State of Louisiana v. Antonio Loyd

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 14, 2019
Docket52,814-KA
StatusPublished

This text of State of Louisiana v. Antonio Loyd (State of Louisiana v. Antonio Loyd) 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. Antonio Loyd, (La. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Judgment rendered August 14, 2019. Application for rehearing may be filed within the delay allowed by Art. 992, La. C. Cr. P.

No. 52,814-KA

COURT OF APPEAL SECOND CIRCUIT STATE OF LOUISIANA

*****

STATE OF LOUISIANA Appellee

versus

ANTONIO LOYD Appellant

Appealed from the Fourth Judicial District Court for the Parish of Morehouse, Louisiana Trial Court No. 2017-173F

Honorable Marcus Hunter, Judge

LOUISIANA APPELLATE PROJECT Counsel for Appellant By: Edward K. Bauman

ROBERT S. TEW Counsel for Appellee District Attorney

JOHN GATES SPIRES Assistant District Attorney

Before MOORE, GARRETT, and STONE, JJ. MOORE, J.

After a second jury trial, the defendant, Antonio Loyd, was convicted

of first degree robbery in violation of La. R.S. 14:64.1. The trial court

sentenced Loyd to 25 years hard labor without benefit of probation, parole,

or suspension of sentence. For the following reasons, we affirm the

conviction and sentence.

Facts

Whitney Yates was working as a teller at Ouachita Independent Bank

(“OIB”) in Bastrop, Louisiana on December 14, 2016, when the defendant

entered the bank and approached her station. He handed Ms. Yates a note

which said his child had cancer, he needed money, and this was a robbery.

Yates testified that, after reading the note, she looked up at him, and “he let

me know that he had a gun, and he would shoot me if I did not get him the

money.” Although she did not actually see a gun, Ms. Yates testified that

the defendant indicated he had a gun by reaching into his left pocket. He

told her not to press the panic button and demanded large bills. He took the

money and left the bank.

A surveillance video captured the robbery. This video, lasting 1

minute and 13 seconds, was played for the jury. Ms. Yates had a clear view

of the defendant’s face: He did not wear a mask and only the width of a

desk separated the defendant from Ms. Yates. Ms. Yates identified the

defendant in open court as the person in the video who robbed her.

Shortly after the robbery, Captain Leondrio Reed of the Bastrop

Police Department interviewed Ms. Yates. He prepared a photographic

lineup, (State’s Ex. S-1), but Ms. Yates was too shaken over the incident to attempt an identification. A week or so later, Captain Reed again met with

Ms. Yates and asked her to review the same photo lineup. (State’s Ex. S-2).

Yates did not identify anyone in the lineup as the robber.

In February, 2017, Captain Reed received a crime stoppers tip from

April Trahan of Sulphur, Louisiana. April told Reed that she was the sister

of Ashley Blakeman, who was Antonio Loyd’s girlfriend. Reed traveled to

Calcasieu Parish and interviewed Ms. Blakeman. Based upon Blakeman’s

statement to him, Captain Reed prepared a third photo lineup—this time

including a photo of Antonio Loyd (State’s Ex. S-5). He met with Ms.

Yates, and she positively identified the appellant as the robber.

Based on information Captain Reed obtained from Ms. Blakeman,

Bastrop Police Department Assistant Chief Anthony Evans went to the

Super 8 Motel in Monroe and obtained a motel receipt in the name of

Antonio Loyd for the night of December 13, 2016. (State’s Ex. S-3).

Captain Reed went to the Family Dollar store where he was able to obtain

surveillance video footage showing Loyd purchasing a pair of pants on the

afternoon of the robbery. (State’s Ex. S-7).

Captain Reed testified, without objection, that he confirmed that a

person named Antonio Loyd checked into the Westlake Isle of Capri, Lake

Charles, Louisiana, on the night of December 14, 2016, and stayed two

nights. This was after the robbery occurred earlier in the day on December

14, 2016.

Ashley Blakeman, Loyd’s former girlfriend, testified and identified

Loyd as the person with whom she traveled to Bastrop in December, 2016.

She said that she and Loyd spent the night at the Super 8 Motel in Monroe

on December 13, 2016. She reviewed the Super 8 Motel receipt, (State’s Ex. 2 S-3), and confirmed that the signature on the receipt was Loyd’s. On

December 14, 2016, they drove to Bastrop to visit Loyd’s brother. During

the day, they left his brother’s house and went to Family Dollar store where

Loyd bought a pair of sweat pants. He put them on in the car. They rode

around a few minutes and then went to a bank. Loyd told her to “lay her

seat down.” She asked him what was going on and he told her not to worry

about it.

Ms. Blakeman reviewed the bank video with the jury. She identified

Loyd in the video and said he was wearing the same clothing he had on

when he got out of the car and entered the bank. She said Loyd returned to

the car and drove away fast to his brother’s home in Bastrop where he pulled

up on the side of the house all the way towards the back.1 After a while, she

asked Loyd when they were going to leave, and he said a little bit closer to

dark. When they left, they returned to Calcasieu Parish by a different route

from that which they traveled to Monroe the night before. About halfway

there, Loyd told her they were going to the Isle of Capri.2 After they

checked in, they went to the room where Loyd pulled money from his

sweater. She said that it was thousands of dollars. He gave her several

hundred dollars.

1 She testified that when they first visited his brother earlier that day, he parked the car in front of the house. 2 An exhibit (S-9) depicting a reservation at the Isle of Capri for that date was offered subject to cross-examination and defense counsel elected to reserve his right to cross-examine after the witness was tendered for cross-examination. On cross examination, defense counsel asked Ms. Blakeman questions regarding the location, route, and what happened after they got to the Casino, all of which she answered; however, she acknowledged that she never saw a receipt or anything signed by anyone. After this inquiry in the presence of the jury, defense counsel objected to the admission of this exhibit for lack of proper foundation and the objection was sustained. 3 Blakeman reviewed a still frame photo from the bank robbery video

and identified Loyd. (State’s Ex. 4). She stated she got a photo off the

Internet which led her to believe Loyd was involved in the robbery. On

cross examination, she was asked how she came to get a photo of Loyd

related to robbery. She stated that after they arrived at the Isle of Capri, she

put two and two together. She typed in (on the computer) Bastrop and the

date and multiple things popped up (about the robbery), including a picture

of Loyd. When asked why she just did not ask Loyd about it, she answered

“I did ask him, and he told me that it was none of my business, not to worry

about it.” She actually asked him multiple times and she got the same

answer. After obtaining Loyd’s photograph from the Internet, Blakeman

showed it to her sister, April Trahan. Ms. Trahan later contacted Captain

Reed.

On cross-examination, Ms. Blakeman admitted that she was pregnant

when the defendant broke off their relationship to go back to his wife. The

baby was 10 and ½ months old at the time of trial.

The jury returned a verdict of guilty of first degree robbery. The trial

court ordered a presentence investigation and fixed sentencing for July 19,

2018. Loyd was sentenced to serve 25 years at hard labor, without benefit of

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