Genesson Beraut v. Commonwealth of Kentucky

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 2, 2023
Docket2021 CA 000953
StatusUnknown

This text of Genesson Beraut v. Commonwealth of Kentucky (Genesson Beraut v. Commonwealth of Kentucky) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Genesson Beraut v. Commonwealth of Kentucky, (Ky. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

RENDERED: MARCH 3, 2023; 10:00 A.M. NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals

NO. 2021-CA-0953-MR

GENESSON BERAUT APPELLANT

APPEAL FROM HENDERSON CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE KAREN L. WILSON, JUDGE ACTION NO. 20-CR-00005

COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY APPELLEE

OPINION AFFIRMING

** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: CETRULO, JONES, AND MCNEILL, JUDGES.

JONES, JUDGE: Genesson Beraut appeals from the Henderson Circuit Court’s

judgment following conviction at his jury trial. The trial court sentenced Beraut to

ten years’ imprisonment after he was found guilty of complicity to a first-degree

robbery committed by his associate, Junior Balan. After a thorough review of the

facts and the law, we affirm. I. BACKGROUND

At approximately 2:15 p.m. on November 13, 2019, Caitlyn Singh and

Kimberly McClure were working at 41 North Express Liquor, a spirit shop located

next to Highway 41 in Henderson, when two black men of about medium height

walked in wearing hooded sweatshirts or jackets. The raised hoods on both men

were cinched tight, partially obscuring their faces. Security camera video footage

from inside the store showed the men briefly conversing before one of the men,

later identified as Beraut, followed Caitlyn into the “employees only” storeroom.

He began chatting with her while simultaneously raising one leg and placing it on a

box across the aisle, blocking her exit into the main area of the store. Caitlyn

initially thought he was flirting with her, though she later testified that Beraut also

asked her, “what would [she] do if he had a gun?” At first, she thought he was

joking, but he seemed serious. Caitlyn became angry and ordered him out of the

storeroom. She tried to move past Beraut’s raised leg, and he eventually complied

and allowed her to pass.

When Caitlyn emerged into the main part of the store, she saw

Kimberly at the register, hands raised. While Beraut was with Caitlyn in the

storeroom, Balan had pointed a handgun at Kimberly and demanded the cash from

the register. After Kimberly handed over the money, Balan shouted, “let’s go!”

and the two men bolted out the front door of the establishment. Caitlyn and

-2- Kimberly ran out the door after them, attempting to keep Balan and Beraut in view

as they fled on foot. The two men ran away from Highway 41, down Watson Lane

and past a church, at which point the women lost sight of them.

Meanwhile, Dominique Milan, a friend of Kimberly’s, was driving

toward the store when she saw the women running from it. She asked Kimberly

what was happening, and Kimberly said the store had been robbed. Dominique got

to the store, turned around, and came back to find Kimberly. The women then saw

a gold Buick drive past with Beraut behind the wheel. Kimberly told Dominique

that those were the people who robbed her. At this point, Dominique, who was

still in her vehicle, called 911 to report the robbery, described the gold Buick as the

suspect vehicle, and also told the dispatcher that she was currently following the

Buick. She gave turn-by-turn directions to the police until they caught up to her

and initiated a stop of the Buick. The vehicle had three occupants: Beraut in the

driver’s seat, Beraut’s pregnant girlfriend in the passenger seat, and Balan in the

back seat. After obtaining a search warrant for the vehicle, police investigators

recovered $445 in cash inside a pink fanny pack located on the floorboard of the

front passenger seat, where it was covered by a black hooded jacket.

Approximately four months after this incident, a rusting handgun resembling the

one used in the robbery was found in the yard of a residence near the church where

the two men had fled.

-3- When questioned by Henderson police, Beraut initially declined to

provide his personal information and stated he did not know anything about the

robbery. He also initially told police he had not been inside the liquor store. In a

second interview, however, Beraut admitted his previous statement was false and

he had been inside the liquor store, but he was only there to flirt with the clerk.

The interviewer, Detective Jake Isonhood, stopped Beraut’s account to express his

disbelief that Beraut would go inside the liquor store and flirt with Caitlyn while

his pregnant girlfriend was waiting in the vehicle outside. Reviewing the security

camera footage from the store, Detective Isonhood later described it to the jury in

the following way:

They walk in, kind of walk around a little bit. At one point in time, you see both of them go into the corner, almost like they are talking, that is what it appears they are doing, at which time Mr. Balan goes around, goes toward the counter where Kim is, at which time Mr. Beraut walks around and looks to see what Mr. Balan is doing and then goes towards the back of the store.

Once in the back of the store, he places his leg on the box, preventing Caitlyn from going out. You see her try to shove the foot. She is not able to. She points and then eventually they work their way out.

Whenever they work their way out you can hear, because it is audio and video on the one where Kim is at, you can hear Mr. Balan yell, “let’s go,” and that’s when both of them, not just one of them, take off running out of the store.

-4- As a result of this incident, the Henderson County grand jury indicted

Beraut on one count of complicity1 to first-degree robbery.2 During Beraut’s jury

trial, the Commonwealth presented testimony from Caitlyn, Dominique, and

Detective Isonhood detailing the aforementioned sequence of events. In addition,

Officer Jeremy Ebelhar, also of the Henderson Police Department, testified

regarding the physical items recovered from the scene, i.e., the clothing, fanny

pack, and cash recovered in the search of the gold Buick, as well as the handgun

which was found four months afterward. The Commonwealth also provided the

jury with the opportunity to view the liquor store’s security camera footage.

Beraut testified in his own defense. He conceded that the evidence

pointed to Balan robbing the liquor store but vigorously asserted that he knew

nothing about Balan’s plan. Beraut testified that he, his girlfriend, and Balan were

on a road trip to Alabama when they stopped to smoke marijuana. According to

Beraut, Balan did not want to drink the beer they had in the car, and so he went

inside the store to purchase liquor. Beraut claimed he followed Balan inside the

store because he was out of paper to roll marijuana cigarettes. He asserted the

hood was cinched tight around his face because it was cold outside. While inside

the store, Beraut said that Balan encouraged him to flirt with the clerk. Beraut

1 Kentucky Revised Statutes (KRS) 502.020. 2 KRS 515.020, a Class B felony.

-5- admitted he placed his leg on the box to prevent Caitlyn from walking away, but he

claimed that his goal was to keep her talking to him as long as possible to increase

his chances of getting her telephone number. Beraut admitted he may have talked

to Caitlyn about a gun, but he did not remember the specific context for that

particular topic. Beraut then claimed he did not know that Balan was carrying a

gun, nor that Balan intended to rob the clerk, and he ran when Balan yelled “let’s

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