State Of Louisiana v. Frederick Curtis Mangrum

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 22, 2021
Docket2020KA0243
StatusUnknown

This text of State Of Louisiana v. Frederick Curtis Mangrum (State Of Louisiana v. Frederick Curtis Mangrum) 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. Frederick Curtis Mangrum, (La. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA

T COURT OF APPEAL

FIRST CIRCUIT

2020 KA 0243

l,Ji2c :.' 1ZCJ STATE OF LOUISIANA

VERSUS

FREDERICK C. MANGRUM

JUDGMENT RENDERED: FEB 2 2 2021:

Appealed from the Twenty -Second Judicial District Court In and for the Parish of Washington • State of Louisiana Docket Number 16- CR10- 133283 • Division D

The Honorable William H. Burris, Judge Presiding

David F. Gremillion ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT Ravi G. Shah DEFENDANT— Frederick Covington, Louisiana Mangrum

Warren L. Montgomery ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE District Attorney State of Louisiana

J. Bryant Clark, Jr. Matthew Caplan Assistant District Attorneys Covington, Louisiana

BEFORE: WHIPPLE, C. J., WELCH, AND CHUTZ, JJ. WELCH, I

The State of Louisiana charged the defendant, Frederick Curtis Mangrum,

by bill of information with sexual battery on a victim under the age of thirteen

years, a violation of La. R. S. 14: 43. 1( C)( 2). The defendant pled not guilty. After a

trial by jury, the jury found the defendant guilty as charged. The trial court denied

the defendant' s motion for post -verdict judgment of acquittal and motion for new

trial. The trial court sentenced the defendant to forty years imprisonment at hard

labor without the benefit of probation, parole, or suspension of sentence. The trial

court denied the defendant' s motion to reconsider sentence. The defendant now

appeals, assigning error to the admission of hearsay testimony, the sufficiency of

the evidence submitted to support the jury' s verdict, and the constitutionality of his

sentence. For the following reasons, we affirm the defendant' s conviction, but we

vacate the defendant' s sentence and remand for resentencing.

FACTS

B.J., 1 who was eight years old at the time the defendant' s trial began on July

8, 2019, testified that her father, the defendant, " digged my private part." The

victim identified " tuiee" as her front private part, and again, in regard to that part

of her body, stated, " He digged it." When asked what the defendant used to dig in

her private part, she stated, " His hand, I think." The victim testified that she lived

with her mother, but that the incident occurred during an overnight stay at a family

member' s home,2 and that her mother was not present when the incident occurred.

The victim testified that the next day, when she returned home, she told her mother

what happened, but that her mother did nothing in response. The victim also told

her grandmother. The victim did not know how many times the abuse occurred,

1 According to the record, the victim' s date of birth is September 7, 2010. Herein, we refer to the child victim and family members by initials only. See La. R.S. 46: 1844( W).

2 The family member was later identified as the victim' s adult sister, C.M., with whom the defendant was staying at the time of the incident.

2 though she believed it only happened once. The victim was unaware of how long

before the trial the incident occurred or what grade she was in at the time of the

incident and could only say, " But I know I was very tiny and cute."

The victim' s grandmother, A.J., testified that she learned of the incident

when the victim came to stay with her in the summer of 2016. A.J. testified that

the victim objected when she tried to clean the victim' s private area while giving

her a bath, noting the victim stated, " I want to do it myself." A.J. initially believed

that the victim just wanted to be an independent " big girl." However, after the

victim left for a couple of days with her mother and then returned, she exhibited

the same reluctance to allow her grandmother to clean her private area during

baths. A.J. stated that she began feeling " kind of bad" because she was

accustomed to bathing the victim during her stayovers. She ultimately asked the

victim, " Has anybody ever, you know, touched you there?" The victim did not

initially reply and only looked at A.J., so she added, " Don' t, just tell me the truth

I ain' t going to get mad." The victim then replied, " Yes, ma' am." When A.J.

asked who, the victim replied, " My daddy" and began to cry.

A.J. testified that the victim told her that she was watching television before

the incident occurred. As A.J. further testified, the victim told her that the

defendant took her into a room, pulled down her lower clothing, laid her back, and

had his fingers down there." A.J. attempted to console the victim, who was

crying, and decided to take the victim into her physical custody without her

mother' s consent. A.J. called the Office of Child Protective Services (" OCS") in

Bogalusa and reported B. J.' s disclosure. On August 1, 2016, A.J. brought the

victim with her as she moved to Texas.

In August 2016, Captain David Miller of the Bogalusa Police Department

received a referral for this case from the OCS in Bogalusa. Captain Miller learned

that the victim disclosed to her grandmother that while she was in Bogalusa, in his

3 jurisdiction, she was inappropriately touched by the defendant. After learning that

the victim' s grandmother had also reported the victim' s disclosure to child

protective services in Texas, Captain Miller went outside of his jurisdiction to

contact Lori Hix, a special investigator of the Department of Family and Protective

Services (" DFPS") in Texas.

The victim participated in two recorded interviews in Texas, one on August

5, 2016, by Investigator Hix at the home of one of the victim' s relatives, and one

on August 11, 2015, by Susan Knobloch at the Children' s Advocacy Center

CAC") in Belton, Texas. On August 18, 2016, Gessica Finley, a pediatric

forensic nurse coordinator at the McLane Children' s Hospital in Temple, Texas,

conducted a medical evaluation and an unrecorded interview of the victim. During

the three interviews, the victim identified her father, the defendant, as " Bullet."

The victim did not disclose any abuse or inappropriate behavior during the

interview with Investigator Hix. However, during the CAC interview, the victim

described an incident in which her father digitally penetrated her " tuiee" and her

butt." As indicated in Nurse Finley' s notes, the victim made a similar claim

during the interview at the McLane Children' s Hospital.

The defendant testified at trial and confirmed that in 2014 ( while he and the

victim' s mother, D.J., were still together) there was a time period during which he

and the victim spent one or two nights at the home of C. M., the victim' s adult

sister. However, the defendant repeatedly denied ever sexually abusing or

touching the victim inappropriately.

SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE

In his second assignment of error, the defendant argues that the State failed

to present sufficient evidence to support the jury' s verdict. The defendant

concedes that the victim was under the age of thirteen at the time of the alleged

incident, but argues the State failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that he

9 touched the victim in an inappropriate manner. He contends that although the

victim testified, she did not remember details or the statements she gave to

interviewers, including Ms. Knobloch and Nurse Finley. The defendant notes that

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