State of Louisiana v. Sedrick R. Tennessee

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 23, 2023
DocketKA-0022-0668
StatusUnknown

This text of State of Louisiana v. Sedrick R. Tennessee (State of Louisiana v. Sedrick R. Tennessee) 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. Sedrick R. Tennessee, (La. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

22-668

STATE OF LOUISIANA

VERSUS

SEDRICK R. TENNESSEE

**********

APPEAL FROM THE SEVENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF CONCORDIA, NO. 19-1798 HONORABLE JOHN C. REEVES, DISTRICT JUDGE

ELIZABETH A. PICKETT CHIEF JUDGE

Court composed of Elizabeth A. Pickett, Sharon Darville Wilson, and Gary J. Ortego, Judges.

AFFIRMED.

Edward K. Bauman Louisiana Appellate Project P. O. Box 1641 Lake Charles, LA 70602-1641 (337) 491-0570 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT-APPELLANT: Sedrick R. Tennessee

Bradley R. Burget District Attorney, Seventh Judicial District Joseph A. Boothe Assistant District Attorney 4001 Carter St., Suite 9 Vidalia, LA 71373 (318) 336-5526 COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE: State of Louisiana PICKETT, Chief Judge.

FACTS

Haley Williams, victim Fred McCray, Jr.’s sister, testified that she

accompanied her brother to a Mardi Gras krewe party on the night of June 22,

2019. The two rode in his 2012 black Audi. Mr. McCray’s vehicle had a

personalized front license plate bearing his nickname, “Big Daddy.”1 After leaving

the party, Mr. McCray took his sister home around 1:00 a.m. and then went to hang

out with friends or find another party, possibly in Natchez. When Mr. McCray was

discovered missing the next day, Ms. Williams tracked his phone to a location not

far from where the party had been held. She notified law enforcement of its

location.

The victim’s cell phone was retrieved by Concordia Parish Sheriff’s Deputy

Justin Stevens on June 23, 2019, in the grass just off the roadway near the corner

of Highway 3232 and Highway 15 outside Ferriday, Louisiana. His inspection of

the phone revealed that the victim’s bank had sent text messages indicating the

possibility of fraudulent charges on his bank card at Walmart in Natchez,

Mississippi. Video footage retrieved from Walmart cameras aided in revealing the

identity of the person who used the victim’s card, Ronald Riley. Mr. Riley

provided authorities with the clothing left at his home by the defendant, Sedrick

Tennessee, after the defendant showered and changed there the night of the

incident. Additionally, Mr. Riley provided information he overheard from the

defendant regarding the location of the victim’s body which ultimately led

authorities to the discovery of the victim’s body near an embankment across from a

Ferriday, Louisiana mill yard. On the victim’s body were a bracelet and a ring.

1 Information regarding the personalized plate was elicited during the testimony of the victim’s mother, Carol Williams. Sam King, an officer of the Ferriday Police Department at the time of the

incident, reviewed video camera footage showing Mr. Riley leaving Walmart after

he made purchases with the victim’s credit cards, and then at the Holiday

Apartments where Mr. Riley and his girlfriend lived. On the video, he saw the

victim’s vehicle enter the complex (personalized plate intact), the defendant exit

the vehicle, Mr. Riley enter the vehicle, and the vehicle leave the complex. Mr.

Riley told Officer King he and the defendant went to the carwash and wiped down

the vehicle. A camera near the carwash showed the victim’s Audi entering the

carwash at 8:04 a.m. and being washed by Mr. Riley. At that time, the vehicle no

longer had the personalized license plate. After washing the car, Mr. Riley left the

carwash, walking north toward Walmart. The camera showed that the vehicle left

the carwash and headed south on Highway 61 which leads to Woodville, Baton

Rouge, and New Orleans.

Mr. Riley, who previously pled guilty to accessory after the fact to first

degree murder for his involvement in this case, testified that the defendant knocked

on his door around 7:00 a.m. on June 23, 2019. He knew the defendant through

mutual acquaintances, but the defendant was looking for someone who previously

had occupied Mr. Riley’s apartment. The defendant asked for a change of clothing

because his shirt was damp, and Mr. Riley provided some. The defendant offered

Mr. Riley some marijuana and asked if Mr. Riley had a cigar. He did not, so the

two walked to the store and Mr. Riley bought a cigar which they later filled with

marijuana and smoked. Mr. Riley testified that while he was riding in the victim’s

Audi with the defendant, before they went to the carwash, the defendant pulled into

someone’s driveway, removed the “tag” from the front of the victim’s vehicle, and

threw it in the bushes. While in the car, Mr. Riley observed a red substance in and

running down the side of the console of the car. He said that the substance running 2 down the side looked “old,” but he described the substance inside the console as

wet. The defendant and Mr. Riley went to the carwash where the defendant asked

Mr. Riley to wash the car because he was getting it ready to sell. Before Mr. Riley

exited the car, he took a black pouch from the passenger door which contained the

victim’s credit cards. On June 23, 2019, he used these cards at Walmart in

Natchez, Mississippi. When he learned that police were looking for him for using

the cards, he contacted authorities and ultimately met with Officer King and then

Lieutenant Chris Groh. He told Lt. Groh that he overheard the defendant on the

phone saying “something with an ‘M,’ ‘ville.’” Mr. Riley told Lt. Groh that the

defendant said, “Man, I got this truck as a whole lick. I’m fixing to try to sell it.”

Mr. Riley confirmed that a “lick” can mean robbery.

Information received by other deputies indicated that Jimmy Lewis was

possibly involved in the shooting of the victim. Officers went to the location

where they were told Mr. Lewis may be, and after Mr. Lewis was spotted, he fled,

hiding in an area of abandoned buildings. However, he later exited one of the

buildings and surrendered himself to law enforcement.

Lt. Groh, who was with the Concordia Parish Sheriff’s Department when the

offense occurred, testified that he interviewed Mr. Lewis on June 24, 2019, after

advising him of his rights. During his interview with Lt. Groh, Mr. Lewis

confessed to murdering Mr. McCray, something he was still very upset about.

During a subsequent search of Mr. Lewis’ home, police recovered tennis shoes that

Mr. Lewis admitted to wearing during the commission of the crime. Mr. Lewis

was subsequently interviewed again on July 22, 2019, and he provided a recorded

statement. Lt. Groh also spoke to Mr. Lewis on December 8, 2020, shortly before

trial, in his office at the jail where he was then the warden. The statement was not

recorded. Lt. Groh asked Mr. Lewis if this was a planned robbery, and he replied 3 that it was not, but he said that the defendant “continuously throughout that nine

days before, [Defendant] kept saying, ‘Man, I gotta get some money. I’ve gotta

get some money.’” Mr. Lewis confirmed to Lt. Groh that this was a “spur of the

moment situation,” and he also confirmed that the defendant did not have a gun.

Lt. Groh never found any evidence of a coordination between Mr. Lewis and the

defendant to rob Mr. McCray.

According to Lt. Groh, Mr. Lewis told him that when they got to “Lower

Levee Road,” he got out to urinate, and when he returned to the vehicle, there was

a “slap fight” between the victim and the defendant. It appeared to him that the

defendant was attempting to pull the victim’s rings off his hands, and the victim

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525 So. 2d 1251 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1988)
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State v. Moody
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State v. Letulier
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State v. Berry
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