State of Louisiana v. Trabillion Hawthorne

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 22, 2021
Docket53,932-KA
StatusPublished

This text of State of Louisiana v. Trabillion Hawthorne (State of Louisiana v. Trabillion Hawthorne) 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. Trabillion Hawthorne, (La. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Judgment rendered September 22, 2021. Application for rehearing may be filed within the delay allowed by Art. 922, La. C. Cr. P.

No. 53,932-KA

COURT OF APPEAL SECOND CIRCUIT STATE OF LOUISIANA

*****

STATE OF LOUISIANA Appellee

versus

TRABILLION HAWTHORNE Appellant

Appealed from the First Judicial District Court for the Parish of Caddo, Louisiana Trial Court No. 361835

Honorable Charles Gordon Tutt, Judge

LOUISIANA APPELLATE PROJECT Counsel for Appellant By: Edward Kelly Bauman

JAMES EDWARD STEWART, SR. Counsel for Appellee District Attorney

TOMMY JAN JOHNSON WILLIAM C. GASKINS Assistant District Attorneys

Before MOORE, STEPHENS, and ROBINSON, JJ. ROBINSON, J.

Trabillion Hawthorne appeals his armed robbery conviction and

habitual offender sentence of 33 years at hard labor without benefits. We

affirm his conviction and habitual offender adjudication, but vacate his

sentence as illegally lenient and remand for resentencing.

FACTS

On the morning of September 28, 2016, Deborah Coleman and

LaToya Taylor arrived for work at the Wyndham Garden hotel located on

East 70th Street in Shreveport, Louisiana. Coleman was the general

manager of the hotel. Taylor was the front desk manager.

Surveillance video from several cameras at the hotel captured the

following incident. At approximately 7:28 a.m., a dark-skinned male

wearing a dark hoodie and gloves entered the hotel through a side entrance.

He approached Coleman at the check-in counter, pointed a silver revolver at

her, and handed a plastic bag to her. Taylor was standing nearby at her work

area at the time. Both women opened their cash drawers. Because

Coleman’s drawer was empty, she pointed to Taylor, who had a drawer

containing cash. The suspect moved to the counter area across from Taylor

and pointed the revolver at her as she handed cash and coin rolls to him.

The suspect then fled from the hotel through the side entrance.

Anthony Moore, a hotel employee who witnessed the robbery,

watched the suspect leave the hotel, run across the parking lot, and then go

behind a nearby business. Moore thought the suspect threw something in a

dumpster behind the business. Moore observed the suspect run across a

street to the Haystack Apartments complex before losing sight of him. Officers from the Shreveport Police Department (“SPD”) who were

called to the scene were advised that the suspect was a black male about

5’9” with a slender build and wearing a hoodie jacket, black pants, and

gloves. Nothing was found in the dumpster behind the restaurant. A police

K-9 unit tracked a suspected car but it did not amount to anything. A

suspect was not developed that day. A few days later, a detective received a

tip about an individual, but that individual did not resemble the robber on the

surveillance video.

Two years later, in October of 2018, Wyosha Scott, who was the

former girlfriend of Hawthorne, posted a photo of Hawthorne on Facebook

next to a photo of the suspect from the Wyndham robbery. This information

was forwarded to Cody Roy, an investigator with SPD’s armed robbery unit.

After Roy found a photo of Hawthorne and compared it to the video, he

thought Hawthorne was the suspect.

On October 16, 2018, Roy obtained an arrest warrant for Hawthorne,

who was taken into custody on that date. Hawthorne told Roy that he was

living in the Haystack Apartments on September 28, 2016. Using a law

enforcement database for pawned items, Roy found that Hawthorne had sold

a chrome revolver two months after the robbery. A photo lineup was shown

to Coleman, who identified Hawthorne as the person who had robbed her.

Hawthorne was charged by an amended bill of information with

committing armed robbery on or about September 28, 2016, in violation of

La. R.S. 14:64 in that he “took a thing of value belonging to another from

the person of another or in the immediate control of another, namely

Deborah Coleman and Latoya Taylor, by the use of force or intimidation

while armed with a dangerous weapon, to wit: Revolver.” 2 Trial

A jury trial was held on January 28, 2020. SPD Corporal David

McClure testified that it appeared to him from watching the video that the

suspect had been armed with a silver .38 revolver. McClure recognized

Hawthorne in court as the suspect in the video. McClure did not go to the

dumpster behind the restaurant as part of his investigation, but he testified

that no clothing was found in it and no gloves were recovered. McClure also

related that a K-9 unit had tracked a suspected car, but nothing came of it.

He was unaware if the owner of that car was ever questioned.

SPD Lieutenant Joseph Dews went to the Haystack Apartments

complex when he first arrived. Dews testified that when he looked in a

grassy field behind the restaurant and adjacent to the hotel, he saw that the

dew in the grass had been disturbed from a trail of footprints. He found the

dumpster empty. No article of clothing or anything of that nature was in it.

SPD Corporal Eric Boughton testified that upon responding to the

armed robbery, he was posted at one of the hotel doors before going to

watch the alley where the dumpster was located. He did not believe

anything was found in the dumpster when it was searched.

Joshua Mayfield was a detective assigned to SPD’s armed robbery

unit and was the on-call investigator on the date of the robbery. He testified

that a suspect was not developed on that date. He observed the video at the

hotel and thought the suspect was armed with a chrome revolver. He also

spoke with Coleman, Taylor, and Moore at the hotel, and he testified

concerning the description of the suspect that he received. He also testified

that he believed the plastic bag was recovered and thought it was turned over

to the crime scene technicians, but was unsure if any testing was done on it. 3 Mayfield stated that a tip concerning a suspect named Tony Kent was

received, but Kent looked nothing like the robber and was easily excluded as

a suspect. He knew that the K-9 unit had been called out to the scene, but he

acknowledged that he did not remember that the dog had alerted on a car

with Texas tags. He did not know where that car was located or to whom

the car was registered.

Deborah Coleman testified that she could see the suspect approaching

her when she looked at a mirror showing the hotel’s side entrance. She

recalled that the suspect pulled a silver revolver out, stuck it in her face, and

said, “Give me all your money.” After she picked up her money tray to

show him that she did not have any money, she pointed to Taylor and said

that Taylor had some money. She then instructed Taylor to open her drawer

and give the money to the robber, which Taylor did. Coleman stated that a

little over $300 was taken. She last saw the suspect when he exited through

the side door.

Coleman testified that she would never forget the robber’s eyes and

mouth. When presented with the photo lineup, she circled Hawthorne’s

photograph because of his eyes and mouth. She also identified Hawthorne

in court as the person who had robbed her. Coleman downloaded the video

of the robbery to her phone and acknowledged that she had watched it a lot.

However, she denied that she was shown the video prior to viewing the

lineup.

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