State v. Carmen

3 So. 3d 587, 2009 La. App. LEXIS 2341, 2009 WL 196346
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 27, 2009
Docket08-KA-478
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 3 So. 3d 587 (State v. Carmen) 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. Carmen, 3 So. 3d 587, 2009 La. App. LEXIS 2341, 2009 WL 196346 (La. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

WALTER J. ROTHSCHILD, Judge.

|aThe Jefferson Parish District Attorney filed a bill of information charging defendant, Gregory Carmen, with theft of a laptop computer valued at over $500, in violation of LSA-R.S. 14:67. 1 Defendant was arraigned and pled not guilty. The State subsequently amended the bill of information to charge defendant with theft of property valued over $1,000, in violation of LSA-R.S. Defendant was arraigned on the amended bill and pled not guilty. On September 26 and 27, 2007, the case was tried before a six-person jury which found defendant guilty as charged. Defendant filed a motion for new trial, *589 which was denied on October 22, 2007. On November 5, 2007, the trial court sentenced defendant to imprisonment at hard labor for two years, suspended this sentence, and placed him on active probation for three years. Defendant appeals. FACTS

| ;,On May 21, 2004, Susan Dreier approached a security checkpoint at Louis Armstrong International Airport on her way to board a flight. She placed her employer’s laptop computer on the x-ray machine, but forgot to retrieve it after it was scanned. Shortly thereafter, Dreier discovered that the laptop was missing, so she returned to the checkpoint to inquire about it. Dreier became very upset when the laptop could not be located, so David Ricks, a lead screener, called for a screening manager. Agents Francis Ruholl and Billy Booth, both screening managers, responded to the call.

After Dreier informed them of the situation, Agents Ruholl and Booth asked Ricks and defendant, Gregory Carmen, who was another lead screener, if they had seen the laptop. Defendant and Ricks both said they did not remember a laptop being left at the checkpoint. They started looking in bins and around the area, but did not find it. Afterwards, Agent Ruholl went to lost and found, but he was informed that no laptop had been turned in that afternoon. Agents Ruholl and Booth then viewed videotaped surveillance of the area in an attempt to locate the missing laptop. 2

On the videotapes, Agents Ruholl and Booth observed Dreier passing through the checkpoint and leaving the laptop behind. 3 Defendant moved the laptop down to the end of the table where people normally picked up their belongings, and it sat there. He then put the laptop into a gray bin where it sat for about a minute. He picked up the bin and placed it on an x-ray unit where it sat for approximately three minutes. Defendant picked up the bin again and took it to the back of the checkpoint where he placed it on top of an unused explosive detection machine.

14The bin, which contained the laptop and a watch, stayed on the explosive detection machine for approximately 14 minutes. During that time, Ricks returned the watch to a passenger who was looking for it. Ricks then picked up the bin and took it to lane one where he placed it on top of the x-ray machine, and it sat for several minutes. Afterwards, defendant picked up the bin and took it to the supervisor’s area where he stayed for a very short period of time. He was out of view at that time as there were no cameras inside that area.

When defendant returned into camera view, he went underneath a light carrying the bin. From that camera angle, both Agents Ruholl and Booth stated that they could see a laptop in the bin. Defendant proceeded to walk toward the entrance to the checkpoint with the bin on his shoulder and walked out into the terminal with the bin. The laptop, which was worth $2,038.65, was never brought to lost and found and was never recovered.

As they viewed the videotaped surveillance in order to determine what happened to the laptop, Agents Ruholl and Booth would stop watching the videotape at certain points to go back to the checkpoint *590 and ask defendant about the laptop. Although defendant had initially denied having any knowledge of a laptop left behind, when Agent Ruholl asked defendant what happened to the laptop that he moved to the explosive detection machine, defendant responded that he remembered seeing it. Agent Booth went back to the checkpoint as well and asked defendant about the laptop, and defendant said he may have moved it because they were very busy. After watching the videotapes, Agent Ru-holl called his supervisor and told him what he and Booth had seen on the tapes. Agents Ruholl and Booth were instructed to do nothing more, and their supervisor said that he would handle the matter from there.

| ^Approximately one month later, Detective Michael Miller of the Jefferson Parish Sheriffs Office took defendant into an office to interview him. After he advised defendant of his rights, defendant waived them and said he did not take the laptop. 4 Detective Miller searched defendant’s house in Baton Rouge with his wife’s consent, but the laptop was not there. They also looked inside the windows of defendant’s truck, but did not see a laptop inside. Detective Miller heard that Michelle Glapion, an employee shuttle bus driver, had seen defendant carrying what appeared to be an expensive laptop computer on the employee shuttle on the day of the incident. He tried to interview her, but she did not return his call.

Agent Booth testified that defendant’s actions on the videotapes did not comply with any Transportation Security Administration (TSA) policy. He explained that defendant did not do anything that he was supposed to do that day with respect to the laptop. Agent Ruholl could not offer any logical explanation as to why defendant would move the laptop all over the checkpoint. The agents explained that the policy was, when an employee finds something that is left behind on the checkpoint, he should turn it over to a supervisor, who in turn writes down on a tag when it was found, what lane it was found in, the time it was found, and the characteristics of the item. Afterwards, it is turned into lost and found.

After the State rested its case, defendant took the stand and testified that he did not take the laptop. He claimed that he moved the laptop to different locations to get it out of the way of the mainstream of traffic so it would not be damaged. He also claimed that if a passenger had come back to look for a missing item that day, the passenger would have been more likely to see it on the explosive detection machine where he had put it. He said that Dreier had come through lane two and |fithat she would probably not have looked in lane one for her laptop where Ricks had inexplicably put it.

Defendant explained that he followed TSA policy by bringing the laptop to the supervisor’s office and that the supervisor generally takes the item to lost and found. He indicated that the bin he took out of the checkpoint area and into the terminal, as shown on the video surveillance, did not contain the laptop. Rather, he contended that it was an empty bin that he saw in the supervisor’s area and he took it to the bathroom in the terminal to clean it because it was soiled. Although he carried the bin on his shoulder into the terminal, he stated that it was not heavy. He admitted that if a person had been standing next to him when he had the bin on his shoulder, he or she could not have seen what was inside.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 So. 3d 587, 2009 La. App. LEXIS 2341, 2009 WL 196346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-carmen-lactapp-2009.