State v. Ford

867 So. 2d 835, 2003 La.App. 4 Cir. 1321, 2004 La. App. LEXIS 446, 2004 WL 389438
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 18, 2004
DocketNo. 2003-KA-1321
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 867 So. 2d 835 (State v. Ford) 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. Ford, 867 So. 2d 835, 2003 La.App. 4 Cir. 1321, 2004 La. App. LEXIS 446, 2004 WL 389438 (La. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

JjMOON LANDRIEU, Judge Pro Tempore.

STATEMENT OF CASE

The State filed a bill of information on August 13, 2002, charging Jeffery C. Ford with attempted aggravated rape in violation of La. R.S. 14:27(42).1 At his arraignment on August 19, 2002, he entered a plea of not guilty. The trial court found probable cause, and after a hearing on February 10, 2003, the motion to suppress the identification was denied. A twelve-member jury found Ford guilty as charged after a two-day trial on February 11 and 12, 2003. He was sentenced on February 28, 2003 to serve forty years at hard labor without benefit of probation, parole, or suspension of sentence. Ford’s motion for an appeal was granted.

For the following reasons, we affirm the defendant’s conviction and sentence.

STATEMENT OF FACT

A.C., the victim, testified at trial that about 1 a.m. on June 8, 2002, she and five colleagues, who were visiting New Orleans, stopped in the Pizzooria in the French Quarter. As her Mends took a table, she told them she was going to the bathroom. She walked down a narrow hallway, and when she opened the |2bathroom door, she realized that a man was right behind her. He entered the bathroom and locked the door. He said, “Shut the fuck up or I’m going to kill you” and grabbed her head and began knocking her against the wall. She pleaded with him not to hurt her, and he repeated his threat to kill her. He put his hands on her neck, pushing her against the wall, and she fell hurting her elbow. The defendant unzipped his pants and ordered her to move her skirt. However, she was wearing a “skort,” shorts that look like a skirt but that cannot be pulled up like a skirt. He got on top of her trying to insert his penis into her, but her clothing was in the way. She described him as very angry and herself as very frightened. When she moved her skort, “there was contact” but he did not penetrate her. She heard someone knocking on the door, and began screaming for help. The defendant again threatened to kill her. Trying to sound like a woman, he said to the person knocking, “I’m fucking peeing. Go away.” The person knocking left, and the defendant again tried to penetrate her. The knocking began again, and she began to scream. The defendant, who had gotten up and had his ear to the door, told her to “[pjretend your [sic] fucking peeing.” He opened the door and as he stepped out, A.C. rushed out the door. She saw her friends and began to cry. She described herself as bruised on her elbow, knee, and-leg, and bleeding from her cuts on her face and head.

She remembered that the defendant was wearing a fisherman’s hat, baggy shorts that came to mid-calf and a red shirt. He had high cheek bones and was slender. She stayed at the pizza parlor with her friend, Larry Shapiro, after her assailant left. About ten minutes later, Glen Wahl, another colleague, returned to the restaurant to get her so that she could identify the defendant. When the officers 13took a suspect from a police car and she saw his face, she “just went crazy” and began screaming at him.

[838]*838Four of A.C.’s colleagues testified. Larry Shapiro explained that they work at the same law firm and were in New Orleans for an internal firm meeting at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel. The group was walking down Bourbon Street toward Canal Street when they decided to go into a pizza parlor for a snack. Shapiro bought a hot dog from a vendor on the street while the rest of the party entered the pizza parlor and ordered. He went into the parlor and sat at the table with the group. Someone noted that A.C. had been in the bathroom for a long time. Christine Huebner went to investigate, and she returned to tell the group that she heard someone say, “I’m fing peeing.” Shapiro responded that A.C. would not say that, and he arid 'Christine walked back to the bathroom. When Christine knocked on the door, it opened and a man walked out. He said, “Everything’s cool,” as he walked past Shapiro. A.C. was behind him crying. Shapiro realized that something was wrong, and he turned to his friends who were about ten feet away and ordered them to “[g]et” the man. A.C. ran to Shapiro and collapsed; he described her as “weeping uncontrollably” and hyperventilating. She said, she had been choked until she could not breathe and her head had been hit against the wall and the floor repeatedly. Shapiro noticed red marks on her neck, bleeding cuts on her head and lips, and swollen eyes. Her clothes were disheveled. Shapiro asked a restaurant employee to call the police.

Christine Huebner told the court of knocking on the bathroom door and hearing a “very high voice” saying “[g]o away. I’m fucking peeing.” Some moments later she returned to pound on the door and call to her friend by name. An employee of the restaurant asked her if she wanted a key to the bathroom, and |4she answered affirmatively. Just then the door opened, and Huebner saw A.C. first. She was shaking uncontrollably and her face was bloody. Huebner pushed A.C. off to Larry Shapiro, who was next to her, and she grabbed the man behind A.C. by the shirt. She held onto him for about thirty seconds and told him he was not leaving. However, she realized he was taller than she and could harm her, and so she let go of his shirt. She called to the men she was with to catch the man. Huebner turned to A.C. and asked her if she had been raped. A.C. answered, “No. He tried to.” Shortly thereafter, Huebner went to Canal Street to identify the attacker. She looked into the back of the police car and saw there the same man she had seen exiting the bathroom at the pizza parlor.

Thomas May and Fred Adams, both members of the law firm group, testified that they were sitting in the pizza parlor when they realized that A.C. had been attacked and the man was leaving the building. They began chasing the man down Bourbon Street and then across Canal Street. Both described the man as wearing baggy shorts and a big shirt. Adams caught the man and struggled with him until the police arrived. Both Adams and May' testified that they never lost sight of the defendant, and that there were no friends of the defendant with him when he was apprehended.

. Dan McCluskey, the manager of the pizza parlor/bar at 200 Bourbon Street, testified that he was on duty on June 8, 2002 when the incident at issue here occurred. He was in an office and did not observe anything. He called the police to report an attempted rape. The tape of the telephone call was played for the jury.

Detective Brian Baudier of the Sex Crimes Unit testified that he investigated an attempted rape on June 8, 2002. He went to Canal and Baronne Streets where the alleged offender was being held. As [839]*839the detective arrived on the scene, the | svictim was being escorted to the police car to identify the man being held there. The police officers had him step out of the car and she lunged at him while making a positive identification. The victim had “blood spatters” and some swelling on her face. The detective went to the establishment at 200 Bourbon Street to photograph the scene. He noticed red spots on the bathroom floor.

Officer Glen Blanche testified that he was driving on Canal Street when he saw two men fighting and another man flagging him down. He stopped and handcuffed both the men who were fighting. He described Ford as wearing a black shirt and black shorts with colored stripes. He was carrying no weapons. After Jeffery Ford was arrested, his picture was taken at Central Lockup. That picture was shown to the jury. He had a “slight mustache and hair on the chin” and gold teeth.

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Related

State v. Willis
987 So. 2d 349 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2008)
State v. Lewis
885 So. 2d 641 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2004)
State v. Ashford
878 So. 2d 798 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2004)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
867 So. 2d 835, 2003 La.App. 4 Cir. 1321, 2004 La. App. LEXIS 446, 2004 WL 389438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ford-lactapp-2004.