State of Louisiana v. Christian A. Satterfield

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 3, 2021
Docket53,809-KA
StatusPublished

This text of State of Louisiana v. Christian A. Satterfield (State of Louisiana v. Christian A. Satterfield) 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. Christian A. Satterfield, (La. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Judgment rendered March 3, 2021. Application for rehearing may be filed within the delay allowed by Art. 922, La. C. Cr. P.

No. 53,809-KA

COURT OF APPEAL SECOND CIRCUIT STATE OF LOUISIANA

*****

STATE OF LOUISIANA Appellee

versus

CHRISTIAN A. SATTERFIELD Appellant

Appealed from the First Judicial District Court for the Parish of Caddo, Louisiana Trial Court No. 361141

Honorable Charles G. Tutt, Judge

LOUISIANA APPELLATE PROJECT Counsel for Appellant By: Peggy J. Sullivan

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

WILLIAM C. GASKINS ALEX L. PORUBSKY MALLORY RICHARD Assistant District Attorneys

Before MOORE, COX, and BLEICH (Pro Tempore), JJ. BLEICH, J. (Pro Tempore).

The defendant, Christian Satterfield, was charged with aggravated

battery, a violation of La. R.S. 14:34. After a jury trial, defendant was found

guilty as charged pursuant to a unanimous verdict. The trial court sentenced

defendant to imprisonment for two years at hard labor. Defendant appeals

his conviction and sentence. For the following reasons, we affirm.

FACTS

The record shows that on the evening of September 14, 2018,

Shreveport police officers responded to a 911 call regarding a stabbing at the

Stone Forks restaurant parking lot in Shreveport. The officers were directed

to a nearby Circle K store to contact the victim, Bobby Frasier, who

informed officers that defendant had attacked him with a knife, causing

wounds to his head and arm. Defendant was arrested the next day and

admitted to the investigating officer that he stabbed Frasier with a knife.

Defendant was subsequently charged with aggravated battery.

At trial, Bobby Frasier gave the following testimony: Frasier and

Joseph Cockrell had been dating since December 2017, and had broken up

just before this incident occurred; Frasier did not know defendant and had

not met him before; on September 14, 2018, Frasier texted Cockrell via cell

phone about returning Cockrell’s laptop and PlayStation game console to

him; they agreed that Frasier would bring the items to Cockrell at the Stone

Forks restaurant after work at 10:00 p.m.; Frasier asked Lindsey Parker, his

friend since childhood, to drive him to meet Cockrell; when they arrived in

the restaurant parking lot that night, no one was outside; Frasier texted

Cockrell, but did not get a response; when someone walked outside the

building and approached them, Frasier assumed the person was Cockrell and stepped out of the car; Frasier then realized it was defendant, who asked

Frasier for Cockrell’s belongings; Frasier refused to hand them over because

he had never met defendant before and was uncomfortable giving him

Cockrell’s belongings. Defendant responded by suddenly, and without

hesitation, striking Frasier in the head; with the falling rain, Frasier was

initially unaware that he was bleeding and simply thought that he had been

punched in the head. Frasier, unarmed but upset, followed his attacker as he

ran to another vehicle in the parking lot; defendant then struck Frasier in the

arm and entered his vehicle; he almost backed over Frasier as he was leaving

the parking lot.

Frasier returned to Parker’s vehicle, where Parker was on the phone

with police; they initially attempted to follow defendant, but then stopped at

a Circle K store down the street and waited for the police and paramedics to

arrive. Frasier was transported to the emergency room and received four

stitches in his arm; the wound in his head was near his eye, so the doctors

used glue instead of stitches; Frasier identified State’s Exhibit 1 as pictures

taken by Parker that showed his injuries; he thought Cockrell worked at

Stone Forks, did not know that defendant worked there and did not call him

there; the police did not ask Frasier to save the text messages from Cockrell

and they were eventually erased from his phone. Frasier followed defendant

to ask why he hit him; Frasier had no intent to harm defendant and had not

threatened him verbally or physically.

Lindsey Parker testified as follows: on September 14, 2018, she

drove Frasier to the Stone Forks restaurant so that he could return items to

his ex-boyfriend, Cockrell; Parker felt that Frasier was upset and hurt about

the breakup; based on what Frasier told her about the agreed meeting, Parker 2 was expecting Cockrell to walk out of the building; Parker was aware that

defendant and Cockrell were dating, but she did not know defendant at that

time; when defendant walked out of the building, he appeared calm; Parker

heard defendant say that he would get Cockrell’s things, and Frasier refused

to give the items to anyone but Cockrell; she did not recall the conversation

being heated and did not recall hearing any negative words, but things

became physical “really quickly and unexpectedly”; Parker watched as

defendant walked up and suddenly stabbed Frasier in the head; Parker never

saw Frasier get physically or verbally aggressive with defendant; she did not

know that defendant had any weapon until she saw the blood coming from

Frasier’s head; Parker saw that defendant ran to his truck and that Frasier ran

after him, but did not see Frasier get struck a second time in the arm.

Parker was already on the phone with the police when Frasier returned

to her vehicle and wanted to follow defendant; she was shaking too badly to

pursue defendant, so she pulled into a Circle K gas station several blocks

away, and they waited for the police and paramedics; she accompanied

Frasier to the hospital, where they learned that Frasier’s wounds were not as

bad as they thought; Parker did not see that Frasier was armed with anything

and did not see Frasier attack defendant; Parker maintained that defendant

was the aggressor; Frasier was still upset about the breakup as they drove to

meet Cockrell; Frasier told Parker that the attacker’s name was Christian

Satterfield as she was speaking with the police on the phone. Parker

acknowledged prior convictions for possession of Xanax and Lortab, simple

battery, and driving while intoxicated, and that she had charges pending, but

denied being promised any inducements or leniency in exchange for her

3 testimony. Parker denied being under the influence of anything at the time

of the incident, and at trial.

Shreveport patrol officers Jemela Freeman and Andre Wilson testified

that they responded to the 911 call of a stabbing at the Stone Forks

restaurant. After arriving at the empty parking lot of the business, they were

redirected to the nearby Circle K gas station, where they found Frasier and

Parker. Officer Freeman observed that Frasier seemed frantic. Both officers

observed the wounds to Frasier’s head and arm, and Officer Freeman noted

that there was blood everywhere. Officer Freeman testified that Frasier said

he had gone to the restaurant to return some belongings to his ex-boyfriend,

but was met by his ex’s new boyfriend, defendant, who wanted to take the

items. Frasier told the officers that he refused to give defendant the items

because he wanted to give them to the owner; Parker told the officers that

defendant pulled out an unknown sharp object and stabbed Frasier twice,

once in the head and once in the arm. Along with this testimony, the jury

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State of Louisiana v. Christian A. Satterfield, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-louisiana-v-christian-a-satterfield-lactapp-2021.