State of Louisiana v. Marquis Moss

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 5, 2022
Docket54,585-KA
StatusPublished

This text of State of Louisiana v. Marquis Moss (State of Louisiana v. Marquis Moss) 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. Marquis Moss, (La. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Judgment rendered October 5, 2022. Application for rehearing may be filed within the delay allowed by Art. 922, La. C. Cr. P.

No. 54,585-KA

COURT OF APPEAL SECOND CIRCUIT STATE OF LOUISIANA

*****

STATE OF LOUISIANA Appellee

Versus

MARQUIS MOSS Appellant

Appealed from the First Judicial District Court for the Parish of Caddo, Louisiana Trial Court No. 364980

Honorable John D. Mosely, Jr., Judge

LOUISIANA APPELLATE PROJECT Counsel for Appellant By: Lieu T. Vo Clark

JAMES E. STEWART, SR. Counsel for Appellee District Attorney

TOMMY J. JOHNSON SENAE E. HALL MEKISHA SMITH CREAL Assistant District Attorneys

Before PITMAN, STONE, and STEPHENS, JJ. STEPHENS, J.

This criminal appeal arises out of the First Judicial District Court in

and for the Parish of Caddo, State of Louisiana, Honorable John Mosely, Jr.,

presiding. Defendant, Marquis Moss, was convicted of one count of armed

robbery, a violation of La. R.S. 14:64, by a unanimous jury, and was

sentenced to 50 years at hard labor on August 31, 2021. This sentence was

ordered to run consecutively to any other sentence he was required to serve.

A motion to reconsider sentence was filed by Moss on September 1, 2021,

and denied by the trial court the next day. Defendant has appealed, urging

that his sentence is excessive.1 For the reasons set forth below, we affirm

defendant’s conviction, vacate the sentence, and remand for resentencing.

FACTS/PROCEDURAL HISTORY

During the evening of February 8, 2019, Deirdre Weller, a Lyft driver,

was parked in a parking spot near the railroad tracks between the Hustler

Club and the Sam’s Town Casino parking garage in Shreveport, Louisiana,

awaiting potential ride requests. As she was scrolling through her phone,

not paying attention, a black male approached her and asked her for a light,

but was told she didn’t smoke. He asked her what she was doing; Deirdre

explained she was a Lyft driver. The man then opened the door, got into her

car, and asked her to “take him up the road for $15.” Deirdre told the man

she would, because, “I mean, what else am I going to do to get him out of

my car[?]”

1 Defendant also assigned as error the trial court’s denial of his motion to reconsider sentence, but did not support this assertion with any argument in his appellate brief. Thus, this issue will not be addressed. As she drove, Deirdre attempted to activate the emergency button on

her Lyft app to notify police, but the man snatched her phone away and put a

gun in his lap, pointed toward her. The man then told her to take him to

Monkhouse Drive. She related that she didn’t have enough gas to do that,

and he told her to keep driving. The gun was still facing her, in the man’s

lap, as he gave her directions and she drove. The man told Deirdre he had

just come from the casino and had lost all of his money and was going to the

strip club. However, they drove under I-20 toward Youree Drive, making

“small talk.”

Although Deirdre told the man she knew where they were going, she

did not, being unfamiliar with the area. He kept giving her directions. She

was terrified; all she could think about was getting home to her children.

They were going down a road that looked like an alley but was mostly

wooded and deserted. The man told her to put her car in park. He asked

Deirdre where the money was, and when she told him she was paid through

an app, he told her to move over, he was taking her car. The man told her to

“get the f*ck out.” As she did so, he kept the gun pointed at her and told her

to get on her knees. Deirdre complied, looked him dead in the eyes and told

him about her small children at home, pleading for her life. The man didn’t

say anything, looked around, as if to see whether anyone else was around,

then closed the car door and drove off in her car, which contained both her

purse and iPhone. Deirdre was able to flag down a passing motorist; she

told him everything that had happened, and the man pulled over, let her into

his car, and called 911 for her.

During the investigation, Deirdre described her assailant to the

investigating officer as a black male, approximately six feet tall, wearing a 2 black do-rag, dark hoodie, dark pants and black latex gloves. She also stated

that he had some facial hair, like a mustache and a goatee. Using

surveillance video from nearby businesses, police officers developed Moss

as a suspect. When she was presented with a photo lineup, Deirdre

positively identified Moss as the man who took her vehicle that night.

Deirdre testified to the effects this event had on her life. For several

months afterward, she slept on a mattress in her living room with a bat

beside her, with all of her family members where she could see them as well

as her front and back doors. Deirdre wouldn’t leave the house unless her

friends came and made her. Her relationship was affected because the police

kept the car, and there was no way her fiancé could get to work without their

vehicle.

Deirdre was concerned for her own safety and that of her whole

family whenever they left the house. Even after she got the car back, for a

long time she was terrified of the dark in her own car. She couldn’t drive at

night for a long time. She sought counseling. She suffers from PTSD and

anxiety for which she takes medication daily. Deirdre expressed that the

man, whom she identified in court as the defendant, took away her pride

when he made her beg for her life on her knees that day. She was certain in

her identification of the man because there were streetlights above them in

the alley, and she looked him “dead in the eyes.”

Moss was arrested and charged by bill of information with armed

robbery, a violation of La. R.S. 14:64, and second-degree kidnapping, a

violation of La. R.S. 14:44.1. He was arraigned and pled not guilty to the

charges on April 18, 2019. A jury trial was held on July 26-30, 2021. A

3 unanimous jury returned a verdict of guilty of armed robbery and not guilty

of second-degree kidnapping.

Moss filed motions for new trial and post-verdict judgment of

acquittal, which were denied by the trial court on August 31, 2021. Moss

waived his sentencing delays, and on that same date, the trial court

sentenced him to 50 years at hard labor to be served consecutively with any

other sentence he is required to serve. Defendant filed a motion to

reconsider sentence, which was denied by the trial court on September 2,

2021. Defendant has appealed, urging excessiveness of his 50-year

sentence.

DISCUSSION

Moss urges that his 50-year sentence, ordered to be served

consecutively with a federal sentence of 115 months that he received for the

firearm that was used in this offense, is essentially a life sentence as applied

to him.2

Error Patent Review

We find, upon a review for errors patent, that the sentence imposed is

indeterminate as a result of the fact that it was imposed “to run consecutively

with any other sentence you’re required to serve.” Words matter. This is

not sufficiently indicative of the fact that the 50-year sentence was intended

to run consecutively with Moss’s previously imposed sentence(s). La. C. Cr.

P. art. 879 provides that if a defendant who has been convicted of an offense

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Related

State v. Jones
131 So. 3d 1065 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2013)
State v. Wiley
216 So. 3d 393 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2017)

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State of Louisiana v. Marquis Moss, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-louisiana-v-marquis-moss-lactapp-2022.