State of Louisiana v. Joel G. Lehmann

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 5, 2024
Docket2023-KA-0386
StatusPublished

This text of State of Louisiana v. Joel G. Lehmann (State of Louisiana v. Joel G. Lehmann) 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. Joel G. Lehmann, (La. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA * NO. 2023-KA-0386

VERSUS * COURT OF APPEAL JOEL G. LEHMANN * FOURTH CIRCUIT * STATE OF LOUISIANA *******

APPEAL FROM ST. BERNARD 34TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT NO. 20-00862 C\W C/W 999-01459, DIVISION “B” Honorable Jeanne Nunez Juneau, Judge ****** Judge Karen K. Herman ****** (Court composed of Judge Roland L. Belsome, Judge Sandra Cabrina Jenkins, Judge Karen K. Herman)

JENKINS, J., CONCURS IN THE RESULT

Perry Michael Nicosia DISTRICT ATTORNEY OF ST. BERNARD PARISH Justin W. Stephens ASSISTANT DISTRICT ATTORNEY OF ST. BERNARD PARISH 1101 W. St. Bernard Highway Chalmette, Louisiana 70043

COUNSEL FOR STATE OF LOUISIANA

Holli Herrle-Castillo LOUISIANA APPELLATE PROJECT P. O. Box 2333 Marrero, Louisiana 70073-2333

COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT

CONVICTION AND SENTENCE AFFIRMED FEBRUARY 5, 2024 KKH RLB The defendant, Joel G. Lehmann (“Mr. Lehmann”), appeals his conviction

for the first-degree murder of his stepfather, Richard Scott (“Mr. Scott”). For the

reasons set forth below, we affirm.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On March 11, 2020, Mr. Lehmann was charged, by bill of indictment, with

committing the January 17, 2020 first-degree murder of Mr. Scott, a violation of

La. R.S. 14:30. On July 14, 2020, the state informed the court that it would not

seek the death penalty, and Mr. Lehmann entered a plea of not guilty.

On August 21, 2020, Mr. Lehmann filed a motion to determine his

competency to stand trial. He was found competent to stand trial, and on August

23, 2022, Mr. Lehmann amended his plea to not guilty and not guilty by reason of

insanity.

After a four-day jury trial, Mr. Lehmann was found guilty as charged on

February 16, 2023. On March 27, 2023, he was sentenced to life imprisonment at

hard labor without the possibility of parole, probation, and suspension of sentence.

On appeal, Mr. Lehmann asserts that the evidence was insufficient to uphold

a conviction for first degree murder. More specifically, Mr. Lehmann argues that

1 the state did not meet its burden of proving that the shooting was not committed in

self-defense.

STATEMENT OF FACT

At trial, Mr. Lehmann’s mother, Darlene Scott (“Mrs. Scott”), testified that

she was married to Mr. Scott for twenty-two years. On January 17, 2020, she lived

with her son and Mr. Scott at 6415 East St. Bernard Highway in Violet, Louisiana.

She stated that Mr. Lehmann had almost always lived with her.1

On January 17, 2020, Mr. Lehmann was unemployed. Mr. Scott was

employed repairing and restoring antique furniture. Ms. Scott stated that her son

and his stepfather always had a good relationship, “until the later years.” Ms. Scott

never saw the two men engage in a physical altercation.

On the morning of the incident, Ms. Scott woke up and got ready for work.

Mr. Scott and Mr. Lehmann remained at home. At about 2:00 p.m., she called Mr.

Scott to let him know that she was leaving work, but had an errand to run. He did

not answer the phone, so she left a message.

Ms. Scott arrived at home at approximately 4:00 p.m. to find Mr. Scott lying

on the dining room floor in a pool of blood. She touched him to see if he had a

pulse, but she felt none. She discovered a bullet hole in his chest and then called

911. She screamed her son’s name “because [she] knew he did it,” and then

walked through the house. In the master bedroom, she found a shovel on her bed

and saw two bullet holes in the wall as she walked toward the bathroom. In Mr.

Lehmann’s room, she found her husband’s cell phone, as well as his gun,

ammunition, crossbow, and arrows.2 Ms. Scott stepped outside and realized Mr.

1 Mr. Lehmann was thirty-six years old at the time.

2 Scott’s truck was gone. As she re-entered the house, the police arrived. Ms. Scott

also discovered a bullet hole in the dining room wall.

The state played Ms. Scott’s 911 call and introduced a series of still

photographs of the scene, which Ms. Scott testified accurately depicted what she

observed that day. Nothing was out of place in the house except for the shovel on

her bed and one chair that appeared to have fallen next to Mr. Scott’s body.

Ms. Scott stated that on January 21, 2020, she received a telephone call from

her son, who was being held in Orleans Parish Prison. During the call, he told her

he has “psychosis.” When asked for her understanding of Mr. Lehmann’s mental

health history, Ms. Scott testified:

He started having issues where he was saying that he was hearing voices. He said that he had somewhere, somehow got a chip — somebody put chip in him and he started hearing voices. He was constantly wearing headphones, basically, 24/7. He started talking about he was God, and he was King Tut, his grandfather was the King of England, just various things of that nature.

I had tried to bring him to the doctor on multiple occasions to no avail. Usually it was a hospital. And when you go into the hospital, they check you in and you have a seat, and then they do what they do, and they’ll call you back into the back when they're ready. Well, every time we’d go, before I could get him into the back, “I’m out of here.” He’s gone, you know. And so we'd leave.

There was one time he actually called me and told me that he was actually going to catch the bus to go to the hospital on his own. So I thought maybe, you know, he’d stay long enough this time since he’s actually taking himself, you know, to be evaluated. And so he proceeded to the hospital. He called me when he got there and called me later. They had sent him to a place off of St. Charles. I don’t recall it off the top of my head, but they sent him from the hospital to this facility off of St. Charles. And he ended up calling me back. And he says, “Mama, come get me. I done jumped the fence and left.” So, again, he — I don’t know if they actually evaluated him at all or what, but — so he was — he was having issues, you know, before this happened.

2 Ms. Scott explained that her husband kept his gun and ammunition in their bedroom dresser; it

was never in Mr. Lehmann’s room. Mr. Scott’s crossbow was kept in her craft room.

3 Regarding Mr. Lehmann’s behavior during the week leading up to the

incident, Ms. Scott stated:

[H]e never left the house. He didn’t have a phone, had no friends. He stayed in his room unless he was going smoke a cigarette, which is not allowed in my house — you have to go outside — so he’d go in and out of the house, you know, to smoke. He’d come out to eat and, of course, go to the bathroom. But other than that, he was in his room with his headphones on.

Ms. Scott testified that Mr. Lehmann never exhibited violent tendencies.

She said that he used drugs from his late teens until two years prior to the

homicide. She testified that she never actually witnessed her son hearing voices,

and she was unaware of any formal diagnoses.

Ms. Scott recounted an episode that occurred a couple of weeks before the

incident. She testified that her daughter’s son, Hayden, visited from Arkansas over

the Christmas holidays. Mr. Scott told Hayden not to touch his recently-purchased

crossbow, which he kept on a table in Ms. Scott’s craft room.

During Hayden’s visit, Ms. Scott made a gift for him at her craft table. To

make room on the table for his grandmother to work, Hayden moved Mr. Scott’s

crossbow and placed it in a closet, out of the way. When Mr. Scott later noticed

that his crossbow had been moved from the craft table, he became angry and

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Related

Jackson v. Virginia
443 U.S. 307 (Supreme Court, 1979)
State v. Brown
907 So. 2d 1 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 2005)
State v. De Gruy
215 So. 3d 723 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2017)
State v. Wells
64 So. 3d 303 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2011)
State v. Williams
85 So. 3d 759 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2012)
State v. Santinac
765 So. 2d 1133 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2000)

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State of Louisiana v. Joel G. Lehmann, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-louisiana-v-joel-g-lehmann-lactapp-2024.