State Of Louisiana v. Edward Brooks

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 19, 2021
Docket2020KA0454
StatusUnknown

This text of State Of Louisiana v. Edward Brooks (State Of Louisiana v. Edward Brooks) 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. Edward Brooks, (La. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL

FIRST CIRCUIT

NO. 2020 KA 0454

STATE OF LOUISIANA r, r, VERSUS

EDWARD BROOKS

Judgment Rendered: FEB 1 9 2021

On Appeal from the 20th Judicial District Court In and for the Parish of East Feliciana State of Louisiana Trial Court No. 19295

Honorable Kathryn E. Jones, Judge Presiding

Samuel C. D' Aquilla Attorneys for Appellant, District Attorney State of Louisiana

Molly G. O' Flynn Julie Ralph

Haley Green Assistant District Attorneys Clinton, LA

Rhonda B. Covington Attorney for Defendant -Appellee, Clinton, LA Edward Brooks

BEFORE: THERIOT, WOLFE, AND HESTER, JJ. HESTER, I

A grand jury charged defendant, Edward Brooks, by bill of indictment with

first degree murder, a violation of La. R.S. 14: 30. He pled not guilty. Defendant

filed a motion to quash on the ground of improper venue, and the State filed an

opposition to the motion. After considering the motion, the trial court granted it.

The State now appeals, challenging the trial court' s ruling. For the following

reasons, we affirm the granting of the motion to quash.

STATEMENT OF FACTS'

On March 9, 2019, fishermen discovered the body of Timmy Daniels in a

brush pile in the Amite River in East Feliciana Parish. Because the body was found

on the East Feliciana side of the river, the East Feliciana Parish Sheriff' s Office

EFPSO) took charge of the investigation. The body was located downriver of a

bridge near the address of 131 Highway 37 in Clinton, Louisiana, and investigators

believed this was most likely where Mr. Daniels was put into the river. The body

had apparently been " deceased for weeks," and an initial inspection of the body

revealed an apparent gunshot wound to the forehead. The body was clothed in

shorts, sweatpants, and tennis shoes, but with no shirt or jewelry. A palm print

recovered from the body was determined to belong to Mr. Daniels, who had been

reported missing by his mother to police on February 21, 2019.

EFPSO conducted an extensive investigation, most of which occurred in East

Baton Rouge Parish. The investigation revealed that Durell Collins, Jesse Schiele,

defendant, and a juvenile, J. B, were involved in Mr. Daniels' death. The Baton

Rouge Police Department had already developed defendant as a suspect in Mr.

1 Because there is no testimony regarding the events at issue, we have taken the facts from the offense reports and pleadings included in the record and the district court' s written reasons for judgment. We note that no authenticated evidence or live testimony has been entered into the record below. Nothing in this opinion should be construed as comment on the admissibility or weight of any potential evidence that may be introduced at a trial. Moreover, we make no comment about any other aspects of the case as part of our review of the district court' s ruling in granting defendant' s motion to quash.

2 Daniels' disappearance before the recovery of his body. The police investigation

showed Mr. Daniels was shot in East Baton Rouge Parish " just above the eye line,

near the center of the forehead" and in the upper right leg. These gunshot wounds

were the cause of death. A subsequent autopsy showed there was no water in Mr.

Daniels' lungs or debris in his mouth, suggesting Mr. Daniels was dead before he

was thrown into the Amite River. The autopsy also revealed that the bullet fired into

Mr. Daniels' forehead lodged in his brain.

Statements given to police provided a general outline of the events leading to

Mr. Daniels' death.' On February 10, 2019, Defendant, Mr. Daniels, and J. B. rode

together in a vehicle driven by Schiele to Mr. Collins' residence on Ozark Street in

Baton Rouge, Louisiana. The four went to Mr. Collins' residence for Mr. Daniels

to obtain marijuana. Upon their arrival, Mr. Daniels asked Mr. Collins via social

media to come outside, pulled a gun on Mr. Collins, and demanded the marijuana.3

An exchange of gunfire ensued, in which Mr. Daniels' was shot in the head and leg

and defendant returned fire with an AK -47. Mr. Collins sustained a bullet wound in

the left forearm and a bullet grazed his chest. A decision was made not to bring Mr.

Daniels to a hospital. Instead, Schiele drove to the Highway 37 bridge, where some

of Mr. Daniels' clothes were removed and he was thrown over the side of the bridge

into the Amite River. Blood found in the vehicle Schiele was driving the day of the

homicide was forensically determined to match Mr. Daniels' DNA profile.

2 Schiele was the only one to claim the shooting took place at a different location. Schiele reported that Mr. Daniels was shot by the occupant of a Honda Accord in Baton Rouge, in what amounted to a road rage incident, while Mr. Daniels, defendant, and Schiele were in the vehicle Schiele drove. Though Schiele denied ever being at the Highway 37 bridge, cell phone records placed his phone and defendant' s phone there on the night of the shooting.

3 There were conflicting statements regarding whether the robbery of Mr. Collins was a common plan among the men or solely that of Mr. Daniels.

4 Mr. Collins denied shooting Mr. Daniels or that he sold drugs, but he also asked police why was he being charged with murder " when he was robbed on his own property and that the two people that dumped his body got caught." Multiple bags of suspected marijuana and a rifle were recovered from Mr. Collins' bedroom at the Ozark Street address, in addition to another firearm and additional narcotics recovered from common areas in the shared residence. What appeared to be entrance and exit bullet holes were found in the vehicle defendant was driving. 3 J.B. gave several statements to police over the course of the investigation. In

his first statement, J.B. stated he was at defendant' s rap studio with defendant, Mr.

Daniels, and another unknown person, when Mr. Daniels received a call and left in

possibly a black Honda. Later, J.B. acknowledged being present during the robbery

of Mr. Collins but claimed he was dropped off in Baton Rouge after the robbery.

J. B. stated that Mr. Daniels was alive and in pain when J.B. exited the car. In his

final statement, J. B. told police he had not been truthful in the prior interviews and

that he was at the bridge when Mr. Daniels was thrown into the river. J. B. said that

after arriving at the bridge, when Mr. Daniels was removed from the vehicle, " he

was still making noises and was possibly still alive."

In its written reasons for judgment, the trial court found that the accounts of

the incidents " consistently stated that a shooting occurred in Baton Rouge where

Daniels sustained gunshot wounds to his head and right leg." The court also found

the autopsy report persuasive as it indicated " there was no water present in Daniels'

lungs nor was there any debris in his mouth."' This led the court to conclude Mr.

Daniels was more likely than not dead before being thrown in the river. Though the

court recognized J. B. provided some inconsistent statements regarding Mr. Daniels

breathing and making noises, it found they did not " outweigh the medical evidence

in the autopsy report[.]" In conclusion, the court found "[ n] o acts constituting the

offense of murder or necessary elements of that charge occurred in East Feliciana

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