State of Louisiana v. Kerri Seeney Monic

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 25, 2024
DocketKA-0024-0080
StatusUnknown

This text of State of Louisiana v. Kerri Seeney Monic (State of Louisiana v. Kerri Seeney Monic) 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. Kerri Seeney Monic, (La. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

24-80 STATE OF LOUISIANA VERSUS KERRI SEENEY MONIC eso OK Re ok APPEAL FROM THE

FOURTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF CALCASIEU, NO. 7131-21 HONORABLE KENDRICK J. GUIDRY, DISTRICT JUDGE

3K 2K 2K ook ok ok ok kok

VAN H. KYZAR JUDGE

38 A 2 oe 2B ok Kok OK oe

Court composed of Van H. Kyzar, Sharon Darville Wilson, and Gary J. Ortego, Judges.

AFFIRMED. Peggy J. Sullivan

Louisiana Appellate Project

P.O. Box 1481

Monroe, LA 71201

(318) 855-6038

COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLANT: Kerri Seeney Monic

Stephen C. Dwight

District Attorney

John Eric Turner

Assistant District Attorney

Fourteenth Judicial District

901 Lakeshore Drive, Suite 800

Lake Charles, LA 70601

(337) 437-3400

COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE: State of Louisiana KYZAR, Judge.

Defendant, Kerri Seeney Monic, appeals her conviction and sentence for second degree murder. For the reasons herein, we affirm her conviction and sentence.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On April 29, 2021, Defendant was charged in the Fourteenth Judicial District, Calcasieu Parish, with having committed the second degree murder of William Saul Clark, on or about January 21, 2021, in violation of La.R.S, 14:30.1. On July 12, 2021, Defendant entered a plea of not guilty. The trial began with jury selection on September 6, 2022, and the first witness was called the next day.

Evidence presented at trial established, without contradiction, that the victim died after Defendant shot him in the head with a handgun.’ Although Defendant initially denied any knowledge of the circumstances surrounding the victim’s death, she ultimately admitted that she killed the victim in self-defense.

The jury heard testimony from Thelma Andrepont, the victim’s aunt, that the victim and Defendant, who were in a relationship, lived with her at her home in Sulphur, Louisiana. On the day of the murder, Defendant, driving Ms. Andrepont’s vehicle, took Ms. Andrepont to a medical appointment, arriving at the West Calcasieu-Cameron Hospital at 1:15 p.m. The appointment lasted about forty-five minutes, after which Defendant met Ms. Andrepont at the hospital’s front entrance to take her back home. On their return, they found the garage door open. Ms. Andrepont was unable to enter the house through a door inside the garage, which

was blocked from the inside by the victim’s body. She testified that she could see

' Defendant conceded in the opening statement that she shot and killed the victim. the victim’s feet through the partially opened door and that Defendant drew her attention to a bullet hole in the door’s window, right above where Ms. Andrepont was standing. Ms. Andrepont told Defendant to call 911. She stated that Defendant acted hysterically when the victim’s body was discovered and never mentioned that she knew anything about the victim being shot.

On cross examination, Ms. Andrepont was asked whether there was a history

of domestic violence between Defendant and the victim:

Q. _... And did Kerri and Bill sometimes have problems with each other?

A. Yes.

Q. Okay. Did police get called about that stuff sometimes?
A. I think a couple of times.
Q. Okay. And one of the other of them might get picked up for

domestic violence occasionally?

A. I don’t remember.

Okay. But amid all this yelling and arguing, did you see either one of them hit the other one?

No. I never did see either one of them hit the other one. Did you ever hear anybody slap?

No.

Did you ever hear anybody get pushed up against the wall?

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Did you ever see any marks on Ms. Kerri’s face that were from Bill?

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Did you ever see any marks on Bill? A. No.

Q. Was it always just yelling and arguing?
A. Right.

Ms. Andrepont further stated that while the two argued and would sometimes get in each other’s faces, she never observed either of them strike the other. She said that typically, the victim would withdraw from the argument and go smoke a cigarette in the garage to calm down. Sometimes, Defendant would follow him in an attempt to continue the argument.

The State’s next witness was Christalle Fontenot, a 911 dispatcher, who received Defendant’s call regarding an unresponsive person. Ms. Fontenot identified the 911 call recording, which was played for the jury. In it, Defendant can be heard crying throughout the call while reporting that her “roommate” was in the home.

The State’s next witness was Deputy William Vaughan, a dispatcher for the Calcasieu Parish Sheriff's Office (CPSO). Deputy Vaughan introduced a recording of his conversation with Defendant after he was connected to her through 911. In the recording, Defendant can be heard crying throughout the call, making it difficult to understand her; however, she stated that there was a bullet hole in the door and that her boyfriend was blocking the door. She further said that the victim was on the floor unresponsive when they arrived home, and she repeated, “we don’t know what happened.”

As Deputy Vaughan asked questions about the victim, both Defendant and Ms. Andrepont began answering, with Ms. Andrepont telling him that the victim was diagnosed as both bi-polar and schizophrenic. Defendant told Deputy Vaughan that the victim had not been taking his medication but that he had been taking other

drugs; she then began screaming “I don’t know” when asked if he took recreational drugs. The remainder of the seven-minute call essentially consists of the sound of Defendant crying.

Senior Corporal Travis Carroll, with the CPSO, testified that he was the first inside the residence as he was small enough to squeeze through the door blocked by the victim’s body. The victim had a gunshot wound to the head. While inside, he located a shell casing from a firearm. Corporal Carroll identified a video recording from his body camera during his response to the Andrepont residence, which was published to the jury. In the video, he can be seen pulling the victim away from the door by his feet so that CPSO Officer James Graves could enter the house. Corporal Carroll spent approximately three minutes clearing the house before unlocking and opening the front door of the residence. Corporal Carroll then checked the victim and noted that he was “still warm.” He can be heard telling other officers that the victim was propped against the door and the wall when he entered.

The video shows Corporal Carroll, after he exited the house, trying to calm Defendant down and gathering information from her and Ms. Andrepont. At this point, Defendant informed him that the victim owned a .9 mm pistol. However, she noted that she had not seen the gun since she was released from the Concordia Parish Correctional Facility and that the victim had claimed it was stolen.’ Ms. Andrepont reported that the victim was sometimes suicidal, that he had acted strangely for about

a week, and that she had previously stopped him from killing himself with a gun.

; Corporal Carroll clarified that his body camera footage had Officer Graves’s name on it because his camera was malfunctioning, so he had borrowed one from Officer Graves to ensure that he had a functioning camera. He also noted that the time stamp on the video was roughly an hour ahead of what it should have been.

* Defendant had admittedly been jailed for a period of time after an altercation with her mother.

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Related

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State of Louisiana v. Kerri Seeney Monic, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-louisiana-v-kerri-seeney-monic-lactapp-2024.