State v. Arias-Chavarria

49 So. 3d 426, 10 La.App. 5 Cir. 116, 2010 La. App. LEXIS 1300, 2010 WL 3766834
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 28, 2010
Docket10-KA-116
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 49 So. 3d 426 (State v. Arias-Chavarria) 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 v. Arias-Chavarria, 49 So. 3d 426, 10 La.App. 5 Cir. 116, 2010 La. App. LEXIS 1300, 2010 WL 3766834 (La. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

EDWARD A. DUFRESNE, JR., Chief Judge.

|2In January of 2008, a Jefferson Parish Grand Jury returned an indictment charging defendant, Rony 0. Arias-Chavarria, with second degree murder in violation of LSA-R.S. 14:30.1. At the arraignment, defendant pled not guilty. 1 Defendant then filed motions to suppress evidence, identification, and confession, which were heard and denied by the trial judge on August 6, 2008.

On August 18 and 19, 2009, the matter proceeded to trial before a twelve person jury. After considering the evidence presented, the jury found defendant guilty as charged. On August 25, 2009, the trial judge sentenced defendant to life imprisonment at hard labor without benefit of parole, probation, or suspension of sentence. Defendant now appeals.

FACTS

On the morning of September 10, 2007, Thomas Dimm, an excavating contractor, was clearing out trash and weeds from an overgrown vacant lot in the 2400 block of Helena Street in Kenner, Louisiana. While cutting the grass, he | (¡discovered the partially nude body of a white woman in the lot. Upon seeing this, Mr. Dimm immediately called the police.

Detective Herbert Hille of the Kenner Police Department, Criminal Investigations Division, responded to the scene. Upon his arrival, Detective Hille observed the deceased female lying in the uncut grass approximately forty feet from the doors of the back side of the businesses adjacent to the vacant lot, nearest to doors that opened into an auto body shop called Medina’s One Stop. The victim was subsequently identified as twenty-one year old Bobbie Jo Hulsey.

During the course of his investigation, Detective Hille discovered that the victim had last been seen entering Medina’s One Stop during the early morning hours of September 10, 2007. As a result of this information, Detective Hille prepared a search warrant for Medina’s One Stop, *429 which was executed on September 12, 2007. During their search of the business, officers found defendant in the restroom and detained him while the search was being conducted. Defendant, who had been employed at Medina’s for approximately two weeks, identified himself as “Jose Luis Flores Castillo” and advised the officers that he was temporarily living at the business.

On a table in the office, the officers located a piece of paper with the victim’s name and cell phone number on it. The information was written on stationary from the Studio Lodge, the hotel where the victim had been living prior to her death. The officers also found the victim’s cell phone and cell phone charger in defendant’s backpack, which was discovered behind a couch in the office.

Subsequent to the search, the officers interviewed defendant at the Criminal Investigations Division. In this initial interview, defendant claimed that he had met the -victim outside a convenience store the day before her body was discovered |4and that she had given defendant her cell phone number and told him he could call her for sex. Defendant stated that he called the victim later that night, that she went to Medina’s One Stop, that they had sex, and that she left, leaving her cell phone behind.

After further investigation, the officers interviewed defendant again on September 13, 2007, at which point he provided the officers with his real name, Rony Omar Arias-Chavarria, and agreed to give a statement. During this second interview, defendant admitted that he took the victim to Medina’s and that he paid her to have sex with him. Defendant claimed that when they began to have sex, the victim laughed at him and told him that his penis was small. Defendant became angry, removed his penis, and inserted four fingers into the victim’s vagina. The victim told him to stop, and when defendant removed his fingers, they were covered in blood. Defendant contends that he continued to have sex with the victim, but the victim kept laughing. Defendant put his arm around the victim’s neck, squeezing until she fell to the ground. Defendant carried the victim to the field behind the shop and left her body lying in the grass. Defendant cleaned the blood from the floor with cleaning solution from the office. Defendant admitted that he did not try to call for help after the victim fell to the ground, but later called a man named Benito about an unrelated matter. After the interview was concluded, defendant was arrested for second degree murder.

In order to corroborate defendant’s statement, Detective Hille secured the phone records for both the victim’s cell phone and the business phone at Medina’s One Stop. The phone records from Medina’s One Stop confirmed that a call was placed from Medina’s to the victim’s cell phone at 1:35 a.m. on September 10, 2007. The records further reflected that there was a call placed from the victim’s | f,phone to a prepaid account in the name of Benito Hernandez at 5:25 a.m. on that same date.

At trial, Mr. Medina confirmed that defendant worked at Medina’s One Stop and that he was living in the office when the victim’s body was discovered in the vacant lot. Mr. Medina testified that defendant had a key to Medina’s and that he was the only person living at the shop. When Mr. Medina arrived at the shop the day after the victim was discovered, he observed that the shop was clean and neat, and that the office smelled of Clorox cleaning solution.

An autopsy performed by Dr. Karen Ross, a forensic pathologist and Assistant Coroner at the Jefferson Parish Coroner’s Office, established the cause of the victim’s *430 death as strangulation associated with blunt force injuries. During her examination, Dr. Ross also observed “gaping lacerations of the vaginal and perianal area” and a “perforation between the vagina and the anus” that extended for six inches from the vagina. Dr. Ross opined that the injuries to both the neck and the vaginal/anal areas contributed to the victim’s cause of death.

In an effort to obtain a possible match from DNA evidence collected from the victim, Detective Hille obtained and executed a search warrant to take a saliva sample from defendant using a buccal swab. Bonnie Dubourg, a forensic DNA analyst for the Jefferson Parish Sheriffs Office, tested the samples taken from both the victim and defendant, and concluded that defendant could not be excluded as a possible DNA donor. Based on a statistical analysis performed on the source profile, Ms. Dubourg testified that the odds of someone other than defendant having that profile would be greater than one in one hundred billion, with the exception of identical twins.

| SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE

On appeal, defendant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence used to convict him of second degree murder. Specifically, he contends that the evidence proved that the killing was committed in the heat of passion and, as such, constituted manslaughter. Defendant requests that this Court set aside the verdict rendered by the jury and enter a verdict for the responsive charge of manslaughter.

In reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence pursuant to the standard set forth in Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 99 S.Ct.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 So. 3d 426, 10 La.App. 5 Cir. 116, 2010 La. App. LEXIS 1300, 2010 WL 3766834, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-arias-chavarria-lactapp-2010.