State v. Burke

103 So. 3d 652, 2011 La.App. 4 Cir. 1081, 2012 La. App. LEXIS 1361, 2012 WL 5377658
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 31, 2012
DocketNo. 2011-KA-1081
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 103 So. 3d 652 (State v. Burke) 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. Burke, 103 So. 3d 652, 2011 La.App. 4 Cir. 1081, 2012 La. App. LEXIS 1361, 2012 WL 5377658 (La. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

JAMES F. McKAY III, Judge.

| STATEMENT OF THE CASE

The defendant, Travis Burke, was charged by grand jury indictment on August 26, 2009, with second degree murder, a violation of La. R.S. 14:3o.!.1 The defendant pleaded not guilty at his September 1, 2009 arraignment. The defendant filed a motion to sever on June 4, 2010, which the trial court denied on July 7, 2010. The State subsequently tried the defendant [654]*654separately before a twelve-person jury on January 26-28, 2011, and he was found guilty as charged of second degree murder. On March 28, 2011, the defendant was sentenced to life imprisonment at hard labor, without benefit of parole, probation, or suspension of sentence.

FACTS

The defendant, Travis Burke, was convicted in the instant case for the May 22, 2009 second degree murder of Rodrick2 Gordon.

[ 2Marguerite Crystaval, the victim’s mother, testified that the victim, “Roddy,” as she referred to him, was living with her on the Westbank at the time he was killed. He was then sixteen years old and in the ninth grade at L.B. Landry High School. On the day Rodrick was killed, he, along with Ms. Crystaval, her mother, and her youngest child, a daughter, went to the daughter’s kindergarten graduation. Afterward, Rodrick asked to go to his aunt’s residence for the weekend; she lived near the intersection of Carrollton and Earhart Avenues.

Ms. Crystaval testified that the last time she saw her son was that morning after the graduation, when her mother dropped her off at work. Rodrick was in the car. She identified a photograph of Rodrick and his younger sister, Christianne Crystaval. Ms. Crystaval confirmed on cross examination that her ex-husband, Benjamin Crys-taval, was a New Orleans Police Officer. He apparently was the victim’s father. She recalled the police detective who investigated the case from when she lived in a housing development, saying he was always the police officer in that area.

Rosaline Perkins, Rodrick Gordon’s grandmother, testified concerning the family going to Christianne Crystaval’s kindergarten graduation on the day Rodrick was killed. After the graduation they dropped Rodrick’s mother off at work at Harrah’s, at approximately 10:00 a.m. She said Rodrick and she came back to her home in Gretna, where Rodrick used to stay when his mother was at work. She then drove back across the river and dropped Rodrick off at a cousin’s home in the Iberville project. She later learned Rodrick had been killed, and she went to the scene in what she recalled as the 1400 or 1500 block of Conti Street.

New Orleans Police Department Officer Heidi Williams, assigned to the Crime Lab, testified that she worked the homicide scene in the 1500 block of Conti | -¡Street. She identified her crime scene report and a number of photographs taken at the scene. She also identified five Winchester 9mm Luger casings, six Wolf 9mm Luger casings, one FC 9mm Luger casing, one CCI 9mm Luger casing, five PPU Luger casings, nine Winchester .40 Smith and Wesson casings, one spent projectile, one copper jacket, one lead fragment, two copper fragments, and one spent bullet. Officer Williams confirmed that no weapons were recovered on the scene, nor was any physical evidence recovered that was attributable to any particular suspect, including the defendant.

A witness, who desired to be referred to at trial as K.G., testified that she had been living in the Iberville project for approximately fifteen years. She knew Rodrick and referred to him as “like family.” She was present the day he was murdered. K.G. testified that she was walking from [655]*655N. Robertson Street when she saw a white car and a black Trans Am pass through and come up the 1500 block of Conti Street. She testified that the defendant was in the white car with “Mall.3” She said the Trans Am had a few people she said she could not identify at the time, but later did. K.G. said she ducked behind a car on the side of a building. She observed the defendant and Mall exit the white car with two blaek guns “like a 9.... ” She heard fifteen shots and saw Rodrick fall to the ground with a bullet to the back of his head. She said he “crawled for his life.” K.G. testified that the shooters then stood over Rodrick and shot him a few more times before fleeing the scene. She said she was close enough to the defendant and Mall that she could identify the defendant with a tattoo on his forehead and a Seventh Ward “tear drop” on the side of his eyes.

14K.G. testified that she telephoned Detective Pratt approximately one hour later. Asked why she did so, K.G. replied: “Because I witnessed a murder. And it was wrong. And it’s got to be stopped.” She told Detective Pratt the names of the shooters and provided descriptions of the two vehicles involved. She met with Detective Pratt the following Monday, and he interviewed her. The next day she viewed two photo lineups and identified the suspects. She said she then “went in custody.4” The prosecutor asked why she went into custody, and she replied that she was not scared, that no one told her anything, but she did state she was in fear. When the prosecutor asked K.G. if she was aware of any feuding that was occurring in the neighborhood, she stated that it had been going for years with Sixth and Seventh Ward people beefing with “the Goo-nies,” who were in the Iberville project. She said Travis and Mall were affiliated with the Seventh Ward people. K.G. testified that, although Rodrick’s grandmother lived in the Iberville project and he was raised there, his family had moved. When asked if Rodrick was affiliated with any of the cliques, she replied that he did not even know them and was an innocent child in the wrong place at the wrong time. K.G. identified the defendant at trial.

On cross examination K.G. stated that the defendant had gone to Clark High School. She confirmed that to her recollection the murder occurred on June 8, not May 22. When asked how she knew the defendant, K.G. said he had been in the Iberville development several times and he had been at the home/homes of people she knew. She said she had known Rodrick’s mother and grandmother, and she had held Rodrick when he was a baby. K.G. testified that she had previously lived |sin the Iberville project. She denied having given Detective Pratt a height description for the defendant or that she had told Detective Pratt that one of the suspects had two tattoos on his face. She said she gave a recorded statement to police the same week as the shootings. However, when questioned by defense counsel some more about having given a recorded statement, she testified that Detective Pratt had told her he was going to record her statement.

On redirect examination K.G. confirmed that she recalled meeting with Detective Pratt and initialing the back of a photo with the defendant’s face on it. She was shown State Exhibit 7, and she said that was the identification she had made. She said it was dated May 26, 2009, at 8:86 p.m., and she had written on the back, “[sjhot and killed Rodrick.” She was [656]*656asked who that was, and she replied that it was the defendant. She confirmed that she knew all the youths connected to this case by their nicknames, by their full names, and by their photographs. She estimated she made the identification three days after the shooting took place. She said there was no doubt in her mind that the defendant was the person who killed Rodrick.

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Related

State v. Rivers
160 So. 3d 1108 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2015)

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Bluebook (online)
103 So. 3d 652, 2011 La.App. 4 Cir. 1081, 2012 La. App. LEXIS 1361, 2012 WL 5377658, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-burke-lactapp-2012.