State v. Besse

83 So. 3d 257, 11 La.App. 5 Cir. 230, 2011 WL 6821435, 2011 La. App. LEXIS 1610
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 28, 2011
DocketNo. 11-KA-230
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 83 So. 3d 257 (State v. Besse) 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. Besse, 83 So. 3d 257, 11 La.App. 5 Cir. 230, 2011 WL 6821435, 2011 La. App. LEXIS 1610 (La. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

MARION F. EDWARDS, Chief Judge.

12Defendant/appellant, Kevin Besse (“Besse”), appeals his conviction of two counts of criminal activity, as well as his adjudication and sentence as a fourth felony offender.

Besse was charged with two counts of home invasion in violation of La. R.S. 14:62.8. Besse entered a plea of not guilty at the arraignment. Afterward, the State amended the bill of information to change the offenses charged to two counts of unauthorized entry of an inhabited dwelling in violation of La. R.S. 14:62.3. The matter was tried before a six-person jury, and Besse was found guilty of criminal trespass on Count 1 and guilty as charged on Count 2. The trial court sentenced Besse to thirty days in parish prison on Count 1 and to imprisonment at hard labor for six years on Count 2. The sentences were made to run concurrently.

^Subsequently, the State filed a multiple offender bill of information alleging that Besse was a fourth felony offender. Besse denied the allegations in the multiple bill. After a hearing on the matter, the trial court found Besse to be a fourth felony offender as charged. The court vacated the “previous sentence” and imposed an enhanced sentence of thirty years at hard labor without benefit of probation or suspension of sentence. A timely appeal motion was granted by the trial court.

FACTS

Anastasia Rey (“Rey”), William James (“James”), and Besse met each other while they were patients at River Oaks Hospital undergoing substance abuse treatment. When Rey, age 29, and James, an elderly gentleman, were released from River Oaks, they decided to rent a duplex together at 546 Orion in Jefferson Parish. Besse was released shortly thereafter and contacted Rey. He and Rey had a brief romantic relationship. During that time, Besse stayed with Rey overnight at her house on Orion, but he never moved into that house. Rey testified that she did not like Besse’s possessive and controlling behavior, so she ended their relationship and asked Besse to leave the house.

Besse refused to leave the home, so Rey left with James and instructed Besse to get his clothing and other belongings and leave her house by the time she returned. Rey and James left and drove around the neighborhood. They both agreed that Besse was “shady” and should not be in [261]*261their house. While they were talking, Rey noticed that James’ cell phone was on and that Besse was listening to everything they were saying.

Rey and James went to a bar near their house called “Mama’s Place” to give Besse time to leave the house. While she was playing video poker, James was sitting next to her drinking. At some point, Besse walked into the bar and punched 14James in the face. The bartender told Besse to leave, which he ultimately did, and the bartender called the police.

When Deputy Jason Melito of the Jefferson Parish Sheriffs Office arrived, he asked James if he wanted to press charges, but James declined to do so. At that point, Besse called Rey’s cell phone. Deputy Melito got on the cell phone and told Besse that Rey did not want anything to do with him, and if Besse was found at her house, he would go to jail.

After the officer left, Rey and James went home. James, who was drunk, stayed outside in the car and smoked cigarettes. Rey walked inside the house to change clothes.1 She went into her bedroom, turned on the television, and sat on the futon to watch it. Suddenly, Rey saw Besse standing in the doorway. Besse told Rey she was going to talk to him now. Rey “freaked out” and tried to go to the door, but, when she reached for it, Besse grabbed her and started wrestling with her. Besse was choking her, and they struggled all the way to the front room. Besse had his arm around her throat starting to cut off the air.

Rey said to Besse, “You’re going to kill me,” and he replied, “Yeah, Pm going to f. ..eking kill you.” She kept trying to open the [front] door with her arms and legs, because she thought Besse would kill her if the door closed. Rey, who was screaming, was able to get out of the house. She opened the passenger side door of her car and screamed for James to help her; however, James was “out of it.” At that point, Besse jumped in the front seat, and Rey took off running. Her cell phone was not working so she ran to Mama’s Place and asked the bartender to call the police, which she did.

IsRey was shaken up, her shirt was ripped, she was barefoot, and her pants were covered in grass. She was sore all over her body, and she had fingerprints around her neck and a bruise on her leg. Deputy Melito responded to the call at Mama’s Place, and he and Rey drove back to the house.

Other officers, who were already there, had searched the interior of the house, but they could not find anyone there. At that time, Rey told the officers to check the passenger side door of her car for James. They found James slumped over and unconscious. His face was beaten and “unrecognizable.” He had a severe laceration to his right eye, and severe swelling to his face and left eye. An ambulance was called, and James was taken to the hospital.

Meanwhile, Rey followed the detective in her car to the bureau and gave a statement. Afterward, Rey went back home. At Deputy Melito’s suggestion, Rey called 911 to ask them to send an officer to her house to walk through it with her before she entered the house. While Rey was waiting for the officer to arrive, she no[262]*262ticed that Besse had sent her several text messages, which were: (1) “I was not going to hurt you. I do love you. Sorry. I just want to talk and be friends;” (2) “From Kevin, James attacked me in the car;” (3) “Please call me!;” (4) “Do you know he was drinking? I bet not;” and (5) “I will not ever hurt you, and I did not. I just want to talk. Please forgive me.”

Deputy Carey Dials eventually arrived at the house, and Rey showed her the text messages from Besse. Afterward, Rey and Deputy Dials went inside the house. Rey went into a spare room and opened the closet. When she did so, the equipment began moving and Besse jumped out. Rey screamed, alerting Deputy Dials who came in and handcuffed Besse. Besse identified himself to the officer as “Steven.” The deputies noticed that Besse had a severe laceration on the knuckle of his right hand. When Deputy Melito asked Besse for his address, Besse |fisaid he had lived at the Orion house for a week, but his current address where he had lived for the longest time was 2429 Idaho Street in Kenner.

Besse testified that, when he was released from River Oaks, he and Rey began living together on Lake Avenue for a couple of weeks, but they were trying to find a larger place for him, Rey, and James to live. Besse explained that he was not involved in getting the house on Orion and that house was “strictly” Rey and James’, and he did not want “any part of that.” Besse claimed that Rey did not feel comfortable with James, and she would not move into the Orion house unless Besse moved in with them, so he did.

Besse asserted that James rented the Orion house, that Besse and Rey moved into that house together, and that the three of them lived there for approximately two or three weeks. He claimed that he gave Rey $300 for rent. Besse admitted he got into a conflict with James one time that night at Mama’s Place and slapped him on the side of the face because James allegedly gave Rey $900, and Besse was concerned Rey would use that money for drugs. He denied punching James at Mama’s Place.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 So. 3d 257, 11 La.App. 5 Cir. 230, 2011 WL 6821435, 2011 La. App. LEXIS 1610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-besse-lactapp-2011.