Share and Follow
Inset: Davarius James (Escambia County Jail). Background: Home in Pensacola, Florida, where he allegedly murdered his girlfriend (Google Maps).
A Florida man, aged 38, has been sentenced to life imprisonment for the murder of his girlfriend earlier this year. The tragic incident involved the brutal beating and strangling of his 50-year-old partner inside their shared residence, reportedly because she had given away some of his possessions.
On Wednesday, Escambia County Circuit Judge John L. Miller handed down the life sentence to Davarius James for the murder of Claudette Robinson, as confirmed by authorities.
Last month, it took a jury less than half an hour to convict James of second-degree murder. This swift decision followed the presentation of evidence by prosecutors detailing the “brutal beating and strangling attack,” according to a news release from the First Judicial State Attorney’s Office.
The evidence showcased the severe injuries Robinson suffered, including fractures to her ribs, throat, and chest, along with brain and spinal cord hemorrhaging, as reported by the Pensacola Journal. The medical examiner likened her injuries to those seen in car crash victims, with the exception of a fractured hyoid bone in her neck, indicating manual strangulation.
Instead of maintaining his innocence, James’ defense attorney urged the jury to consider a lesser charge of manslaughter, though the jury ultimately decided otherwise.
As Law&Crime previously reported, officers with the Pensacola Police Department responded to a home in the 900 block of North 7th Avenue in regard to a domestic disturbance at about 7 a.m. on Feb. 3. The woman who called 911 told the dispatcher she received a call from James, a lifelong friend, who asked her to come check on Robinson. When she went inside the home, she said Robinson’s right eye was sealed shut from bruises and swelling and that the victim was “cold to the touch.”
When the friend said they needed to call 911, James said something along the lines of “this isn’t going to look good.” He told the friend Robinson’s injuries were from a “fall.”
She went outside to call the police, but when she returned, James had already fled.
Deputies instructed the friend to call James on speaker and she complied, telling James the police needed to speak with him. He responded by saying he “would have to tell them about last night,” adding that “she been dead.” When she told him the cops were listening to the conversation, he hung up, the affidavit said.
In an interview after his arrest, and after he was given his Miranda rights, James explained he and Robinson had been dating for about two years and living together for about a year.
He said they got into an argument the night before about her giving his personal items away to family and friends without his permission, which “angered” him. He said he tried to grab her arm, but claimed she yanked away from him, causing her to fall and hit the back of her head.
When detectives questioned how she could suffer an injury to her face when she fell on the back of her head, they said James became “agitated” and claimed she fell in a “twisting fashion, hitting her face first and then the back of the head.”
The defendant said the victim got up “wobbly” and walked to the bathroom, which is when he heard a crash. He said he went to check on her and found her on the floor. James allegedly said he helped her up and guided her to the bed where they laid together. The victim “stopped talking and just held him,” cops wrote.
According to the affidavit, James continued to check on her pulse and her breathing because “he was concerned that she would die.”
“James recounted that at one point Robinson was shaking and her eyes were rolling in the back of her head, his solution was to pour cold water on top of her. This shocked Robinson and she grabbed James again,” detectives stated.
He was “satisfied she was not dead,” eventually fell asleep and awoke around 7 a.m. the next day, cops wrote. He said his girlfriend was breathing but “very shallowly.” Then he went to meet with his parole officer. After returning to the home, he told Robinson “yesterday is in the past, daddy is here to take care of you,” according to the affidavit.
But when he went to pick her up she felt “stiff,” which is when he started calling friends for help, police wrote. He also had been previously arrested for an alleged domestic violence incident against Robinson in which she was “afraid that James would kill her,” investigators noted.
During an opening statement, prosecutors said James performed a Google search for the following: “If I performed CPR over five hours ago, why isn’t it working?” Other searches included James “asking how to determine if someone was dead, how long someone can live off CPR, and searches about how to tell if someone had been choked by the neck,” prosecutors previously said.