State of Louisiana v. Brent Authorlee

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 3, 2013
DocketKA-0012-1179
StatusUnknown

This text of State of Louisiana v. Brent Authorlee (State of Louisiana v. Brent Authorlee) 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. Brent Authorlee, (La. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

12-1179

STATE OF LOUISIANA

VERSUS

BRENT AUTHORLEE

**********

APPEAL FROM THE SIXTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF IBERIA, NO. 08-599 HONORABLE LORI ANN LANDRY, DISTRICT JUDGE

ULYSSES GENE THIBODEAUX CHIEF JUDGE

Court composed of Ulysses Gene Thibodeaux, Chief Judge, Marc T. Amy, and J. David Painter, Judges.

AFFIRMED.

J. Phillip Haney District Attorney 300 Iberia Street, Suite 200 New Iberia, LA 70560 Telephone: (337) 369-4420 COUNSEL FOR: Plaintiff/Appellee - State of Louisiana

Paula Corley Marx Louisiana Appellate Project P. O. Box 80006 Lafayette, LA 70598-0006 Telephone: (337) 991-9757 COUNSEL FOR: Defendant/Appellant - Brent Authorlee Angela B. Odinet Assistant District Attorney 415 Main Street St. Martinville, LA 70582 Telephone: (337) 394-2220 COUNSEL FOR: Plaintiff/Appellee - State of Louisiana THIBODEAUX, Chief Judge.

Defendant, Brent Authorlee, was charged by bill of indictment with

second degree murder in violation of La.R.S. 14:30.1. Defendant entered a plea of

not guilty, and he was convicted by a unanimous jury verdict.

Defendant was sentenced to the mandatory term of life in prison, at

hard labor, without benefit of probation, parole, or suspension of sentence.

Defendant appeals and asserts a single assignment of error, that the totality of the

evidence presented at trial, which was entirely circumstantial, was insufficient to

support the jury‟s verdict of second degree murder. Defendant requests that this

court reverse the jury‟s verdict and vacate the conviction against him because the

State failed to establish the requisite proof that Defendant committed the crime

beyond a reasonable doubt. We cannot honor that request. We affirm Defendant‟s

conviction.

I.

ISSUE

We will consider whether the State presented sufficient evidence at

trial to support Defendant‟s conviction.

II.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The victim, Michelle Kenney, was a waitress at the Little River Inn in

New Iberia, Louisiana. Defendant was employed as kitchen staff. At trial, the

owner and manager of the Little River Inn testified that Defendant and the victim

first initiated a work relationship that culminated into a more personal relationship around October 2007. The owner testified that she observed Defendant and the

victim act affectionately toward one another until a work Christmas party on

December 16, 2007, when the relationship began to involve hostile arguments.

The owner observed an argument between the two, wherein Defendant made

references regarding the victim‟s new boyfriend, Craig Hebert, and her relationship

with Hebert. The owner testified that the hostility between the victim and

Defendant increased progressively to the point that she was uncomfortable

working around the two.

On February 14, 2008, Defendant was released from employment at

the Little River Inn, and his final paycheck was withheld until he agreed to return a

gold-colored comforter to the victim. According to the owner, Defendant returned

the comforter to the victim on February 22, 2008.

The victim‟s boyfriend, Hebert, reported last seeing the victim a week

before her death on February 17, 2008. On February 24, 2008, Defendant and the

victim were identified on a surveillance video at a convenience store.

Sometime between the late evening hours of February 24, 2008, and

the early morning hours of February 25, 2008, the victim was killed in her

residence, which also served as the business where she worked, Patout-Greenwood

Insurance Company.

The victim‟s body was found after a neighbor, Julius Segura, called 9-

1-1 to report a potential break-in at the victim‟s business-residence. Police Officer

Kenneth Franques responded to the call. Upon arrival at the business-residence, he

found that a rear window to the building was broken. He also found the front door

unlocked and the victim‟s bedroom in disarray.

2 The victim‟s body was found under a gold-colored blanket. A

serrated knife was found in the victim‟s possession, and several injuries were

noted. A forensic pathologist, Joel Carney, testified that the cause of the victim‟s

death was an incised wound to the neck, with the manner of death being homicide.

Specifically, the victim‟s throat had been cut from ear-to-ear with an incision that

was deep enough to sever her throat and jugular vein and ultimately leave a tool

mark on her back vertebra. The wound was immediately fatal.

Blood evidence was found in the victim‟s bedroom, including some

on her body, the gold-colored comforter, and a storage container next to her body.

Fingernail clippings and hair samples were collected from the victim and the

surrounding area. Authorities also collected a cigarette butt found on a coffee table

in the living room of the residence.

DNA Evidence

The serrated knife found in the victim‟s possession was tested for

DNA evidence. An expert DNA analyst testified that a Y-chromosome profile,

consistent with Defendant‟s DNA, was found on the handle of the knife. The

examiner stated, however, that the DNA was not a specific match to Defendant‟s

DNA but that Defendant could not be excluded as a source of the DNA. The

examiner testified that the particular Y-chromosome profile found excluded 99.92

percent of the general male population, leaving only 1 in 1,300 males that could

have left the profile. The 1 in 1,300 males represented males that would be related

to Defendant in a direct familial line.

Fingernail clippings from the victim were also tested for DNA.

Defendant could not be excluded as a source of DNA found under the fingernails

3 of the victim. The statistics cited by the expert DNA analyst showed that, based on

the particular type of DNA, 99.92 percent of the male population could be

excluded and that the DNA was found in 1 in 1,300 males. Again, the 1 in 1,300

males would be those related to Defendant in a direct familial line. The expert

testified to a reasonable degree of scientific certainty that Defendant was the

source of the DNA found under the fingernails of both of the victim‟s hands.

Defendant‟s DNA, along with the victim‟s DNA, was found on a

knife located in a block of knives in the kitchen of the residence. The cigarette butt

located on the coffee table in the victim‟s residence also contained DNA from the

Defendant and a third-party, Ms. Lillian Lucille Green-Verret.

The Victim’s Vehicle

Green-Verret testified that Defendant picked her up in the victim‟s

white Lincoln Town car on February 24, 2008, the night of the murder. Defendant

drove her to the victim‟s residence sometime before midnight. Defendant exited

the vehicle upon arrival and entered the victim‟s residence through a back

entrance, while Green-Verret waited in the vehicle. Defendant later gestured for

Green-Verret to come inside.

Green-Verret entered the residence and sat on a couch in the living

room, while Defendant proceeded to a back bedroom and closed the door. Green-

Verret stated that she did not hear any voices from the back bedroom but did hear

sounds of furniture being moved around. She also did not hear any glass break

while at the victim‟s residence.

Green-Verret testified that she sat on the couch and waited for

Defendant for approximately twenty to twenty-five minutes.

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