Commission on Capital Cases updates this information regularly.  This information, however, is subject to change and may not reflect the latest status of an inmate’s case and should not be relied upon for statistical or legal purposes. 

 

LONG, Robert Jo (W/M)

AKA: Bobby Joe Long

DC#    494041

DOB:  10/14/53          

 

Thirteenth Judicial Circuit, Hillsborough County, Case# 84-13346

Sentencing Judge, Trial:  The Honorable John P. Griffin

Sentencing Judge, Resentencing:  The Honorable Richard A. Lazzara

Attorney, Trial:  Charles O’Connor – Assistant Public Defender

Attorney, Resentencing:  Robert Fraser – Assistant Public Defender

Attorneys, Direct Appeal:  Ellis Rubin & David Rappaport – Private

Attorney, Direct Appeal (Resentencing):  A. Anne Owens – Assistant Public Defender

Attorney, Collateral Appeals:  Robert A. Norgard – Private

 

Date of Offense:  05/27/84

Date of Sentence:  07/25/86    

Date of Resentence:  07/21/89

 

Circumstances of the Offense:

 

On 07/25/86, Robert Long was sentenced to death for the murder of Michelle Simms in Hillsborough County, Florida.

 

On 11/16/84, Long was arrested and charged for the kidnapping and sexual battery of Lisa McVey.  In a confession obtained on that date, Long gave the following account of the events that preceded Michelle Simms’ death.  Long bought some rope the night before the murder and cut it into sections before it was put in his vehicle’s glove box.  Long then went looking for a prostitute along Kennedy Boulevard in Tampa.  Long then stopped next to the victim and obtained her company for $50.  After the victim entered the car, Long drove approximately one mile before making the victim undress at knife point and reclined the passenger’s seat until it was flat before he tied her up.  Long stated that he then drove approximately 15-20 miles before he raped the victim.  Long then talked to the victim and told her that he was going to drop her off where he picked her up.  Instead, Long drove to Plant City where he attempted to strangle the victim.  When that failed, he hit her head with a club and pushed her from the vehicle.  Long left her on the side of the road after he slit her throat.  Long discarded the victim’s clothing at the scene of the murder.   

 

The nude body of Michelle Simms was discovered on 05/27/84, in a wooded area near Plant City, Florida.  A rope was tied around the victim’s wrists and around her body to restrict the movement of her hands and her clothing was scattered in the surrounding area.  The victim’s throat was cut, there was blood on her face and head and the victim also suffered from rope burns on her neck and chin.  The medical examiner stated that the cause of death could have been either strangulation, bleeding from two knife slashes in her neck, or head injuries.

 

Additional Information:

 

On 09/23/85, Long entered into a plea agreement in Hillsborough County, which included eight counts of first-degree murder, eight counts of kidnapping, seven counts of sexual battery, and the kidnapping and sexual battery of Lisa McVey, whose abduction led to Long’s arrest on 11/16/84.  Long agreed not to contest the admissibility of his confessions of the physical evidence, in return for which the State agreed to the imposition of a life sentence for all crimes charged, except for the murder of Simms.

 

Long was convicted of another first-degree murder charge in Pasco County (CC# 84-2275) and sentenced to death on 05/03/85.  During his final Direct Appeal (Retrial II), filed to the Florida Supreme Court, the Court vacated Long’s death sentence, reversed his conviction, and remanded the case to the Circuit Court with directions to enter an order of acquittal for the murder of Johnson.

 

Trial Summary:

 

11/28/84          Indicted as follows:

                                    Count I:           Kidnapping (Lisa McVey)

                                    Count II:         Sexual Battery (Lisa McVey)

                                    Count III:        First-Degree Murder (Michelle Simms)

09/23/85          Jury returned guilty verdicts on all counts of the indictment

07/18/86          Jury recommended death by a vote of 11-1

07/25/86          Sentenced as follows:

                                    Count I:           Kidnapping (Lisa McVey) – Life

                                    Count II:         Sexual Battery (Lisa McVey) – Life

                                    Count III:        First-Degree Murder (Michelle Simms) – Death

06/30/88          FSC remanded case back to lower court for resentencing for Count III

06/29/89          Jury recommended death by a vote of 12-0

07/21/89          Sentenced as follows:

                                    Count III:        First-Degree Murder (Michelle Simms) – Death


Appeal Summary:

 

Florida Supreme Court – Direct Appeal

FSC# 69,259

529 So. 2d 286

 

09/02/86          Appeal filed

06/30/88          FSC remanded case to circuit court for resentencing

08/26/88          Rehearing denied

09/29/88          Mandate issued

 

Florida Supreme Court – Direct Appeal (Resentencing)

FSC# 74,512

610 So. 2d 1268

 

08/03/89          Appeal filed

10/15/92          FSC affirmed the conviction and death sentence

01/26/93          Rehearing denied

02/25/93          Mandate issued

 

United States Supreme Court – Petition for Writ of Certiorari

USSC# 92-8669

510 U.S. 832

 

04/26/93          Petition filed

10/04/93          Petition denied

 

State Circuit Court – 3.850 Motion

CC# 84-13346

 

12/29/94          Motion filed

08/01/95          Motion denied

 

Florida Supreme Court – 3.850 Appeal

FSC# 86,433

672 So. 2d 543

 

09/11/95          Appeal filed

03/18/96          Appeal dismissed


State Circuit Court – 3.850 Motion

CC# 84-13346

(Pending)

 

10/04/95          Motion filed

03/31/03          Amended motion filed

 

Factors Contributing to the Delay in Imposition of Sentence:

 

The 3.850 Motion has been pending in the Circuit Court for over ten years and the remanding of the case resulted in the filing of two Direct Appeals in the Florida Supreme Court.  A status conference is to be held 10/31/07 to determine competency for an evidentiary hearing.

 

Case Information:  

 

During the trial, testimony was presented stating that Long had suffered from a series of the following head injuries: he had been knocked unconscious for several minutes as a result from falling off of a swing; he had been knocked unconscious for approximately 20 minutes as a result of falling down a flight of stairs; he had been hospitalized for approximately one week as a result of being hit by a car at age seven; he had been knocked unconscious as a result of falling off of a horse; he had been in a serious motorcycle accident in which he had suffered serious head injuries at age 20 while enlisted in the army. 

 

A Direct Appeal was filed to the Florida Supreme Court on 09/02/86.  Issues that were raised on Direct Appeal included whether the trial court erred by denying the defendant’s motion to vacate his plea agreement and whether the use of prior convictions, which were later vacated by the Court, unfairly prejudiced the sentencing proceedings.  The Court agreed that the use of the prior convictions as aggravating factors was harmful error and remanded the case to the Circuit Court for resentencing on 06/30/88. 

 

A second Direct Appeal was filed to the Florida Supreme Court on 08/03/89.  Issues that were raised on appeal included whether the trial court erred in denying Long’s motion to withdraw his guilty pleas and whether the trial court erred in allowing the hearsay testimony of two detectives regarding the details of the two other rapes as crimes of violence in aggravation.  The Court found all of the issues either harmless or without error and affirmed the conviction and the death sentence on 10/15/92.  A Petition for Writ of Certiorari was filed to the United States Supreme Court on 04/26/93 and denied on 10/04/93.

 

A 3.850 Motion was filed to the Circuit Court on 12/29/94, which was denied on 08/01/95.

 

A 3.850 Appeal was filed to the Florida Supreme Court on 09/11/95 and was dismissed without prejudice at the request of the defendant on 03/18/96 so that an amended 3.850 could be filed; that 3.850 was filed to the Circuit Court on 10/04/95.  On 03/31/03, an amended motion was filed to the Circuit Court, which is currently pending. 

 


The Commission on Capital Cases updates this information regularly.  This information, however, is subject to change and may not reflect the latest status of an inmate’s case and should not be relied upon for statistical or legal purposes. 

 

LONG, Robert Jo (W/M)

AKA: Bobby Joe Long

DC# 494041

DOB:  10/14/53

 

Sixth Judicial Circuit, Pasco County, Case# 84-2275CFAES

Sentencing Judge, Trial:  The Honorable Ray E. Ulmer, Jr.

Sentencing Judge, Retrial (I):  The Honorable Wayne L. Cobb

Sentencing Judge, Retrial (II):  The Honorable Charles W. Cope

Attorneys, Trial:  Robert A. Norgard & Randall Grantham – Assistant Public Defender

Attorneys, Retrial (I): William Eble – Chief Assistant Public Defender

Robert McClure – Assistant Public Defender

Attorneys, Retrial (II): William Eble – Chief Assistant Public Defender

                                    Laurie R. Chane – Assistant Public Defender

Attorney, Direct Appeal:  W.C. McLain – Assistant Public Defender

Attorney, Direct Appeal (Retrial I):  Steven L. Bolotin – Assistant Public Defender

Attorney, Direct Appeal (Retrial II):  A. Anne Owens – Assistant Public Defender

 

Date of Offense:  approximately 10/22/84

Date of Sentence: 05/03/85

Date of Resentence (I): 03/02/89

Date of Resentence (II): 04/12/94

 

Circumstances of the Offense:

 

On 05/03/85, Robert Long was sentenced to death for the murder of Virginia Johnson in Pasco County, Florida. 

 

Virginia Johnson was an 18-year-old prostitute of Tampa, Florida.  She was an alcoholic and a drug addict of mainly cocaine and heroin.  Roughly 1½ years before she was murdered, Johnson lived with several different men.  On October 1984, Johnson’s friend, Sharon Martinez, reported Johnson missing.  According to Martinez, her last encounter with Johnson took place as Johnson was going to a health clinic to be treated for gonorrhea.  Bernadine Herman, a nurse at the health clinic, confirmed that Johnson arrived for her appointment for treatment of gonorrhea on 10/15/84, but did not return for a follow-up examination. 

 

On 11/06/84, two female horseback riders found human remains in a pasture.  The two women rode to a nearby mobile park and notified the sheriff’s department.  Investigators and crime scene technicians arrived at the pasture and searched the area thoroughly for evidence.  They found the human remains in two separate areas; a pair of women’s panties was also found nearby.  The technicians transported the human remains to the medical examiner’s office.  Dr. Joan Wood, the medical examiner, found no injury to any of the bones other than that caused by animals after death, and remaining skin tissue could not be evaluated due to decomposition.  Dr. Wood concluded that a shoelace entwined around the neck was the manner of death; however, she could neither confirm nor exclude manual strangulation as the cause of death.  Dr. Wood estimated the time of death to be approximately 15 days prior to the discovery of the body.  The human remains were then transferred over to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) for further examination. 

 

Curtis Wilken, a forensic anthropologist, examined the human remains and concluded that a comparison of the teeth with dental records ultimately identified the remains to be those of Johnson. 

 

Michael Malone, a hair and fiber expert with the FBI, examined the hair samples taken from the remains and compared hairs, fibers to hairs, and fibers, which had previously been removed from Robert Long’s car when it was searched by the Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office for the investigation of the murder of Michelle Simms.  The hairs found in Long’s car microscopically matched the head hairs taken from Johnson’s remains.  Malone believed that Johnson had been in Long’s car.

 

Before the discovery of Johnson’s remains, Long was arrested on 11/16/84 in Tampa for an unrelated charge – the sexual battery and kidnapping of Lisa McVey.  Long was interrogated by the Hillsborough Sheriff’s Office and Long confessed to the murder of Johnson.  During the interrogation, Long indicated Johnson approached him in Pasco County and offered him “a date” for $30 or $40.  Long admitted he had sex with her before strangling her with his hands.  He then dragged Johnson’s body into a horse pasture and left her tied with shoestring.  Long recalled leaving Johnson’s panties on her body.

 

Additional Information:

 

The date Johnson was murdered is unknown.  Based on a medical examiner’s estimates, Johnson was murdered on 10/22/84.

 

On 09/23/85, Long entered into a plea agreement in Hillsborough County, which included eight counts of first-degree murder, eight counts of kidnapping, seven counts of sexual battery, and the kidnapping and sexual battery of Lisa McVey, whose abduction led to Long’s arrest on 11/16/84.  Long agreed not to contest the admissibility of his confessions of the physical evidence; in return, the State agreed to the imposition of a life sentence for all crimes charged, except for the murder of Simms.

 

Long is currently serving a death sentence for the murder of Michelle Simms, the Hillsborough County case (CC# 84-13346).
Prior Incarceration History in the state of Florida:

 

Long confessed to eight other murders and was convicted of sexual battery in numerous other cases where the victim was not murdered. 

 

5/29/1984

Sexual Battery with a Deadly Weapon

7/12/1985

PINELLAS

LIFE

5/29/1984

Kidnapping during a Felony

7/12/1985

PINELLAS

LIFE

5/29/1984

Robbery with a Deadly Weapon

7/12/1985

PINELLAS

LIFE

5/29/1984

Armed Burglary

7/12/1985

PINELLAS

LIFE

 

Trial Summary:

 

12/06/84          Indicted as follows:

                                    Count I:  First-Degree Murder (Virginia Johnson)

04/27/85          Jury returned guilty verdicts on all counts of the indictment

04/27/85          Jury recommended death by a vote of 12-0

05/03/85          Sentenced as follows:

                                    Count I:  First-Degree Murder (Virginia Johnson) – Death

11/07/88          Jury trial

11/07/88          Jury returned guilty verdicts on Count I

11/10/88          Jury recommended death by a vote of 9-3

03/02/89          Sentenced as follows:

                                    Count I:  First-Degree Murder (Virginia Johnson) – Death

02/10/94          Jury returned guilty verdicts on Count I

02/10/94          Jury recommended death by a vote of 7-5

04/12/94          Sentenced as follows:

                                    Count I:  First-Degree Murder (Virginia Johnson) – Death

 

Appeal Summary:

 

Florida Supreme Court – Direct Appeal

FSC# 67,103

517 So.2d 664

 

06/03/85          Appeal filed

11/12/87          FSC vacated Long’s conviction and sentence and remanded the case back to the Circuit Court for retrial

04/18/88          Mandate issued


Florida Supreme Court – Direct Appeal (Retrial I)

FSC# 74,017

610 So.2d 1276

 

04/17/89          Appeal filed

10/15/92          The FSC reversed the conviction and sentence and remanded the case back to the Circuit Court for retrial       

02/26/93          Mandate issued

 

Florida Supreme Court – Direct Appeal (Retrial II)

FSC# 83,593

689 So.2d 1055

 

04/26/94          Appeal filed

03/06/97          FSC vacated Long’s death sentence, reversed his conviction, and remanded the case to the Circuit Court with directions to enter an order of acquittal for the murder of Johnson

04/07/97          Mandate issued

 

Factors Contributing to the Delay in Imposition of Sentence:

 

The Florida Supreme Court took nearly three years to render a decision for Long’s initial Direct Appeal.  Long’s case was remanded back to the lower court for a retrial. 

 

For Long’s Direct Appeal (Retrial I), the Florida Supreme Court took over three years to render a decision. 

 

For Long’s Direct Appeal (Retrial II), the Florida Supreme Court took nearly three years to render a decision. 

 

Case Information:

 

On 06/03/85, Long filed a Direct Appeal to the Florida Supreme Court.  Among ten claims raised by Long during appeal, Long’s confession issue was dispositive.  When held in custody by law enforcement for an interrogation, Long uttered the sentence, “I think I might need an attorney.”  The question in this case is whether Long clearly stated his right to counsel by the statement.  The Court held that the statement was equivocal to Long having voluntarily waived his Miranda rights and did not intend to terminate the interrogation to consult with counsel.  Furthermore, the Court maintained that the investigating officers did not attempt to clarify the equivocal request for counsel, but continued to interrogate Long to obtain the eventual confession to the murder of Johnson.  The Court concluded that without equivocal request for counsel, the confession was voluntary and admissible.  On 11/12/87, the Court vacated the conviction and sentence and remanded the case back to the Circuit Court for a new trial.  On 04/18/88, the mandate was issued. 

 

On 04/17/89, Long filed a Direct Appeal (Retrial I) to the Florida Supreme Court.  On appeal, Long raised four claims.  First, Long claimed the trial court erred in allowing the State to produce for the jury, over the defense counsel’s objection, a videotape interview of Long by CBS News as Williams Rule evidence.  Second, Long claimed the trial court erred in allowing the State to present evidence, including hair, fiber, and tire track evidence, regarding four other murders to which Long had pleaded guilty in the Hillsborough County plea agreement.  Third, Long claimed the trial court erred in allowing the State to present the Hillsborough County murders as the central feature of the trial.  Fourth, Long claimed the trial court erred in allowing evidence of the Hillsborough County guilty pleas and convictions resulting from Long’s plea agreement may not be admitted as aggravating factors given the terms of the plea agreement.  The Court concluded the trial court erred only in allowing evidence of the Hillsborough County murders to be introduced in aggravation against Long; however, this ruling did not preclude the introduction of relevant evidence regarding offenses for which Long was convicted before he entered into Hillsborough County plea agreement.  Accordingly, on 10/15/92, the Court reversed Long’s conviction and sentence of death and remanded the case back to the Circuit Court for a new trial.  On 02/26/93, the mandate was issued.

 

On 04/26/94, Long filed a Direct Appeal (Retrial II) to the Florida Supreme Court.  A number of the problems surrounding this case have involved the use of facts from the Hillsborough County cases to obtain a conviction in this case.  In analyzing the issues of importance, the Court upheld the Hillsborough plea agreement to sustain the eight murder convictions obtained against Long through that agreement.  Because of the limited evidence available in this case due to that plea agreement, the Court was compelled to conclude that there is insufficient evidence available to find Long guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of the murder of Johnson.  On 03/06/97, the Court vacated Long’s death sentence, reversed his conviction, and remanded the case to the Circuit Court with directions to enter an order of acquittal for Johnson’s murder.  On 04/07/97, the mandate was issued.

 

Institutional Adjustment:

 

DATE             DAYS             VIOLATION                                     LOCATION      

--------  ----                   ------------------                          -------------------

01/13/86          45                 POSS OF WEAPONS                          FLORIDA STATE PRISON

02/11/88          30                 FIGHTING                                            FLORIDA STATE PRISON

08/10/88          0                   DISORDERLY CONDUCT                FLORIDA STATE PRISON

12/10/91          30                 UNARMED ASSAULT                       FLORIDA STATE PRISON

01/06/92          0                   SPOKEN THREATS                            FLORIDA STATE PRISON

02/12/93          0                   DISORDERLY CONDUCT                UNION C. I.         

05/23/93          0                  DISOBEYING ORDER                        UNION C. I.        

07/08/93          0                   FEIGNING ILLNESS OR                   UNION C. I.        

09/27/95          0                   FIGHTING                                            UNION C. I.        

05/06/96          0                   UNARMED ASSAULT                       UNION C. I.        

06/19/00          180               UNARMED ASSAULT                       UNION C. I.        

12/22/00          60                 DISORDERLY CONDUCT                UNION C. I.        

12/05/01          0                   MAIL VIOLATIONS                           UNION C. I.        

01/02/03          30                 FIGHTING                                            UNION C. I.

______________________________________________________________________

 

Report Date:   05/13/03          CC

Approved:       07/10/03          WS      

Updated:         02/04/10          EMJ