By John Barry, Times Staff Writer
Tuesday, January 31, 2012
TAMPA — The prosecution's case looks simple: Derrick Cullins fatally stabbed his half brother and his brother's friend in 2009, dumped their bodies in the woods, then ripped out the carpeting and repainted the house to hide the evidence. Cullins had blood on his shoes and a bite mark on his chest. Blood was found all over the house.
But the trial of Cullins, 31 — charged with the second-degree murders of his brother, Carl Walters, 21, and Walters' friend Ryan Davis, 20 — is anything but simple. The trial, presided over by Hillsborough Circuit Judge Emmett Battles, is expected to take three weeks.
In opening arguments Tuesday, the defense said the case is a rush to judgment. There are no eyewitnesses, no suggested motive. The defense says it will call witnesses who saw both victims alive after they were supposed to have been killed.
Assistant State Attorney Ada Carmona told the jury Tuesday that the two men were killed Sunday, April 5, 2009, at the Tampa home the brothers shared.
The prosecutor said Walters' blood was found in the living room, foyer and kitchen. Davis' blood, she said, was found in the hallway, kitchen, a spare bedroom and on Cullins' shoes. The living room carpet was missing.
Walters' naked body was found in the woods in Plant City April 7. He had been stabbed 18 times. Davis' skeleton wasn't found until the following February.
Prosecutors said Cullins spent the morning of April 6 buying cleaning products. When detectives searched his truck, they found a receipt from a nearby waste disposal site for the dumping of a carpet.
But Assistant Public Defender Ann Shane said the house had been in a constant state of remodeling. The carpet that was dumped was never found. The blood evidence was conflicting.
She also said the jury would hear from a neighbor who saw and talked with Walters outside the house on the Monday after he was supposed to have been killed. She said another witness would testify that she talked with Davis, the second victim, at a graduation ceremony at the Florida State Fairgrounds in June, two months later.
"Chronology is going to matter in this case," she told the jury. "You will not rush to judgement. You will see Mr. Cullins did not kill."