State v. Hall

986 So. 2d 863, 2008 WL 2266143
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 4, 2008
Docket43,125-KA
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 986 So. 2d 863 (State v. Hall) 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. Hall, 986 So. 2d 863, 2008 WL 2266143 (La. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

986 So.2d 863 (2008)

STATE of Louisiana, Appellee
v.
Kendrick Darney HALL, Appellant.

No. 43,125-KA.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

June 4, 2008.

*865 Louisiana Appellate Project, by G. Paul Marx, Lafayette, for Appellant.

Paul J. Carmouche, District Attorney, Geya D. Williams-Prudhomme, John Ford *866 McWilliams, Jr., Assistant District Attorneys, for Appellee.

Before BROWN, DREW and MOORE, JJ.

MOORE, J.

Kendrick Darney Hall was charged with armed robbery with a firearm, La. R.S. 14:64 and 64.3 ("Count 1"), and first degree robbery, R.S. 14:64.1 ("Count 2"), arising from separate incidents involving the same victim. After a 12-member jury found him guilty as charged on both counts, the state charged him as a fourth felony offender on Count 1. Finding him guilty as charged, the district court sentenced him to 99 years at hard labor without benefits as a fourth felony offender on Count 1 and to a concurrent 40 years at hard labor without benefits on Count 2. Hall now appeals, raising four assignments of error. We affirm.

Factual Background

The victim in both incidents was Doris Bowman, who lived with her elderly mother on Washington Street in Shreveport's Highland area. On the night before Thanksgiving 2004, a man knocked on Ms. Bowman's front door, saying it was "the police." She looked out the peephole and, seeing a man in a black jacket, opened the door. The man told her he was looking for Eric; Ms. Bowman replied that an Eric might live two doors down. She quickly shut the door but watched, through the peephole, the man she now considered "erratic and funny." She described him as a young black man, about 5'7" or 5'8" in height and weighing about 170 lbs., wearing a black jacket, red plaid shirt and jeans, but did not call the police.

The next morning, Thanksgiving Day, Ms. Bowman opened her front door to let out the dog, and saw the same man sitting in the corner on one of her porch chairs. She asked him what he was doing there; he replied he was "beat up" and waiting on his brother, and asked to use her phone. When she refused, he pulled out a gun, held it to her head and said, "I ought to kill you." He pushed his way past her, through the open front door, and into her mother's bedroom, where the mother was asleep. He grabbed the mother's purse and ran back out through the front door. Ms. Bowman was already phoning 911. She testified that she got a good look at the assailant, who was in the same clothes as the night before. She was positive it was the same person.

About a month later, Detective James Cromer of the Shreveport Police Department assembled a photo lineup of six black-and-white photos of young black males resembling Ms. Bowman's description; she could not pick her assailant out of this lineup. Two weeks later, Det. Cromer prepared a second lineup, from which Ms. Bowman again could not pick her assailant. Neither of these lineups included Hall's photo. Cromer advised her that with no leads, he would list the investigation as suspended.

Over a month later, on the morning of February 23, 2005, Ms. Bowman stepped out the front door to go to work when a person came up from the corner of the porch and said, "Give me your purse or I'll shoot you." She did not actually see a gun, but handed him her purse anyway and got a good look at him: she was certain it was the same person who had robbed her in November. She immediately called the police and reported that the suspect had run west on Washington Street. Corporal John Schelmz testified that she gave no other description than that it was the same person as before. He was unable to locate any witnesses that day.

*867 The next day, police received a report of suspicious activity in an abandoned house at 327 Wilkinson Street, one block north of Ms. Bowman. Corporal Schelmz recalled seeing that house the previous day with its blinds up, but now they were down; he went to the back of the house and found the door wide open. Officers entered the back door and immediately discovered, among other items, a purse which they recognized as stolen from Ms. Bowman. A check with Department of Water and Sewerage showed that a Kendrick Hall had paid the last water bill at 327 Wilkinson.

With this information, Det. Cromer prepared another photo lineup, including Hall's photo with those of five other young black males; once again, Ms. Bowman could not pick out her assailant. Concerned that Hall's photo might be outdated, Cromer pulled Hall's latest driver's license photo and noticed that he now looked substantially different. Cromer therefore assembled a fourth lineup using the driver's license image and five other photos, all in a larger format than before. On March 8, Ms. Bowman immediately and positively picked Hall as picture #5 from this lineup. She testified she was "100% certain" that he was the man who robbed her both times.

Police also interviewed Chiniqua Martin, a teen whose family lived five or six houses down from 327 Wilkinson Street. She testified that Hall and his family had lived there but moved out prior to February 2005, and yet she saw him "going in and out of the house on several occasions after the family moved out." She added that she had seen nobody else entering the abandoned house. She positively identified Hall as picture # 5 in the large-format photo lineup, and identified him in court as the person she had seen entering 327 Wilkinson Street after the family moved out.

During a custodial interrogation on March 9, 2005, Hall waived his Miranda rights and admitted that his family previously lived at 327 Wilkinson Street, but insisted they had moved out months before and he never went back. He denied ever robbing Ms. Bowman.

As noted, the state charged Hall with Count 1, armed robbery with a firearm, for the incident of November 24, 2004, and Count 2, first degree robbery, for the incident of February 23, 2005. After a five-day trial, the 12-member jury found him guilty as charged on both counts.[1] He was later adjudicated a fourth felony offender on Count 1. The district court sentenced him, after reconsideration,[2] to 99 years at hard labor without benefit of parole, probation or suspension of sentence as a fourth felony offender on Count 1, and to a concurrent 40 years at hard labor without benefits on Count 2. The instant appeal followed.

Discussion: Sufficiency of the Evidence

By his first assignment of error, Hall urges the verdict was based on insufficient evidence, including unreliable eyewitness identification, alibi evidence proving innocence, suggestive lineups and lack of corroborating evidence. In fact, the state failed to prove any armed robbery occurred on November 25, as nothing was taken from the victim, Ms. Bowman, or from her immediate control, as required by La. R.S. 14:64 A. He concedes that the *868 concept of "immediate control" has been expansively interpreted, but contends that the purse in the mother's bedroom was not sufficiently under the victim's control, on the front porch, that "absent violence or intimidation, the victim could have prevented the taking." State v. Thomas, 447 So.2d 1053 (La.1984); State v. Long, 36,167 (La.App. 2 Cir. 10/30/02), 830 So.2d 552. Even if a robbery occurred, Hall contends that Ms. Bowman gave police physical descriptions of her assailant that were inconsistent and inaccurate, failed to notice distinctive tattoos on his right hand, and did not identify him in open court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
986 So. 2d 863, 2008 WL 2266143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hall-lactapp-2008.