State of Louisiana Versus Ed Raymond Veillon, Jr.

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 29, 2020
Docket19-KA-606
StatusUnknown

This text of State of Louisiana Versus Ed Raymond Veillon, Jr. (State of Louisiana Versus Ed Raymond Veillon, Jr.) 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 Ed Raymond Veillon, Jr., (La. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA NO. 19-KA-606

VERSUS FIFTH CIRCUIT

ED RAYMOND VEILLON, JR. COURT OF APPEAL

STATE OF LOUISIANA

ON APPEAL FROM THE TWENTY-NINTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF ST. CHARLES, STATE OF LOUISIANA NO. 18,226, DIVISION "C" HONORABLE EMILE R. ST. PIERRE, JUDGE PRESIDING

July 29, 2020

JOHN J. MOLAISON, JR. JUDGE

Panel composed of Judges Stephen J. Windhorst, Hans J. Liljeberg, and John J. Molaison, Jr.

CONVICTIONS AND SENTENCES AFFIRMED, REMANDED FOR CORRECTIONS OF RECORD JJM SJW HJL COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLEE, STATE OF LOUISIANA Joel T. Chaisson, II Louis G. Authement

COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLANT, ED RAYMOND VEILLON, JR. Mary Constance Hanes

DEFENDANT/APPELLANT, ED RAYMOND VEILLON, JR. In Proper Person MOLAISON, J.

Defendant, Ed Raymond Veillon, Jr., appeals his May 2, 2019 conviction for

second degree murder and attempted murder. In his counseled brief, defendant

claims the evidence was insufficient to support convictions of second degree

murder and attempted second degree murder, as defendant’s state of intoxication

prevented him from forming a specific intent to kill. In a supplemental pro se

brief, defendant also challenges the sufficiency of the evidence, as well as claiming

the trial court abused its discretion in denying the defense’s objection to a juror and

that a conflict of interest should have resulted in the recusal of an assistant district

attorney. We find no merit to the assignments of error, in defendant’s counseled

and pro se briefs. Therefore, we affirm the convictions and sentences.

FACTUAL HISTORY

On April 22, 2018, defendant spoke to a 9-1-1 operator requesting

paramedics for his wife, Nicole, and fifteen-year-old son, Seth, who were bleeding.

He told the operator that his gun went off after an argument “over stupid sh*t.” He

reported his nine-year-old daughter, O.V.,1 was trying to help her mom, who was

still breathing.

O.V. waved down the officers dispatched to her residence on Lynn Drive in

St. Charles Parish, Louisiana. Sergeant Jose Alverenga, shift supervisor for St.

Charles Parish Sheriff’s Office, arrived and observed two bodies on the floor by

the kitchen. He administered CPR to the female, Nicole Veillon, who was non-

responsive and incoherent. Seth showed no signs of life. Sergeant Alverenga

observed defendant seated in a recliner with an empty holster by his right foot.

Defendant was not able to tell Sergeant Alverenga where the gun was located.

1 Due to her status as a minor, O.V. will be referred to be her initials to protect her identity. See State v. Barnett, 18-254 (La. App. 5 Cir. 4/3/19), 267 So.3d 209, 235 n.2.

19-KA-606 1 Deputy Terry Dabney located the gun on other side of the coffee table from the

defendant, with the magazine out. Nicole, defendant’s wife of twenty years, was

transported to the hospital; she was shot in the hand and neck and suffered a stroke.

Nicole remained at a rehabilitation facility for two months after the shooting.

Sergeant Jeremy Pitchford arrived later and spoke to the defendant who

indicated that his son, angry about a break up, was the shooter. He spoke to

defendant in an ambulance which transported him to University Medical Center for

treatment to a gunshot wound to his knee.

Sergeant Pitchford observed a bullet wound to Seth’s chest that did not

appear self-inflicted, and he obtained a search warrant for the house with the

assistance of Detective Jenni Barrett from the Criminal Investigation Division.

Crime scene technician Jason Troxler assisted in the execution of the search

warrant. He observed Seth was still wearing his glasses, and there were several

bullet holes in his back when Seth was moved. He located a black semi-automatic

handgun on the living room floor. Next to a chair was a bottle of alcohol that was

not taken into evidence. The ejected magazine, containing one live bullet, was

located below the gun. Another live bullet was located near the gun. Technicians

located twelves casings, most in a ten-foot radius of one another. Projectiles had

traveled through the living room walls and the floor of the residence. A gun

cleaning kit and a green ammo can with several boxes of 9mm bullets were found

in a bedroom.

Detective Barrett took a statement from O.V. at the neighbor’s house later

that evening.2 Detective Holly Laurent from the St. Charles Parish Juvenile

Division conducted a forensic interview of O.V. O.V. told Detective Laurent that

her parents argued because her father drank her mother’s wine. When they

stopped arguing, defendant loaded his gun and she hid under the kitchen table. She

2 Detective Barrett was not able to get a statement from Nicole Veillon until May 3, 2018.

19-KA-606 2 saw defendant walk up to her mother, who pushed him, and defendant shot her

mother. She ran outside when Seth got out of his chair to push defendant, and she

returned to house after hearing more gunshots. O.V. said it sounded like three gun

shots but thinks it was only one because she only saw one shot in her mother and

Seth. O.V. called 9-1-1 at her father’s request. She gave the phone to her father,

and she put a towel on her mother’s neck.

On April 23, 2018, Dr. Yen Van Vo, an expert in the field of forensic

pathology, conducted a forensic examination of Seth. Seth was 5’6” tall and

weighed 108 pounds. The forensic examination revealed that Seth sustained four

gunshot wounds. Dr. Vo determined that gunshot wound “A,” which entered the

right side of his chest and exited his right lower abdomen, was an “intermediate

range entrance gunshot wound” based on the presence of stippling or scraping on

Seth’s chin in the pathway of the wound. Gunshot wound “B” entered on the left

side of Seth’s upper back, going into the left side of the chest and left lung, and out

the right side of the chest before embedding in the right shoulder. Gunshot wounds

“C,” “D,” “H,” and “I” were caused by a bullet that appeared to go through Seth’s

left arm and re-entered and exited the left side of his back. “Dark soot, as well as

stippling” surrounded this wound, which Dr. Vo indicated refers to a “contact or

near contact” with the gun. The final wound “E” entered on the left side of Seth’s

back, went through the left lung, vertebra, right chest cavity, and lacerated the right

lung before exiting the back side of Seth’s right arm. Dr. Vo determined Seth’s

cause of death was multiple gunshot wounds, and he recommended the St. Charles

Parish Coroner make a determination of homicide.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On May 23, 2018, a St. Charles Parish Grand Jury indicted defendant on one

count of second degree murder of Seth Veillon in violation of La. R.S. 14:30.1

19-KA-606 3 (count one) and one count of attempted second degree murder of Nicole Veillon in

violation of La. R.S. 14:27 and 14:30.1 (count two). Defendant pled not guilty to

both counts at his arraignment on May 29, 2018. He was represented by Deanne

Roussel Williams until David Moyer was appointed on September 7, 2018.

The trial began on May 1, 2019. St. Charles Parish Assistant District

Attorney Connie Aucoin tried the case, with the assistance of Deane Boyd.3

During jury selection, the defense used all twelve preemptory strikes. Juror

Rosalind Brooks was challenged for cause. She testified that she had experienced

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