State of Louisiana v. Donovan Eugene Phillips

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 25, 2026
Docket56,745-KA
StatusPublished
AuthorStephens

This text of State of Louisiana v. Donovan Eugene Phillips (State of Louisiana v. Donovan Eugene Phillips) 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. Donovan Eugene Phillips, (La. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Judgment rendered February 25, 2026. Application for rehearing may be filed within the delay allowed by Art. 922, La. C. Cr. P.

No. 56,745-KA

COURT OF APPEAL SECOND CIRCUIT STATE OF LOUISIANA

*****

STATE OF LOUISIANA Appellee

Versus

DONOVAN EUGENE PHILLIPS Appellant

Appealed from the First Judicial District Court for the Parish of Caddo, Louisiana Trial Court No. 378,924

Honorable Christopher T. Victory, Judge

LOUISIANA APPEALS AND Counsel for Appellant WRIT SERVICE By: Remy V. Starns Michael Anthony Mitchell Mary E. Roper

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

VICTORIA T. WASHINGTON ERIC M. WHITEHEAD Assistant District Attorneys

Before STONE, STEPHENS, and THOMPSON, JJ. STEPHENS, J.,

This criminal appeal arises out of the First Judicial District Court,

Parish of Caddo, State of Louisiana, the Honorable Chris Victory, Judge,

presiding. The defendant, Donovan Eugene Phillips, was charged by bill of

indictment with the first degree rape of E.C. (d.o.b. 12/22/2007), in violation

of La. R.S. 14:42(A)(4).1 Following trial held on April 7-9, 2025, the 12-

person jury found Phillips guilty as charged, and on April 15, 2025, he was

sentenced by the trial court to life imprisonment without the benefit of

probation, parole, or suspension of sentence. Phillips has appealed, urging

one assignment of error. For the reasons set forth below, his conviction and

sentence are affirmed.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In September 2020, Deputy Jack Anderson with the Caddo Parish

Sheriff’s Office (“CPSO”) spoke with Ilenna Austin Phillips (“Ms. Austin”),

who reported that her 12-year-old daughter E.C. had been sexually abused

by her former stepfather/Ms. Austin’s ex-husband, Donovan Phillips. Dy.

Anderson got in touch with Ray Saunders, CPSO’s on-call youth services

detective, who took lead on the case and arranged for E.C. to be interviewed

at the Gingerbread House.

Forensic interviewer Meaghan Hughes spoke with E.C. on September

21, 2020, at the Gingerbread House; portions of the recorded interview,

which was properly authenticated and admitted into evidence as State’s

Exhibit No. 1, were shown to the jury at Phillips’ trial during E.C.’s

1 La. R.S. 14:42(A)(4) provides that first degree rape is a rape committed upon a person where the anal, oral, or vaginal sexual intercourse is deemed to be without lawful consent of the victim because it is committed when the victim is under the age of thirteen years. Lack of the victim’s age shall not be a defense. testimony.2 E.C. related to Ms. Hughes that Phillips had been sexually

touching her since she was seven or eight years old, and he had shown her

pornography on his phone—specifically, videos depicting sexual intercourse.

E.C. told Ms. Hughes that when she was ten years old, Phillips took her

virginity when he had painful vaginal intercourse with her. E.C. related that

once she began having her period, which was around February 2020, Phillips

would use a condom during intercourse. She specifically recalled that the

condoms were a brand called “SKYN” that came in a black box. Phillips

would keep the condoms in a brown backpack on the shelves in his

bedroom. E.C. testified that the kids (she and her three brothers) were not

allowed in Phillips’ room unless they were told to go in there. According to

E.C., a condom broke once during intercourse, and Phillips went to the store

to purchase a “Plan B” pill which he gave her to take.

E.C. testified that Phillips would routinely force her to perform oral

sex or engage in vaginal intercourse when her mother left the house. These

acts would take place in his locked bedroom or in the living room when no

one was home. However, on one occasion, Phillips performed oral sex on

E.C. while she was asleep in the living room and her mother was asleep in

the bedroom. Another time he made her have sex back in the woods behind

the tree the deer “cam” was strapped to. E.C. further stated that Phillips

would make her do chores, threaten her with physical harm, withhold certain

privileges, or yell at her if she refused to have sex with him.

2 We note that the trial court cleared the audience out of the courtroom for E.C.’s testimony pursuant to a motion made by the State, allegedly under the auspices of Louisiana’s statute protecting the rights of victims of crimes. We do not read this provision as expansively. Instead, La. R.S. 46:1844 must be considered in light of La. Const. art. I, § 22 (Access to Courts), and art. I, § 16 (a Defendant’s Right to a Fair Trial). 2 Ms. Austin testified that she and Phillips were married for about eight

years. Prior to their marriage, Ms. Austin had three children—two sons and

a daughter, E.C., and together, Ms. Austin and Phillips had one son, A.P.

Ms. Phillips stated that her marriage was “basically” over when she moved

out of his house into a rent house on August 1, 2019. She explained that she

first learned of the abuse when a friend’s daughter forwarded to her

screenshots of messages E.C. sent to her and others in a group chat in which

E.C. expressed that she wanted to kill herself. When Ms. Austin spoke to

her daughter about the messages, E.C. was crying and distraught. E.C. told

her mother about the sexual abuse Phillips had subjected her to, which had

occurred from around 2017 through September 2020.3

According to Ms. Austin, Phillips lost his job sometime in 2015.

From 2015 to 2019 he did not maintain a job, although he had occasional

work. As a result, the nature of their relationship changed during that time

period. Ms. Austin characterized Phillips as distant and more verbally and

physically abusive, as well as avoidant. It was during that time that Phillips

decided that he didn’t want her to sleep in the same bed as him, so she went

and slept on the couch. According to Ms. Austin, she slept on the couch for

about two years. She then moved to A.P.’s bedroom, which is where she was

staying when she moved out.

Ms. Austin testified that her and Phillips’ sexual relationship ended

somewhere around 2015 or 2016. They were not having sex when she

moved to the couch. Before that time, they had sex “constant, all the time,”

multiple times a day. Ms. Austin stated that when that changed, she had a

3 Although Ms. Austin and Phillips separated in 2019, Phillips still had visitation with the children, including E.C., until the abuse was reported. 3 feeling that something was going on. “I knew he was cheating on me, but I

really, honestly had no clue that it was my daughter (sobbing).”

Immediately after her conversation with E.C., Ms. Austin called her

brother, a Louisiana State trooper, to ask his advice on how to proceed. He

told her to hang up immediately and contact local law enforcement, which

she did. CPSO deputies came out and took her statement then made

arrangements to have E.C. interviewed at the Gingerbread House.

Ms. Austin then testified that she is just now realizing that the

relationship Phillips had with E.C. was “too close to be a father-daughter

thing.” Examples given by Ms. Austin included that Phillips let E.C. walk

around in his t-shirt and panties and gave her better treatment than the boys.

According to Ms. Austin, when she and Phillips had sex, they did not use

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Related

State v. Williamson
389 So. 2d 1328 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1980)
State v. Lanclos
980 So. 2d 643 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 2008)
State v. Logan
822 So. 2d 657 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2002)

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State of Louisiana v. Donovan Eugene Phillips, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-louisiana-v-donovan-eugene-phillips-lactapp-2026.