State of Louisiana v. S. R.

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 6, 2012
DocketKA-0011-1458
StatusUnknown

This text of State of Louisiana v. S. R. (State of Louisiana v. S. R.) 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. S. R., (La. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

11-1458

STATE OF LOUISIANA

VERSUS

S. R.

**********

APPEAL FROM THE THIRTY-FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF GRANT, NO. 10-221 HONORABLE WARREN DANIEL WILLETT, DISTRICT JUDGE

JOHN D. SAUNDERS JUDGE

Court composed of John D. Saunders, Billy Howard Ezell, and Phyllis M. Keaty, Judges.

AFFIRMED.

James Patrick Lemoine District Attorney, 35th Judicial Disctrict Court P. O. Box 309 Colfax, LA 71417-0309 (318) 627-3205 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLEE: State of Louisiana Beth Smith Fontenot Louisiana Appellate Project P. O. Box 3183 Lake Charles, LA 70602 (337) 491-3864 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLANT: S. R.

Renee W. Dugas Assistant District Attorney, 35th Judicial District Court P. O. Box 309 Colfax, LA 71417 (318) 627-3205 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLEE: State of Louisiana SAUNDERS, J.

On April 9, 2010, the Grant Parish Grand Jury indicted Defendant, S.R.,

with two counts of indecent behavior with juveniles, in violation of La.R.S. 14:81.

Defendant‟s trial on those charges began with jury selection on March 21, 2011,

and continued through March 23, 2011. Following presentation of the evidence

and the argument, the jury found Defendant guilty as charged.

Thereafter, on June 23, 2011, the sentencing court imposed seven years at

hard labor on each count; ordered the penalties to run concurrently; designated that

the first two years of the sentence for the second count would be served without

benefit of probation, parole, or suspension of sentence; credited Defendant for time

served; and directed Defendant to pay costs of court.

Defendant filed a motion to reconsider sentence, and on August 11, 2011,

the district court conducted a hearing on that motion. After considering the

evidence and argument presented, the trial court denied Defendant‟s motion to

reconsider sentence.

Defendant now appeals his conviction and sentence. We affirm Defendant‟s

convictions and sentences.

STATEMENT OF FACTS:

At trial, the State called fourteen-year-old Elizabeth Delaney to testify as its

first witness. At the time of trial, Elizabeth had known M.W.,1 the victim, for three

years. They were in sixth and seventh grades together. Elizabeth and M.W. were

friends. They slept over at each other‟s houses. Elizabeth knew S.W., M.W.‟s

mother, and Defendant. Defendant lived with S.W., M.W., and J.R. J.R. was the

1 Initials are being used in the instant case to protect the identity of the victims in accordance with La.R.S. 46:1844(W). daughter of Defendant and S.W.; J.R. was M.W.‟s half-sister. J.R. was about six

years younger than M.W. who, at the time of trial, was thirteen.

Elizabeth recalled M.W. talking to her about something that made M.W.

uncomfortable. The conversation occurred in August 2009 when they were

walking up and down M.W.‟s road. M.W. told Elizabeth that she was not really

comfortable with Defendant, because he had sexually abused her. M.W. did not go

into detail about the abuse. M.W. was upset when she made the statement; she

acted as if she had not ever been able to speak about it before. M.W. related that

the abuse had happened on more than one occasion. M.W. was not a very open

person; Elizabeth only had an inkling about what M.W. was going to say when the

topic arose, because Elizabeth had observed that M.W. acted like she was

uncomfortable around Defendant. Elizabeth also felt uncomfortable around

Defendant, but she thought it was because she did not really know him.

Elizabeth remembered that M.W. told her that Defendant had used his hand

to abuse her sexually. Defendant touched M.W. on her breasts and between her

legs in the area covered by underwear. M.W. did not specify whether Defendant

touched her beneath or over her underwear.

Elizabeth stated that, the next time M.W. told her about the abuse, the girls

were at Elizabeth‟s house. The topic came up when M.W. said that she did not

want to go home, because Defendant was in the house when she got home after

school. M.W. stayed with Elizabeth for three to four days. M.W. was crying,

scared, and really upset; she did not want to go home, because she did not want the

abuse to happen again. Elizabeth‟s mother, Tracey Delaney, may have overheard

the conversation. Elizabeth instructed M.W. to tell S.W., M.W.‟s mother, and told

M.W. that if she did not tell S.W. then Elizabeth would tell S.W. Once Mrs.

2 Delaney overheard the conversation, M.W. related the same basic story to her.

Mrs. Delaney also instructed M.W. to go home and tell her mother.

Elizabeth said that, when she spoke to M.W. on the telephone a couple of

weeks later, M.W. still had not told her mother. Elizabeth again threatened to tell

S.W. if M.W. refused, so M.W. told her mother that day. Elizabeth had not seen

any of the abuse, though she had witnessed Defendant hug M.W. in an

“affectionate” manner that was not similar to what a father would give his daughter.

The hugs Elizabeth saw Defendant give M.W. seemed similar to what a boyfriend

would give his girlfriend.

Mrs. Delaney was the State‟s second witness. Mrs. Delaney knew M.W. as

one of her daughter‟s school friends. M.W. stayed at the Delaney residence quite a

bit; they lived near M.W.‟s home. Elizabeth also stayed overnight at M.W.‟s

house. Mrs. Delaney thought M.W. lived with her mother, father, and sister. She

assumed at the time that Defendant was M.W.‟s father. Mrs. Delaney overheard

crying, so she went to see what was going on. When she saw that it was M.W.

crying, she assumed that M.W. was probably crying because she was homesick and

wanted to go home. Mrs. Delaney asked M.W. what the trouble was, but at first,

M.W. did not say anything.

Mrs. Delaney said that Elizabeth asked to speak to Mrs. Delaney outside of

the room. Once out of the room, Elizabeth explained about what had been going

on. Mrs. Delaney was shocked and really did not know what to do, so she went

back into the room and asked M.W. if she wanted Mrs. Delaney to call S.W. for

her or if M.W. wanted Mrs. Delaney to take her home. M.W. did not want to go

home, because she was scared of Defendant, whom M.W. called her “step-dad.”

M.W. told Mrs. Delaney that S.W. did not know what had been happening and that

3 M.W. did not want S.W. to find out. M.W. said Defendant had molested her while

her mother was at work over the summer.

Mrs. Delaney asked M.W. if, maybe, he was just hugging her. Mrs. Delaney

had doubts at first because M.W. was really jealous of J.R. However, M.W. said

that it was more than hugging; Defendant was feeling inside her panties. Mrs.

Delaney told M.W. that M.W. needed to tell her mother. Mrs. Delaney did not

know what else to say. M.W. was crying and seemed very upset. Mrs. Delaney

explained that she did not want to believe that anything had been going on:

I know that things go on like that. I didn‟t want to believe it because . . . I had been around the step-dad and, and he had treated, it seemed to me, treated her just like he did the other one, and he was the one that took care of them it looked like, cause I think [S.W.] was working in the daytime and he taking care of them, and [Elizabeth] had spent a lot of time over there and [Elizabeth] had not[] been in any type of dysfunctional situation going on.

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State of Louisiana v. S. R., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-louisiana-v-s-r-lactapp-2012.