State of Louisiana v. Donald Briggs, III A/K/A Donald Briggs C/W State of Louisiana v. Stefan Jermaine Briggs

CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 1, 2026
Docket2025-K-00529
StatusPublished

This text of State of Louisiana v. Donald Briggs, III A/K/A Donald Briggs C/W State of Louisiana v. Stefan Jermaine Briggs (State of Louisiana v. Donald Briggs, III A/K/A Donald Briggs C/W State of Louisiana v. Stefan Jermaine Briggs) 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.

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State of Louisiana v. Donald Briggs, III A/K/A Donald Briggs C/W State of Louisiana v. Stefan Jermaine Briggs, (La. 2026).

Opinion

FOR IMMEDIATE NEWS RELEASE NEWS RELEASE #018

FROM: CLERK OF SUPREME COURT OF LOUISIANA

The Opinions handed down on the 1st day of May, 2026 are as follows:

BY Penzato, J.:

2025-K-00529 STATE OF LOUISIANA VS. DONALD BRIGGS, III A/K/A DONALD BRIGGS C/W STATE OF LOUISIANA VS. STEFAN JERMAINE BRIGGS (Parish of Vermilion)

REVERSED AND REMANDED. SEE OPINION.

Griffin, J., dissents and assigns reasons.

Guidry, J., dissents and assigns reasons. SUPREME COURT OF LOUISIANA

No. 2025-K-00529

STATE OF LOUISIANA

VS.

DONALD BRIGGS, III A/K/A DONALD BRIGGS

C/W

STEFAN JERMAINE BRIGGS

On Writ of Certiorari to the Court of Appeal, Third Circuit, Parish of Vermilion

PENZATO, Justice Pro Tempore1

This case involves a drive-by shooting, which resulted in the death of Jazaylon

Levy. A unanimous jury convicted brothers, Donald Briggs, III and Stefan Briggs,

of second degree murder in connection with the shooting.

The Third Circuit Court of Appeal reversed defendants’ convictions,

concluding the evidence was insufficient because the State failed to exclude every

reasonable hypothesis of innocence. Finding that the court of appeal erred in

substituting its verdict for that of the jury, we reverse, reinstate defendants’

convictions and sentences, and remand to the appellate court for consideration of the

pretermitted assignments of error.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Approximately a year-and-a-half before the murder of Mr. Levy, there was an

eruption of gun violence between two rival groups in Abbeville, Louisiana. The

Briggs brothers were affiliated with one group, while Ronald Bernard, III, was

1 Judge Allison H. Penzato of the Court of Appeal, First Circuit, appointed Justice pro tempore, sitting for the vacancy in the First District. 1 affiliated with the other. In late 2020, Stefan was shot in two separate incidents. Mr.

Bernard became a suspect, but police never confirmed his involvement in the

shootings.

On the night of July 14, 2022, after 9:00 p.m., Mr. Levy was shot during a

drive-by shooting in the parking lot of the Stone Bridge Apartment complex, located

off Rodeo Road, in Abbeville. Mr. Levy, Gavin Garnica, a known associate of

Bernard’s group, and one other teenager were walking Kashawna Preston and her

sister to their respective cars in the parking lot of the complex. As the group walked,

Ms. Preston noticed a silver Mercedes-Benz backed into a parking space. Shortly

after Ms. Preston and her sister departed in their vehicles, Mr. Levy was shot while

standing near one of the empty parking spaces, a few parking spaces down from

where Ms. Preston observed the silver Mercedes-Benz.

Detective Lon Hargrave, a courtesy officer who resided at Stone Bridge and

worked with the Vermillion Parish Sheriff’s Office SWAT team, treated Mr. Levy

at the scene. Mr. Levy and Mr. Garnica were later transported to the hospital, where

Mr. Levy expired from his injuries. While at the hospital, Mr. Garnica was

apprehended on other charges and interviewed by Detective Hargrave. At that time,

Mr. Garnica relayed that he sustained a gunshot graze wound to the leg. Mr. Garnica

further admitted that he was “out there ‘when them boys started shooting.’”

Otherwise, he was uncooperative with the investigation.

Detective Trent Guidry, the Abbeville Police Department lead investigator,

retrieved video surveillance from a Walmart store located one half mile from Stone

Bridge. At 9:15 p.m., prior to the shooting, defendants exit a light-colored sedan

and enter Walmart. After leaving Walmart, defendants’ vehicle turns onto Rodeo

Road in the direction of Stone Bridge. Thereafter, a light-colored sedan, consistent

with defendants’ sedan, enters Stone Bridge. Between nine to eleven minutes later,

video footage of a Stone Bridge exit driveway captures audio of ten gunshots being

2 fired. Video footage from a neighboring apartment complex shows a light-colored

sedan overtaking a white Ford F-150 truck and another vehicle2 leaving Stone Bridge

shortly after the shooting. Almost immediately after the sedan exited the complex,

video surveillance from a Motel 6 records a light-colored sedan traveling eastbound

on Highway 14. Subsequent footage from a Texaco station located at the

intersection of Highways 14 and 89, in Delacambre, depicts a Toyota Camry

followed by a light-colored Mercedes-Benz arriving at the station. Donald Briggs

exits the Mercedes and enters the Camry, while Stefan exits the passenger side of

the Mercedes, enters its driver’s side, and drives away.

At the conclusion of the investigation, defendants were charged by grand jury

indictment with the second degree murder of Mr. Levy. The defendants were tried

together, and a unanimous jury found both defendants guilty as charged. Thereafter,

defendants received life sentences at hard labor without the benefit of parole,

probation, or suspension of sentence.3 After the trial court denied post-verdict

motions, defendants appealed.

On appeal, defendants each asserted three assignments of error, one of which

pertained to the sufficiency of the evidence. After consolidating defendants’

separate appeals, the appellate court concluded that the evidence was insufficient to

convict defendants of second degree murder and reversed the jury verdict.4 The

court of appeal reasoned that because the evidence was circumstantial, the State was

required, but failed, to negate every reasonable hypothesis of misidentification,

2 Neither the State nor the defendants submit that the shooting could have come from this third vehicle, which, according to Detective Hargrave, was already visible in the driveway when the shots were fired. 3 The appellate court noted the same patent error in each of defendant’s sentences, which ordered defendants’ sentences to run concurrently to any other sentence absent such a statement in the transcript. However, given it reversed the conviction and vacated the sentence, it found the errors patent to be moot. 4 The court of appeal pretermitted defendants’ remaining assignments of error, deeming them moot. 3 finding: “[e]ven if the jury reasonably inferred from the video evidence that the

brothers were in the vicinity of the shooting at the time of the shooting and left

shortly afterwards, the jury was required to speculate as to whether the shots were

fired from the brothers’ car.” The court noted the lack of any evidence connecting

defendants to the shooting or the victim, and the “ambiguous” evidence connecting

them to Mr. Garnica, who was wounded in the shooting which killed Mr. Levy.

Thus, the court concluded the jury’s determination was based on speculation rather

than reasonable inferences. The appellate court further found that the evidence was

insufficient to prove Donald Briggs, the driver of the Mercedes, possessed specific

intent to kill.

We granted the State’s writ application to review the correctness of the

appellate court’s decision. State v. Briggs, 2025-00529 (La. 10/1/25), 420 So.3d 22.

LAW AND DISCUSSION

The sole issue presented is whether the evidence was sufficient to support

defendants’ convictions. The State asserts that the appellate court erred in finding it

did not negate every reasonable hypothesis of misidentification or prove Donald’s

specific intent to kill. In particular, the State contends that the appellate court

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State of Louisiana v. Donald Briggs, III A/K/A Donald Briggs C/W State of Louisiana v. Stefan Jermaine Briggs, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-louisiana-v-donald-briggs-iii-aka-donald-briggs-cw-state-of-la-2026.