State v. Bowie

813 So. 2d 377, 2002 WL 501109
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 3, 2002
Docket2000-KA-3344
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 813 So. 2d 377 (State v. Bowie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Bowie, 813 So. 2d 377, 2002 WL 501109 (La. 2002).

Opinion

813 So.2d 377 (2002)

STATE of Louisiana
v.
David Henry BOWIE.

No. 2000-KA-3344.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

April 3, 2002.

*380 G. Paul Marx, Esq., Lafayette, for Appellant.

Richard P. Ieyoub, Atty. Gen., Douglas P. Moreau, Dist. Atty., Creighton B. Abadie, Esq., Baton Rouge, Tracey E. Barbara, Esq., Beau J. Brock, Esq., Richard C. Nevils, Esq., Baton Rouge, for Respondent.

TRAYLOR, J.

On March 3, 1996, an East Baton Rouge grand jury indited David Henry Bowie for the first degree murder of John Smith.[1] After a ten-day bifurcated trial ending in March of 1999, a petit jury found the defendant guilty as charged and unanimously recommended imposition of the death penalty, after finding several aggravating circumstances: (1) that the killing occurred while the defendant was engaged in the perpetration or attempted perpetration of an armed robbery or second degree kidnapping; (2) that he knowingly created a risk of death to more than one person; (3) that the crime was committed in an especially heinous, atrocious or cruel manner; and (4) that the victim was older than sixty-five. La.C.Cr.P.art. 905.4(A)(1), (4), (7), (10).

On direct appeal to this Court under La. Const. Art. 5, § 5(D), defendant appeals his conviction and death sentence. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the defendant's conviction for first degree murder and the sentence to death.

FACTS

John Smith and Leslie Domengeaux spent the evening of January 16, 1996 riding in Smith's Nissan Maxima and drinking. Domengeaux testified, and other witnesses agreed, that the victim liked women, alcohol and gambling. On the night of January 16, Smith drank gin and Thunderbird wine. Domengeaux joined in the drinking and also smoked crack cocaine, to which she was addicted, and which was furnished by Smith on January 16 and 17 in exchange for sex. Back at Smith's home, early on the morning of January 17, Smith and Domengeaux had intercourse. Smith continued to drink while Domengeaux consumed the last of the cocaine. Afterwards, Domengeaux left in Smith's Nissan to buy more crack. Her search took her to a fast-food restaurant, where she spotted the defendant in his mother's Lincoln Town Car. Domengeaux knew that defendant was a source for crack cocaine, and had a large supply of rock cocaine that morning.[2]

*381 Domengeaux knew the defendant from the neighborhood. The defendant and the victim also were acquainted. Domengeaux and the defendant smoked cocaine in the Lincoln, then went to Smith's home where the two men drank and shot dice. Also present in the house at this point was Kathy Armstead Fort. Fort helped Smith in his small fish-selling business and was often in Smith's home. Like Domengeaux, Fort was also a cocaine addict. While the men gambled, the women went to the kitchen to smoke crack furnished by the defendant.

At some point that morning, the defendant lost all his money to Smith and he telephoned friends to borrow funds. The women were sent to pick up Michael Owens and Charlie Sterling, men known to both Domengeaux and Fort, and friends of the defendant. The defendant and his two friends, Owens and Sterling, lived in Scotlandville's Rosenwald Apartment complex. Once at Smith's house, the dice game resumed with Smith, defendant and Sterling playing. Owens only watched but joined in the beer-drinking and general smoking of "blunts," i.e., cigars with marijuana cores. The women drank beer and smoked crack, while Smith drank Seagram's VO and vodka.

The defendant lost again, as did Sterling. At some point, defendant and Domengeaux retreated to the spare bedroom in Smith's small home, where they had sex and smoked crack. Later the defendant got up, donned a pair of boxer shorts and told Domengeaux he would be back. The next thing Domengeaux heard was defendant telling Smith that he wanted his money back. Apparently, defendant had walked to the front and asked if Sterling had any more money. Defendant said something about knocking peoples' heads off, which Sterling shrugged off because he thought his friend was simply upset over losing at dice. Suddenly the defendant had a gun in his hand and was telling everyone to cooperate. Owens testified that he did not hear the defendant threaten to harm or kill anyone. However, he watched as the defendant, dressed in boxer shorts and holding a gun, took money from the top front pocket of Smith's jump suit. Fort saw the defendant gather the money, and recognized the weapon he held as Smith's own .38 revolver. As ordered, Owens, Sterling and Fort crowded into the spare bedroom with Domengeaux. Defendant came to the door, handed the gun to Sterling and told him to watch them. Smith and the defendant were alone for an unknown period of time. No one heard anything untoward. Subsequently, the defendant called Sterling from the bedroom, telling him to leave the gun with Owens. Sterling had already told the women he would not harm them, and when Owens got the weapon he tossed it on the bed.

The defendant, Sterling and Smith went into Smith's bedroom. From the next room Kathy Fort heard the defendant tell Sterling to hit Smith. She heard the sound of an impact, followed by gasping and gagging. She heard no struggle. The defendant kept telling Smith to open the safe in his closet. When he gave Smith two minutes to open it, Fort and Domengeaux offered to help get the combination. Smith continued to refuse, saying that he was not worried about the gun or the guys and that they would not get his money unless he was dead. The women returned to the spare bedroom.

According to Sterling, when he first arrived in Smith's bedroom, Smith was asking the defendant why he was doing this. Sterling could not recall the defendant's reply, but he did recall that the defendant *382 still had the gun. For this reason, when defendant ordered him to hit the victim with his "best shot," Sterling complied. Sterling hit the victim three times, "not really trying," as Smith was "full of beer and blunts" and too drunk to struggle. The defendant ordered Sterling to get some shoelaces, but Sterling was "not sure" who retrieved the laces. Sterling watched the defendant loop the shoelaces around Smith's neck and choke him. The victim urinated, and had blood bubbles popping out of his nose. Pressed on the whereabouts of the revolver when the defendant had his hands around the victim's neck, Sterling testified variously that the defendant or Owens had the weapon, and then that he could not recall. Asked why he did not try to stop the defendant, Sterling replied, "`[c]ause I ain't no Superman and I ain't the type ....for to go playing no hero or nothing like that, that's just not me."

Unsatisfied with the shoelaces, the defendant grabbed the victim and propelled him from his bedroom into the short hallway. The defendant then kicked open the door of the spare bedroom, pushing and dragging the unresisting Smith with him. Domengeaux saw the defendant grab tissue from the adjacent bathroom and shove it into the victim's nose and mouth. Sterling also witnessed this, as well as saw the defendant put a towel in Smith's mouth and place a rag over his face. The defendant then called for an electric clothing iron, which stood on a table in the spare bedroom. Owens saw the defendant pick up the iron, and Fort watched the defendant loop its cord twice around the victim's neck, then pull and tie it tightly.

Once convinced that the victim was dead, the defendant ordered Sterling to get a garbage can, and told everyone to cleanup. They emptied ashtrays and other (unspecified) "stuff" into the can.

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Bluebook (online)
813 So. 2d 377, 2002 WL 501109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bowie-la-2002.