State v. Casaday

162 So. 3d 578, 2015 La. App. LEXIS 388, 2015 WL 847484
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 27, 2015
DocketNo. 49,679-KA
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 162 So. 3d 578 (State v. Casaday) 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. Casaday, 162 So. 3d 578, 2015 La. App. LEXIS 388, 2015 WL 847484 (La. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

PITMAN, J.

| defendant Raymond “Bubba” Casaday appeals his conviction for conspiracy to distribute methamphetamine and sentence of 15 years’ imprisonment at hard labor. For the reasons stated herein, we affirm Defendant’s conviction and sentence.

[582]*582 FACTS

Defendant was charged with conspiracy to distribute a Schedule II Controlled Dangerous Substance methamphetamine in Bienville Parish, Louisiana, a violation of La. R.S.14:26 and 40:967(A)(1). A jury trial was held February 19-21, 2013, at which the following evidence was adduced and procedural issues arose.

Bienville Parish Sheriffs Office (“BPSO”) Sgt. Chris Davis testified that, on November 2, 2009, he and Mike Row-lan, a civilian and former police sergeant working undercover for the BPSO, arranged for Sgt. Rowlan to purchase methamphetamine from Ms. Tenia “Dee Dee” Matthews Kelley (“Kelley”).

Sgt. Rowlan and Kelley communicated by phone and arranged a meeting. At approximately 3:00 or 3:30 p.m., Sgt. Davis and another BPSO deputy, Lt. John Micah Crawford, parked their unmarked car near a convenience store in Jamestown, Louisiana, while Sgt. Rowlan parked in another nearby lot. When Kelley arrived in her truck, she pulled in next to Sgt. Rowlan and he gave her money to buy methamphetamine. After the transfer of the money, Kelley drove away to the north.

At about 6:00 p.m., Sgt. Davis and Lt. Crawford traveled north on the same road and observed Kelley’s vehicle at the home of Defendant, which pwas about a mile away from the meeting place. Sgt. Davis and Lt. Crawford returned to the convenience store to wait. Sgt. Davis testified that several hours elapsed before Kelley returned to meet Sgt. Rowlan, and she did so in a different vehicle. After Kelley met Sgt. Rowlan and left the meeting place, Sgt. Davis and Lt. Crawford met with Sgt. Rowlan and retrieved an envelope that Kelley had given him containing a baggie full of methamphetamine.

Kelley testified about her ■ role in the transaction, stating that Sgt. Rowlan had contacted her about buying some methamphetamine, so she called Defendant and his wife, Janice McWilliams (“McWilliams”). Kelley testified that “Bubba told me that yeah, he could — he could handle that for me.” She stated that she did not know Sgt. Rowlan was working for the BPSO when she met him in Jamestown. Sgt. Rowlan told her that he wanted an “eight ball,” or 3½ grams, of methamphetamine. She testified that she took money from him and drove a mile to a mile and a half to “Bubba and Janice’s house” and gave Defendant the money, after which he was to obtain the drugs and bring them back to her.

Kelley stated that she stayed at Defendant’s home while he was gone to get the drugs “three to four hours.” She said that Defendant told her “the first that he had come up on was no good, that he was having to wait for — for them to go get some that was. That one wasn’t no good.” Kelley further stated that the people present at Defendant’s home during these events were herself, Defendant, McWil-liams, and McWilliams’s daughter, Samantha, and son Jesse. Later that evening, two of Jesse’s friends stopped by. She | ¡.testified that, when Defendant returned home, he went with McWilliams into a bedroom, closed the door and then came back out and gave her the drugs in “a little clear zip up thing” that she put into an envelope. She further stated that, when she drove back to Jamestown to meet Sgt. Rowlan and give him the drugs, she used a car owned by Defendant’s family to drive because the car was for sale and she was considering buying it.

Kelley also testified that she sold methamphetamine to Sgt. Rowlan a total of four times and admitted that, as a result of these transactions, she had been charged with four counts of distribution of methamphetamine. Prior to Defendant’s trial, she [583]*583pled guilty to all four counts, receiving a sentence of ten years at hard labor, with all but one suspended and five years’ probation. She spent a year in jail and was on five years’ probation. She stated that she had not been promised anything by the district attorney’s office in exchange for her testimony in Defendant’s case.

BPSO Sgt. Mike Rowlan testified that, at the time of these events, he was retired from the Ouachita Parish Sheriffs Office and was working undercover for the BPSO on a “pay by the day” basis. He stated that, in furtherance of his undercover work, he contacted Kelley asking to buy $300 worth of methamphetamine, and she agreed to meet him in Jamestown. When they met, he gave her the money, whereupon she told him to wait there for her to get the drugs and she would deliver them to him. Sgt. Rowlan testified that he stayed at the meeting location from about 2:30 p.m. that afternoon until about 8:30 p.m. that night when Kelley returned. During this interval, he was texting and talking to Kelley, who [4was explaining to him that “they were having to get it” and that she was getting the drugs from a friend of hers in Jamestown who was a nurse and whose boyfriend worked offshore.

Sgt. Rowlan stated that, when Kelley returned, she was driving a different vehicle, which he subsequently learned was registered to the late husband of McWil-liams. He testified that Kelley told him that obtaining the drugs took a long time because “the meth that they had was not very good, and they had to wait for Mr. Casaday to go get some better meth.”

McWilliams (wife of Defendant), a former registered nurse, admitted that she had already pled guilty to conspiracy to distribute methamphetamine for her role in this incident. She testified that, on November 2, 2009, Kelley called her and asked if she knew where she (Kelley) could buy some methamphetamine. McWilliams told Kelley that she would check around and make some phone calls. Subsequently, Kelley came to her home to deliver some items and to visit her boyfriend, Chris Lee, who was also at McWilliams’s house at the time.

In her testimony, McWilliams denied that either she or Defendant sold methamphetamine to Kelley. She also testified that there was no methamphetamine in their house “until she [Kelley] got there.” She stated that she pled guilty to conspiracy to distribute methamphetamine “cause I carried it out further to see if she could get some. I did not distribute them to her, but according to [sic ] it was a conspiracy that we had discussed it.” McWil-liams further stated that, while Kelley was at her house, she (Kelley) “broke out ... her own supply and a pipe.”

IsMcWilliams also testified that Defendant was at the house that day until late that evening when he left to go to Minden to pick up some rugs from a store to cover newly installed plywood flooring in a bedroom. She stated that Defendant never delivered any drugs to Kelley that day.

Lt. Crawford testified that he was with Sgt. Davis in the unmarked car across from the location where Kelley met Sgt. Rowlan. He stated that they monitored what was happening via cell phone and that, at some point after Kelley left the meeting and during the five hours she was gone, they drove by Defendant’s home several times and saw her vehicle parked outside on each occasion that they passed by, but did not have the house under constant observation.

On cross-examination, Lt. Crawford admitted he had mistakenly testified at McWilliams’s preliminary examination that he’had constant surveillance on the resi[584]

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Bluebook (online)
162 So. 3d 578, 2015 La. App. LEXIS 388, 2015 WL 847484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-casaday-lactapp-2015.