State of Louisiana v. Daniel Marshall

157 So. 3d 563
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 9, 2014
Docket2013-K -2007
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 157 So. 3d 563 (State of Louisiana v. Daniel Marshall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana 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. Daniel Marshall, 157 So. 3d 563 (La. 2014).

Opinion

VICTORY, J.

|! Following defendant’s second degree murder trial and his conviction and sentence for the lesser verdict of manslaughter, the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeal vacated defendant’s conviction and sentence upon finding that the prosecutor’s use of defendant’s post-arrest silence, in violation of Doyle v. Ohio, 426 U.S. 610, 96 *564 S.Ct. 2240, 49 L.Ed.2d 91 (1976), was not harmless because it undercut his plausible self-defense claim. We granted the State’s writ application, and, after reviewing the record and the applicable law, reverse the judgment of the court of appeal and reinstate defendant’s conviction and sentence.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On the evening of September 25, 2009, defendant, Daniel Marshall, ended a love triangle by repeatedly shooting Ronald Hodges, Jr., as Hodges jumped off the porch of a residence on South Scott Street in New Orleans and came toward him. The residence belonged to Ebony Gasti-nell, the mother of his three children. In all, Hodges sustained five gunshot wounds — two to the back — and projectile fragment abrasions on his right shoulder, arm and hand. The police found nine spent casings fired by a .40 caliber handgun scattered on the ground but did not find any firearms discarded on the scene.

li>Hodges had been in a romantic relationship with Gastinell for several years,- and fathered her three children. He had been separated from her for six months while serving a sentence on a drug conviction before his release in September 2009. During that time, Gastinell began a relationship with defendant, and he sometimes stayed at her residence. After Hodges returned from jail, Gastinell lied to him when he confronted her about her relationship with defendant, as revealed to him by his children living in the house. Gastinell stopped seeing or talking to defendant in that week as she attempted to repair her relationship with Hodges.

On the night of the shooting, Hodges arrived at Gastinell’s residence to unclog a toilet. While he was there, defendant knocked on the back door. Gastinell told him to leave. About thirty minutes later, defendant came back and knocked on the front door. Gastinell went out to the front porch and again told defendant to leave, explaining that she was trying to work things out with Hodges. She heard her mother Sandra tell Hodges she wanted to bring him home and then Sandra walked outside to her car. At that time, defendant backed up and stood by the gate in the front yard. Hodges then came out the front door and saw the defendant standing there. Instead of walking down the steps, Hodges jumped off the porch with his hands in the air and rushed at defendant, despite Gastinell’s attempt to restrain him. Hodges was nearly six feet tall and weighed over 200 pounds. The much smaller defendant (5'6" and 140 pounds) responded by pulling out his gun and opening fire. Gastinell described the incident as follows:

As [Hodges] came ... out of the house, he saw [defendant] standing right there. And [defendant] was just staring ... like he had something on his mind. So when [Hodges] ... saw him standing over there, he just jumped off the porch and he raised his hands up and he was like, ... “Say, Homie, I’m not even tripping. I ain’t even tripping.” And that’s when [defendant] just came off his hip with the gun and cocked it and started shooting. There was no altercation, |,.¡there was no nothing. They never passed words. They never even bumped heads, never.

Gastinell testified that defendant continued to fire even after Hodges, who had turned and tried to run when the shooting began, collapsed on the ground. Sandra Gastinell testified that after Hodges turned and attempted to run, he sustained two bullet wounds to his back and fell to the ground, at which point defendant stood over the prostrate victim and “kept on shooting and kept on shooting.” When he finished, he *565 took off running. Sandra got into her car and pursued him as defendant ran down the street and jumped a fence. When Sandra yelled after him to ask why he had shot Hodges, defendant exclaimed, “Because I told fool not to tell me nothing,” and then went over the fence. His arrest followed four days later when he surrendered to the police after Gastinell and her mother identified him in a photographic lineup, and a warrant issued for his arrest.

Police testimony established that nine spent casings, all from a .40 caliber semiautomatic pistol, together with bullets fragments, were found in close proximity to the victim’s body lying in the driveway of GastinelTs home near the sidewalk. The coroner testified that Hodges had been shot a total of five times. One bullet entered the left side of his face and exited through the right side. Another entered the back of the victim’s left hand and exited through his palm Another entered his right upper arm near the bicep and lodged in his arm. Another entered his back left shoulder, cut through a major artery in the neck, and lodged in the left side of his chest. The coroner testified this shot was the primary cause of death. The final bullet entered the victim’s back and passed through the spinal column before lodging in his torso. The coroner also testified that fragment abrasions sustained by the victim on his right side had been caused by a bullet or |4bullets breaking up after striking a hard surface, such as wood, cement, or metal, close to the body. Viewing a photograph of the victim' lying sprawled on the ground, the coroner concluded that the fragment injuries appeared to have been caused by a bullet hitting either the cement of the driveway or the nearby ground. The bullet wound to the victim’s face was also consistent with the victim lying on the ground when he was shot. Notably, the coroner had found blood smeared on the palm of the victim’s right hand, the same hand in which defendant claimed Hodges held a gun as he came off Gastinell’s porch.

Defendant took the stand and told jurors he shot Hodges in self-defense as the victim rushed at him in a jealous rage with a revolver held in his right hand. Defendant testified he dropped his own gun in a panic as he fled the scene after shooting Hodges, although he normally carried it with him at all times for protection. Defendant further claimed that he knew Hodges had access to firearms stashed in the residence because he had stayed there and saw a small revolver that belonged to Sandra Gastinell. Defendant was uncertain whether Hodges fired his own gun, but he was sure that he did not stand over the victim and continue to shoot Hodges while he lay on the ground. On cross-examination, the state confronted defendant with his failure to stay on the scene and explain to the police that he shot Hodges in self-defense. The state also confronted defendant with his failure to give his self-defense account to the police following his arrest and receipt of his Miranda warnings, although he had four days in which to cool off and consider his options before surrendering to the authorities. Over defense counsel’s repeated objections, the state challenged defendant as follows:

IsQ. All right. So you had four days to think about what happened, and you decided to do the right thing and turn yourself in, right?
A. Yes, ma’am.
Q. Cool down a little bit, correct?

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Related

State v. Carter
257 So. 3d 776 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2018)
State v. Johnson
244 So. 3d 617 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2017)
State v. Mansfield
190 So. 3d 322 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2016)
State v. Lensey
182 So. 3d 1059 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2015)

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Bluebook (online)
157 So. 3d 563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-louisiana-v-daniel-marshall-la-2014.