State v. Girard

799 A.2d 238, 2002 R.I. LEXIS 123, 2002 WL 1291811
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 28, 2002
Docket2001-282-C.A.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 799 A.2d 238 (State v. Girard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Girard, 799 A.2d 238, 2002 R.I. LEXIS 123, 2002 WL 1291811 (R.I. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION

BOURCIER, Justice.

In this brutal, barbaric and utterly senseless “thrill kill,” the defendant, Marc A. Girard, appeals from his conviction by a Superior Court trial jury for first-degree murder and conspiracy to commit murder. He maintains on appeal that the trial justice erred in failing to suppress his confession, in refusing to give instructions to the jury on second-degree murder or manslaughter, and in sentencing him to consecutive terms on his convictions. We deny his appeal and affirm his convictions.

I

Facts/Procedural History

In the early hours of the morning of Monday, June 14, 1999, after a weekend of drinking, defendant Marc Girard (Girard) was walking to his apartment in Woon-socket, when he encountered Jeanette Descoteaux (Jeanette), who also was out walking. Jeanette, who also had been *242 drinking, engaged in small talk with Gir-ard. She invited him to accompany her to her Mend’s second-floor apartment, where they might procure some cocaine and beer. He agreed to go.

When they arrived, they were greeted by Jeanette’s Mends, Debbie Desrosiers (Debbie) and Renee Edwards (Renee). There was no cocaine or beer in the apartment, so Jeanette’s Mends persuaded Gir-ard to give them money to purchase drugs. He gave Debbie $60 and instructed her to use $50 to purchase drugs and to either purchase some liquor or bring back $10 in change. She returned with some cocaine and the change. The three women shared the cocaine while Girard smoked a cigarette. Meanwhile, Girard repeatedly asked Jeanette whether she needed a ride home.

Sometime later, Girard gave Debbie another $20 and she promptly left to purchase more cocaine. Simultaneously, Gir-ard left and went to get his car. On his way out of the apartment, he asked Debbie whether Jeanette needed a ride, and Debbie told him that if she did, Jeanette would meet him downstairs. When Girard returned in his car, a red Nissan SX, Debbie was outside waiting for her drug -delivery. He again asked Debbie whether Jeanette needed a ride. She responded with the same answer — if Jeanette needed a ride, she would come downstairs. Girard then told Debbie that he would be back in ten minutes.

Approximately fifteen minutes later, Debbie observed Girard banging on a neighbor’s door. She told him he was at the wrong house and asked him why he had left his car engine running. He informed her that a Mend of his was waiting in the car. 1 He then followed her upstairs to her apartment, where he persuaded Jeanette to leave Debbie’s apartment with him. Debbie witnessed Jeanette get into Girard’s car with him and his Mend, Alfred Brissette (Brissette). That was the last time Jeanette was seen alive by anyone other than Girard and Brissette.

In the car, Girard and Brissette told Jeanette that they knew a drug dealer by the name of “Uncle Bob” who lived in a cabin in the woods of Burrillville. 2 They promised her that “Uncle Bob” would supply her with all the cocaine she ever could possibly want. Persuaded by their promises, Jeanette agreed to switch from Gir-ard’s Nissan to Brissette’s rented four-wheel-drive Chevrolet Blazer (the Blazer) at the defendant’s home. As they were about to leave there for Burrillville, Girard took a camping shovel from the house. Approximately eighteen months earlier, Brissette and Girard had conspired to randomly kill and bury an unsuspecting and unfortunate female. Brissette had purchased the shovel for the express purpose of digging a grave to bury whoever they murdered. Usually, it was kept in the trunk of Girard’s Nissan so that it readily would be available if and when they were to carry out their brutal, preconceived plan.

Meanwhile, Brissette, who was driving the Blazer, stopped the vehicle on a fire trail in the woods of the George Washington Park in Burrillville. Girard exited the vehicle and went to reheve himself in the woods. While Girard was gone, Brissette persuaded Jeanette to perform oral sex upon him in return for the promised cocaine. Unsatisfied with Jeanette’s perfor- *243 manee, Brissette demanded that she engage in sexual intercourse with him. He opened the trunk of the Blazer, put down the rear seat and then he and the now-naked Jeanette climbed into the back of the Blazer to engage in sexual intercourse. After that, Brissette reached into the back of the Blazer for a plastic bag containing a lug wrench and smashed it into Jeanette’s head. Jeanette was stunned and asked Brissette what he was doing, to which he responded by again striking her head with the lug wrench. She screamed “[s]top, stop. No, I’ll take care of you.” Meanwhile, Girard, who had witnessed the brutal blows, attempted to soothe the still-naked Jeanette by giving her a cigarette and telling her that she needed to calm down, otherwise she might bleed to death. Jeanette promised the defendant that if they brought her to a hospital, she would not tell anybody what had happened.

In the meantime, Brissette, who had been rummaging about in the Blazer, reappeared and handed the shovel to Girard and directed him to dig a hole. Girard took the shovel and began to dig, but was unable to accomplish the task because the ground was too rocky. Suddenly realizing the implications of what was happening, the wounded and bleeding Jeanette sprang to her feet and began to run for her life. Girard immediately stopped digging and returned to the Blazer. Brissette then grabbed the shovel from Girard and the two men hastily pursued Jeanette. Bris-sette pursued her from behind while Gir-ard ran to the outside so that he could cut her off and prevent her from escaping. As they neared Jeanette, Brissette struck her with the shovel while Girard grabbed her around her waist and dragged her back to the Blazer.

Girard again tried to calm the now-terrified Jeanette and promised her that they would bring her to the hospital. He later admitted knowing that he and Brissette had no intention of letting her go. The men ordered Jeanette to get dressed. After she had dressed, Brissette began to hit her repeatedly with his fists and with the lug wrench. She fell to the ground. Gir-ard then struck her in the spine in an attempt to paralyze her. Both men then dragged her farther into the woods. As Jeanette lay on the ground “gurgling,” Girard viciously struck her head three times with the lug wrench because:

“I thought she was still alive. I was just — she—she was wounded bad. I was just trying to put her out of her misery. I didn’t want her laying out there for days still alive, bleeding.”

At that time, Girard believed that it was he who had struck the fatal blow.

After Girard and Brissette decided that Jeanette probably was dead, they left her body in the woods and returned to the Blazer. They then attempted to cover their tracks by concealing the evidence. They gathered the shovel, lug wrench and plastic bag, and placed them in the back of the Blazer on top of an orange tarp, which they covered with a blanket. They left the scene and went to Brissette’s house to retrieve clean clothing for him. They subsequently went to Girard’s house to shower off the blood. Coincidentally, that day was trash day in the neighborhood, so they placed their bloody clothing in a trash bag, put the bag in a lidded trash can and left it out for collection.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
799 A.2d 238, 2002 R.I. LEXIS 123, 2002 WL 1291811, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-girard-ri-2002.