State of Louisiana v. Benjamin Devonte Franklin

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 17, 2025
Docket56,616-KA
StatusPublished

This text of State of Louisiana v. Benjamin Devonte Franklin (State of Louisiana v. Benjamin Devonte Franklin) 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. Benjamin Devonte Franklin, (La. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Judgment rendered December 17, 2025. Application for rehearing may be filed within the delay allowed by Art. 922, La. C. Cr. P.

No. 56,616-KA

COURT OF APPEAL SECOND CIRCUIT STATE OF LOUISIANA

*****

STATE OF LOUISIANA Appellee

versus

BENJAMIN DEVONTE Appellant FRANKLIN

Appealed from the First Judicial District Court for the Parish of Caddo, Louisiana Trial Court No. 383,356

Honorable Donald E. Hathaway, Jr., Judge

LOUISIANA APPEALS & Counsel for Appellant WRIT SERVICE By: Christopher A. Aberle

BENJAMIN DEVONTE Pro Se FRANKLIN

JAMES E. STEWART, SR. Counsel for Appellee District Attorney

JASON W. WALTMAN ERIC M. WHITEHEAD Assistant District Attorneys

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

This case is appealed from the First Judicial District Court, Caddo

Parish, Louisiana. Benjamin Devonte Franklin was convicted of second

degree murder and sentenced to life imprisonment. He now appeals the

sufficiency of the evidence against him. For the following reasons, we

affirm Franklin’s conviction and sentence.

FACTS

Franklin was indicted on September 30, 2021, with one count of

second degree murder of Shameika Robison. The trial court ordered a sanity

commission, and the sanity hearing was held on September 27, 2023. The

trial court stated that it reviewed the doctors’ reports and found Franklin

competent to assist in his defense, assist counsel, and understand the charges

against him.

Franklin filed a motion to change his plea to not guilty and not guilty

by reason of insanity. After a hearing on the matter, the State and trial court

accepted Franklin’s change in plea. The following testimonies were

presented at trial:

Karanski Kennedy testified that he was at the South Port Apartments

the night of the shooting with his cousins and brother. He stated that the

police asked them if they knew anything about what happened, and he did

not. He testified that he only heard the gunshots but did not go outside.

Kierra Mills testified that Robison was her aunt, but she felt more like

a big sister, and they talked almost every day. Mills stated that when her

family did not hear from Robison for more than a day, she went to Robison’s

apartment to check on her. She testified that it was unusual for Robison to

not contact family for that long or respond to phone calls. Mills testified that when she arrived at the apartment complex, she saw Robison’s vehicle in the

parking lot, and when she went to Robison’s apartment door, the door was

cracked open; at this point, Mills called her father and the police. Both of

Mills’s 911 calls were played for the jury. Mills stated that she did not enter

Robison’s apartment, but she saw the police go inside. Mills testified that

Robison’s daughter was four or five years old at the time of the shooting,

and she is currently eight years old.

Shreveport Police Detective Monica Davis testified that she was on

patrol on June 4, 2021, when she was dispatched for a welfare concern at the

South Port Apartments. Det. Davis’s MVS video was played for the jury.

Det. Davis stated that after her partner arrived, the two of them announced

themselves and entered the apartment. She testified that she found

Robison’s body half-naked and noticed multiple gunshot wounds. Det.

Davis stated that she did not observe Robison breathing, called the fire

department, and proceeded to search the apartment. She stated that there

were moving boxes in the apartment, but the whole apartment was neat

except for the master bedroom, where things were in disarray.

Shreveport Police Crime Scene Investigator Amber Futch testified

that she was dispatched on June 4, 2021, to assist homicide/violent crime

detectives with a crime scene. Corporal Futch’s crime scene photographs

were entered into evidence. She testified that she observed several 9 mm

cartridge casings on the floor near Robison. She stated that she did not

observe any damage to the door or latch, indicating that there was no forced

entry. Cpl. Futch testified that they recovered a phone box and case but no

phone in the apartment. She also found two open condom wrappers in the

2 trash can. She testified that she found a total of 21 expended cartridge

casings and 10 projectiles.

Cpl. Futch testified that when she finished processing the crime scene

at South Port Apartments, she was dispatched to a location on Blom Street,

where officers were executing a search warrant. Cpl. Futch’s photos of the

Blom residence were entered into evidence. She stated that she found a

Taurus .40 caliber, Glock 9 mm, and two extended magazines that fit the

Glock 9 mm. She testified that she was instructed to collect a black

sweatshirt, black jeans, camouflage face mask, shoes, and cell phone found

by detectives. Cpl. Futch stated that she photographed two bank cards

belonging to Robinson in the bathroom that were snapped or cut in half; one

card was also partially burned. In another bedroom, she found a 9 mm

Taurus, and in the garage, she found Franklin’s identification in a white

Toyota Corolla.

Olivia Jones, a sexual assault nurse examiner, testified that she was

called in by the coroner to examine Robison because of the way she was

found. She stated that she swabbed Robison’s body to test for possible DNA

that did not belong to Robison. After taking photographs of Robison and

writing her report, she sent the swabs and samples to the coroner’s office.

Dr. Ashley Brummett testified that she is a forensic DNA analyst at

the North Louisiana Crime Lab, and she was accepted as an expert in the

field of forensic DNA analysis. Dr. Brummett stated that she performed

DNA analysis on the evidence collected in this case. She testified that

Franklin was excluded as a contributor to the DNA on the condom wrappers,

and there was not enough DNA (other than Robison’s DNA) on the cervical

swab to determine who contributed. Dr. Brummett was able to determine 3 that male DNA was present on the external genitalia swab, perineal swab,

vaginal swab, cervical swab, vaginal washing, and anal swab.

Sheronda Robison testified that Robison was her sister. She stated

that in June 2021, she and her extended family took a trip, but Robison did

not go with them. Sheronda testified that Robison lived with her prior to

moving into the South Port Apartment, about a month prior to her murder.

She stated that although they did not live together, they still talked to each

other every day. Sheronda stated she was concerned when she did not speak

with Robison while she (Sheronda) was gone on the family trip because

Robison’s daughter was on the trip as well. She testified that when Robison

did not return her phone calls and texts, she asked her daughter, Mills, to go

to Robison’s apartment to check on her.

Dr. James Traylor was accepted as an expert in forensic pathology.

He testified that he performed the autopsy on Robison and determined that

her cause of death was multiple gunshot wounds. He stated that Robison

sustained approximately 20 gunshot wounds, but there may be more because

the wounds were bunched closely together. Dr. Traylor testified that

Robison had massive internal damage and bleeding from the gunshots, and

she was deceased 24 to 36 hours before she was found.

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State of Louisiana v. Benjamin Devonte Franklin, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-louisiana-v-benjamin-devonte-franklin-lactapp-2025.