State Of Louisiana v. John Paul Washington

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 15, 2023
Docket2022KA1363
StatusUnknown

This text of State Of Louisiana v. John Paul Washington (State Of Louisiana v. John Paul Washington) 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. John Paul Washington, (La. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL

FIRST CIRCUIT

2022 KA 1363

VERSUS

JOHN PAUL WASHINGTON

Judgment Rendered: SEP 15 2023

On Appeal from the Seventeenth Judicial District Court In and for the Parish of Lafourche State of Louisiana Docket No. 588055 Honorable Kirk A. Vaughn, Judge Presiding'

Kristine M. Russell Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellee District Attorney State of Louisiana and Jason L. Chatagnier Joseph S. Soignet Assistant District Attorneys Thibodaux, Louisiana

Gwendolyn K. Brown Counsel for Defendant/ Appellant Baton Rouge, Louisiana John Paul Washington

BEFORE: McCLENDON, HESTER, AND MILLER, 33.

1 Judge John E. LeBlanc presided over the trial. McCLENDON, I

Defendant, John Paul Washington, was charged by grand jury indictment with

second degree murder, a violation of LSA- R. S. 14: 30. 1, and pled not guilty. A unanimous

jury found him guilty as charged. He filed a combined motion for a new trial and for a

post verdict judgment of acquittal, but the motion was denied. He was sentenced to life

imprisonment at hard labor without benefit of probation, parole, or suspension of

sentence. He now appeals, challenging the sufficiency of the evidence. For the following

reasons, we affirm the conviction and sentence.

FACTS

The victim, Travontae Williams, worked at a barber shop in the Midland

neighborhood in Thibodaux. On May 25, 2019, at approximately 2: 00 a. m., Travontae

was shot in his head and fatally shot in his abdomen, when the projectile perforated the

right common iliac artery.

Thibodaux Police Department Captain Aaron Barnes, then a sergeant in the

Detectives Bureau, testified that he responded to the crime scene at the intersection of

Plantation Road and Midland Drive in Thibodaux. When he arrived on the scene, he

observed Travontae' s body lying on the sidewalk adjacent to 1400 Plantation Road. Two

9mm bullet casings were found in the front yard of 1400 Plantation Road, one 9mm

casing was found on a vehicle parked in the driveway, and three 7. 62 bullet casings were

found under the carport. A Smith & Wesson SD40 pistol2 was located next to Travontae' s

body.

Stephon Williams testified Travontae was his " little cousin." The day before the

murder, May 24, 2019, defendant picked up Stephon at the barber shop and took him for

a ride. Thereafter, Travontae gave Stephon a ride from the barber shop back to his home

in Cortez, where he fell asleep. At 11: 43 p. m., defendant sent a text message to

Stephon' s phone, stating, " Son I no u got my shit son I won' t my money r my shit[.]"

Captain Barnes testified Travontae's cell phone contained text messages between

Travontae and defendant. The text messages indicated that defendant believed Stephan

2The handgun had been reported stolen.

2 had stolen something from defendant, and defendant wanted it back. The text messages

also indicated that Travontae attempted to intervene on behalf of Stephon by offering to

pay for the item. 3

The police determined that defendant owned a Buick Roadmaster, and a witness

at the scene saw a large -bodied vehicle, either a Buick Roadmaster or a Chevrolet Caprice,

leaving at a high rate of speed. The police obtained a search warrant and went to

defendant's home, where they found a grey Buick Roadmaster. A search of the vehicle

was conducted. Thereafter, defendant's brother, Ricky Washington, arrived in a white

Buick Roadmaster. After obtaining Ricky Washington' s consent, the police also searched

his vehicle. Nothing of evidentiary value was found in either vehicle.

Thibodaux Police Department Detective Jacob Thibodeaux assisted the

investigation by providing geographical location evidence and obtaining search warrants

for defendant's phone and the cell phone provider's phone records. Detective Thibodeaux

testified that geographical location evidence indicated that on May 25, 2019, between

1: 45 a. m. and 2: 00 a. m., defendant was on the East side of Audubon Street,4 near his

cousin Danzell Washington' s residence in the Plantation Trace apartment complex; at

2: 03 a. m., defendant was in the Midland area of Thibodaux, very close to Midland Drive

and Plantation Road; and at 2: 22 a. m., defendant was in the area of his home on Violet

Street. Analysis of Danzell Washington' s phone records, using geographical locating,

revealed multiple overlapping points with the location of defendant's phone at several

times surrounding the incident.

3 Forensic examination of Travontae' s phone revealed the following exchange of text messages: Defendant; 5/ 25/ 2019, 12: 52: 57 a. m.]: Son I got to go with my move on that boy I fill like a bihh

Travontae; 5/ 25/ 2019, 12: 54: 01 a. m.]: Yea y'all could fight

Defendant; 5/ 25/ 2019, 12: 56: 08 a. m.]: Boy no that's 300 fuck fighting it is what is son I fuck with u son but I can' t go out like that

Travontae; 5/ 25/ 2019, 12: 57: 31 a. m.]: That my blood Brudda Defendant; 5/ 25/ 2019, 12: 57: 54 a. m.]: Ya that's mind to

Travontae; 5/ 25/ 2019, 12: 58: 54 a. m.]: Nah me n duke blood all that gun play shit over with potna

Travontae; 5/ 25/ 2019, 12: 59: 52 a. m.]. Getcha one cause that shit gone turn out bad

Travontae5/ 25/ 2019, 1: 00: 33 a. m.]: Bet

4 The record reflects that witnesses referred to the street as both Audubon Drive and Audubon Street during trial.

3 Darius Lewis testified that on May 25, 2019, he was living on " Audubon" in the

Plantation Trace neighborhood of Thibodaux. He went to the apartment of his friend,

Danzell Washington, to play video games. Lewis testified that defendant arrived at the

apartment at approximately midnight, complaining that someone had stolen something

from his car. Defendant expressed anger at "' the cousin of the guy that took the

suspected stuff out of the car." Lewis further testified that defendant's phone was on

speaker while he argued with someone, and Lewis overheard defendant and the man on

the phone threatening to kill each other. Lewis tried to defuse the situation by telling

defendant that no one needed to lose their life and, if the man wanted to pay for what his cousin had taken, defendant should take the money and " just leave it alone."

Defendant, however, told Danzell Washington he wanted to get a gun and kill the man.

Danzell Washington went into the back of the apartment, changed into all black clothing,

retrieved a long gun and another firearm, and gave the weapons to defendant. Lewis

then left the apartment.

Lewis testified he saw defendant and Danzell Washington in a rental car, possibly

a Chrysler 300. He stated that on May 25, 2019, at approximately 3: 00 a. m., Danzell

Washington called him and asked him to pick him up from French Lane. When Lewis

arrived at the scene, he saw the rental car and learned that someone had lost the key so

the vehicle could not be driven.

In a June 28, 2019 statement, Lewis told the police that Danzell Washington stated

he had lost the keys to the rental car. Additionally, Lewis indicated a short dark-skinned

man, a light -skinned man " with dreads," and a third man named " Mal" or " Jamaal" were

with Danzell Washington. At trial, Lewis conceded that defendant was neither short nor

had he ever had " dreads."

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State Of Louisiana v. John Paul Washington, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-louisiana-v-john-paul-washington-lactapp-2023.