State v. Franklin

956 So. 2d 823, 2007 WL 1345360
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 14, 2007
Docket42,055-KA
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 956 So. 2d 823 (State v. Franklin) 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. Franklin, 956 So. 2d 823, 2007 WL 1345360 (La. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

956 So.2d 823 (2007)

STATE of Louisiana, Appellee,
v.
Melecia a/k/a Lecia FRANKLIN, Appellant.

No. 42,055-KA.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

May 9, 2007.
Opinion Denying Rehearing June 14, 2007.

*827 Dmitrc I. Burnes, Alexandria, for Appellant.

Jerry Jones, District Attorney, Neal G. Johnson, Assistant District Attorney, for Appellee.

*828 Before WILLIAMS, PEATROSS & MOORE, JJ.

PEATROSS, J.

Defendant, Melecia (aka Lecia) Franklin, was convicted of two counts of forgery and one count of felony theft. On each count of forgery, she was sentenced to serve two years' imprisonment at hard labor, to run concurrently. For felony theft, Defendant was sentenced to serve seven years' imprisonment at hard labor, to run consecutively with counts one and two, which was suspended. She was placed on five years' supervised probation and ordered to make restitution. Defendant now appeals. For the reasons stated herein, Defendant's convictions and sentences are affirmed.

FACTS

Defendant had been working as an employee of the Sterlington Branch of Cross Keys Bank, Ouachita Parish, and its predecessor, Sterlington Bank, since about 1981. In 2003, Defendant was vault teller, which was equivalent to second-in-charge of the branch. She was responsible for all of the money that came in and out of the bank, supervising the other tellers and balancing her teller station and the vault on a daily basis. As vault teller, it was Defendant's customary practice when a teller was short as little as $5 to search the entire bank until the shortage was resolved. She was considered a highly-trusted employee.

Defendant had not taken any of the time allotted for her annual vacation as of the middle of December 2003, which was unusual. On Friday, December 12, 2003, however, both Defendant and the assistant vault teller, Terri Smith, had scheduled to take the day off work to travel with their respective families to New Orleans to watch the local high school football team participate in the playoffs. In preparation for the absences, Defendant selected her niece, Hillary Dupree, to be in charge of the vault. Ms. Dupree was a loan clerk who occasionally did teller work and knew how to balance her teller station. Defendant showed Ms. Dupree how to balance the vault by using the totals from the general ledger cash book entry for the previous day as her basis and then adding the subsequent "cash-in" items and subtracting the subsequent "cash-out" items.

At the close of the day on Friday, December 12, Ms. Dupree informed the branch manager, Johnny James, that the vault was out of balance—at first there was a shortage of $6,500, and later an additional $100,000 shortage was discovered. Ms. Dupree called Defendant on her cell phone in New Orleans and advised her of the initial $6,500 shortage. Defendant, who was apparently irritated at being contacted while she was trying to check in at the hotel, told Ms. Dupree that she would address the problem when she returned to work on Monday. When the additional shortage of $100,000 was discovered later that afternoon, another teller, Rhonda George, attempted to contact Defendant on her cell phone. Finally, Ms. Dupree detected what she thought was the cause of the $100,000 discrepancy—that she did not bring the correct balance forward from the previous day. Ms. George then called Defendant's daughter's cell phone and left a voice message that the $100,000 discrepancy had been resolved. The $6,500 discrepancy was not resolved—Ms. Dupree and Ms. George decided to take the matter up with Defendant on Monday.

At about 8:30 a.m. on Monday, December 15, 2003, Defendant arrived for work at the bank and went straight into Mr. James' office. She was accompanied by her sister, Teresa Norman. Defendant admitted to Mr. James that $120,000 had *829 been missing from the vault since September 5. Mr. James suggested that Defendant go home while he called the main office in St. Joseph to report the shortage and he would call her to return when the bank officials arrived. Defendant, however, said she and her sister would wait for the officials at the bank. Defendant was seen behind the teller windows in the interim.

At about 11:00 a.m., three main office bank officials arrived, namely Jack Grace, Executive Vice President, Michael Vizzard, Senior Vice President, and Linda Keahy, Cashier. Defendant joined Mr. Grace in the vault and explained what happened on September 5. She related that, while she was inside the vault, she took some money out of the small vault and moved it over on the top of the safety deposit boxes in the outer room of the vault. Defendant related that she was counting the money when she got a phone call that her sister was very sick. Defendant told Mr. Grace that she "went to pieces" after learning about her sister's illness. She said that she did not know what happened to the money after that, but asserted that she did not take it. Defendant speculated that it might have accidentally been thrown away in some of the boxes that were on the cluttered floor. She related that the denominations were $80,000 in hundreds and $40,000 in twenties. Defendant offered no explanation why she waited 101 days to report the $120,000 shortage.

Ms. Keahy had previously audited the branch in July 2003 and balanced Defendant's teller station and vault to a total shortage of about $64.25. On the morning of December 15, Ms. Keahy counted the cash in the vault, compared it to the general ledger and determined that there was indeed a shortage of $120,010. It was also determined that the drawer to Defendant's teller station, which was kept inside the vault during her absence on Friday, December 12, was over by approximately $500. Included in Defendant's teller station records were "cash out" items for two savings accounts withdrawals and a "cash in" for $10,000, representing money Defendant moved from the vault to her teller station. Both Ms. Dupree and Ms. George later denied taking the $120,000 from the bank.

While the vault was being counted, Defendant voluntarily met with Mr. Grace and Mr. Vizzard in the break room and answered questions regarding the shortage. Mr. Grace asked why Defendant had waited so long to notify the bank of such a sizable shortage. Initially, Defendant continued in her assertion that she did not know what happened to the money other than the shortage occurred in September and she did not take it.

At Mr. Grace's request, Mr. Vizzard left the break room to supervise the vault count. It was after Mr. Vizzard left the room that Defendant told Mr. Grace that she has a 14-year-old daughter and did not want to go to jail. She asked what would happen if she admitted taking the money. Mr. Grace told Defendant that he could not make any promises or bargains, but asked her to "think real hard" whether she really took the money. He suggested that making restitution would be helpful, but was not required. Defendant then admitted that she had taken the money.

Mr. Vizzard returned to the break room at Mr. Grace's request. It was then that Defendant admitted to both Mr. Grace and Mr. Vizzard that she took the money in increments and spent it all. She refused, however, to sign a written confession. Before leaving the bank shortly after 1:00 p.m., Defendant told Mr. James that she was sorry. She was allowed to return later that afternoon after the bank closed to say goodbye to her co-workers and collect *830 her belongings. Defendant was fired from her job and Mr. Vizzard reported the loss to Kansas Bankers Surety Company, the bank's bonding company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
956 So. 2d 823, 2007 WL 1345360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-franklin-lactapp-2007.