State v. Battieste

597 So. 2d 508, 1992 WL 46288
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 6, 1992
DocketKA 91 0021
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 597 So. 2d 508 (State v. Battieste) 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. Battieste, 597 So. 2d 508, 1992 WL 46288 (La. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

597 So.2d 508 (1992)

STATE of Louisiana
v.
Jamal BATTIESTE.

No. KA 91 0021.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

March 6, 1992.

*509 Doug Moreau, Dist. Atty., by Don Wall, Asst. Dist. Atty., Baton Rouge, for plaintiff/appellee.

Otha Nelson, Baton Rouge, for defendant/appellant.

Before SHORTESS, LANIER and CRAIN, JJ.

LANIER, Judge.

Jamal Lejean Battieste was charged in a single bill of information with two counts of armed robbery, violations of La.R.S. 14:64. Count I charged the armed robbery *510 of Dr. Louis Jeansonne[1], and Count II charged the armed robbery of Nick Tessitora, Jr. Defendant entered pleas of not guilty to both charges. After trial by jury, defendant was found guilty as charged in Count I; and the jury returned a responsive verdict of guilty of first degree robbery on Count II. For the armed robbery conviction, the trial court sentenced defendant to imprisonment at hard labor for a term of ninety-nine years, without benefit of parole, probation or suspension of sentence; for the first degree robbery conviction, defendant was sentenced to imprisonment at hard labor for a term of forty years, without benefit of parole, probation, or suspension of sentence. The trial court ordered that the sentences run concurrently and that defendant receive credit for time served. This appeal followed.

FACTS

The instant offenses occurred at Dr. Louis Jeansonne's dental office in East Baton Rouge Parish, on Wednesday, October 5, 1988. At about 11:30 a.m.—12:00 noon on that date, two black men came into the waiting room at the office and asked Jane Ross Mouton, the doctor's secretary, if the doctor sold gold crowns. Mouton answered in the affirmative and told the men that the crowns were not kept in the office and had to be ordered. After apparently being told the price of the crowns, the men left the office. Shortly thereafter, Mouton went home. Tessitora, who was in the doctor's waiting room to have some dental work done on his teeth, observed the two men come in and overheard the conversation concerning the gold crowns.

Tessitora testified that, after the two men left the office, the doctor saw someone pass by one of the windows of the office. The doctor and Tessitora went to the driveway in back of the office to investigate. When Tessitora got to the driveway he saw two men standing near the wall of the office. Tessitora and Dr. Jeansonne then walked from the back to the front of the office. Tessitora indicated to the doctor that what they had seen did not "look right" and that (because he thought he could defend himself better than Dr. Jeansonne) he should reenter the office ahead of Dr. Jeansonne.

After reentering the office, Tessitora began searching the rooms in the office. While Tessitora was in the hall, two men, each armed with a gun, jumped out of a room and one placed a gun to Tessitora's side. The gun was later placed to Tessitora's head. One of the perpetrators told Tessitora to lie on the floor with his face down. Tessitora did not comply, choosing instead to talk to the perpetrators to give himself time to decide what he was going to do.

In the meantime, Dr. Jeansonne had encountered the perpetrators too; and, from his vantage point in the hall, Tessitora observed that one of the perpetrators was trying to get the doctor to lie on the floor face down in one of the rooms at the rear of the office. Tessitora testified that the doctor told the perpetrators that he would lie on the couch inside the room but not on the floor. Tessitora saw the perpetrator using his gun to beat the doctor about his head because the doctor would not lie down on the floor. While observing the beating being administered to the doctor, Tessitora looked around to see if he could find "a good piece of iron" that he might use to strike the perpetrator who was with him in the hall. When Tessitora was unable to find a suitable object, he decided to walk up to this perpetrator in the hope of catching him off guard. However, when Tessitora walked up to the perpetrator, the perpetrator struck Tessitora in the head with a "triple-strength" hand-held mirror, which apparently shattered on impact. Tessitora pushed the perpetrator (who had struck him) against the wall and "tussled" with him. Both perpetrators then ran from the doctor's office.

During the incident, the perpetrators took the wallets of Dr. Jeansonne and Tessitora. *511 Tessitora testified that he felt he would have been killed if he had not given up his wallet.

The police were summoned, and officers with the Baton Rouge City Police Department went to the scene. The victims gave investigating officers an account of what had happened and provided descriptions of the perpetrators. The officers found no one fitting the descriptions in the area near the crime scene. Officer Robert Lively, a crime scene officer, dusted shards of the broken mirror that had been used to strike Tessitora and lifted latent fingerprints from the pieces onto seven fingerprint lifters.

The investigation of the offenses continued. A videotaped reenactment of the crimes was prepared for Crime Stoppers and broadcast. Thereafter the police received information naming two possible suspects, neither of whom was defendant. Detective Michael W. Morris obtained photographs of the two suspects, which were included in a photographic lineup that was shown to Tessitora, Dr. Jeansonne and Mouton. When the lineup was displayed to Tessitora, he identified one of the suspects as one of the robbers. However, after the suspect was arrested and placed in a physical lineup, Tessitora was unable to identify anyone in the physical lineup.

Later, after Officer Annie Michelli of the Baton Rouge City Police Department's Latent Fingerprint Division had been unsuccessful in identifying State Exhibit S-12 (a latent left thumbprint Lively had lifted from one of the pieces of the broken mirror), she submitted S-12 to the Latent Fingerprint Section of the Louisiana State Police. S-12 was entered into an automatic fingerprint identification machine, containing rolled fingerprints on record at the repository of the State Police; and the machine retrieved a list of respondents having fingerprint similarities to S-12. From the list, Emily Kilcrease (a latent fingerprint analyst employed by the State Police Latent Fingerprint Section who qualified and was accepted by the trial court as an expert in latent fingerprint comparison) identified defendant's known left thumbprint as matching S-12. Sybil Guidry (who works with Kilcrease and who qualified and was accepted by the trial court as an expert in fingerprint analysis comparison) checked and verified the comparison Kilcrease made of defendant's fingerprint. Additionally, at trial, Kilcrease and Guidry compared S-16 (an inked impression of defendant's left thumbprint obtained by Kilcrease at trial) to S-12 and determined that the latent left thumbprint was defendant's.

Officer Michelli told Detective Morris about the matched fingerprint. Morris then went to defendant's home, which was located about four blocks from Dr. Jeansonne's office. Defendant voluntarily accompanied Morris to a police office on Plank Road for questioning. At the office, defendant was advised of his constitutional rights; and, following that advice, defendant denied any knowledge of the robberies. Additionally, defendant stated that he had never been a patient of Dr. Jeansonne, and he had never been inside the doctor's office. On the following day, Morris checked the records of Dr. Jeansonne's patients without finding any record of defendant's name.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
597 So. 2d 508, 1992 WL 46288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-battieste-lactapp-1992.