State v. Fisher

40 So. 3d 1020, 2010 WL 1997119
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 18, 2010
Docket2009-KA-1187
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 40 So. 3d 1020 (State v. Fisher) 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. Fisher, 40 So. 3d 1020, 2010 WL 1997119 (La. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

JOAN BERNARD ARMSTRONG, Chief Judge.

STATEMENT OF CASE

On January 15, 2004, a grand jury indictment was issued charging the defendant, Isiah Fisher, with one count of aggravated rape. The defendant pled not *1022 guilty at his arraignment on January 26, 2004. On September 14, 2004, the State filed its response to the defendant’s motion for bill of particulars and motion for discovery. Among other motions, the State also filed a Priemr Notice informing the defendant that it sought to introduce evidence that the defendant committed numerous acts of sexual abuse upon his biological daughter between 1981 and 1986 in an around the Parishes of Ascension and Calcasieu in the State of Louisiana. 1

On November 12, 2008, the defendant elected trial by judge. He was found guilty as charged. On May 15, 2009, the defendant filed a motion for new trial and for arrest of judgment. The trial court denied the motion. The defendant waived all delays, and was sentenced to serve life imprisonment in the custody of the Department of Corrections without benefit of probation, parole, or suspension of sentence. The defendant’s motion for appeal was granted.

| STATEMENT OF FACT

The victim’s father, C.S., testified that in the summer of 1999, he was living with his daughter, D.S., in New Orleans, Louisiana, who was eleven years old at the time. 2 The father had custody of his daughter, but her mother, A.W. would take her on the weekends. On August 14, 1999, a Saturday, C.S. dropped his daughter off at her grandmother’s house sometime before noon. The defendant was married to D.S.’s grandmother at that time and lived at the same location.

A.W. testified that she had a sister and brother who lived with her mother. On August 14, 1999, A.W., her mother, sister, and brother attended the funeral of a family friend. When she and her family left for the funeral, D.S. stayed at the house to watch her younger sister and brother, as well as a younger cousin. The defendant was not at the house when the adults left. A.W. could not recall if he was there when they returned later that evening.

In 2003, A.W. was living in Georgia, and her daughter was living in Texas. In April of that year, she remembered receiving an instant message from her daughter. Her first reaction was to call and speak with her. After that, A.W. telephoned several family members to inquire whether they had ever been molested, harassed or approached by the defendant. One of the people A.W. called was J.L., the defendant’s daughter.

Based on her conversation with J.L., A.W. was able to convince D.S. to give a statement to the police, which she did in June of 2003. A.W. waited until June 2003, when school had let out, to travel to New Orleans to meet with the police. 13After meeting with the police, A.W. took D.S. to Children’s Hospital and to the Children’s Advocacy Center.

D.S. testified that sometime prior to April 14, 1999, she went to her grandmother’s house to baby-sit her brother, sister and her cousin because her mother was going to attend a funeral. After the adults left the house, D.S. was in the front of the house watching television and listening to music. The younger children were in the back of the house playing.

D.S. was dancing to a song when the defendant entered the room and braced up against her, putting his arms around her waist. D.S. did not hear the defendant enter the house. D.S. moved away from the defendant and went to the back of the *1023 house where the other children were. D.S. remained in the back of the house until she heard a car start in the rear of the house. Believing that the defendant had left, D.S. went back to what she was doing in the front of the house.

Approximately twenty or thirty minutes later, D.S. was seated on the sofa when she felt someone put their arm across her chest and saw the defendant come around to the front of the sofa. She did not hear him renter the house through the back door.

The defendant used his arm to keep her from getting up. When he came around to the front of the sofa, he began to pull down her pants. He was covering her mouth. After he removed her pants and underwear, he unbuckled his pants and removed his penis. The defendant repositioned D.S. towards the edge of the sofa and then inserted his penis into her vagina while he lay on top of her.

After he was finished, he pulled his pants back up and left the room. He returned with a wash cloth and told her to wipe herself off and then went into the 14backyard. Later that day he told her not to tell anyone or he would do the same thing to her sister, which is why she did not tell anyone about being raped.

In April 2003, while D.S. was living in Texas with her father, she disclosed what had happened to her to a speaker who came to her church to talk about her own sexual abuse, and who encouraged her to tell her father. Instead, D.S. went home and sent her mother an instant message that she had something really important to tell her. After that, her mother called her.

The defendant’s daughter, J.L., who was thirty-six years old at the time of trial, testified that she first met her father when she was five or six years old when she was living in Donaldsonville, Louisiana, with her grandmother, the defendant’s mother.

Approximately every other weekend the defendant would take her in his car to St. James, Louisiana, where he lived with his girlfriend. Her father would always take the river road and stop at the sugarcane fields where he would stop the car touch her on her breast and in between her legs. She was eight years old at the time.

By the time J.L. reached eleven, the defendant began penetrating her vaginally. The first instance occurred in Donaldson-ville at her grandmother’s house. While she was still eleven, she moved to Lake Charles, Louisiana, to live with her father. While there, he would penetrate her almost on a daily basis. She became pregnant by her father that year and then moved to Lafayette, Louisiana, to live at a home for unwed mothers.

J.L. gave birth to a baby boy on May 25, 1986. She moved back to Lake Charles briefly and then to Ascension Parish to live with her mother. The child died in October of 1986.

| SJ.L. did not see her father again until 1987 when he came to a family gathering. He told her that he had come to pick her up, and she asked him why he did not tell everyone what he had been doing to her. He drove off in his car. Approximately one year later, her father began seeing S.B. (D.S.’s grandmother) and because S.B. assured her that everything would be all right, J.L. let her father back into her life.

J.L. related a telephone conversation she had with her father and his sister in which her father asked her to tell everyone that she made the allegations up about his having sex with her. He told her that no one needed to know that he was baby Darryl’s father and that it could be their secret. J.L. also recalled a sequence of *1024

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Related

State v. Woodberry
171 So. 3d 1082 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2015)
State v. Thomas
171 So. 3d 959 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2015)
State v. Keys
125 So. 3d 19 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2013)
State v. Smith
96 So. 3d 678 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2012)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 So. 3d 1020, 2010 WL 1997119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-fisher-lactapp-2010.