State v. Duplessis

785 So. 2d 939, 2001 WL 540480
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 28, 2001
Docket2000-KA-2122
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 785 So. 2d 939 (State v. Duplessis) 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. Duplessis, 785 So. 2d 939, 2001 WL 540480 (La. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

785 So.2d 939 (2001)

STATE of Louisiana
v.
Taurean DUPLESSIS.

No. 2000-KA-2122.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

March 28, 2001.

*941 Harry F. Connick, District Attorney, Leslie P. Tullier, Assistant District Atorney, New Orleans, Counsel for State of Louisiana.

Gary W. Bizal, Pierce & Bizal, New Orleans, Counsel for Taurean Duplessis.

Court composed of Judge CHARLES R. JONES, Judge PATRICIA RIVET MURRAY, and Judge DENNIS R. BAGNERIS, Sr.

CHARLES R. JONES, Judge.

Taurean Duplessis appeals his conviction and sentence for the attempted manslaughter of Leroy Butler. We affirm.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Duplessis was charged by bill of information with the attempted second-degree murder of Butler, a violation of La. R.S. 14:(27) 30.1. He was convicted by a twelve-person jury of the responsive verdict of attempted manslaughter. He was sentenced to serve ten years at hard labor with credit for time served. His sentence was suspended and he was placed on ten years active probation with conditions including that he report to the Orleans Parish Prison every weekend. This timely appeal follows.

FACTS

At trial, Officers Alvin Poole and Alvin Theard each testified that they responded to a call of an aggravated battery by shooting. When they arrived at the scene, they observed a young man lying face down on the front of the residence. It appeared that the victim had sustained a gunshot wound to his back. A person was standing over the victim applying pressure to the wound. On the ground next to the victim was a spent bullet casing. The front door of the residence was open. Officer Poole observed blood on the front porch. The victim was still conscious and aware of his surroundings. When the victim was questioned by Officer Poole as to what happened, the victim stated that his neighbor, Taurean, shot him. The person standing over the victim identified the shooter, Taurean, as his nephew. Officer Poole testified that it appeared that the victim was shot in the side and that the bullet exited from his back. Officer Poole further testified that he did not enter the house at any time. He stated that he was told that the shooting was over a dispute about a pair of tennis shoes. Officer Poole testified that the crime lab technicians took photographs both outside and inside the residence.

On cross-examination, Officer Poole testified that it appeared that the victim was shot in the left side but that he was not sure. He further testified that he did not search the house for weapons or anything else. He testified that Officer Theard and Detective Davis went into the residence. He was unable to testify if Officer Theard and Detective Davis searched for weapons. The bullet casing found near the victim was found in the grass near the driveway.

*942 On re-direct examination Officer Poole testified that he did not search the house. He testified that he observed the spent bullet casing on the ground near the victim but he was not the person who retrieved the casing.

Officer Theard testified that he and Detective Fred Bates went into the residence to search for a perpetrator and a possible weapon. He testified that he observed drops of blood at the entrance to the victim's home and blood just inside the front door to the victim's home. A baseball cap was located inside the victim's home. A sock was located beneath the rear kitchen window. The burglar bar frame was damaged where the bullet exited the victim and struck the bar. Small bullet fragments were found beneath the burglar bars. Outside of the residence below the kitchen window another sock was found lying on the ground. The kitchen windowpane was damaged and the screen was damaged. On the front lawn, near the victim, Officer Theard observed a spent bullet casing that appeared to come from some type of assault rifle.

On cross-examination, Officer Theard testified that he and Detective Bates went into the residence and that Officer Poole did not enter the residence. He testified that the reason for entering the residence was to look for the perpetrator and weapons. They looked for whatever could be seen in "plain view", however, no perpetrator or weapons were found in the house. The only other person at the scene when he arrived, other than the victim, was the victim's uncle.

On re-direct examination, Officer Theard testified that he was the lead investigator until Detective Bates arrived on the scene.

Detective Bates testified that he investigated the shooting of Butler. He confirmed when he arrived at that scene, Officers Theard and Poole were present, and that the EMS had not yet arrived. He testified that he and Officer Theard searched the house and the entire block for the perpetrator. He had obtained information during the course of the initial investigation that the shooter ran from the victim's home and went around the corner in an eastbound direction. No arrest was made on the day of the shooting. Detective Bates testified that he obtained an arrest warrant for Taurean Duplessis. Several days after the shooting, Duplessis turned himself in at the Seventh District Police Station and was arrested.

Detective Bates further confirmed that several blood splatters were seen on the front porch. Directly inside the front door of the residence was a smearing of blood. An indentation in the metal frame around the front door was also visible. Inside the living room was a black Raiders skullcap type hat and a bandana. A black sock was observed on the floor inside below the rear kitchen window. The window was broken and the screen was damaged. Another black sock was lying on the ground below the rear kitchen window. He also observed that the light bulbs in the fixtures around the rear of the house had been unscrewed. He was unable to determine why the bulbs were unscrewed. He received information that the hole in the kitchen window screen was not there prior to the shooting. He stated that the bullet casing found at the scene was a large type belonging to an assault type SKS or AK 47-type rifle. No weapon was recovered from the scene. At the time of the search no one was inside the residence.

On cross-examination, Detective Bates testified that he did not perform any trace powder examination of the victim's hands to determine if he had fired a weapon. He stated that in addition to Officer Theard, Detective Adams also searched various rooms of the residence with him. He also *943 testified that the rear door of the house was locked with a deadbolt only allowing someone to enter if they had a key.

On re-direct examination, Detective Bates testified that no blood was found anywhere in the house except near the front door.

Leroy Butler, the victim, testified that he was sixteen years old and lived next door to Duplessis. He testified that he and Duplessis knew each other well and often played basketball and football together. He testified that he was the victim of the shooting in this instance, and that he was at home alone at the time of the shooting. He testified that prior to the shooting an incident occurred between himself and Duplessis over a pair of tennis shoes in late January. Butler stated that he owned an orange, grey and black pair of Nike Max tennis shoes which Duplessis wanted to purchase for seventy dollars. Duplessis asked for the shoes to wear and told Butler that he would pay him the following day. When Duplessis did not pay for the shoes the next day, Butler challenged him to a fight outside Duplessis' house. Everybody in the neighborhood was outside watching the fight.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
785 So. 2d 939, 2001 WL 540480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-duplessis-lactapp-2001.