-3
James Marion Moorman, Public Defender, and Paul C. Helm, Assistant Public
Defender, Tenth Judicial Circuit, Bartow, Florida,
for Appellant
Robert A. Butterworth, Attorney General, and Candance M. Sabella, Assistant
Attorney General, Tampa, Florida,
for Appellee