State of Louisiana v. Amin Barkatali Virani

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 8, 2026
Docket56,781-KA
StatusPublished
AuthorCox

This text of State of Louisiana v. Amin Barkatali Virani (State of Louisiana v. Amin Barkatali Virani) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of Louisiana v. Amin Barkatali Virani, (La. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Judgment rendered April 8, 2026. Application for rehearing may be filed within the delay allowed by Art. 922, La. C. Cr. P.

No. 56,781-KA

COURT OF APPEAL SECOND CIRCUIT STATE OF LOUISIANA

*****

STATE OF LOUISIANA Appellee

versus

AMIN BARKATALI VIRANI Appellant

Appealed from the Sixth Judicial District Court for the Parish of East Carroll, Louisiana Trial Court No. 108,183

Honorable James Hugh Boddie, Jr., Judge

LOUISIANA APPEALS AND Counsel for Appellant WRIT SERVICE By: Annette Fuller Roach

LIZ MURRILL Counsel for Appellee Louisiana Attorney General

J. TAYLOR GRAY DANIEL J. SMART Assistant Attorneys General

Before PITMAN, COX, and HUNTER, JJ. COX, J.

This appeal arises out of the Sixth Judicial District Court, East Carroll

Parish. Amin Virani was found guilty by a unanimous jury of attempted

second degree murder and sentenced to 25 years at hard labor without the

benefit of probation, parole, or suspension of sentence. Virani now appeals

his conviction and sentence. For the following reasons, we affirm Virani’s

conviction, vacate his sentence, and remand for resentencing.

FACTS

Virani was accused of shooting at and attempting to kill Matthew

Meadows. He was charged by bill of information on August 4, 2016, with

one count of attempted second degree murder in violation of La. R.S. 14:27

and 14:30.1. The trial began on September 13, 2024, where the following

testimonies and evidence were presented:

Deborah Hopkins testified that she is the 9-1-1 director for East

Carroll Parish. She stated that she pulled the requested 9-1-1 phone calls

from November 12, 2015, and downloaded them to a USB drive. Ms.

Hopkins identified the USB drive and two calls were played for the jury

from Meadows and his ex-wife, Rachel Meadows (“Rachel”).

Dr. Bart Liles testified that he is a general surgeon in Monroe,

Louisiana, and was accepted as an expert in general and trauma surgery. He

stated that after Meadows became a patient of his, he learned that his wife

and Meadows’ wife are first cousins. Dr. Liles testified that the first time he

met Meadows was when he was contacted to remove a bullet from

Meadows’ arm. He stated that he removed the bullet and gave it to Trooper

Sannika Williams. Dr. Liles stated that the bullet was just beneath the skin

near Meadows’ elbow. East Carroll Parish Chief Deputy Bill Hopkins testified that he was

the chief investigator at the time of the incident. He stated that he responded

to Rachel’s house after the 9-1-1 call. He testified that when he arrived at

the house, Rachel’s daughter ran to him, bear-hugged him, and said,

“Daddy’s trying to kill mama[.]” Dep. Hopkins stated that when he asked

Rachel what happened, she told him that Meadows raised his gun so she

raised her gun and shot at him, which is what she said on the 9-1-1 call.

Rachel then told Dep. Hopkins that Meadows threw his gun out of his truck

window. When Dep. Hopkins asked her where Meadows’ gun was located,

she showed him a .38 revolver wrapped in a black cloth on the kitchen

counter. He testified that when he cleared the weapon, there were four live

rounds and one spent round in the cylinder. Dep. Hopkins asked Rachel

where her gun was located, and she retrieved a .380 automatic pistol from a

back bedroom. He stated that when he cleared the .380, it was not loaded.

Dep. Hopkins testified that he bagged the weapons and the rounds

found in the .38 and asked Rachel to show him where the shooting took

place. He stated that from what he observed, “it looked like it was a one-

sided deal.” He testified that he saw four or five .380 casings in the

driveway, and the gravel looked as though someone drove away quickly.

Dep. Hopkins stated that because the scene did not seem to match Rachel’s

account of what happened, he called the State Police. He testified that

Rachel told another deputy a different version of events, but he could not

recall that version. The State replayed Meadows’ 9-1-1 call and Dep.

Hopkins testified that Meadows said, “I don’t know what he shot me with”;

“Some guy I don’t know”; “he’s coming out”; “the guy is coming up behind

me again”; and “the guy is in a Hyundai, I’m following him.” 2 Delhi Police Officer Craig Frasier testified that he was working for

the East Carroll Sheriff’s Department at the time of the shooting. He stated

that on the day of the shooting, he was dispatched to the intersection of Hwy

2 and Hwy 65. He testified that when he arrived, he met with Meadows,

who was parked in his truck, and asked him what happened. Based on his

memory and report, Officer Frasier stated that Meadows told him that as he

was speaking with Rachel about custody of the children, he could see

someone standing in the dark, the man called Rachel to him to talk, the man

started shooting at him, and he retreated to his vehicle. Officer Frasier

testified that when he questioned Meadows, Meadows described the shooter

as either “Indian” or “Mexican.” He stated that he saw blood on Meadows’

arm and what appeared to be bullet holes in the truck. Officer Frasier stated

that he called an ambulance for Meadows and secured the truck until

investigators arrived.

On cross-examination, Officer Frasier admitted that he stated in his

report that Meadows said he was shot by his ex-wife. On redirect, Officer

Frasier read his report for the jury, where he relayed the same information

that he testified to in his earlier testimony. He clarified that the line stating

that Meadows was shot by his ex-wife was a summary of what he was told

from dispatch.

Louisiana State Trooper Sanikka Williams testified that she is

currently a Lieutenant over criminal investigations and led the investigation

into Meadows’ being shot. She stated that when she arrived at Rachel’s

residence, she was briefed by the Sheriff’s deputies and other State Police

detectives. She testified that Rachel gave three different accounts of the

shooting. Crime scene photos were introduced during Lt. Williams’ 3 testimony. Lt. Williams identified tire marks leaving the driveway and four

shell casings found in the driveway, all of which correlated with where

Meadows’ truck was parked.

Lt. Williams also identified photos of Meadows’ truck, which

depicted bullet holes in both the driver’s and passenger’s windows. She

testified that glass was found inside the vehicle, which indicated that the

bullet was shot from the outside. She stated that they found Meadows’ 9

mm Smith & Wesson inside his vehicle. Lt. Williams stated that the gun

inside Meadows’ vehicle showed inconsistency in one of Rachel’s versions

of events that Meadows threw his gun out of the window. She testified that

Meadows’ 9 mm could hold eight bullets, and eight unfired bullets were

found in the weapon. Lt. Williams stated two bullet fragments were also

found inside Meadows’ truck.

Lt. Williams identified the revolver that was wrapped in cloth and

recovered from Rachel. She stated that it contained four live rounds and one

fired round. Lt. Williams also identified the Ruger .380 that Rachel

retrieved from her bedroom, which could hold six bullets but was empty. Lt.

Williams stated that the fact that the .380 was empty indicated it was fired.

She testified that the four casings found at the scene were determined to

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