State of Louisiana v. Bacardny Wayne George

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 7, 2009
DocketKA-0009-0143
StatusUnknown

This text of State of Louisiana v. Bacardny Wayne George (State of Louisiana v. Bacardny Wayne George) 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. Bacardny Wayne George, (La. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

09-143

STATE OF LOUISIANA

VERSUS

BACARDNY WAYNE GEORGE

**********

APPEAL FROM THE SIXTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF IBERIA, NO. 07-1162 HONORABLE EDWARD LEONARD JR., DISTRICT JUDGE

ELIZABETH A. PICKETT JUDGE

Court composed of Michael G. Sullivan, Elizabeth A. Pickett, and Billy Howard Ezell, Judges.

AFFIRMED.

J. Phillip Haney District Attorney, 16TH Judicial District Jeffrey J. Trosclair Assistant District Attorney 300 Iberia Street, Suite 200 New Iberia, LA 70560 (337) 369-4420 Counsel for State-Appellee: State of Louisiana

William Jarred Franklin Louisiana Appellate Project 3001 Old Minden Road Bossier City, LA 71112 (318) 746-7467 Counsel for Defendant-Appellant: Bacardny Wayne George PICKETT, Judge.

FACTS

On April 12, 2007, retired prosecutor Ralph Lee was sitting in a swing in his

back yard in New Iberia, drinking his morning coffee. Around 7:10 a.m., he heard

a female voice coming from City Park, located adjacent to the back yard of his home,

saying, “stop, you’re killing me, stop, you’re killing me.” Lee stood up, turned

around and saw a black male wearing a white t-shirt holding something over his head

and forcefully smashing it to the ground. Lee went through a gate from his yard into

a short street leading to the park and saw the man again raise something over his head

and smash it to the ground. Lee heard a “splat,” like “when you slap wet hamburger

meat on a counter.”

As Lee entered the park, he saw the man standing over what appeared to be a

human, lying on the ground. The man had his hands on his knees and was looking

at the person on the ground, “bending over looking at whatever he had done.” When

the chain link gate rattled, the man looked up and began walking toward an older

model green Cadillac parked in the “tear drop” area of the park. The man looked

directly at Lee once, and Lee was able to see his face “very well.”

Lee was also able to plainly see the license plate on the car, OOU 586. Lee

was unarmed, and, being a former assistant district attorney, understood the

importance of being able to get away with the license plate information. No one else

was in the park; Lee realized that “if [he] went down there was no witness left.” The

man got in the car and “drove off, very calmly, like nothing had happened.”

1 When Lee went to the person on the ground, he found a black female, lying on

her stomach, and “her head was an absolute mess.” Lee thought she was dead. He

jogged back to his house and called 911.

Deputy Jeff Credeur arrived at the park at 7:23 a.m. He found paramedics

treating the woman and noted she had a severe head injury. Lee gave Deputy Credeur

the car’s license plate number, and Deputy Credeur had Deputy Brimm run the plate.

The 1999 green Cadillac was registered to the defendant, Bacardny George.

Detective Jeff Matthews located the green Cadillac at the defendant’s

workplace, Superior Inspection Services, about a twenty-minute drive from the park.

The vehicle was placed in secure storage, and Detective Matthews tested areas in the

vehicle for blood. The tests were positive.

Around the same time, Ralph Lee identified the defendant from a photo lineup

as the person he had seen that morning in the park. At trial, Lee further identified the

defendant as the man in the park and in the photo, although he believed the defendant

was “a little lighter” in the courtroom than he had been at the time of the attack. Lee

had no doubt that the defendant was the man he had seen that day in the park.

Meanwhile, Nicole Watkins was “bleeding very actively” in the emergency

room of the Dauterive Hospital. Dr. Kevin Chamas, medical director and physician

at the hospital, found seventy-five severe lacerations to Watkins’ head. He

considered her condition life-threatening without treatment, and described her injuries

as “so extensive it was pretty difficult” to provide her the proper treatment. Watkins

was responding only to pain when she arrived, unable to verbalize recognizable

words. Dr. Chamas described her injuries as “facial edema over both eyes and then

the right cheek, right lip and then large flap lacerations to her posterior scalp.” The

2 scalp lacerations “were extremely severe and deep and actually at first it was really

difficult to realize how bad they were.” As Dr. Chamas was repairing lacerations, he

“just kept finding new lacerations and she had a total of about seventy-five (75)

severe lacerations.” Describing the lacerations, Dr. Chamas said “they were severe

as I had ever seen.”

A CAT scan showed Watkins had bleeding into the right frontal region of her

brain. Her injuries were to both the front and back of her head. Because no

neurosurgeon was available, Dr. Chamas repaired the extensive lacerations as quickly

as he could and prepared Watkins for transfer to Lafayette General Hospital.

Dr. Chamas testified it was unusual for him to stay at a patient’s bedside for

more than an hour. He was at Watkins’ bedside, providing “critical and extensive

care,” for more than two hours. He considered her injuries consistent with being

struck in the head with large rocks. Forensic testimony at trial showed the presence

of Watkins’ blood on a concrete block that weighed seventeen pounds, twelve

ounces; another concrete block found in the area with blood on it weighed eighteen

pounds and nine ounces.

At trial, the twenty-five-year-old Watkins testified she has an eleventh grade

education, lives with her mother and others, and has two children, ages five and nine.

She takes medication for seizures resulting from “what happened to [her].” She does

not recall being in the park, but knows she was in a black Jeep and smoked crack

cocaine on the night before the attack. She knows she has “a whole lot” of scars on

her head, and she has dreams about the attack.

The jury found the defendant guilty of attempted second degree murder on

August 13, 2008. The next day, the state charged the defendant with being a second

3 felony offender, based on his January 26, 2004 conviction for attempted possession

with the intent to distribute cocaine. The trial judge adjudicated the defendant a

second felony offender at proceedings on October 8, 2008, and sentenced him as such

to eighty years at hard labor without benefit of probation, parole or suspension of

sentence.

ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR

1. There is insufficient evidence to prove the guilt of defendant for the offense of attempted second degree murder beyond a reasonable doubt.

2. The trial court erred in allowing photographs of the alleged victim into evidence.

3. The sentence imposed is excessive for this offender and offense.

ERRORS PATENT

In accordance with La.Code Crim.P. art. 920, all appeals are reviewed by this

court for errors patent on the face of the record. After reviewing the record, we find

there are no errors patent.

ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR NUMBER ONE

The defendant contends the evidence was insufficient to prove his guilt of

attempted second degree murder beyond a reasonable doubt. The standard of review

in a sufficiency of the evidence claim is “whether, viewing the evidence in the light

most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found proof

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