State Of Louisiana v. Michael Young

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 24, 2020
Docket2019KA1684
StatusUnknown

This text of State Of Louisiana v. Michael Young (State Of Louisiana v. Michael Young) 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. Michael Young, (La. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL

FIRST CIRCUIT

2019 KA 1684

VERSUS

MICHAEL YOUNG

DATEOFJUDGMENT. JUL 2 4 2020

ON APPEAL FROM THE SEVENTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT NUMBER 564396, DIVISION A, PARISH OF LAFOURCHE STATE OF LOUISIANA

HONORABLE JOHN E. LEBLANC, JUDGE

Kristine M. Russell Counsel for Appellee District Attorney State of Louisiana Heather Hendrix Joseph S. Soignet Assistant District Attorneys Thibodaux, Louisiana

Holli Ann Herrle- Castillo Counsel for Defendant -Appellant Marrero, Louisiana Michael Young

BEFORE: McDONALD, THERIOT AND CHUTZ, JJ.

Disposition: CONVICTION AND SENTENCE AFFIRMED. CHUTZ, I

The defendant, Michael Young, was charged by bill of information with

simple burglary, a violation of La. R.S. 14: 62. He pled not guilty. After a trial by

jury, he was found guilty as charged. The trial court denied the defendant' s

motions for post -verdict judgment of acquittal and new trial and sentenced the

defendant to twelve years imprisonment at hard labor. The defendant now appeals,

assigning as error the sufficiency of the evidence to support his conviction and the

alleged denial of his constitutional right to present a defense. For the following

reasons, we affirm the conviction and sentence.

STATEMENT OF FACTS

On or about June 13, 2016, around 2: 00 a. m., Bobby LeBlanc, the operations

manager for BJ' s Country Stop stores,' received a call from an alarm monitoring

company, informing him that the alarm was sounding for store number 3, located

at 2846 Bayou Blue Road in Houma, Louisiana, in Lafourche Parish. The alarm

company also alerted the Lafourche Parish Sheriff' s Office ( LPSO) of the

sounding alarm at the store. Mr. LeBlanc, who lived nearby, arrived at the store

within three or four minutes of being notified and observed that one of the glass

doors had been shattered and a security bar had been broken. Mr. LeBlanc waited

for law enforcement to arrive before entering the store.

Lieutenant Trent Duplantis of the LPSO responded to the alarm and entered

the store through the shattered glass door. The store was in disarray, and the cash

register drawer was missing. Lt. Duplantis and Mr. LeBlanc viewed store video

surveillance footage that showed a black male using a bag2 to shatter the glass

door. The black male then entered the store, took the cash register drawer, and

1 According to trial testimony, the LeBlanc family operated a total of four BFs Country Stop stores owned by Darryl LeBlanc. Bobby LeBlanc and Tracy LeBlanc testified at trial.

2 The bag, which contained a brick, was found in the middle of the store.

2 exited the store. The subject' s hands and face were covered, and he was wearing a

white muscle shirt and black shorts with a wide red stripe outlined in white on each

side.

Tracy LeBlanc, who helped manage the BJ' s Country Stop stores, was also

notified that morning of the burglary at store number 3 and viewed the surveillance

footage. Ms. LeBlanc downloaded the footage from the surveillance system, saved

it on a compact disc, and gave the disc to law enforcement. In an attempt to find

footage of the perpetrator visiting the store before the burglary, 3 Ms. LeBlanc

watched surveillance footage from the day before the burglary, June 12, 2016, for

store number 3. She subsequently began watching footage from the same time

period for store number 1, located across the street from store number 3, but

outside Houma city limits, at 2903 Highway 316 in Gray, Louisiana, in Terrebonne

Parish. She ultimately discovered and downloaded footage from store number 1,

depicting an individual whom she identified as the perpetrator, based on his

matching description, clothing, socks, and shoes. In addition to providing law

enforcement with the surveillance footage and still shots from both stores, Ms.

LeBlanc also gave them the merchant copy of the credit card receipt generated at

6: 56 p.m. for a gas transaction at store number 1 by the person she identified as the

perpetrator. The first name of the signature on the receipt was clearly readable as

Michael," the last name appeared to start with the letter " Y," and the credit card

was issued under the name Michael T. Young.

Further, Detective Stephanie Belanger of the LPSO, who was assigned to

investigate the offense, determined that the vehicle depicted in the footage at store

number 1, for which the gas was purchased, was registered in the defendant' s

3 Ms. LeBlanc testified that based on her experience from numerous prior incidents, such as and armed robberies, perpetrators tended to go to the store before they burglaries, thefts,

committed the crime and often wore the same clothing later worn during the incidents.

3 name.' Detective Belanger viewed the surveillance footage from both stores and

concluded, as did Ms. LeBlanc, that the perpetrator of the burglary was wearing

the " exact same clothing" as the defendant wore the day before at store number 1.

Based on the surveillance footage from both stores, the receipts for the gas

transaction, and the vehicle registration, Detective Belanger obtained a warrant for

the defendant' s arrest for the burglary.

ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR NUMBER ONE

In assignment of error number one, the defendant argues that the State failed

to present sufficient evidence that he committed the burglary in this case. He

argues that he was convicted because he was a black man who, on the night before

the burglary, wore shorts similar to the ones worn by the perpetrator at the time of

the burglary. The defendant claims that Ms. LeBlanc acknowledged that the shorts

the defendant wore the night before were distinguishable from the shorts that the

perpetrator had worn. He specifically asserts that Ms. LeBlanc testified that one

pair of shorts contained black piping while the other pair did not and that they

differed as to the width of the stripes. The defendant argues that Ms. LeBlanc

could not conclusively testify that the same pair of shorts were shown in each

video. The defendant contends that there was no other evidence linking him to the

burglary, noting that there was no DNA, fingerprints, or physical evidence. The

defendant argues that the perpetrator' s attire was not so unique as to negate a

reasonable probability of the offense being committed by another black man in

Lafourche Parish with similar shorts, a white tank top, and black socks. The

defendant contends that the evidence presented at trial only established that he

pumped gas the evening before the burglary at the store across the street from the

location of the burglary, wearing an outfit that any other number of black men

4 Counsel for the defendant acknowledged at trial in opening and closing remarks and on appeal that the defendant was at store number 1, on June 12, 2016, and made the gas transaction as depicted in the surveillance footage and still shots.

11 could have worn. Thus, he argues that the State failed to connect him to the actual

burglary and failed to exclude at least one " probability of innocence."

A conviction based on insufficient evidence cannot stand as it violates Due

Process. See U.S. Const. amend. XIV; La. Const. art. I, § 2.

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State Of Louisiana v. Michael Young, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-louisiana-v-michael-young-lactapp-2020.