State of Louisiana v. Khoi Q. Hoang

CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 26, 2019
Docket2017-K-0100
StatusPublished

This text of State of Louisiana v. Khoi Q. Hoang (State of Louisiana v. Khoi Q. Hoang) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana 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. Khoi Q. Hoang, (La. 2019).

Opinion

Supreme Court of Louisiana FOR IMMEDIATE NEWS RELEASE NEWS RELEASE #014

FROM: CLERK OF SUPREME COURT OF LOUISIANA

The Opinions handed down on the 26th day of March, 2019, are as follows:

PER CURIAM:

2017-K-0100 STATE OF LOUISIANA v. KHOI Q. HOANG (Parish of Orleans)

Here, from all of the evidence presented, a jury could reasonably infer (without speculating) that defendant removed the truck’s license plate or directed someone else to do so because the truck was going to be used in a murder or had just been used in a murder. Thus, the majority of the panel of court below erred in finding that “circumstantial evidence connecting Defendant to the removal of the license plate was nonexistent.” Accordingly, we reverse the court of appeal’s decision and reinstate defendant’s conviction and sentence for obstruction of justice. REVERSED.

JOHNSON, C.J., dissents and assigns reasons.

WEIMER, J., dissents and assigns reasons. 03/26/19

SUPREME COURT OF LOUISIANA

No. 2017-K-0100

STATE OF LOUISIANA

VERSUS

KHOI Q. HOANG

ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH CIRCUIT, PARISH OF ORLEANS

PER CURIAM

Lien Nguyen was abducted from his home during the night on April 23,

2013. His hands were bound behind and his back, he was shot twice, and he was

left to die in an area off Old Gentilly Highway. He was still alive when he was

found by James Mushatt, who called 911. Mr. Mushatt reported seeing a Nissan

Titan truck speeding away and said the victim told him that his wife was

responsible for the crime. The victim died at the scene shortly after.

Video surveillance captured a Nissan Titan truck as it pulled into the

victim’s driveway on the night of the murder and then drove off in the direction in

which the victim was later found. During the investigation, a detective learned that

Irene Booker owned a Nissan Titan truck, which she would loan out in exchange

for narcotics. According to Ms. Booker, she loaned her truck to defendant on the

afternoon of the murder. When defendant failed to return the truck to her at the

time promised, she called him and he assured her, “We’ll be there shortly.”

Someone other than defendant then returned the truck to her well after midnight

and gave her $200. Ms. Booker later learned that her truck’s license plate was missing. She obtained a temporary license plate with an expiration date of June 24,

2013. 1

Defendant was indicted with conspiracy to commit second degree murder,

solicitation to commit second degree murder, second degree murder, and

obstruction of justice. At trial, the State presented evidence that defendant and the

victim’s wife began an intimate relationship immediately after the murder. The

State also presented evidence that the two had asked Joseph Hoang to kill the

victim for them. The victim’s wife denied conspiring to kill her husband but

suggested defendant killed the victim over money owed for drugs. The victim’s

wife did not report his disappearance nor did she report it when defendant told her

on the morning after the murder that he had “finished Lien . . . everything is done.”

Although a detective believed, based on the dust found around where the victim’s

missing security system had sat, that the security system was removed very

recently, the victim’s wife claimed the system had not functioned for some time

and had been removed earlier.

The jury found defendant guilty as charged of obstruction but was unable to

reach a verdict on the remaining charges. Defendant was sentenced to life

imprisonment without parole eligibility as a third-felony habitual offender. The

court of appeal reversed because it found the evidence insufficient to support the

conviction. State v. Hoang, 16-0479 (La. App. 4 Cir. 2/21/16), 207 So.3d 473. The

majority found the jury could only speculate from the State’s circumstantial

evidence that defendant removed the license plate from Ms. Booker’s truck and

1 R.S. 47:519(H) provides in pertinent part:

Temporary registration plates or markers shall expire and become void upon the receipt of the annual registration plates or upon the expiration of sixty days from the date of issuance, depending on whichever event shall first occur.

2 removed the security system from the victim’s home. See Hoang, 16-0479, pp. 4–

5, 207 So.3d at 476 (“While the circumstantial evidence presented at trial

established that these two events may have occurred, no reasonable juror could

have determined that Defendant was the person responsible for either the removal

of the license plate or the security system based on the scant circumstantial

evidence presented by the State.”). According to the majority, the State, at best,

proved only that defendant borrowed the Nissan Titan truck from Ms. Booker the

afternoon of the murder. Hoang, 16-0479, p. 6, 207 So.3d at 466. Thus, “[w]hile

the State was able to connect Defendant and Ms. Nguyen to the victim, the State

failed to connect him to either [the removal of the license plate or the removal of

the surveillance system].” Hoang, 16-0479, p. 7, 207 So.3d at 477.

Judge Lobrano dissented because she found the evidence sufficient to prove

defendant acted as a principal to the crime of obstruction. In addition to finding the

State presented sufficient evidence that defendant was a principal to the removal of

the license plate and the surveillance system, Judge Lobrano agreed with the

State’s contention that the jury could also have rationally concluded defendant was

a principal to the disposal of the murder weapon and return of the truck after it was

used to abduct and murder the victim, which acts also constitute obstruction. Thus,

where the majority viewed the circumstantial evidence as only providing grist for

the jury to speculate as to defendant’s guilt, the dissent found it provided the jury a

sufficient basis to reject the “extraordinary coincidence” of defendant’s hypothesis

of innocence. See Hoang, 16-0479, pp. 9–10, 207 So.3d at 484–485 (Lobrano, J.,

dissenting).

Jurors were instructed that they could find defendant guilty of obstruction if

they found he engaged in two specific acts (emphasis added):

In order to convict the defendant of obstruction of justice, you must

3 find, first, that the defendant knew or had good reason to believe that his act may affect an actual, potential, present, past, future criminal proceeding, and two, that the defendant tampered with evidence by disconnecting a video surveillance system and removing a license plate from a vehicle, and three, that the defendant had a specific intent to distort the results of any actual, potential, present, past, future criminal proceeding or investigation, and four, that the evidence was reasonably likely to be relevant to an actual, potential, present, past, future criminal investigation or proceeding.

The State argued in this court, consistent with the views of the dissenting judge

below, that the jury, after reading the jury charges as a whole, could have found

defendant guilty based on his commission of other acts beside removing the license

plate or surveillance system—such as by disposing of the murder weapon or by

returning the truck after it was used to commit the crime. We need not reach that

issue, however, because we find the evidence sufficient, under the due process

standard of Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307

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