State v. Carter

181 So. 2d 763, 248 La. 730, 1966 La. LEXIS 2382
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 17, 1966
Docket47514
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 181 So. 2d 763 (State v. Carter) 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. Carter, 181 So. 2d 763, 248 La. 730, 1966 La. LEXIS 2382 (La. 1966).

Opinions

FOURNET, Chief Justice.

Joshua Carter and Lawrence Baptiste prosecute this appeal from their conviction of a charge by indictment returned by the Orleans Parish grand jury on December 12, 1961, of the aggravated rape1 of Mrs. Myrtle Sandifur, as well as from their death sentences thereunder, relying for the reversal thereof on numerous errors allegedly committed during the course of their trial, to which objections were timely made and perfected in Bills of Exceptions.

The record reveals Mrs. Sandifur, a married woman of the 1 Caucasian race-about 43 years of age, left her home on. Soniat Street on the night of November 18, 1961, accompanied by her husband, Napoleon Sandifur, to walk their small , dog,' stopping to visit friends who operated a bar in the 1300 block of Lyons Street. While walking back on Upperline Street about midnight, near its dimly-lighted intersection with Coliseum Street, she and her husband were suddenly and viciously attacked.

Mr. Sandifur testified he was “grabbed from behind,” knocked to the ground, and savagely beaten into unconsciousness, he was unable to “recognize anything” because the area was so dark except that his assailants were four Negroes, two of them being taller than the other two. Before he was knocked to the ground and before losing consciousness, money amounting to less than $5.00 was taken from his wallet.

Mrs. Sandifur stated that prior to the time she and her husband were “jumped” she saw no one, her first knowledge of the attack coming when she was hit in the face, told to “shut up” when she screamed, and was struck again. . From that .time, until she was taken home by the police a few hours later, she knew nothing. However, the record shows she .was knocked to the ground at the point of attack, robbed [735]*735of the $19.00 in her purse, ravished there by one of the assailants, dragged by him with the assistance of another through an alleyway, where both ravished her. She was discovered under bushes on Lyons Street shortly thereafter by police officers in an undressed condition from the waist, her girdle, underpants, false teeth (broken during the attack), and several other articles of clothing being found on the ground at this spot. Her condition was so serious Patrolman Arthur Trahan, who was at the scene, stated she was not only unconscious but so white and her breath so negligible he thought she was dead.

There were no other eye witnesses testifying at the trial, although an unidentified person notified the police about 12:25 a. m. the crime was in progress, and, as a result, several units of the police department were dispatched to the scene. Sergeant Felix Palmisano and Patrolman William Buckel, first to arrive, found Mr. Sandifur in a dazed condition, bleeding profusely from multiple cuts and bruises about the face. There was much blood on the sidewalk and ground in the immediate vicinity. On the sidewalk they found a man’s wallet, a lady’s shoes, purse, and the contents thereof. Mr. Sandifur, in an apparent moment of consciousness, seemed to remember seeing his wife being dragged away and asked of her whereabouts.

Detectives Edward O’Donnell and John J. Perrot, arriving at the scene after the victims had been taken to Charity Hospital, observed the blood on the sidewalk and were told by other officers they had managed to piece together from Mr. Sandifur’s incoherent statements that four Negroes had attacked him and his wife. Perrot, recalling having seen a Negro male wearing white tennis shoes running across Upperline Street and entering the Colonial Bar as he and O’Donnell were approaching the scene, at once backed the car to this place and, with O’Donnell, entered. There they found Lawrence Baptiste, age 20, Henry Baptiste, age 19, and Richard Ruth, age IS, sitting at the bar, each with a bottle of beer. The officers, upon directing the beams of their flashlights and noticing Lawrence was wearing white shoes, took the three out of the bar and, after placing them under arrest for the crime of armed robbery, took them back to the scene of the crime, where they were questioned for a few minutes. At this time Lawrence explained the blood found on his shoes resulted from a fight in which he had engaged in the bar earlier, while Henry denied the substance discovered on his shoes was blood. The three were then taken to the Second District Precinct Station, where they arrived about 1:30 a. m. Henry and Lawrence were booked with vagrancy— under investigation for armed robbery; Ruth was not, as he was a juvenile.

When told the blood on his shoes would be compared with that of the victims and [737]*737his alibi thoroughly checked, Lawrence purportedly made several inculpatory remarks. This prompted Ruth, who was nearby, to also make incriminating statements. The police, learning from these statements that Joshua Carter, age 17, was also implicated, arrested him at his home about 2:00 a. m., and, shortly thereafter, he was booked at the Second District Precinct Station with armed robbery and aggravated rape. Ruth was then booked with aggravated rape. Some time thereafter, as the result of a telephone call from the Detective Bureau, Lawrence and Henry were rebooked with armed robbery and aggravated rape.

About 3:15 a. m. these four defendants were transferred to the Detective Bureau at Police Headquarters, where they were fingerprinted and “mugged,” each making oral statements, including Carter and Henry, who, until then, had been adamant in protesting their innocence. These statements were later reduced to writing by Desk Sergeant Dyer, Carter signing his at 5 :25 a. m., Henry at 6:55 a. m., Lawrence at 7:25 a. m., and Ruth at 7:45 a. m.

A little after 8:00 a. m. the accused were taken to the scene of the crime, where additional oral statements were purportedly made, and where they performed certain acts demonstrating the manner in which they had committed the crime, photographs being taken of them as they went through their gestures. At 8:00 o’clock the following morning (November 20, 1961), these men were taken to the “show-up room”, and it was while there that Carter indicated he and Lawrence had criminally assaulted Mrs. Sandifur. All were then taken back to the Precinct Station, where they remained until taken to Parish Prison on November 27, 1961.

On December 12, 1961, the grand jury for Orleans Parish, in a Bill of Indictment prepared by the District Attorney and charging all four with aggravated rape, returned a true bill only as to Joshua Carter and Lawrence Baptiste, pretermitting the charges against Henry Baptiste and Richard Ruth. However, on February 23, 1962, they were also charged by indictment with the aggravated rape of Mrs. Sandifur. On November 26, 1962, all four were brought to trial, and, after a hearing lasting IS days, Joshua Carter and Lawrence Baptiste were convicted and sentenced to death. Richard Ruth and Henry Baptiste, who received a qualified verdict of guilty without capital punishment, did not appeal, and are presently serving their sentences under these convictions.

The transcript recording this lengthy trial is voluminous, consisting, in addition to exhibits, of 12 volumes totalling 2,737 pages that are devoted to the inscription of the minutes of the court, the indictments, the opening statement of the District Attorney, various documents and evidence heard on the voir dire examination of the jurors and during the trial on the merits, as well [739]*739as the trial judge’s charge to the jury, the Bills of Exceptions and appended Per Curiams.

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Bluebook (online)
181 So. 2d 763, 248 La. 730, 1966 La. LEXIS 2382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-carter-la-1966.