State Of Louisiana v. Ronald Douglas Moore Jr.

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 27, 2019
Docket2019KA0069
StatusUnknown

This text of State Of Louisiana v. Ronald Douglas Moore Jr. (State Of Louisiana v. Ronald Douglas Moore Jr.) 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. Ronald Douglas Moore Jr., (La. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL

FIRST CIRCUIT

NO. 2019 KA 0069

VERSUS

RONALD DOUGLAS MOORE JR.

Judgment Rendered: SEP 2 7 2019

On Appeal from The 22nd Judicial District Court,

Parish of St. Tammany, State of Louisiana Trial Court No. 594814

The Honorable Peter J. Garcia, Judge Presiding

Warren L. Montgomery Attorneys for Appellee, District Attorney State of Louisiana J. Bryant Clark Jr.

Assistant District Attorney Covington, Louisiana

Prentice L. White Attorney for Defendant/Appellant, Baton Rouge, Louisiana Ronald Douglas Moore Jr.

BEFORE: WHIPPLE, C. J., GUIDRY, AND CRAIN, JJ. CRAIN, J.

The defendant, Ronald D. Moore Jr., was found guilty of first degree rape

and aggravated burglary. See La. R. S. 14: 42A and 14: 60A( 3). For first degree

rape, he was sentenced to life imprisonment without benefit of probation, parole, or

suspension of sentence. He was sentenced to 15 years at hard labor for aggravated

burglary, with both sentences to run concurrently. The defendant appeals. We

affirm.

FACTS

On the night of August 4, 2017, P.R., a 53 year-old female, was home alone

watching television and fell asleep on her couch.' At some point after 1: 00 a. m.,

she was awakened by a man standing over her and touching her breasts. Unsure if

what she was perceiving was actually happening, P.R. said words to the effect of

this can' t be," to which the intruder responded, " Yes, this is f ---- g happening."

P.R. immediately began to fight, kick, scratch, and scream, " trying with all [ her]

might to get him off." As she attempted to kick herself free, P.R. grabbed a picture

frame and hit the intruder on the head. He pushed her to the floor, choking her like

he was mad at [ her] for fighting." The assailant repeatedly hit her in the head,

cursed her, and told her he would slit her throat if she made another sound. He

then repeatedly raped P.R.

Several times during the attack, the man stopped and looked around the

house, asking P.R. if she had anything of value he could take. He threatened to kill

her if he found anything she had not disclosed, and got angrier when he discovered

no cash in the house. He found and took a bottle of prescription muscle relaxers,

then resumed raping P.R. Before leaving, the assailant took P.R.' s driver' s license

and cell phone, and gave her a final " warning" that if she reported the matter to the

police, he would kill her and her entire family. P.R. estimated the attack lasted

1 We refer to the victim by her initials. See La. R.S. 46: 1844W.

2 about an hour and a half to two hours.

After the assailant left, P.R. drove straight to a friend' s house, arriving at

about 3: 45 a. m. On the way, she saw her assailant walking a street in her

neighborhood. P.R.' s friend, after listening to P.R. describe what happened, drove

P.R. back to her house to get more clothes and then to the hospital, where the

police were contacted and P.R. underwent a comprehensive rape examination. The

physical examination revealed extensive abrasions, bruising, and evidence of

strangulation, including petechiae, as well as vaginal tearing and redness to the

anal folds. Foreign DNA was obtained from P.R.' s clothing and several locations

on her body, including under her fingernails. The examining forensic nurse

concluded P.R.' s injuries were consistent with her account of an attack and rape.

Officers with the Mandeville Police Department ( MPD) interviewed P.R. at

the hospital, and she recounted the attack, including a description of the assailant

and the location where she last saw him walking. Responding officers found an

empty bottle of muscle relaxers prescribed to P.R. on the ground a short distance

from her residence. They also located a broken picture frame on the floor of P.R.' s

living room. Security camera footage from a nearby convenience store revealed a

man matching the description given by P.R. walking from the direction of P.R.' s

house at about 3: 19 a. m. P.R. was shown a still image from the video and

immediately confirmed the man in the image was the person who raped her. MPD

posted the image and a sketch of the assailant on social media, where the

defendant' s former step -brother saw it and identified the defendant to MPD.

Pursuant to a search warrant, clothing consistent with P.R.' s description of her

attacker' s clothing was seized at the defendant' s residence.

The defendant was arrested and interviewed by MPD detectives. He said on

the night of the crime a friend, Ashley Paille, picked him up at his house and they

drove to a bar. After Paille began talking to two guys in the bar, the defendant

3 started drinking heavily and eventually walked out into the parking lot. There, he

claimed he met a girl and two guys, and paid them to take him home. He

remembers getting in their vehicle but claimed to have no memory of anything that

occurred after that point. He denied raping P.R. or entering her house. He said a

red mark under his eye was the result of a fight " a while back." When the

detective pointed out a rip in his shirt that was visible on the security camera video,

the defendant said he did not know how his shirt was torn, offering, " I might' ve

got mad at myself, I don' t know."

In a recorded telephone conversation at the jail between the defendant and

his mother, he said he had intercourse with " a chick," but it was in a car, not a

house, and she brought him home. He denied ever going into a house that night,

and did not remember going to the convenience store. The defendant claimed P.R.

was " somebody craving attention."

Paille confirmed she picked up the defendant at his house in Lacombe on

the night of the crime, and the two went to a bar about a block from P.R.' s house.

Paille said the defendant appeared jealous and wanted to leave after she began

talking with two men at the bar. Between 1: 00 a.m. and 1: 30 a.m., after consuming

several drinks, the defendant said he was walking home and left. When Paille left

at around 2: 00 a. m., she texted the defendant but got no response. She then called

him, but the call went straight to voicemail. A significant time later, the defendant

responded and said he was home. In the ensuing days, Paille saw security camera

images and immediately realized the person in the video was the defendant. [ 455-

56] He was wearing the same clothes; the only difference was the video showed

his shirt was ripped, which was not the case when she last saw him at the bar. He

also did not have any scratches or abrasions on his face when he left the bar.

MPD officers interviewed two people seen talking to the defendant in the

security camera video at the convenience store. Those individuals confirmed they

M gave the defendant a ride from the convenience store to a residence in Lacombe.

One of them, Amanda Martinelle, testified at trial and said the defendant claimed

he and his girlfriend had been at a bar, got in an argument, and his girlfriend left

with another guy. The defendant said he walked to the store to look for a ride

home. He paid Martinelle to bring him to a house in Lacombe.

A forensic review of the defendant' s cell phone confirmed it was not used to

make or receive calls or texts between 1: 00 a. m. and 3: 00 a.m.

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443 U.S. 307 (Supreme Court, 1979)
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849 So. 2d 574 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2003)
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State v. Calloway
1 So. 3d 417 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 2009)
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898 So. 2d 1219 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 2005)
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