State v. Brady
This text of 569 So. 2d 110 (State v. Brady) 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.
Opinion
STATE of Louisiana
v.
Nona L. BRADY.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.
*111 Harry F. Connick, Dist. Atty., Valerie A. Welz, Asst. Dist. Atty., New Orleans, for relator.
Ernest Lee Caulfield, Maurice A. Williams, New Orleans, for respondent.
Before CIACCIO, WILLIAMS and BECKER, JJ.
BECKER, Judge.
The defendant has been charged with second degree murder. Her motion to suppress evidence was heard on April 16, 1990, and was granted in part and denied in part. The State now seeks relief from that portion of the trial court's judgment granting the suppression of certain evidence.
Sometime around midnight on November 30/December 1, 1989, police officers responded to a call of a man who had been stabbed and was lying wounded in a residence at 1224 ½ S. White Street. The initial officers responding to the call encountered the defendant Nona Brady, who told them that the victim, Gregory Jacobs, had arrived home with stab wounds which he indicated he had received at the house of another girlfriend. Ms. Brady took the officers to Jacobs' body, which was found lying in the hallway in the center of the house. After ascertaining Jacobs was dead, the officers notified homicide detectives.
At approximately 12:30 a.m., Det. Demma, a homicide detective, arrived at the scene. He testified Ms. Brady told the officers that Jacobs had entered through the front door and had collapsed in the hallway. However, the officers noticed there was no blood in the front of the house, but there were bloodstains near the body and leading into the kitchen in the rear of the residence. The officers also observed a button lying on the kitchen floor.
The victim's body was positioned in such a way that his head was lying in the open doorway of the bathroom. Lying in plain view in a sink in the bathroom was a blood-spattered towel, soaking in water. Next to the sink was a linen closet, and there was blood on the handle of its door. The door, however, was closed. Det. Demma testified he opened the door and found inside a pair of bloodied scissors and a bloodstained shirt which was later found to have been worn by Ms. Brady when she went to her neighbor's house to notify the police. The officers then arrested Ms. Brady and advised her of her rights. They seized the button from the kitchen floor, the bloodstained towel from the bathroom sink, the scissors and the bloodstained shirt from the linen closet, and bloodstain samples from various places in the residence. The trial court suppressed the shirt button found on the floor of the kitchen, the bloody towel found in the bathroom sink, and the scissors and shirt found in the closed linen closet. It denied the motion to suppress blood samples taken from various places in the residence.
The State argues that the button and the towel were lawfully seized pursuant to the plain view exception to the warrant requirement. For evidence seized without a *112 warrant to be admissible under the "plain view" exception, "(1) there must be a prior justification for an intrusion into a protected area; (2) in the course of which evidence is inadvertently discovered; and (3) where it is immediately apparent without close inspection that the items are evidence or contraband." State v. Hernandez, 410 So.2d 1381, 1383 (La.1982). See also State v. Taylor, 531 So.2d 1137 (La.App. 4th Cir. 1988). Recently in Horton v. California, ___ U.S. ___, 110 S.Ct. 2301, 110 L.Ed.2d 112 (1990), the United States Supreme Court held that evidence found in plain view need not have been found "inadvertently" in order to fall within the plain view exception to the warrant requirement. Horton concerned guns used in an armed robbery which were discovered during a search of the defendant's house pursuant to a warrant which listed only the stolen property as the items to be seized. The Court held that the guns were lawfully seized pursuant to the plain view exception to the warrant requirement, even though the officers may have suspected they could have been found at the defendant's house. The Court reasoned that such seizure did not violate the defendant's privacy rights because the officers already had a justification for searching the defendant's house, and the discovery of the guns was made while the officers were conducting a warrant-backed search.
Here, although Ms. Brady did not personally call the police, she went to a neighbor's house and apparently asked the neighbor to call the authorities. Ms. Brady also admitted the police to the residence which she shared with the victim. She told the officers that the victim had been stabbed at another location, had come back to the residence, entering through the front door, and had collapsed where his body was found, in the hallway in the middle of the house. His head was lying in the open doorway of the bathroom, and lying in the bathroom sink was a bloodied towel. Based upon these facts, the officers discovered the towel in plain view while they were in an area in which they had a prior justification to be, and by its very nature, the towel covered in blood appeared to be evidence of a crime. Thus, the trial court erred by granting the defendant's motion to suppress this towel.
The defendant told the officers that the victim entered the house through the front door and collapsed in the central hallway. However, the officers found no blood in the front of the house, the pathway supposedly taken by the victim just before his death. Instead, a pool of blood was found at the site of his death, and a trail of blood led to the kitchen in the back of the house where the button was found.
Another recognized exception to the warrant requirement is a quick search of a premises to determine the presence of a perpetrator or persons in need of aid. See Thompson v. Louisiana, 469 U.S. 17, 105 S.Ct. 409, 83 L.Ed.2d 246 (1984); Mincey v. Arizona, 437 U.S. 385, 98 S.Ct. 2408, 57 L.Ed.2d 290 (1978); State v. Perry, 502 So.2d 543 (La.1986), cert. den. Perry v. Louisiana, 484 U.S. 872, 108 S.Ct. 205, 98 L.Ed.2d 156 (1987); State v. Lambertus, 482 So.2d 812 (La.App. 4th Cir.1986).
In Thompson, the defendant killed her husband, attempted to commit suicide, and then called her daughter (who did not live with her) in an attempt to get medical help. The daughter called the police. Approximately thirty-five minutes after the defendant had been taken to the hospital, a team of homicide detectives conducted a two-hour general warrantless search of the house, seizing evidence against the defendant. Although the Louisiana Supreme Court upheld this search, the United States Supreme Court reversed, noting there is no "murder scene" exception to the warrant requirement. The Court noted that the police have the right to make a warrantless entry and search of a building if they reasonably believe the building contains persons in need of assistance or that the perpetrator is still on the premises. However, the officers who had responded to the call had already searched for other victims and the perpetrator. In addition, the homicide officers admitted they had time to get a warrant, but chose not to do so. The *113 Court held that the warrantless general search was illegal.
In Mincey, the defendant killed a policeman in his apartment during a raid to arrest the defendant.
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569 So. 2d 110, 1990 WL 151416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-brady-lactapp-1990.