State of Louisiana v. Don Lee Johnson

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 19, 2025
Docket56,517-KA
StatusPublished

This text of State of Louisiana v. Don Lee Johnson (State of Louisiana v. Don Lee Johnson) 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. Don Lee Johnson, (La. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Judgment rendered November 19, 2025. Application for rehearing may be filed within the delay allowed by Art. 922, La. C. Cr. P.

No. 56,517-KA

COURT OF APPEAL SECOND CIRCUIT STATE OF LOUISIANA

*****

STATE OF LOUISIANA Appellee

versus

DON LEE JOHNSON Appellant

Appealed from the First Judicial District Court for the Parish of Caddo, Louisiana Trial Court No. 377,403

Honorable Ramona L. Emanuel, Judge

THE HARVILLE LAW FIRM, LLC Counsel for Appellant By: Douglas Lee Harville

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

CHRISTOPHER S. BOWMAN ERIC M. WHITEHEAD Assistant District Attorneys

Before PITMAN, COX, and ROBINSON, JJ. PITMAN, C. J.

Defendant Don Lee Johnson appeals his conviction for manslaughter,

a crime to which he pled guilty, and his sentence of 20 years at hard labor

without benefit of probation or suspension of sentence. He argues that he

was intellectually incapable of waiving his rights and voluntarily confessing

to the crime. He also argues that he received ineffective assistance of

counsel when his attorney failed to file a motion to suppress the confession.

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

instruct Defendant to file for post-conviction relief on the issue of ineffective

assistance of counsel.

FACTS

Defendant is a man of very limited intellectual ability with the mental

capacity of a child of 10 to 12 years of age. Defendant was 21 years old and

homeless in April 2020 when his sister, Samantha Hobbs, who lived in

Vivian, Louisiana, asked him to live with her. Hobbs had a four-year-old

son and a three-month-old infant son, A.S. Hobbs worked at a convenience

store, sometimes as many as 12 hours a day, and she would leave the

children in Defendant’s care.

On May 1, 2020, Hobbs was at work, and Defendant was taking care

of both children. While he was feeding the infant, the older child kept

attempting to go outside. Defendant slammed the infant on the sofa twice

before he ran to get the four-year-old at the door. He stated that he noticed

white fluid coming from the infant’s nose, but that he wiped it off and never

mentioned the incident to anyone.

In the following days, the baby appeared to be ill. He quit eating and

was sleeping a lot more than usual. When he started to run a fever and began vomiting, Hobbs took him to the emergency room at North Caddo Medical

Center on May 3. There were no visible signs of injury, and the doctor told

Hobbs to take the child to his usual physician for a follow-up visit. On

May 4, she took him to see Dr. Walker May, who told her the baby had a

virus and to return if he did not get any better by the next day. A.S. had a

fever of 102 on May 5, and Hobbs gave him Children’s Tylenol at 9:30 a.m.

His fever dropped to 98. At 2:30 a.m. on May 6, she fed the baby and

changed his diaper and put him to sleep.

The next morning Hobbs’s boss, Celeste, came to her house to ask if

she could come to work early, and Hobbs told her she needed to first check

on her baby. She went into the bedroom and found him blue and with foam

coming from his nose. Celeste called 911, placed the baby on the floor and

started performing CPR. The call was dispatched as a “deceased person”

call; and when the emergency crew arrived, the baby was on the floor

covered by a blanket.

An autopsy was performed and the coroner returned a cause of death

as subdural hematoma and subarachnoid hemorrhage as a result of abusive

head trauma caused by shaken baby syndrome occurring five days prior to

death. The ensuing investigation ruled out Hobbs as the perpetrator because

she had been at work on the day of the incident causing death and had taken

her child to the doctor multiple times because she did not know what was

wrong with him.

While the baby’s death was being investigated, Defendant went to

Arkansas to stay with his adoptive mother. On July 24, 2020, he was

returned to Louisiana at the request of the investigators; and, after having

2 been read his Miranda warning and signing a waiver, he admitted to

throwing the baby onto the sofa.

Defendant was originally charged with second degree murder on

October 22, 2020, and he was arrested. On October 5, 2021, a hearing was

held regarding the free and voluntary nature of his confession, and it was

found to have been freely and voluntarily made. On January 4, 2022, a

sanity commission was requested, and the trial court appointed Jennifer

Russell, PhD, a licensed psychologist, and Joshua Sanderson, MD, a

psychiatrist, to the commission.

The sanity commission report issued in May 2022 by Dr. Russell

indicated that Defendant had received a certificate of completion from high

school where he attended special education classes. He worked at a lumber

yard and at a Tyson plant “hanging live chickens.” His adoptive mother was

consulted and stated that he had suffered from his mental disability his

whole life and that he could not function without the assistance of someone

else, that he was a kind boy who had never been in any trouble with the law

and that he had been diagnosed with Asperger syndrome. She also told the

psychiatrists and psychologists who interviewed him that he might not

understand questions asked of him but that he would pretend he did and

respond in a way that he thought they would want him to answer. The

testing performed showed that he had an IQ of 67, which placed him in the

first percentile when compared to others of similar age and within the

“Extremely Low” range associated with intellectual disability.

Dr. Sanderson found that Defendant was unable to assist his attorney

in his own defense because he could not demonstrate a factual or rational

understanding of the nature of the proceedings against him. He stated that 3 “the evaluation supports a recommendation that [Defendant] be found

unrestorable” and that “some of his cognitive and social deficits are

permanent and will continuously result in difficulties with rational

manipulation of information.”

The sanity commission report found that Defendant was incompetent

to assist in his defense or understand the charge against him but reached no

conclusion as to his sanity at the time of the crime. Defendant was sent to

the East Feliciana Forensic Facility for nine months, during which time he

received instruction on the functions of court personnel and assistance with

his mental health in hopes that he could be brought to a state of

understanding. In February 2023, the sanity commission report was issued,

which determined he understood the function of the judge, the district

attorney, the defense attorney, the jury, the charge against him and the effect

of a plea bargain agreement; thus, he was found competent to stand trial.

An amended bill of information was issued August 30, 2023, which

reduced the charge against Defendant to manslaughter “without any intent to

cause death or great bodily harm” when he committed second degree battery

of the baby. The district attorney offered a plea bargain agreement wherein

if he pled guilty, his sentence, which was potentially 10-40 years under La.

R.S. 14:31(B), would be capped at 25 years.

Defendant pled guilty to manslaughter the day the amended bill was

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State of Louisiana v. Don Lee Johnson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-louisiana-v-don-lee-johnson-lactapp-2025.