State v. Bowers

965 So. 2d 959, 2007 WL 2713079
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 19, 2007
Docket42,390-KA
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 965 So. 2d 959 (State v. Bowers) 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. Bowers, 965 So. 2d 959, 2007 WL 2713079 (La. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

965 So.2d 959 (2007)

STATE of Louisiana, Appellee
v.
Erica M. BOWERS, Appellant.

No. 42,390-KA.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

September 19, 2007.

*961 Louisiana Appellate Project by Annette Roach, Lake Charles, for Appellant.

Paul J. Carmouche, District Attorney, William Jacob Edwards, Dhu Thompson, Tommy J. Johnson, Assistant District Attorneys, for Appellee.

Before WILLIAMS, MOORE and LOLLEY, JJ.

MOORE, J.

Erica M. Bowers was charged by bill of information with manslaughter, La. R.S. 14:31 A(2)(a), and hit-and-run driving, La. R.S. 14:100, arising from an incident at a Kroger grocery store. She elected a bench trial and was found guilty as charged on both counts. The state then charged her as a fourth felony habitual offender; the court adjudicated her as charged and denied her motion for acquittal. The court sentenced her, as a fourth felony offender, to 47 years at hard labor on the manslaughter charge, and to a concurrent five years at hard labor on the hit-and-run. Bowers now appeals her convictions and sentences; we affirm.

Factual Background

On the afternoon of April 23, 2004, Ms. Bowers and an accomplice, Rhonda Mosely, drove to the Kroger on Mansfield Road in Shreveport. Ms. Bowers was carrying a checkbook belonging to a Mr. Monsour, who had reported it as stolen. The car they were driving, a 1982 Chrysler Fifth Avenue, had license plates stolen from another vehicle. Ms. Bowers went into the store while Ms. Mosely waited in the car, which was parked in the middle of the fire lane in front of the main entrance.

Ms. Bowers rolled a shopping cart around the store, loading it up chiefly with baby items—four cases of Similac Advance, two packages of Huggies—as well as some T-shirts and a purse, and proceeded to the checkout area. However, the *962 friendly cashier to whom she intended to pass a stolen check was not present, so Ms. Bowers pushed the cart to the pharmacy area and then sauntered out the door.

Seeing this, store manager Rita Small and two other Kroger employees hurried down from the upstairs office and pursued Ms. Bowers as she walked out the door without paying for nearly $270 of merchandise. (The indoor portion of the incident was recorded on the store's video camera.) Ms. Small told Ms. Bowers that she would have to pay for the items she was taking; Ms. Bowers cursed at her and continued down the shallow ramp to the waiting Chrysler; Ms. Small was close behind. Ms. Bowers then told her she was not paying for the things, and pushed the cart back to Ms. Small; it still contained all the items she had taken from the store, as well as Mr. Monsour's checks and a Louisiana ID card belonging to yet another person, but crudely altered to look like Monsour's. Ms. Bowers then opened the driver's door of the Chrysler and started to get in as the car drove forward.

The victim, Daniel "Danny" Maguire, was a 74-year-old Kroger courtesy clerk. He was gathering shopping carts from the lot to return to the store, not involved in the confrontation with Ms. Bowers but unfortunately standing in the path of the Chrysler. The car ran over him, breaking both his legs.

Not surprisingly, many people were nearby and witnessed the incident. Their accounts varied in minor particulars, but all essentially agreed that when Ms. Bowers opened the car door, the other woman, Ms. Mosely, was either sitting behind the wheel or close to it, and Ms. Bowers had to shove her over to get into the driver's seat. Several witnesses saw a "struggle" or "confrontation" for the wheel, and the car started moving before Ms. Bowers had shut the door behind her. Maguire did not see the car coming until it was too late; he was hit almost immediately. Ms. Small and her customer service manager, Brenda Burcham, both testified that the Chrysler first knocked him down, paused, and then ran over him fast with all four wheels. Several witnesses were unsure which woman was driving when all this happened; however, an assistant store manager, Scott Miles, and a customer in the parking lot, Jennifer Scott, told police that it was the woman who had just left the store.

After running over Maguire, Ms. Bowers and Ms. Mosely zigzagged out the parking lot and sped away, but vigilant store patrons Byron and Tami Hazelwood followed them long enough to get the Chrysler's tag number. Police discovered that the license plate had been stolen from another vehicle, a Ford Tempo, but through that car's owner they developed Ms. Bowers as a suspect. Several witnesses identified Ms. Bowers from a photo lineup that was also used to investigate the forgery of Mr. Monsour's at a local Rite Aid drugstore.

Detective Shawn Parker of the Shreveport Police Department located Ms. Bowers in the Harrison County, Texas jail; he and Det. Tim Hunt interviewed her there on April 30. She waived her Miranda rights and gave a recorded statement which was played at trial. She admitted that she had Mr. Monsour's checks without his permission and planned to pass one of them at Kroger; however, the person she expected to be working one of the cashier lanes was not there, so she took the loaded cart out of the store. She insisted that Ms. Mosely was driving the car when it struck Maguire.

After the incident, an ambulance carried Maguire to LSU Medical Center in Shreveport. He had a badly broken left leg that required surgical repair as well as *963 other contusions and abrasions. He died 42 hours after being admitted. The Caddo Parish Coroner, Dr. George McCormick, wrote an autopsy report listing the cause of death as acute myocardial ischemia; Maguire had "cardiomegaly which was consistent with hypertension, resulting in coronary arteriosclerosis." However, Dr. McCormick noted that Maguire's injuries, though not life-threatening, combined with his heart disease to result in acute myocardial ischemia and cardiorespiratory failure; in the death certificate, he listed the manner of death as homicide.

Procedural History and Trial

As noted, the state charged Ms. Bowers with manslaughter, La. R.S. 14:31 A(2)(a), in that she killed Maguire while she was engaged in the perpetration of middle-grade theft of goods, R.S. 14:67.10 B(2), and in the perpetration of forgery, R.S. 14:72,[1] and with hit-and-run driving, La. R.S. 14:100. The bill of information was filed August 5, 2004; just prior to a free and voluntary hearing on September 26, 2005, Ms. Bowers waived her right to a jury trial. Trial began on September 30, 2005, and was continued on six separate days, ending on February 28, 2006.

At trial, Michelle Williams, a deputy coroner, testified that Dr. McCormick, who performed the autopsy on Maguire, died in September 2005, and that she did not personally participate in the autopsy. However, she was the custodian of coroner's records, and the autopsy was a record of the regular business conducted in the office. Over defense objection, the court admitted the autopsy report. A forensic pathologist, Dr. James G. Traylor Jr., testified on the basis of the autopsy and the hospital records that Maguire had a severe degree of natural disease, but the accident and surgery were stressors that exacerbated his underlying condition. He estimated that had Maguire not been run over by Ms. Bowers, there would be "at least an 80- to 90-percent chance that he would still be alive."

The district court found Ms. Bowers guilty as charged of manslaughter and hit-and-run driving, and denied her timely motion for acquittal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
965 So. 2d 959, 2007 WL 2713079, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bowers-lactapp-2007.