State of Louisiana v. Dana Combs

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 15, 2020
Docket53,285-KA
StatusPublished

This text of State of Louisiana v. Dana Combs (State of Louisiana v. Dana Combs) 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. Dana Combs, (La. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Judgment rendered January 15, 2020. Application for rehearing may be filed within the delay allowed by Art. 922, La. C. Cr. P.

No. 53,285-KA

COURT OF APPEAL SECOND CIRCUIT STATE OF LOUISIANA

*****

STATE OF LOUISIANA Appellee

versus

DANA COMBS Appellant

Appealed from the First Judicial District Court for the Parish of Caddo, Louisiana Trial Court No. 346,592

Honorable Ramona Emanuel, Judge

LOUISIANA APPELLATE PROJECT Counsel for Appellant By: Douglas Lee Harville

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

JOSHUA K. WILLIAMS CHARLES K. PARR Assistant District Attorneys

Before MOORE, PITMAN, and STEPHENS, JJ. MOORE, J.

The defendant, Dana Combs, was charged by bill of information with

attempted second degree murder and possession of a firearm or carrying a

concealed weapon by a convicted felon, having previously been convicted of

simple robbery. After the preliminary examination where the court found no

probable cause for the attempted second degree murder charge, the state

amended the bill of information to charge only possession of a firearm or

carrying a concealed weapon by a convicted felon, in violation of La. R.S.

14:95.1. A jury unanimously convicted Combs as charged. The trial court

sentenced Combs to 10 years at hard labor without the benefit of probation,

parole, or suspension of sentence, and ordered the sentence to be served

consecutively with any other sentence. Combs’s motion to reconsider

sentence was denied. Combs now appeals, urging that the trial court erred

by imposing a harsh and excessive sentence.

FACTS

On January 29, 2017, Corporal Jesse Alexander of the Shreveport

Police Department responded to a reported shooting at the La Tierra

Apartments located at 6121 Tierra Drive in Shreveport. When he arrived at

the complex, Cpl. Alexander found Jaldell Riley lying in the parking lot

suffering from gunshot wounds to his leg and back.

The victim, Riley, testified at trial that he and Combs got into a verbal

altercation, and Riley asked Combs if he wanted to fight. Combs declined,

saying that Riley was too big. Combs left the scene and returned. Combs’s

mother stepped in between Combs and Riley to break it up. Combs then

pulled out a gun. Riley ran and Combs began shooting. Riley was hit and

fell to the ground. When Riley looked up, he saw Combs standing with a gun in his hand. Riley testified that he did not have a weapon, say he had a

weapon, or make any movements to suggest that he had a weapon.

Riley did not live in the La Tierra Apartments, and denied that he had

followed Combs to a store on the day in question. He also denied that he

threatened Combs by telling him, “this is my area,” “these are my bricks,”

and “you better have your gun.” He admitted that he is a convicted felon

and was incarcerated at the time of trial.

Detective Logan McDonald of the Shreveport Police Department’s

homicide unit also responded to the shooting. He identified evidence from

the crime scene at trial, and testified regarding video surveillance footage of

the incident that he viewed. He said he observed Combs walk toward the

victim, Riley, who was wearing a red jacket, exchange words with him,

make hand gestures, and then Combs began shooting at Riley, chasing him

around a vehicle while continuously firing. Det. McDonald testified that

Combs’s mother, Felecia Alexander, attempted to intervene.

The jury unanimously convicted Combs as charged.

Prior to sentencing, defense counsel made three filings seeking to

raise certain mitigating circumstances for the court’s consideration when

imposing sentence. In the first, styled “Defendant’s Statement on

Sentencing,” counsel asked the court to consider that Combs was only 21

years old and had only one prior felony conviction, for simple robbery. The

victim, Riley, was older, taller, and heavier than Combs, and he had bullied

and threatened him, thereby provoking him to the point that his actions were

justified. Additionally, Combs’s mother received so many threats after the

incident that she feared retaliation if she testified. Conversely, Combs did

not threaten any of the witnesses to the shooting. 2 Defense counsel then filed “Defendant’s Supplement to His Statement

on Sentencing,” which stated that in December 2014, Combs and his mother

were victims of a shooting in which their home and car were shot multiple

times. Counsel argued that the prior shooting contributed to Combs’s state

of mind in the instant offense.

Finally, a third filing, styled “Defendant’s Second Supplemental

Statement on Sentencing,” contained a police report of the earlier shooting,

as well as one in which Combs’s mother had reported that Riley planned to

“shoot up her residence again or have one of his followers do it.” Since the

present offense, Combs’s mother stated that she received so many threats

that she was forced to change her residence twice. Counsel argued that these

threats made after the present offense constituted “bullying, threatening,

terrorizing, and possible witness intimidation and tampering.”

At the conclusion of the sentencing hearing, the court sentenced

Combs to 10 years at hard labor without the benefit of probation, parole, or

suspension of sentence. The court ordered that there be no fine, no court

costs, and no habitual offender classification. The sentence was ordered to

be served consecutively with any other sentence. At the time of the instant

offense, Combs was on parole for simple robbery.

Trial counsel filed a motion to reconsider sentence, where his sole

objection was the court’s order that the sentence be served consecutively to

any other sentence, and he re-urged the mitigating factors outlined in

defendant’s statements on sentencing. The motion was denied, and this

appeal followed.

3 DISCUSSION

In his sole assignment of error, Combs alleges that the trial court erred

by imposing an unconstitutionally harsh and excessive sentence in

circumstances where Combs possessed the firearm only after Riley, a violent

felon, claimed to be armed and threatened him and told him he had better

shoot him if he had a gun.

Urging the same mitigating factors he submitted to the court prior to

sentencing, Combs notes he was 21 years old at the time of the offense with

only a single prior felony conviction. He maintains that Riley, a known

criminal, provoked him and followed him home from a store. Physically,

Riley is much larger than him, Combs argues, and he (Riley) acted like he

was armed by putting his hands in his pockets. As a past victim of gun

violence and recipient of threats, Combs had a heightened fear that Riley

might harm him or his family. Also, Combs argues that the sentence

imposed fails to contemplate or account for a reasonable combination of

rehabilitation and punishment. Therefore, his sentence is excessive and

should be reversed.

The state argues that Combs’s arguments should not be considered as

he objected only to the consecutive nature of the sentence in his motion to

reconsider. The mitigating factors he now urges were presented to the trial

court prior to sentencing. Furthermore, the state contends that the evidence

showed that Combs was not provoked when he illegally possessed a firearm,

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State v. Dorthey
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603 So. 2d 739 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1992)
State v. Reynolds
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State v. Bailey
180 So. 3d 442 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2015)
State v. Davis
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State of Louisiana v. Dana Combs, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-louisiana-v-dana-combs-lactapp-2020.