State of Louisiana Versus Daveon Gilmore

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 27, 2025
Docket24-KA-551
StatusUnknown

This text of State of Louisiana Versus Daveon Gilmore (State of Louisiana Versus Daveon Gilmore) 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 Versus Daveon Gilmore, (La. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA NO. 24-KA-551

VERSUS FIFTH CIRCUIT

DAVEON GILMORE COURT OF APPEAL

STATE OF LOUISIANA

ON APPEAL FROM THE TWENTY-FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF JEFFERSON, STATE OF LOUISIANA NO. 22-2656, DIVISION "B" HONORABLE R. CHRISTOPHER COX, III, JUDGE PRESIDING

August 27, 2025

MARC E. JOHNSON JUDGE

Panel composed of Judges Jude G. Gravois, Marc E. Johnson, and Scott U. Schlegel

AFFIRMED MEJ JGG SUS COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLEE, STATE OF LOUISIANA Honorable Paul D. Connick, Jr. Thomas J. Butler Juliet L. Clark

COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLANT, DAVEON GILMORE Prentice L. White JOHNSON, J.

Defendant, Daveon Gilmore, seeks review of the 24th Judicial District

Court’s judgments convicting him of second degree murder and sentencing him to

life imprisonment at hard labor, without benefits. For the following reasons, we

affirm his conviction and sentence.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On the morning of February 22, 2022, Dechelle Fradieu saw her schoolmate,

Ahmad Howard, walk to the bus stop at Montgomery and Betty Streets in Marrero

on his way to John Ehret High School. As she waited for the bus with her sister in

a parked car, she saw two men with guns come from behind a house and shoot at

the victim. At trial, she testified that the shooters were dressed in all black, wore

masks, and shot Mr. Howard several times, even after he fell to the ground.

Jefferson Parish Sheriff’s Office (JPSO) Deputy Gavin Martin responded to

the scene, where he saw the victim with multiple gunshot wounds and found shell

casings around the body. Harson White advised JPSO Detective Steven Keller that

he looked out of his window on Julie Street after he heard the gunshots, and saw a

Black male in black clothing and gloves run past the back of his house. Mr. White

then saw two other males in the front of his house running towards the banks of the

canal. Responding deputies were advised that three suspects wearing black hoodies

were seen running towards Julie Street, after which they ran towards Mansfield

Drive and then a canal bank, which was muddy. Former JPSO Sergeant Colin

Dunning gave chase; he testified that the three suspects they were in pursuit of

wore dark clothing and carried objects in their hands. Daphne Zeno initially did not

recall what she told Det. Keller, but after Sergeant Dunning’s bodycam footage

was played in court, she testified that from the vantage point of her driveway in a

vehicle facing Michael Street, she saw the suspects enter a burgundy Dodge van.

24-KA-551 1 JPSO Deputy David Johnson stopped the burgundy van. The four

individuals inside the van were later identified as Defendant, Daveon Gilmore, his

co-defendants Orlando Washington and Davon Gilmore, Defendant’s fraternal

twin brother, and driver Sondriell Williams, Washington’s mother. The defendants

and the clothing found in the van matched the eyewitnesses’ descriptions. Deputy

Brandon Johnson arrived a few minutes later and observed the defendants were

sweating, had mud on their shoes, and the barrel of a rifle-style firearm otherwise

covered by a black jacket. After obtaining a search warrant, JPSO seized several

weapons from the van: a fully loaded 9 mm Smith and Wesson M&P firearm was

located in the netting of the back of the driver’s seat directly in front of where

Davon sat; a Glock firearm inside of a red DoorDash delivery bag tucked between

the center console and the front passenger seat was located in the vicinity of where

Daveon had been seated on the passenger side of the second row of the van; and a

Tegra AR15 rifle was tucked along the seat and the side of the van where

Washington sat on the third row bench.

Dr. Dana Troxclair determined that the victim’s cause of death was multiple

gunshot wounds and ruled the death a homicide. Three projectiles and copper

fragments were recovered during the autopsy. Jene Rauch, an expert in firearm and

toolmark investigation, testified that the casings collected at the crime scene were a

ballistics match to the Glock and the Tegra AR15 rifle. The expert also determined

that the projectile and fragment specimens collected during the autopsy were fired

from the rifle. DNA expert Adriana Perez Washington testified that the DNA of

all three defendants was found on both murder weapons. She further testified that

the DNA profile obtained from the Glock was at least 100 billion times more likely

to have originated from Daveon and two unknown contributors than if it originated

from three unknown contributors.

24-KA-551 2 Police also found clothes between the sidewall of the van and the third-row

seat of the vehicle: a pair of black sweatpants that were inside out; a black jacket; a

black hooded sweatshirt with dirt/mud on it; and a blue ski mask. In the trunk,

police found a black memorial sweatshirt for Ja’Marian Price, a homicide victim,

whose picture appeared on the front and the back of the sweatshirt. DNA testing

results strongly supported the proposition that Washington and Daveon were

contributors and moderate support for the proposition that Davon contributed to the

DNA found on the blue mask. A pair of gray pants were also found in the vehicle –

DNA testing showed strong support for the proposition that Daveon was a

contributor to the DNA found on the gray pants.

Ms. Williams advised Det. Keller that she left her son at the twins’ home

two days earlier. She advised the group planned to attend the funeral of their

friend, Ja’Marian Price, that morning. As Ms. Williams was preparing to pick her

son up to attend the funeral, he called at approximately 7:35 a.m. to pick him up on

Mansfield. Afterwards, one of the twins called and asked her to pick them up on

Carmadel. She observed the police activity as she circled the area looking for her

son and the Gilmores. She found them on Michael; they quickly entered the

vehicle and she drove away. Ms. Williams told the police that she did not own any

firearms and she had no knowledge of any guns inside of the van.

JPSO also found four cell phones inside of the van; each belonged to one of

the four occupants. Detectives were able to discover the motive for Mr. Howard’s

murder through their search of the cell phones. Mr. Price was killed nine days prior

to Mr. Howard’s death. On or around February 16, 2022, communications among

the defendants showed them conspire to avenge their associate Mr. Price’s murder

and identify victim Mr. Howard as their target. Mr. Howard’s brother was a known

associate of the suspect arrested for Mr. Price’s murder. Price was killed by a rival

gang member in front of the gang member’s residence. The district attorney later

24-KA-551 3 determined that Mr. Price was killed in self-defense and Mr. Howard had nothing

to do with the matter. Excerpts from a group thread text message from Washington

and Daveon’s phones reveal their plan for retaliation. The group chose the victim

as the potential target, but acknowledged that the victim was without fault in the

conflict; realized that the victim caught the “project bus,” or school bus, from the

Betty Street Projects on weekday mornings; and noted that Davon had a Smith and

Wesson firearm. A text sent to the group right after the February 21, 2022 shooting

advised “The project hot” in reference to police activity in the area. Defendant

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