State v. Currie

812 So. 2d 128, 2002 WL 272255
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 13, 2002
Docket2000-KA-2284
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 812 So. 2d 128 (State v. Currie) 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. Currie, 812 So. 2d 128, 2002 WL 272255 (La. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

812 So.2d 128 (2002)

STATE of Louisiana
v.
Robert CURRIE, III.

No. 2000-KA-2284.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

February 13, 2002.

*129 Harry F. Connick, District Attorney, Leslie Parker Tullier, Assistant District Attorney, New Orleans, LA, Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellee.

Herbert V. Larson, Jr., and John Wilson Reed, Robert Glass, Glass & Reed, New Orleans, LA, Counsel for Defendant/Appellant.

LOVE, Judge.

The defendant, Robert Currie, appeals his convictions for second degree murder and attempted second degree murder. For the reasons assigned herein, we vacate the original convictions, find the defendant not guilty of second degree murder and attempted second degree murder by reason of insanity, and remand the matter to the trial court for sentencing in accordance with these findings.

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

The defendant was charged by bill of information with one count of second degree murder, La. R.S. 14:30.1, and one count of attempted second degree murder. La. R.S. 14:27(30.1). He was arraigned September 8, 1997, and pled not guilty. On September 24, 1997, he changed his plea to not guilty and not guilty by reason of insanity. On January 8, 1998, a lunacy hearing was held, and the defendant was found incompetent to stand trial. On March 9, 1998, the defendant was again found incompetent to stand trial. After six-months of treatment, he was found competent to stand trial. A motion to suppress evidence was denied March 26, 1999. On August 26, 1999, a twelve-member jury found the defendant guilty as charged. He filed a motion for new trial. The motion was denied November 9, 1999. The defendant was sentenced to life imprisonment at hard labor without benefit of parole, probation, or suspension of sentence on the second degree murder conviction, and to twenty years at hard labor without benefit of parole, probation, or suspension of sentence on the attempted second degree murder conviction. The sentences were ordered to be served concurrently. The defendant filed a motion for appeal.

FACTS

On June 14, 1997, around noon, the defendant, a troubled fifteen year old at the time of the crime, stabbed his mother, Jacqueline Currie, and his friend, Gene Battistelli, at a French Quarter Hotel while the three were on a trip from Memphis, Tennessee. The mother died of injuries from twenty-four stab wounds to her head down to her knee, with wounds so deep that one entered her nasal cavity, another her lung, and another severed her spine. The wounds were inflicted with great strength in an apparent attempt to hit her heart.

The defendant had come to New Orleans earlier in the year, in February, as a runaway from his father's house. On that visit, he became friends with a circle of "Goths", young people who typically dress *130 in black and share an interest in the occult and vampirism. In particular, he came to know a man known as "The Draven" a/k/a Joshua Johanas. The defendant returned to Memphis where he and Battistelli convinced Jacqueline Currie, with whom they were living, that the defendant owed someone money in New Orleans and that he was in danger. The three set out for New Orleans, and along the way Jacqueline Currie bought the knife for the defendant that he would later use to kill her.

In New Orleans, they checked into the Historic French Quarter Inn, and the two teen-agers immediately left to find the defendant's friends, particularly The Draven. They found him at a coffee shop the group frequented. The defendant drank liquor and took two hits of acid. The group proceeded to party all through the night. They returned to the hotel where the defendant wanted to bring two women they had met into the room where Jacqueline Currie was asleep. Battistelli thought they should not, and an argument ensued. The defendant and The Draven left, and Battistelli and Jacqueline Currie went to sleep.

Battistelli and Jacqueline Currie were having coffee by the pool when the defendant returned mid-morning. The defendant said he had to go to the bathroom and grabbed the keys to the room from his mother's hand even though a bathroom was nearby at the pool. He returned from the room, stabbed the two of them, then returned to the second floor of the hotel.

Sergeant James King found the defendant, within minutes of answering the call, sitting in a yoga position on the second floor of the hotel. He was looking straight forward with his arms extended out over his knees. Both of his wrists were cut, and blood was dripping from his neck. When asked, he told King his name. When asked the identity of the person in the courtyard, he said, "That's my mother." King entered the open door of the nearby room and found a great deal of blood in the dressing area and blood smeared over a mirror, apparently spelling a message.

Battistelli said he met the defendant in a rehabilitation center when he was sixteen years old. He saw him in Memphis in a coffee shop after the defendant's first trip to New Orleans. Battistelli had nowhere to stay, and the defendant offered that he could live with him and his mother in exchange for work on the house. The defendant really wanted to come back to New Orleans to buy clothes, but the two told the defendant's mother that people were looking for him to collect money he owed. The two also planned that Battistelli would find a living space with The Draven so that when the defendant went away to school, he would have a place to run away to. Battistelli said the defendant did not act strange on the way down to New Orleans, and that he had done nothing in the days leading up to the trip to suggest that he had lost touch with reality. He said during their friendship, he had to "calm down" the defendant only once when the defendant had taken LSD and slapped his mother in the face. At some time prior to the trip to New Orleans, Jacqueline Currie had taken a knife the defendant owned to have it professionally sharpened at the defendant's request. When the defendant told her that he had forgotten the knife, she bought him another one on the way to New Orleans.

Once in New Orleans, Battistelli, The Draven, and the defendant smoked pot, drank alcohol, and the defendant took two hits of LSD. He appeared fine during the evening. After they returned to the hotel and the above mentioned girls left, Jacqueline Currie, the defendant, Battistelli, and the Draven remained in the room. Battistelli *131 was awakened sometime after dawn by a fight between the defendant and his mother. The defendant started swinging at Battistelli and broke a chair in the room. Battistelli tried to calm the defendant down and have him take a shower. The defendant seemed very upset and agitated. The three (the defendant, Battistelli, and The Draven) went back to a coffee shop where they had been earlier. They returned to the hotel at 11:00 a.m. The mother was sitting at a table by the pool. The defendant snatched the keys to the room from her hand. Battistelli followed the defendant to the room. The defendant exited the room and sliced Battistelli's throat. The mother ran up, and the defendant started to stab her. Battistelli threw an ashtray at the defendant, and he stabbed Battistelli in the shoulder. The defendant continued stabbing his mother, and then began cutting himself. He said, "This is how I end it all." Battistelli grabbed the knife and threw it toward a stairwell. The defendant retrieved the knife. Battistelli grabbed an aerosol can from a nearby maid's cart, and told the defendant that he had a lighter and would burn his eyes out. The defendant smiled, sliced his own throat, and walked up the stairs of the hotel.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
812 So. 2d 128, 2002 WL 272255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-currie-lactapp-2002.