State of Louisiana v. Jessie James Duplantis

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 27, 2013
DocketKA-0013-0424
StatusUnknown

This text of State of Louisiana v. Jessie James Duplantis (State of Louisiana v. Jessie James Duplantis) 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. Jessie James Duplantis, (La. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

13-424

STATE OF LOUISIANA

VERSUS

JESSIE JAMES DUPLANTIS

**********

APPEAL FROM THE FIFTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF VERMILION, NO. 53049 HONORABLE EDWARD B. BROUSSARD, DISTRICT JUDGE

ELIZABETH A. PICKETT JUDGE

Court composed of Jimmie C. Peters, Elizabeth A. Pickett, and J. David Painter, Judges.

PETERS, J., dissents and assigns written reasons.

AFFIRMED . REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS.

Michael Harson District Attorney, Fifteenth Judicial District Ted L. Ayo Assistant District Attorney 100 North State St. Abbeville, LA (337) 898-4320 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLEE: State of Louisiana

Carey J. Ellis, III Louisiana Appellate Project P. O. Box 719 Rayville, LA 71269 (318) 728-2043 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLANT: Jessie James Duplantis Jessie James Duplantis Louisiana State Penitentiary Hickory - Unit 2 Angola, LA 70712 PRO SE PICKETT, Judge.

FACTS

H.C. 1 was referred for counseling with Rachel Hinton, a licensed

professional counselor and licensed marriage and family therapist.2 H.C. indicated

to Ms. Hinton he had been inappropriately touched by his brother and one time by

the defendant, his mother‘s boyfriend. Ms. Hinton stopped the questioning and

notified H.C.‘s Office of Child Services (OCS) worker.

Nicholette Joseph testified at trial as the representative of Hearts of Hope, a

children‘s advocacy center. She interviewed H.C. on June 2, 2010, when H.C. was

six years old. The state played the videotaped interview to the jury over the

defendant‘s objection. On the video, H.C. said he could not live with his mom

because she had a boyfriend, Jessie James Duplantis, the defendant, who did

―mean things.‖ H.C. first said the defendant touched his private four times, and his

brother Blake touched him four times. He said the first time the defendant touched

him, he was four years old; the last three times, he was three. H.C. first said the

defendant touched him ―all over on the private,‖ keeping his hand still. Then he

said the defendant touched his private with a paddle with H.C.‘s clothes on and

again with his hand with H.C.‘s clothes off.

After H.C. made those comments, he asked to ―start all over.‖ He pointed to

where he said the defendant touched him, and this time, he said the defendant

moved his hand. Ms. Joseph presented H.C. with a forensic drawing of what H.C.

described as a boy with no clothes. Ms. Joseph told H.C. the boy had no clothes on

1 The victim‘s initials are used to protect his identity in accordance with La.R.S. 46:1844(W). 2 The record does not indicate the date of the counseling session. because he just got out of the bathtub. H.C. circled the area where he said the

defendant touched him, and he called it his ―bird.‖ He said the defendant touched

his skin inside his clothes. His mother and brother were at home when this

occurred. When asked what room of the trailer, where they lived, these acts

occurred, H.C. answered only, ―in the trailer.‖

When Ms. Joseph asked H.C. if he had told his mom, aunt, and granny about

what happened, H.C. nodded and said ―they got mad.‖ He felt bad that he could no

longer talk to the defendant. Toward the end of the interview, H.C. said he was in

the bathtub when the defendant came in, touched his private, and ―that was it.‖

H.C. also testified at trial after the trial judge questioned him about the

difference between the truth and a lie. He was nine years old and in the fourth

grade at the time of trial. H.C. used to live with his biological mother, Valerie

Chauvin, and the defendant was her boyfriend. When H.C. looked around the

courtroom twice, he testified he did not see the defendant. He then identified the

defendant.

The defendant objected and asked for a mistrial. Apparently, someone in the

audience made a comment defense counsel thought influenced H.C. Regarding

H.C.‘s identification of the defendant, the record states:

Q Do you see Mr. Jessie in the courtroom? Look around.

A I don‘t see.

Q You looked all over? You need to stand up to look?

A I don‘t see him.

Q You don‘t see him?

A No.

Q You still don‘t see him anywhere?

2 A Right there (indicating).

Q Okay. Where are you pointing? What color shirt does he have on?

A White.

Q Does he have a tie or does he not have a tie?

A He does.

BY [the State‘s counsel]: Let the record reflect that he‘s pointing to the defendant wearing a tie.

BY [Defendant‘s counsel]: May we approach?

BY THE COURT: All right.

(WHEREUPON, THE FOLLOWING WAS TAKEN AT A SIDEBAR OUT OF THE HEARING OF THE JURY.)

BY [Defendant‘s counsel]: I need it reflected for the record that I wanted to do this out of the presence of the jury because I didn‘t want to point it out any further to them, but the child only pointed out the defendant after he stood up and after at least one of the ladies, who‘s directly behind me – and although I almost always have tunnel vision for these kind of things – even I could hear her say where he was sitting and what he was wearing.

BY THE COURT: I could hear something, but I couldn‘t tell what was said.

BY [the State‘s counsel]: I didn‘t see it; I‘m sorry.

BY [Defendant‘s counsel]: I could hear it and that‘s unusual for me.

BY THE COURT: I think Autumn might have heard it, too, because her eyes got real big after the lady made a remark.

BY [the State‘s counsel]: You want me to ask her to come up?

BY THE COURT : You want her to come over?

BY [Defendant‘s counsel]: Well, I think the damage is done now. So I think I have no choice but to ask for a mistrial.

BY THE COURT: It would be whether the boy heard her, though.

3 On further questioning, H.C. commented ―he thought [the defendant] was

going to be in handcuffs and his handcuffs the legs, too. [sic] But he was kind of

sad that – it wasn‘t a dream, no.‖ When asked if he heard anyone in the room tell

him where the defendant was situated in the courtroom, he replied the state‘s

counsel had told him ―to look better and then I didn‘t see him. Then I looked, then

I saw.‖

H.C. testified the defendant stayed at the trailer with him and his mother

―[sometimes].‖ When asked whether the defendant ever stayed at the trailer with

H.C. by himself, H.C. responded, ―I guess.‖ H.C. testified the defendant ―did

something that he wasn‘t supposed to do . . . He did something wrong and then he

got in trouble . . . Touched something that he wasn‘t supposed to . . . The private.‖

They were in the bathroom; H.C. ―was taking a bath and [defendant] just – he just

did it on purpose.‖ H.C. did not need help cleaning his ―private.‖ This happened

―[l]ike maybe once – one time.‖ H.C. did not recall if he had ever told anyone it

happened more than once.

The defendant‘s girlfriend, H.C.‘s natural mother, was Valerie Chauvin.

Valerie‘s brother and his wife, also named Valerie, adopted H.C. in 2011.3 H.C.

referred to the women as his ―old mom‖ and his ―new mom.‖ His new mom told

him to ―[j]ust tell the truth and don‘t lie‖ about the touching incident.

The trailer where H.C. lived was in the same yard as his grandmother,

―Granny Betty.‖ His older brother, Blake, also lived in the trailer; H.C. said Blake

was thirteen. H.C. sometimes took baths at Granny Betty‘s house. H.C. testified

his memories were ―kind of old and fuzzy.‖ He further testified that he did not

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State of Louisiana v. Jessie James Duplantis, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-louisiana-v-jessie-james-duplantis-lactapp-2013.