State v. Farry

206 So. 3d 1222, 16 La.App. 3 Cir. 210, 2016 La. App. LEXIS 2107
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 16, 2016
Docket16-210
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 206 So. 3d 1222 (State v. Farry) 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. Farry, 206 So. 3d 1222, 16 La.App. 3 Cir. 210, 2016 La. App. LEXIS 2107 (La. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

SAVOIE, Judge.

hThe Defendant, William Farry, was convicted by a jury of armed robbery, a violation of La.R.S. 14:64. The State charged the Defendant as a habitual offender. The trial court found the Defendant to be a third habitual offender and sentenced him to life imprisonment. The Defendant now appeals his conviction.1

The Defendant, through his attorney, assigns two errors:

1. The circumstantial evidence in this case was insufficient to convict the Defendant of armed robbery.
2. The trial court erred by not granting the Defendant’s Pro Se Motion for a New Trial due to an improper ruling on the admissibility of evidence during the pretrial Prieur hearing and a lack of reasonable notice.2

Additionally, the Defendant assigns two pro se errors:

1. The State failed to prove, by clear and convincing evidence, other crimes evidence.
2. Trial court erred in denying the Defendant’s motion for new trial.

After a review of the record, the Defendant’s conviction is affirmed.

FACTS

In May 2009, someone entered James Fodrie’s (Mr. Fodrie) home armed with a baseball bat. The robber took fifteen dollars ($15.00), a gun, and a coin bag containing mostly German coins and currency.

The trial was held six years later in June 2015.

That same night, prior to the robbery, Mr. Fodrie, ran into Bridgette Bass Schwarz (Ms. Schwarz) at a bar called “Detour” that he often frequented. Mr. Fodrie knew Ms. Schwarz as she had previously worked as a bartender at Detour. 12Mr. Fodrie recalled Ms. Schwarz entered with two men and then approached him. After talking for a while, Ms. Schwarz asked Mr. Fodrie if she could eat supper at his house. Mr. Fodrie went home and began cooking supper when Ms. Schwarz called and asked him to pick her up at her home in Westlake, Louisiana. Mr. Fodrie lived in Sulphur, Louisiana. Mr. Fodrie estimated that it took him twenty minutes to travel to her house. Once they arrived at Mr. Fodrie’s home and talked for a while, Mr. Fodrie recalled Ms. Schwarz took a phone call and walked outside. Around five minutes after Ms. Schwarz returned from outside, the robber, carrying a baseball bat, entered the home. Mr. Fodrie recalled the robber had on a black sweatshirt with a hood, a white mask, and white gloves. The robber asked him for money, and Mr. Fodrie took $15.00 dollars out of his shirt pocket and threw it on the coffee table. The robber instructed Mr. Fodrie and Ms. Schwarz to get on the floor, and the robber instructed Ms. Schwarz to tie up Mr. Fodrie with a phone cord. The robber then tied up Ms. Schwarz and placed Mr. Fodrie and Ms. Schwarz in a closet. Mr. Fodrie was of the opinion that the robber was a man based on his voice. He did not find anything strange about the voice. According to Mr. Fodrie, the robber took his gun, his coin collection contained in a black coin bag, and Mr. Fodrie and Ms. Schwarz’s cell phones.3 The gun and the coin collection were kept in the drawer in Mr. Fodrie’s bedside table. After the robber left, Mr. Fodrie and Ms. Schwarz went to the neighbor’s home and called 911.4 The call was made at approximately 10:12 p.m.

[1225]*1225At trial, Mr. Fodrie identified the black pouch given to police as the one that was stolen from him. Mr. Fodrie explained that, after the robbery, he did not see | athe stolen coins until he was called to the police station two years later. Mr. Fodrie testified as to what was in the black coin bag, explaining, in pertinent part:

A. Yeah, I got some of the Deutsche marks and the pennies and—five pennies, marks in different denominations, the German Deutsche mark and the pennies. Fifty Deutsche marks and your twenty Deutsche mark.
Q. Let’s talk specifically about how you came into possession of the coins and those marks.
A. This is money and everything that I carried with me and everything when I was stationed in Europe when I was in the Army and this is the money that I brought back from Germany with me, and it’s just of sentimental value, but what else I had in this here at the time was Liberty halves. I had some 1800 silver dollars. I have the Anthony dollars, the gold dollars. I had some buffalo nickels, wheat dimes, and one penny that was 1926 and everything I kept just because of the age. I mean I had various different coins that was collectors.
Q. And—
A. That are no longer here.
Q. And those items—some of those items that you had just mentioned are missing from there?
A. Yes.

Mr. Fodrie testified Ms. Schwarz was not left alone in his home, and she did not go into his bedroom

Ms. Schwarz testified that, at the time the offense occurred, she lived with the Defendant who was her boyfriend. Her daughters Kristin and Kari Bass lived with her off and on. She recalled that, on May 30, 2009, she, the Defendant, and two other men were sitting around her home. Ms. Schwarz stated that the two men grabbed her, and the Defendant injected her with cocaine after which she passed out on the bed for an hour. She was awakened by the Defendant. Ms. Schwarz further testified, in pertinent part:

LA. When I woke up they were crushing the pills upon the dresser and melting them and putting water over them and trying to put them in a Visine bottle, and they told me to get dressed, so I was getting dressed and then the other two guys left and then Will informed me what he wanted me to do.
Q Now, at this time you’ve already been injected supposedly?
A. Yes sir.
Q. And what did you think about this?
A. I was scared.
Q. Why didn’t you notify some authorities?
A. I was scared. I’m high on cocaine. My state of mind, I was high on cocaine. This is somebody that I’ve dated.

Another friend of the Defendant’s, referred to as “Johnny Cash,” came by the home between thirty minutes and an hour later. The Defendant wanted Ms. Schwarz to go into a bar, put Xanax in a patron’s drink, and lure the patron out of the bar for the Defendant to rob. The three left the home to carry out the Defendant’s plan.

Ms. Schwarz testified that, after she came out of the first bar, the Defendant punched her because she did not find anyone to drug. After going to two or three bars, the Defendant told her to give him the Visine bottle, and they would order a drink. Ms. Schwarz did not put Xanax in anyone’s drink. She testified that she thought the plan to rob someone had been abandoned.

Around 5:30 p.m., the three entered Detour bar. Ms. Schwarz began talking to [1226]*1226Mr. Fodi’ie whom she knew from previously working as a bartender at Detour. After being in the bar for twenty-five to thirty minutes, the Defendant told her it was time to leave. Ms. Schwarz thought the Defendant was jealous. Mr. Fodrie and Ms. Schwarz made plans to meet for supper at Mr. Fodrie’s home, and Ms. I ¿Schwarz then returned to her home.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Farry
270 So. 3d 673 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2019)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
206 So. 3d 1222, 16 La.App. 3 Cir. 210, 2016 La. App. LEXIS 2107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-farry-lactapp-2016.