State of Louisiana v. Brent M. Braneon Sr.

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 5, 2020
Docket2019-KA-0743
StatusPublished

This text of State of Louisiana v. Brent M. Braneon Sr. (State of Louisiana v. Brent M. Braneon Sr.) 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 M. Braneon Sr., (La. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA * NO. 2019-KA-0743

VERSUS * COURT OF APPEAL BRENT M. BRANEON SR. * FOURTH CIRCUIT * STATE OF LOUISIANA *******

APPEAL FROM CRIMINAL DISTRICT COURT ORLEANS PARISH NO. 481-878, SECTION “K” Honorable Arthur Hunter, Judge ****** Judge Terri F. Love ****** (Court composed of Judge Terri F. Love, Judge Regina Bartholomew-Woods, Judge Tiffany G. Chase)

BARTHOLOMEW-WOODS, J., CONCURS

Leon Cannizzaro District Attorney Kyle Daly Assistant District Attorney ORLEANS PARISH 619 S. White Street New Orleans, LA 70119

COUNSEL FOR STATE OF LOUISIANA/APPELLEE

Kevin V. Boshea ATTORNEY AT LAW 2955 Ridgelake Drive, Suite 207 Metairie, LA 70002

AND

Davidson S. Ehle III MARINO & EHLE, LLC 501 Derbigny Street Gretna, LA 70053

COUNSEL FOR APPELLANT/DEFENDANT AFFIRMED February 5, 2020 Defendant Brent Braneon, Sr., (“Defendant”) seeks review of his

convictions and sentences for armed robbery and second degree murder. On

appellate review, we find the evidence presented at trial was sufficient to support

the jury’s guilty verdicts on the charged offenses. Additionally, the investigating

detective’s testimony at trial that Defendant refused to speak to him or the

detective’s misstatement that Defendant confessed to him, which was not only

corrected but also stricken, did not attribute to the guilty verdicts in this case.

Therefore, we also find no abuse of the trial court’s discretion in denying

Defendant’s motions for mistrial. Accordingly, we affirm Defendant’s convictions

and sentences for armed robbery and second degree murder.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY AND FACTUAL BACKGROND

At trial, Jane Wolfe testified that in 2008 her husband Roy Wolfe (“Mr.

Wolfe”) was in the business of renovating houses, and her cousin Eddie Raskin

(“Mr. Raskin”) performed all the air conditioning work that was needed. One of

the homes her husband was renovating was located at 1704-1706 South Lopez

Street in New Orleans. In July 2008, the renovation of the South Lopez property

was almost complete, and on the day Mr. Wolfe went missing, he and Mr. Raskin

1 were installing the air conditioning unit.

Mr. Raskin testified that on the day in question, he was alone at the property

having sent Mr. Wolfe to obtain supplies that he needed to complete the work.

While alone at the house, Mr. Raskin testified that he was approached by two men

armed with guns. Mr. Raskin stated that he was talking on the phone when a man

in a white tee-shirt and shorts, later identified as Alonzo Gonzales, armed with an

automatic gun, walked through the front door, stuck the gun to his head, and

instructed him to stop talking and took the phone out of his hand. A second

assailant entered the house through the back door wearing a red shirt. When asked

at trial about the identity of the second man wearing the red shirt, Mr. Raskin

pointed to Defendant sitting in the courtroom.

With a gun at his head, Gonzales asked Mr. Raskin where the man with the

truck was. At trial, evidence was presented that Mr. Wolfe drove a silver Chevy

Silverado truck. Defendant and Gonzales then forced Mr. Raskin to lie in a closet

and later in a bathtub while Defendant held him at gunpoint. Mr. Raskin estimated

he was in the bathroom for a total of 30 minutes, during which Defendant was with

him almost the entire time, sitting three feet away on the toilet. At trial, Mr.

Raskin stated that he saw Defendant’s face “clear as day,” as neither of his

assailants were wearing masks, hats, or hoodies.

When Mr. Wolfe returned to the house, Gonzales alerted Defendant, who

then led Mr. Raskin at gunpoint out the back of the house and through an alleyway.

From the alleyway, Mr. Raskin could see Gonzales approach Mr. Wolfe on the

front porch in an apparent attempt to distract Mr. Wolfe, at which point Defendant

opened fire on Mr. Wolfe and chased him. Mr. Raskin ran back through the

alleyway and jumped a gate, and later told police he heard numerous shots fired.

2 He stated he did not know what occurred after that because he was running away

from the shooting.

After fleeing the scene, Mr. Raskin encountered a construction crew and

borrowed a telephone to call 911. The call was published for the jury and on the

call, the suspects were described as two black males, one was wearing a white tee

shirt, the other a red-collared shirt and both had “long dreads.” It was also reported

that the suspects fled in a blue vehicle.

Officer Nicole Honore Daliet (“Officer Daliet”) testified that she was one of

the officers who responded to the armed robbery 911 call. She stated that on that

date, she proceeded to South Salcedo and Eden Streets, which was where the

victim Mr. Raskin was located. After meeting the person who placed the call,

Officer Daliet relocated to 1704-1706 South Lopez Street, where the crime actually

occurred. When police arrived, Mr. Wolfe’s truck was gone, and Mr. Wolfe was

nowhere to be found.

Photographs of the scene were shown to the witness who confirmed that a

semiautomatic weapon was found outside the house. Upon observing the weapon,

crime scene technicians were called to the scene. On cross-examination, Officer

Daliet confirmed that she met with the armed robbery victim, Mr. Raskin, who

provided her with descriptions of the perpetrators and descriptions of the weapons

they wielded.

Mr. Wolfe’s wife, Jane (“Mrs. Wolfe”), testified that she first suspected

something was wrong when her father informed her that Mr. Wolfe was not

answering his phone. When her calls to him proved unsuccessful, Mrs. Wolfe went

to the South Lopez property. Neither her husband nor Mr. Raskin was there;

however, she noticed one of the front doors was open, and she observed a gun in

3 front of the house. Shortly thereafter, Mrs. Wolfe received a call that her home in

Slidell was burglarized. She testified that she called the police, and travelled to her

Slidell home. When she arrived, the police were already at her residence. She

discovered that while there were no signs of forced entry, her television was

missing and her home was in total disarray. During the police investigation of the

burglary, the police learned the burglars were described as four black males, three

of which had long hair. The witness informed police that two men were seen

carrying a television to a black vehicle that was not Mr. Wolfe’s truck while the

other two men remained in the car.

That night, police spotted a vehicle matching the description of Mr. Wolfe’s

truck. Upon realizing that he was being followed, the driver, later identified as

Defendant, led police on a chase. Gonzales, the passenger, began firing at the

police from the passenger window. When the truck eventually came to a stop,

Gonzales fled the vehicle and fired additional shots at police. Defendant

surrendered while still in the vehicle. At trial, one of the investigating officers

recalled the armed robbery/kidnapping at 1704 South Lopez Street as occurring at

around 2:00 p.m., and the ultimate capture of Defendant at 11:00 p.m.,

approximately nine hours later. The same officer also testified that Defendant did

not have a firearm on him when he was apprehended and that Defendant tested

negative for gunshot residue.

The following morning, Mr. Raskin identified Defendant and Gonzales as

his assailants in photographic lineups. The detective who interviewed Mr.

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State of Louisiana v. Brent M. Braneon Sr., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-louisiana-v-brent-m-braneon-sr-lactapp-2020.