State of Louisiana v. Larry Joseph McKithern

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 2, 2012
DocketKA-0011-1402
StatusUnknown

This text of State of Louisiana v. Larry Joseph McKithern (State of Louisiana v. Larry Joseph McKithern) 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. Larry Joseph McKithern, (La. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

11-1402

STATE OF LOUISIANA

VERSUS

LARRY JOSEPH MCKITHERN

**********

APPEAL FROM THE FOURTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF CALCASIEU, NO. 3678-11 HONORABLE CLAYTON DAVIS, DISTRICT JUDGE

ULYSSES GENE THIBODEAUX CHIEF JUDGE

Court composed of Ulysses Gene Thibodeaux, Chief Judge, Sylvia R. Cooks, and Elizabeth A. Pickett, Judges.

CONVICTIONS AFFIMRED. HABITUAL ADJUDICATION VACATED; REMANDED.

John Foster DeRosier District Attorney - 14th Judicial District Court P. O. Box 3206 Lake Charles, LA 70602-3206 Telephone: (337) 437-3400 COUNSEL FOR: Plaintiff/Appellee - State of Louisiana

Edward Kelly Bauman Louisiana Appellate Project P. O. Box 1641 Lake Charles, LA 70602-1641 Telephone: (337) 491-0570 COUNSEL FOR: Defendant/Appellant - Larry Joseph McKithern Karen C. McLellan The Gray Law Firm P. O. Box 1467 Lake Charles, LA 70602-1467 Telephone: (337) 494-0694 COUNSEL FOR: Plaintiff/Appellee - State of Louisiana THIBODEAUX, Chief Judge.

Larry J. McKithern was found guilty of armed robbery, a violation of

La.R.S. 14:64, and aggravated arson, a violation of La.R.S. 14:51. At the sentencing

hearing, the trial court found McKithern to be a second habitual offender. The court

sentenced McKithern to the maximum term of one hundred and thirty years on the

charge of armed robbery and thirty years on the charge of aggravated arson pursuant

to La.R.S. 15:529.1. The court ordered both sentences to run consecutively. For the

following reasons, McKithern‘s convictions are affirmed. Because the State offered

no proof that a ten-year cleansing period had not elapsed, McKithern‘s adjudication as

a habitual offender and sentences are vacated. This matter is remanded for further

proceedings and resentencing.

I.

ISSUES

We shall consider whether:

(1) there was insufficient evidence to convict McKithern, where the evidence largely centered on testimony of two witnesses, both of whom were intoxicated at the time of the offense;

(2) the State failed to prove the ten-year cleansing period had not elapsed between McKithern‘s previous and present convictions, where McKithern was convicted and sentenced to eighteen years in 1988 and where the State did not show whether the date of McKithern‘s discharge was actually eighteen years from the conviction or an earlier date;

(3) the trial court erroneously disallowed McKithern to present an alternative theory, where McKithern‘s first attempt to raise the alternative theory was during the closing argument;

(4) McKithern received ineffective assistance of counsel because the counsel failed to object to allegedly hearsay testimony, where the testimony was regarding a person‘s actions the witnesses personally observed;

(5) the jury instruction on reasonable doubt was deficient; (6) the counsel‘s failure to object to jury instructions and to move to quash the indictment resulted in counsel‘s defective performance that prejudiced McKithern; and,

(7) the trial judge erred by not recusing himself because of bias and prejudice against McKithern, where the judge allegedly issued the arrest warrant, set McKithern‘s bond, presided over a bond- reduction hearing, sequestered McKithern‘s witnesses without sequestering the State‘s witnesses, and disallowed irrelevant questions.

II.

FACTS

On January 3, 2009, a deputy of the Jefferson Davis Sheriff‘s Office was

dispatched to a house fire on Pujol Road. Upon arrival, he found an intoxicated

elderly gentleman. The man told the deputy that he and three others were partying all

night; one of them, Larry, ―poured gasoline on the trailer while he was in it and

ignited it with either a match or a lighter.‖

Earlier that day, Gerald Endicott asked Joey Smith to take him from

Beaumont, Texas, to Lake Charles to look at a vehicle he planned to buy. The pair

arrived around lunchtime on that day and met Richard Green at the trailer. People

were ―hanging out,‖ and they ―bought some beers and whiskey and made a day of it.‖

McKithern and his ―girlfriend‖ were present when Endicott and Smith arrived. When

the party ended, Endicott, Smith, and Green went to bed in the trailer. All of them

were intoxicated.

Larry returned after dark and asked if they had any beer left. He and

Smith drank more beer, and Larry ―started asking [Smith] weird things like if [he] was

a cop.‖ Smith said goodnight and went inside. Larry again knocked on the door, ―and

this time, he stuck his knife in [Smith‘s] face‖ and said to give him all his money.

Smith gave Larry five dollars; Larry was not happy with that and checked Smith‘s

pants and took his cellular phone.

2 Larry then took two dollars from Green and twenty dollars from Endicott

while holding the knife to Endicott‘s neck. When Larry went outside, Smith tried to

get out of the trailer, but Larry ―had the door braced shut somehow.‖ When Larry

came back inside, he had ―a fire type of chemical‖ that he poured on the three men

and around the trailer. He lit the coffee table on fire while Smith was three feet away

from him with flammable fluid on him. Smith ―dove on him and out the door [they]

went, and the other two fellows went out the door‖ while ―[t]he house was blazing.‖

―Larry‖ hit Smith in the face and kicked him a couple of times, then ―broke the

window out of [Smith‘s] truck and walked off in the darkness.‖ Smith got in the truck

to move it away from the fire; he and Endicott ―started to head to town.‖

Smith sustained multiple injuries (but no burns) and ―couldn‘t hold it

together,‖ so he told Endicott to drive him to the nearest hospital. Smith passed out

and awoke the next morning. Endicott was intoxicated and feared getting charged

with driving while intoxicated, so he parked the truck behind a church ―out in the

woods,‖ somewhere close to Lake Charles, and hid. The next day, Smith testified he

drove himself to a hospital in Beaumont, where ―they put a rag type of a bandage on

[his face] and sent [him] to Harris County Hospital in Houston.‖ At some point,

Smith spoke to ―a Detective Gertz‖ in Lake Charles.

Smith described the man they knew as Larry as ―pretty husky fellow . . .

[h]ad tattoos around his neck, all the way around his neck where it stuck out of his T-

shirt.‖ Smith did not see McKithern in the courtroom at trial. Nevertheless, he later

testified, ―I guess that‘s him, but it don‘t [sic] look like him. His hair is longer. He‘s

just not the same as he used to look.‖ When asked about McKithern‘s tattoos, Smith

said ―you can see it on his neck through his shirt.‖ Smith testified again McKithern

―don‘t [sic] look the same today as he did then.‖

Green testified McKithern and his ―girlfriend‖ were at a barbecue at his

trailer that day. Green also had difficulty identifying McKithern at trial. When asked

3 if he saw McKithern in the courtroom, Green replied, ―[w]ait a minute. You know

what, I don‘t know. That might be him right there, but he‘s changed (indicating). He

– he never wore glasses.‖ When the trial court ordered McKithern to remove his

glasses, Green testified, ―[y]eah, that‘s him,‖ and then commented, ―I‘m sorry, Larry .

. . You shouldn‘t have done that to me.‖ The court noted ―that the witness has

identified the defendant as Mr. Larry McKithern.‖ Green testified McKithern ―was

[his] best friend.‖

According to Green, on the day of the incident, McKithern returned to

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State of Louisiana v. Larry Joseph McKithern, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-louisiana-v-larry-joseph-mckithern-lactapp-2012.