State of Louisiana v. Tyrek Randall

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 5, 2025
DocketKA-0024-0340
StatusUnknown

This text of State of Louisiana v. Tyrek Randall (State of Louisiana v. Tyrek Randall) 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. Tyrek Randall, (La. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

24-339 consolidated with 24-340

STATE OF LOUISIANA

VERSUS

TYREK RANDALL

**********

APPEAL FROM THE TWELFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF AVOYELLES, NO. 2021-CR-226993-B HONORABLE WILLIAM BENNETT, DISTRICT JUDGE

ELIZABETH A. PICKETT CHIEF JUDGE

Court composed of Elizabeth A. Pickett, Ledricka J. Thierry, and Wilbur L. Stiles, Judges.

AFFIRMED.

Annette Fuller Roach Louisiana Appellate Project P. O. Box 6547 Lake Charles, LA 70606-6547 (337) 436-2900 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT- APPELLANT: Tyrek Randall

Charles A. Riddle, III District Attorney, 12th JDC Anthony F. Salario Assistant District Attorney P. O. Box 1200 Marksville, LA 71351 (318) 253-6587 COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE: State of Louisiana PICKETT, Chief Judge.

FACTS

This case involved a gunfight between two groups. The first group included

Tyrek Randall (the defendant), Stephon Moore, 1 Jarvis Moore, and Ralin Watson,

while the second group included Marquelle Prater, Roney Fox, and Jekolby Fields. It

was April 4, 2021, Easter Sunday. The defendant was visiting his grandmother who

lived in Cottonport on Martin Luther King (MLK) Drive. The street was nicknamed

“horseshoe” because it was “U”-shaped and curved through the neighborhood. The

defendant’s grandmother lived on the curve. Near her home was a path, “the cut,”

which trailed from one part of MLK Drive to the other side.

The sun was setting. The defendant’s group was outside on the horseshoe

listening to music and watching as cars, mostly filled with girls, passed around the

bend. Eventually, they saw a white SUV with Roney Fox in its backseat flashing cash.

Jarvis Moore told his group to “hit the cut,” and as the SUV was making the curve,

gunshots rang out.

Renell Watson was the brother-in-law of Jarvis Moore. Renell stayed behind as

Jarvis, the defendant, and the others disappeared through the cut. He testified that he

could not see the shooting but saw the flashing lights and heard ten to thirteen cracks

of gunfire. According to him, the defendant had his hand tucked under his arms, not

only when he left but when he returned as well. Renell did not see whether the

defendant was holding anything in his hands. The defendant soon thereafter left in his

car. The others returned to where Renell had been waiting. Only Stephon Moore was

missing.

Since Stephon had the keys to the car, the group could not leave. Jarvis called

his mother who arrived not long afterwards, and they drove around the horseshoe

looking for Stephon. They went to the house of Stephon’s father and then to the house 1 At the sentencing hearing, the trial court stated that defendant and Stephon were half- brothers. of Stephon’s grandmother. It was there that Jarvis’s mother left the group before

continuing her search for Stephon.

According to Renell, the defendant sometimes carried an FN pistol that

belonged to defendant’s mother.

Jekolby Fields testified that he was driving an SUV that evening. When

recounting the shooting, he said that as he was taking the curve on the horseshoe, he

saw the defendant and “about four others” take the cut. He rolled his windows down.

On completing the curve, gunshots rang out. He testified that he saw the defendant

and Jarvis Moore firing their weapons. Fields ducked and hit the gas while his two

passengers, Prater and Fox, returned fire. He then drove until he reached Fox’s house.

Fields never called the police. He testified that he was aware that the defendant and

Fox were in conflict but denied this was the reason he had driven down MLK Drive.

Marquelle Prater testified people, including the defendant and Jarvis Moore,

shot at him. He said he fired shots into the air, and Fox also fired. Prater stated he

would take a plea deal after the defendant’s trial, and it was his understanding he

would not go to jail.

Roney Fox testified he pled guilty to aggravated assault with a firearm as a

result of the events at issue. He also pled guilty to another aggravated assault with a

firearm arising from a separate incident. He received probation as a result of his

pleas. He denied firing a weapon on the day at issue and said he pled guilty to stay

out of jail. He testified that the defendant did fire a gun. Fox was also questioned

about a restraining order the defendant obtained against him. The defendant alleged

Fox shot at him. That restraining order expired on October 22, 2020.

Ralin Watson pled guilty as a result of the events at issue and was sentenced to

four years. He served his time and was released on January 3, 2023. He testified that

multiple shots were fired, but he did not see the defendant fire a gun. He said he did

not hear shots coming from the vehicle either.

2 Detective John Johnson indicated that the investigation revealed shots were in

fact fired from inside the vehicle.

Trooper Chad Peavy, a detective with the Louisiana State Police, took part in

the initial investigation. The crime scene was from 241 to 307 MLK Drive. Law

enforcement found three .38 caliber casings on the road in front of 241 MLK Drive

and one 5.7 X 28 casing, which was consistent with an FN-type firearm, near a

mailbox by 307 MLK Drive. Later that evening, Stephon Moore’s body was found in

the driveway between 307 and 313 MLK Drive. Investigators determined that a bullet

had pierced his skull. However, having found a pool of blood away from Stephon

Moore’s body, Peavy concluded that someone had moved the body. In addition, the

state police examined a Chevy Equinox with roughly fourteen bullet holes in its

exterior. Peavy testified that these holes were found in the back, the passenger side,

the front bumper, and the windshield, but no shell casings were found inside the

vehicle.

Police executed a search warrant at the home of the defendant’s mother. Her

FN pistol, which she usually kept in her car, was not present at that time. She had

turned the pistol over to her attorney the day she hired him. The attorney then gave

the pistol to police.

Michael Stelly, an expert in firearms identification, and John Johnson, Mansura

Chief of Police, testified that one 5.7 X 28 cartridge case found at the scene was fired

by an FN pistol submitted to the crime lab by police.

Deriona Harris, who had a child with Stephon, testified the defendant texted

and called her several months after Stephon’s death. They had four conversations.

During the last conversation, the defendant said he shot Stephon, but it was an

accident. Harris testified this occurred in 2022, and she did not provide information

regarding the defendant’s contact with her to police and deleted the exchanges from

her phone.

3 On June 1, 2021, defendant, Tyrek Randall, was charged by bill of information

filed in trial court docket 226993 with attempted second degree murder, a violation of

La.R.S. 14:27 and La.R.S. 14:31.2 The defendant was also charged on the same date

by bill of information in trial court docket number 226994 with illegal use of weapons

or dangerous instrumentalities, a violation of La.R.S. 14:94.3 In a separate trial court

docket number, the defendant, Jarvis Moore, Prater, Fox, Fields, and Ralin Watson

were charged with the negligent homicide of Stephon Moore.4 An “Expedited Motion

for Consolidation” was filed by the defendant on September 29, 2023, alleging all

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