State v. Cruz
This text of 455 So. 2d 1351 (State v. Cruz) 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.
Opinion
STATE of Louisiana
v.
Louis CRUZ, Jr.
Supreme Court of Louisiana.
*1352 William J. Guste, Jr., Atty. Gen., Barbara Rutledge, Asst. Atty. Gen., John M. Mamoulides, Dist. Atty., Louise Korns, Phillip Boudousque, Clarence McManus, Patrick Leitz, Gerald Alonzo, Robert Pitre, Asst. Dist. Attys., for plaintiff-appellee.
Rebecca Sawyer, New Orleans, for defendant-appellant.
DENNIS, Justice.
Defendant, Louis Cruz was convicted by a jury of first degree murder, La.R.S. 14:30, but the jury was unable to agree on a penalty recommendation. The trial court in accord with law sentenced defendant to life imprisonment without benefit of probation, *1353 parole or suspension of sentence. Defendant appealed.
FACTS
On the morning of August 22, 1981, the body of twenty-two year old Susan Todorov was discovered floating in the Mississippi River in Jefferson Parish near Gretna, Louisiana. The body, clad only in a bra and blouse, was found about 30 feet from shore near a barge dock and other property owned by the J.W. Stone Oil Company. On the batture, between the levee and the water's edge, were a pair of underpants, a shoe, a matchbook from Gatsby's Lounge and a pack of Winston cigarettes. On a wharf nearby, there was a woman's silver chain minus its diamond pendant. Police observed footprints and drag marks, four to five feet from the underwear, leading down to the river. The clothing, shoe and chain were identified as Todorov's; a set of diamond earrings and a watch she wore when last seen were missing. According to Todorov's mother, the 4' 10", 85 pound victim could not swim and was terrified of water.
Todorov was last seen alive leaving Gatsby's Lounge in Gretna with Louis Cruz, the defendant, on the evening of July 19. She had been celebrating her forthcoming marriage with two girl friends, Jo Alice and Penny. Her fiancé stopped by the lounge momentarily that night to swap cars, leaving Todorov his orange Trans Am. According to Jo Alice, while at Gatsby's the women met and talked with Louis Cruz, the defendant. Jo Alice and Todorov left the bar several times to go to the parking lot. There was evidence that Todorov, Jo Alice and Cruz were smoking marijuana that evening. Once, Jo Alice, Todorov and defendant went to the orange Trans Am together and Jo Alice put her brown purse, containing her wallet and house keys, under the passenger's seat in the front of the car.
A Jefferson Parish detective, Officer Rees, saw Todorov, Jo Alice and Cruz standing by the Trans Am outside Gatsby's at about two in the morning. He spoke with them momentarily, after which the two women rejoined Cruz and all three went back inside the lounge. Jo Alice testified that a few minutes later Todorov left the lounge and Cruz walked out behind her. Officer Rees testified that Todorov and Cruz got into the orange Trans Am and drove away.
Cruz was next seen at 6:00 a.m. at the Sahara Lounge in Belle Chase. A barmaid recognized him when she reported for work and also noticed an orange Trans Am parked nearby. Michael Bellamy testified that he saw Cruz about 9 a.m. in Belle Chase when Cruz gave Bellamy a ride in an orange Trans Am, which he claimed was a "company" car. Sometime during the ride, Bellamy noticed an object under his feet which he found to be a brown, ladies' purse that had come from under the passenger's seat.
Later that day, credit card purchases were recorded in Gretna, Biloxi and Pascagoula on the accounts of both Susan Todorov and her fiancé. The manager of a shoe store in Biloxi recalled one sale. He picked out defendant's photograph from a line-up and made a positive in-court identification of Cruz as the man who had used the credit card.
Between 10:30 and 11 p.m. on the evening of Thursday, August 20, 1981, Jo Alice was at home putting her child to bed when she heard a noise. She looked up and saw Cruz standing outside at an opened, unscreened window. He shook a set of keys, which she recognized as her own, and told her "I'm going to kill you like I killed her." Jo Alice saw an orange Trans Am parked outside. She screamed and ran into the room where her sister and brother-in-law were sleeping. When Jo Alice returned with her brother-in-law to the window where she had seen Cruz, both he and the Trans Am were gone.
On Saturday, August 22, 1981, the body of Susan Todorov was recovered from the river. According to Dr. Alvaro Hunt, the pathologist who performed the autopsy, the body was in an advanced stage of decomposition due to the high temperature of *1354 the atmosphere and water. There was no evidence of physical wounds or of bruising around the neck to suggest strangulation; no evidence of death by natural disease processes; and no evidence consistent with rape. The sole finding made by the pathologist was that a hemorrhage to two small bones had occurred. These bones, `petrous portion of the temporal bones' are located above and central to the internal ear near the base of the skull; a hemorrhage in this area is "very common" in deaths by drowning. Such a hemorrhage is also consistent with other forms of death by asphyxia. Dr. Hunt did not perform any tests to determine the presence and amount of alcohol or drugs in her body. He explained that decomposition "precluded ... any satisfactory drug analyses," for the process of decomposition itself produces alcohol. At the completion of the autopsy, Dr. Hunt concluded that he "was unable to determine the cause of death or the manner in which she died." During his trial testimony, however, Dr. Hunt stated that the pathological evidence was consistent with a death caused by drowning or asphyxia.
Four days after the autopsy Detective Dennis Dunn of the Gretna Police Department and members of the New Orleans Police Department executed a warrant for the arrest of Louis Cruz. Cruz was transported to the Algiers Police Station, where Dunn verbally advised him of his rights. Dunn asked if he wanted a cigarette and offered Cruz one from his own pack of Winstons. Cruz asked "[w]as that the same cigarettes you found on the river batture?" Detective Dunn then asked defendant Cruz whether he would like to waive his rights and make a written statement. Defendant declined, and requested to speak with an attorney.
Assignment of Error No. 1
Defendant argues that the trial court erred in denying the defendant's second motion for a new trial despite new evidence presented at a supplementary evidentiary hearing which demonstrated a prejudicial error and defect in the proceeding.
Dr. Hunt, the state's pathologist, testified at trial that he did not perform any tests to determine the presence and amount of alcohol or other drugs in the victim's body because its state of decomposition precluded any satisfactory drug analyses. Following decomposition, he said, the body produces its own alcohol and other compounds which interfere with the definitive determination of drugs and drug levels. At the evidentiary hearing on the new trial motion defendant presented testimony by a Tennessee pathologist to the effect that, although a body's decay makes analysis more difficult, there are tests which afford accurate toxicological measurements even under these circumstances. Dr. Hunt at the evidentiary hearing acknowledged the availability of such tests but testified that they are not as reliable as the Tennessee pathologist claimed. Dr. Hunt stated that the performance of such tests in the present case was unwarranted because of both the body's decomposition and the circumstances known to surround the crime at the time of the autopsy.
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455 So. 2d 1351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cruz-la-1984.