State of Louisiana v. Brandon S. Butler

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 22, 2020
Docket53,360-KA
StatusPublished

This text of State of Louisiana v. Brandon S. Butler (State of Louisiana v. Brandon S. Butler) 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. Brandon S. Butler, (La. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Judgment rendered April 22, 2020. Application for rehearing may be filed within the delay allowed by Art. 922, La. C. Cr. P.

No. 53,360-KA

COURT OF APPEAL SECOND CIRCUIT STATE OF LOUISIANA

*****

STATE OF LOUISIANA Appellee

versus

BRANDON S. BUTLER Appellant

Appealed from the Twenty-Sixth Judicial District Court for the Parish of Bossier, Louisiana Trial Court No. 205,973

Honorable Michael Nerren, Judge

LOUISIANA APPELLATE PROJECT Counsel for Appellant By: Douglas Lee Harville

J. SCHUYLER MARVIN Counsel for Appellee District Attorney

ANDREW JACOBS JOHN MICHAEL LAWRENCE DOUG STINSON Assistant District Attorneys

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

Following a bench trial, the defendant, Brandon S. Butler, was

convicted as charged of two counts of first degree murder. He received

consecutive sentences of life imprisonment without benefit of parole,

probation, or suspension of sentence. The defendant appealed. We affirm

the defendant’s convictions and sentences.

FACTS

In May 2014, Jacqueline Beadle and Karyl Cox were roommates who

shared a one-story, three-bedroom house in the 3000 block of Bragg Street

in Bossier City. Ms. Beadle, who had a young son, had lived there for about

a year; for seven to eight months of that time, her boyfriend, Shawn

Washington, lived with her until they broke up in early 2014. Ms. Cox had

resided in the Bragg Street house for approximately a month; she had a

young daughter, whose custody she shared with the child’s father.

On Friday, May 9, 2014, Ms. Beadle dropped her son off at the home

of her mother, Joanna Hanson, where he spent the night. On Saturday,

May 10, 2014, Ms. Hanson tried repeatedly and unsuccessfully to contact

Ms. Beadle by phone and text message. According to Ms. Hanson, it was

highly unusual for Ms. Beadle not to call to check on her son and talk to him

when he spent the night with his grandmother. Ms. Hanson called several of

her daughter’s friends, including Mr. Washington, to see if they had heard

from her. On Sunday, May 11, 2014, which was Mother’s Day, Ms. Hanson

went to the Bragg Street house at about 6:30 a. m. because she was worried

about her daughter. When she arrived, she noticed that her daughter’s car

was there, but Ms. Cox’s blue, four-door Chevy Cruze sedan was not. She

entered the locked residence with a key and found the dog confined in its crate in the kitchen and “going crazy.” After letting the dog go outside, Ms.

Hanson went into her daughter’s bedroom, where she discovered Ms.

Beadle’s body on the floor under a comforter. She had been stabbed several

times and shot in the forehead. Ms. Hanson then went into Ms. Cox’s

bedroom, where she discovered her body in bed under the covers. She too

had been shot in the forehead; she also had several other gunshot wounds.1

Ms. Hanson went outside and called 911.

Law enforcement officers arrived and cordoned off the house with

crime scene tape. At some point that day, the defendant approached an

officer outside the house and asked to speak to a detective. Detective Jeffery

Humphrey of the Bossier City Police Department (“BCPD”) talked to the

defendant, who said that Ms. Cox was his best friend. Thereafter, Detective

Humphrey took the defendant to the police station for an interview in which

he answered general questions about the victims.

By the following day, Monday, May 12, examination of the crime

scene had disclosed the defendant’s fingerprint on the door of Ms. Beadle’s

bedroom in a red substance that appeared to be blood.2 The defendant was

asked to give a second interview. During the first part of this interview, the

defendant spoke to Detective Michael Hardesty for about 33 minutes. He

described Ms. Cox as his best friend, stated that they spoke almost daily, and

said that he was at her house about four days a week. However, he informed

1 The record indicates that Ms. Cox’s child was with her father at the time of the murders. 2 Jeffery Ross, a BCPD crime scene detective, testified that he observed fingerprints in a substance that appeared to be blood on Ms. Beadle’s bedroom door. However, he did not believe a test was done to determine if it was actually blood. Michelle Vrana, the DNA section supervisor at the North Louisiana Criminalistics Laboratory (“NLCL”), testified that a sample of suspected blood from the door was visually negative for blood. However, forensic testing of the sample obtained a partial DNA profile that was consistent with Ms. Beadle.

2 the detective that he had not been at the Bragg Street house or in Ms. Cox’s

car since Tuesday, May 6. He claimed that he had been with Sekeona

Campbell, a former girlfriend who was visiting family in Shreveport, from

about 11 p.m. Friday night until 7:30 or 8:00 Saturday morning. He stated

that, because he did not have a car, his friend, Terrell Stewart, had given him

a ride to where Sekeona was staying. This portion of the interview ended

shortly after Detective Hardesty confronted the defendant about the bloody

fingerprint. The defendant vehemently denied being in the house on Friday

night and maintained that his fingerprint could not be on the door in blood.

When the interview resumed after a brief break, Detective Humphrey

took over questioning the defendant, who admitted being in the house Friday

night. He stated that, after Ms. Cox retired to her bedroom for the night, he

was with Ms. Beadle in her bedroom when her former boyfriend, Shawn

Washington, appeared at her partially open window. He said Ms. Beadle

jumped up, tripped on a cover, fell, and busted her nose on a dresser or

nightstand. The defendant said he helped her get up, and she told him to

leave, which he did. According to the defendant, Mr. Washington, who had

come through the window, was threatening to “fuck up” Ms. Beadle and kill

her. The defendant said he walked to the Orchard Apartments where he was

living, took a shower, and called Mr. Stewart for a ride. He revised his

arrival time at the place where Sekeona Campbell was staying to 1:30 or

2:00 a.m. Saturday morning. However, according to Sekeona, the defendant

did not arrive until about 4 a.m. Saturday morning and he was driving a

dark, four-door car which he said belonged to a female friend. She observed

a picture of a child in the area of the car’s speedometer.

3 After the victims’ bodies were found on Sunday morning, the police

utilized the GPS technology in Ms. Cox’s missing car to locate it in the

driveway of a vacant house in the 4000 block of Sheryl Street, which was

not far from the Orchard Apartments. There appeared to be blood on the

door and the driver’s seat. Forensic examination determined that the

defendant’s fingerprint was on the driver’s door handle and the blood on the

driver’s seat belonged to Ms. Beadle. Photos of the recovered car show

pictures of Ms. Cox’s young daughter prominently displayed on either side

of the speedometer.

During his second statement on Monday, the defendant told the police

that he had given his mother the clothes he was wearing Friday night to be

laundered. Later that day, the police retrieved them from the trunk of her car

and submitted them for testing. Ms. Beadle’s blood and DNA were found

on the defendant’s underwear.

In July 2014, the defendant was indicted on two counts of first degree

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