State v. Cornejo-Garcia

90 So. 3d 458, 11 La.App. 5 Cir. 619, 2012 WL 206305, 2012 La. App. LEXIS 45
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 24, 2012
DocketNo. 11-KA-619
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 90 So. 3d 458 (State v. Cornejo-Garcia) 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. Cornejo-Garcia, 90 So. 3d 458, 11 La.App. 5 Cir. 619, 2012 WL 206305, 2012 La. App. LEXIS 45 (La. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

SUSAN M. CHEHARDY, Judge.

|2On February 26, 2009, a Jefferson Parish Grand Jury indicted defendant, Jose Cornejo-Garcia, and four co-defendants1 on four counts of second degree murder, in violation of La. R.S. 14:30.1, for the homicides of Wallace Gomez, Beauford Gomez, Jeffrey Carmadelle, and Wayne Hebert. On March 22, 2010, the State agreed to sever the trials of the five defendants. That day, the trial court also granted defendants’ motions to quash count two of the indictment with respect to the homicide of Beauford Gomez.2

On November 16, 2010, trial commenced. The next day, a twelve-person jury returned a unanimous verdict of guilty as charged on all counts. On November 23, 2010, the trial court sentenced defendant to three consecutive sentences of life imprisonment at hard labor without benefit of parole, probation, or suspension of sentence. On November 30, 2010, the trial court denied defendant’s motion to reconsider sentence and granted his motion for appeal.

Facts

IsAround 2:00 p.m. on Thursday, October 30, 2008, five Hispanic males entered Gomez’s Bar on Fourth Street in Marrero, Louisiana. They ordered drinks from the bar then moved towards the pool tables. Moments later, however, these men, brandishing firearms, corralled the bar patrons near the back of the barroom and told everyone to empty their pockets. As Wallace Gomez, one of the bar’s owners, came out from the back room of the bar in response to the commotion, one of the gunmen, later identified as Renel Esco-bar-Rivera, grabbed him, put a .357 magnum to his head, and forced him back into [461]*461the office.3

Stanley Gomez, Wallace’s brother and the bar’s co-owner, who had been behind the bar before the men entered, tried to go into a rear storeroom but was quickly forced back into the bar by one of the gunman. Stanley watched as the gunman, later identified as Mario Funes, opened the bar’s cash register and dropped the cash drawer on the floor. The other three men were busy pilfering the bar patrons’ wallets, currency, cellular phones, and other property.

A few minutes later, Escobar-Rivera came running out with a bag in his hand shouting in Spanish. In response to his shouts, all of the robbers except Mario Funes fled the bar.

Wallace, now armed, emerged from the back room in pursuit of the robbers. One of the patrons alerted Wallace that one of the men was still behind the bar. When Funes emerged, Wallace confronted him, asking, “Are you one of them?” The armed man did not respond.

Although there is conflicting testimony as to who fired first, it is uncontroverted that, at that point, Wallace and Funes exchanged gunfire.4 During |4this exchange, seventy-six-year-old Wallace and seventy-year-old Beauford Gomez, a third Gomez brother, who had been seated at the bar, were shot and mortally wounded. Funes also sustained a gunshot wound.

When they heard the gunfire, two of the robbers, who had already exited the bar, ran back in firing their weapons and dragged their wounded accomplice outside. During this exchange, two bar patrons— Jeffrey Carmadelle and Wayne Hebert— were shot.

Just as the three robbers made it to the parking lot, Detective Rhonda Goff of the Jefferson Parish Sheriffs Office drove by in her marked patrol car on her way to work. As she passed Gomez’s, she saw three Hispanic men covered in blood standing right outside of the front door of the bar. Two of the men, later identified as defendant herein and Rigoberto Funes, were carrying a third man, Mario Funes, who was injured.5 When she first spotted the men, they were facing east towards her but they abruptly turned to cut across a field away from her.

Detective Goff testified that she immediately thought that the situation was odd when the men did not attempt to signal her — a police officer — for help. After she stopped the men to investigate, several bar patrons approached to inform her that the men had just killed four people. Detective Goff quickly handcuffed the two uninjured men and called for backup. At trial, Detective Goff identified defendant herein as one of the men who was carrying his wounded accomplice.

In the meantime, two of the gunmen, later identified as Pedro Navarette-Duran and Renel Escobar-Rivera, fled the , scene [462]*462in their vehicle.6 However, Charles Hen-ning, who had just pulled into the parking lot as the robbers were |sfleeing the bar, wrote down the vehicle’s license plate number and gave it to Detective Goff.

Deputies and paramedics testified that, when they entered the bar, “there was blood and money everywhere.” Wallace and Beauford Gomez were pronounced dead at the scene by the authorities. The two bar patrons, Jeffrey Carmadelle and Wayne Hebert, were transported to a hospital where they were pronounced dead on arrival. The injured suspect was transported for medical treatment then arrested upon release from the hospital.

After hearing the testimony and evidence, the twelve-person jury found this defendant guilty as charged on all three counts. This appeal follows.

ANALYSIS:

On appeal, defendant raises two assignments of error: first, the trial court erroneously denied his request for special jury instructions7 and, second, his consecutive sentences are excessive.

With respect to his first assigned error, defendant contends that the trial judge erred in denying two special jury instructions. The first instruction was an exception to the rule that an aggressor cannot claim the right of self-defense, which provides that an aggressor may claim self-defense if “he withdraws from the conflict in good faith and in such a manner that his adversary knows or should know that he desires to withdraw and discontinue the conflict.” La. R.S. 14:21. The second instruction addresses the permissibility of the use of deadly force to prevent the commission of a crime:

Two things must concur in order to justify us in killing another to prevent him from committing some act: first, it must reasonably appear necessary in order to prevent him from committing a crime; and second, the crime to be prevented must be a great crime, and not a petty offense from which no great injury would result to us or others, 16in body or property. Therefore, if it reasonably appears that the crime can be prevented by any other available means, as by a warning, by a show of force, or by the use of any force short of killing, the killing would not be justified.

State v. Plumlee, 177 La. 687, 149 So. 425, 428-29 (1933).

In its reply, the State asserts that the trial court was correct in its determination that the facts did not support the requested instructions.

La.C.Cr.P. art. 802 mandates that the trial court instruct the jury on the law applicable to each case. State v. Batiste, 06-824, p. 14 (La.App. 5 Cir. 3/13/07), 956 So.2d 626, 636, unit denied, 07-0892 (La.1/25/08), 973 So.2d 751. The trial court is required to charge the jury on the law applicable to any theory of defense, when properly requested, which the jurors could reasonably infer from the evidence. Id.

La.C.Cr.P. art.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 So. 3d 458, 11 La.App. 5 Cir. 619, 2012 WL 206305, 2012 La. App. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cornejo-garcia-lactapp-2012.