State of Louisiana v. Henry Heath

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 10, 2020
Docket53,559-CA
StatusPublished

This text of State of Louisiana v. Henry Heath (State of Louisiana v. Henry Heath) 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. Henry Heath, (La. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Judgment rendered November 10, 2020. Application for rehearing may be filed within the delay allowed by Art. 922, La. C. Cr. P.

No. 53,559-KA

COURT OF APPEAL SECOND CIRCUIT STATE OF LOUISIANA

*****

STATE OF LOUISIANA Appellee

versus

HENRY HEATH Appellant

Appealed from the Fifth Judicial District Court for the Parish of Richland, Louisiana Trial Court No. F2018-8

Honorable Stephen G. Dean, Judge

LAVALLE B. SALOMON, APLC Counsel for Appellant By: Lavalle B. Salomon

PENNY WISE DOUCIERE Counsel for Appellee Interim District Attorney

K. DOUGLAS WHEELER AMANDA M. WILKINS Assistant District Attorneys

Before PITMAN, STONE, and McCALLUM, JJ. PITMAN, J.

A jury convicted Defendant Henry C. Heath, Jr. of 20 counts of

indecent behavior with a juvenile. The trial court sentenced him to a year

and six months at hard labor on each count and ordered that the sentences be

served consecutively. Defendant appeals his convictions and sentences. For

the following reasons, we affirm Defendant’s convictions and sentences.

FACTS

On January 8, 2018, the state filed a bill of information charging

Defendant with 61 counts of indecent behavior with a juvenile. On

January 23, 2019, the state filed an amended bill of information charging

Defendant with 20 counts of indecent behavior with a juvenile. On

March 12, 2019, the state filed a second amended bill of information

charging Defendant with 20 counts of indecent behavior with a juvenile in

Richland Parish, in violation of La. R.S. 14:81. The state alleged that

between the dates of January 1, 2016, and December 31, 2016, Defendant

committed indecent behavior with a juvenile, i.e., S.G., whose date of birth

is February 8, 2000.

Trial commenced with jury selection on March 18, 2019, and

evidence was adduced on March 19 and 20, 2019.

S.G. testified that she met Defendant at church sometime in December

2014, when she was 14 years old. After she expressed an interest in hunting,

Defendant agreed to take her and began to visit her home. Defendant, S.G.,

her mother (“K.G.”), her sister and Defendant’s nieces and nephews

periodically cooked and watched movies together, among other things. She

and Defendant located hunting spots near her house and put out corn for the

deer. Around April 2015, she dated Defendant’s son. She testified that Defendant did not approve of their relationship and told her that his son was

not good enough for her. She characterized Defendant as acting like a

jealous boyfriend.

S.G. recalled that her first sexual contact with Defendant was in

December 2015, at Mack Borden’s father’s house in West Carroll Parish

where he had taken her to hunt. The two left the Bordens’ house and went to

Defendant’s home located in Morehouse Parish. There, Defendant

undressed her, fondled her breasts and other areas on her body and put a

vibrator inside her vagina. Defendant additionally pleasured himself. At

some point, Defendant also kissed her. She testified that she asked

Defendant to stop, but he did not. Defendant asked her not to tell anyone

about their encounter because they could both get into trouble.1

S.G. testified that in January 2016 she continued to see Defendant

almost daily at her home in Richland Parish, which was across the road from

the home of her grandparents, Francis Dolores and Darryl Caston.

Occasionally, Defendant would walk by her and touch her buttocks and grab

her breasts. She and Defendant continued to prepare their hunting spot,

usually close to dark, throwing corn along a tree line some distance from her

grandparents’ house and behind the mobile home across the road where her

family lived. She stated that while putting out the corn, Defendant would

pull her pants down, pull her shirt up or touch her breasts or buttocks. She

testified that this type of activity occurred at least five times in January 2016

behind her house and behind her grandparents’ house. She never told

anyone about these incidents.

1 The only charges before this court are those that occurred in Richland Parish. 2 S.G. testified that in February 2016, she and Defendant continued

putting out corn, even though it was not hunting season. She stated that

Defendant was at her house daily and sexually assaulted her every day. She

recalled a day when she and Defendant took his truck behind her

grandparents’ house where Defendant undressed her and touched her breasts

and vagina. He also used his mouth in her “private area.” Defendant

engaged in identical contact with her on another day in February after

returning from Walmart. He stopped his truck on Ruff Road and proceeded

to undress her and touch her breasts and vagina. She testified that this type

of activity occurred at least four times in February 2016.

S.G. testified that she did not experience any contact from Defendant

in March 2016. Defendant and her mother were fighting, so he stayed away.

In April 2016, S.G. and her family planned to move to Gainsville, Texas, to

assist her uncle in the opening of his new restaurant. She stated that prior to

their departure, Defendant gave her a vibrator and a cellphone. She did not

refuse the vibrator because she knew that would make Defendant angry.

The family moved to Texas in May and there was no contact between her

and Defendant on the cellphone, with the exception of one text message she

received from him saying, “I see how it’s going to be.”

S.G. further testified that she and her family returned to Louisiana

either at the end of July or early August 2016. Defendant traveled to Texas

to help her family with their move. Shortly thereafter, she and her family

went to Minnesota to visit her brother. On the drive home, they stopped in

Branson, Missouri, where Defendant met them and insisted that she ride

with him on the way back to their home, but K.G. refused to allow her to

ride alone with Defendant, which upset him. After their return home, 3 Defendant resumed his daily visits to her home and began staying overnight,

sleeping on the couch.

In August 2016, there was sexual contact between Defendant and S.G.

virtually every day. S.G stated that when her mother left the room,

Defendant would casually grab her buttocks and breasts. She also stated that

the touching was on both the outside and inside of her clothing. She testified

that this type of activity occurred at least five times in August 2016. She

further testified that there was not any sexual contact between her and

Defendant in September, October or November 2016. During those months,

she did not see Defendant very often because he was working. She did,

however, occasionally text him on K.G.’s phone to determine if he would

attend her softball games.

S.G. testified that in December 2016, when hunting season began, she

and Defendant resumed putting corn out for the deer at dusk. Defendant’s

sexual contact with her also resumed. She stated that Defendant again

pulled down her pants, put his mouth on her, used his fingers on her vagina

and touched her breasts. She told him to stop on a couple of occasions. She

testified about another incident which occurred around Christmas after she

and K.G. picked up some pecans from her grandparents’ property and stored

them in her grandmother’s barn. She and Defendant went to retrieve the

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State of Louisiana v. Henry Heath, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-louisiana-v-henry-heath-lactapp-2020.