State v. Coleman

121 So. 3d 703, 2013 WL 3744108, 2013 La. App. LEXIS 1466
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 17, 2013
DocketNo. 48,168-KA
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 121 So. 3d 703 (State v. Coleman) 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. Coleman, 121 So. 3d 703, 2013 WL 3744108, 2013 La. App. LEXIS 1466 (La. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

CARAWAY, J.

hKimethia Coleman was charged with second degree murder, a violation of La. R.S. 14:30.1, and a jury convicted her as charged. The trial court sentenced Coleman to the mandatory sentence of life imprisonment at hard labor without parole, probation or suspension of sentence. Coleman appeals her conviction raising four assignments of trial error. We affirm.

Facts

On January 17, 2010, just before 4:00 a.m., Coleman called Caddo Parish 911 from the apartment of her boyfriend, Brian Spinks, in Shreveport. Spinks was in the United States Air Force and had dated Coleman for over a year. Police discovered Spinks partially blocking the front door of the apartment. He had been stabbed 64 times in the upper torso and his throat had been slashed. Spinks expired at the scene. An autopsy revealed that the victim received two fatal wounds including a 3-inch stab wound at the base of the neck and an incised wound in the front of the neck.1

The living area of the apartment where Spinks lay on his back was doused in blood. Two kitchen knives, one broken and one intact, from the kitchen butcher block holder, were found on the floor in this room. Coleman was covered in blood and was crying and upset. She had a knife wound in her right mid-abdomen, another in her lower left abdomen, a cut |2on one hand and two cuts on each thigh.2 Coleman was able to tell the officers that a “black” guy with “dreads,” or dreadlocked hair, followed her to Spinks’ apartment and inflicted the fatal wounds. Nevertheless, police were unable to locate a third person assailant.

Coleman was transported to a hospital for treatment of her minor wounds and then transferred to the Shreveport police department at approximately 7:00 a.m. She spoke with officers who described her [706]*706emotions as fluctuating wildly. Eventually, Coleman was given her rights and executed a waiver. During her recorded interview, Coleman requested several times to speak with her mother by telephone.

Coleman initially told police that earlier in the evening she had gone out with friends to different clubs. Near the end of the evening, at approximately 2:00 a.m., she ran into Spinks, who was also out for the evening with friends. Coleman indicated that because she and Spinks had an agreement not to be in the same bar when they went out separately, she approached him at the club and told him not to be angry with her. Other witnesses in the bar indicated that Coleman was angry when she approached Spinks and threatened to “whoop his ass.”

After the encounter, Spinks left the bar and tried to call Coleman.3 The phone message indicated that Spinks called Coleman to “tell [her] that |3we’re done.” Coleman did not hear the phone call but later tried to call Spinks before going to his apartment.

During her questioning by police, Coleman first indicated that while she and Spinks were in the back bedroom of the apartment talking, an intruder forced his way into the apartment and began attacking Spinks with a knife. As she had done earlier, Coleman described the intruder as a black man with dreadlocks whom she knew only by his first name, John.

During her interview, when confronted by Spinks’ phone message, Coleman became angry with police detectives. She interviewed with one officer for an hour and a half before requesting to speak alone with another detective. During this private 10-15 minute interview, Coleman told the detective that Spinks had hit her before that evening and she was embarrassed about that fact. She indicated that after she arrived at Spinks’ apartment, the two began arguing in the bedroom when Spinks grabbed her by the throat, pinched her hand and stabbed her four or five times. After the initial argument, she was able to break away, but Spinks went into the kitchen, came back and continued to argue with her. She explained that Spinks then stabbed her in the legs and torso with a kitchen knife. Coleman then said that she went into the kitchen to get a knife of her own before she and Spinks began fighting in the living room. She said that she took the knife away from Spinks and, according to the detective, “had to do what she had to do.”4 Coleman then again indicated that the person named John5 ^entered the apartment and continued to stab Spinks. At that point, she requested an attorney and the interview was terminated.

Coleman was then allowed to use a telephone in the detective’s office to call her mother. Calls on these phones are recorded at the discretion of the officers, and the phones have a sticker informing the user of that fact. The detective chose to record [707]*707Coleman’s call. In this phone call, Coleman informed her mother that she did not believe she was being recorded. She also said that she had told the police a story about a guy coming in and then changed her story to claim self-defense. The detective was standing in the doorway of his office but did not hear the conversation.

Coleman was initially charged with manslaughter and subsequently indicted on February 25, 2010, for second degree murder. She pled not guilty and not guilty by reason of insanity.6

On April 5, 2011, Coleman’s counsel filed a motion for the appointment of a sanity commission urging that Coleman did not have the ability to proceed due to a suspected mental problem. The trial court found Coleman incompetent to proceed and transferred her to the Feliciana Forensic Facility for 90 days. Coleman returned to court on November 2, 2011, and was then found competent to stand trial. That same day, the matter was set for trial on April 23, 2012.

Coleman’s counsel sought three continuances of the trial which were denied by the trial court.

| ⅞ Coleman also filed a number of pretrial motions including a motion to suppress her statements to police and to her mother on the grounds that she was in a state of shock and the statements were not freely and voluntarily given. That motion was heard and denied by the trial court.

Trial commenced on April 23, 2012. At trial, Coleman testified that on the night of the murder when she got to Spinks’ apartment, he told her, “I told you not to go the club, you should listen to me,” and began to choke her while the two were in the bedroom. Coleman claimed that her relationship with Spinks had become abusive. Coleman testified that Spinks left the room and got a knife from the kitchen. She claimed that she fought with Spinks over the knife and that Spinks inflicted stab wounds on her sides, stomach and leg. Thereafter, Coleman claimed that she went into the kitchen and got a knife for herself. According to Coleman; the two began fighting with the knives in the living room, and she defended herself by stabbing Spinks “because he was trying to attack me. He was trying to kill me.”

Coleman said that the victim grabbed her in an effort to keep her there. She could not remember all of the ensuing events, including how many times she may have stabbed Spinks, explaining that “I must have blanked out.” Coleman admitted that she lied during the 911 call because she was scared and shocked. She also admitted that she lied to police about another individual stabbing Spinks.7

|fiThe jury unanimously convicted Coleman of second degree murder. After imposition of the mandatory life sentence, Coleman appealed.

Discussion

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
121 So. 3d 703, 2013 WL 3744108, 2013 La. App. LEXIS 1466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-coleman-lactapp-2013.