State v. Harrison

239 So. 3d 406
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 21, 2018
DocketNO. 2017–KA–0054
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 239 So. 3d 406 (State v. Harrison) 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. Harrison, 239 So. 3d 406 (La. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

On the day of the shooting, Ms. Mayer deposited her child at her mother's house at 7:05 a.m. As Ms. Mayer was leaving, she saw what she thought was a couple arguing across the street from her mother's house. Seconds afterwards, Ms. Mayer heard Ms. Hedgepeth screaming and then saw Ms. Hedgepeth struggling with the suspect, who was standing next to Ms. Hedgepeth's car. Ms. Mayer ran toward the commotion. The suspect reached in and out of Ms. Hedgepeth's vehicle while Ms. Hedgepeth was seated in the car. Then Ms. Mayer saw the victim run from the corner of Eliza and Vallette Streets to help Ms. Hedgepeth. By that time, Ms. Hedgepeth had exited the vehicle, and the suspect had entered. The victim jumped on the hood of Ms. Hedgepeth's car, hitting and kicking the windshield. A shot was fired. The victim jumped from the hood of the car, alerting Ms. Mayer and Ms. Hedgepeth that the suspect was armed and had shot him. The victim ran across the street and collapsed on the lawn of a nearby house. Ms. Mayer ran under some steps and watched the suspect, who was wearing a gray hoodie, run toward the river. Ms. Mayer went to the unconscious victim's aid. She attempted to staunch the bleeding from the victim's torso by applying pressure to the wound. Just then, the victim's young sons ran to the victim and attempted to speak to him. EMS personnel arrived but despite their efforts could not revive the victim.

NOPD expert firearm examiner, Ms. Meredith Acosta, examined four unknown caliber copper jacket fragments (specimens 1, 2, 3 and 5), three fired 9mm caliber cartridge cases, two fired casings (specimen 4) and one fired casing (specimen 6) and a bullet retrieved during the victim's autopsy (specimen 7). Ms. Acosta opined the casings retrieved from the shooting scene were fired from a 9mm semi-automatic weapon and confirmed that she did not examine a weapon related to this case.

Corporal Kay Harrell testified she was employed by the Orleans Parish Sheriff's Office as the supervisor of the records division of the NOPD Intake and Processing center. Corporal Harrell's duties involved updating all inmate files, keeping track of probation, parole and release of inmates. Through her computer, Corporal Harrell was able to access information related to the locations of inmates. On July 30, 2014, the Orleans Parish District Attorney's Office asked her to determine the defendant's and Joshua McReynolds' location histories.

The booking date on the defendant's location records was February 28, 2012. Further, the defendant's record indicates he was housed in Templeman 5, A-1, Cell-1 of Orleans Parish Prison from May 27, 2012 to June 20, 2012.

Joshua McReynolds' location history reflected he was booked on June 15, 2011, and housed in the same cell with the defendant from June 6, 2012, to June 12, 2012.

Joshua McReynolds testified that he pled guilty to armed robbery on June 25, 2012. He was incarcerated in the Orleans Parish Prison, serving a twenty-year sentence at the time of the trial in this case. During a portion of his time in jail, Mr. McReynolds was in the same cell as the defendant, who related to Mr. McReynolds that he had shot a man while carjacking a woman. The defendant referred to the killing as the "good Samaritan murder." Mr. McReynolds recounted that the defendant questioned him about his knowledge of forensic evidence, specifically DNA. The defendant explained that he had wiped *413down the car but may have dropped a cigarette butt at the shooting scene. When Mr. McReynolds questioned the defendant about what it felt like to kill a man, the defendant replied it was just like shooting a bird with a BB gun.

Jim Huey testified that he worked at the Orleans Parish Sheriff's Department and was the custodian of records of inmate telephone calls. He stated that the phone calls of the inmates are recorded on an internet-based system and stored on a secured database. Mr. Huey testified that when an inmate makes a call, the inmate must use a pin/folder number that was issued to the inmate at booking. One of Mr. Huey's duties is to provide law enforcement agencies copies of an inmate's jailhouse telephone calls. Mr. Huey explained that as an inmate makes a call from the Orleans Parish Prison, the inmate is issued a warning that the call will be monitored and recorded. Mr. Huey also noted that a call detail sheet, which lists the specifics of an inmate call, i.e., name of caller, time, duration, number called, etc., accompanied the recording of jailhouse calls. Pursuant to the State's request, Huey supplied a disc containing a recording of four calls the defendant placed in the first week of March 2012 while incarcerated at Orleans Parish Prison.1

Jeremy Ballard testified that on the morning of January 25, 2012, he arrived at his glass studio in Algiers Point at approximately 6:50 a.m. His shop was located on the corner of Vallette and Eliza Streets. At approximately 7:00 a.m. that day, Mr. Ballard heard what he thought were four gunshots. He walked out of his shop to investigate and saw two children running in the street. Mr. Ballard recognized the children from the neighborhood because he had seen them with their father on previous mornings waiting on the corner for their school bus. Ballard ran toward the children as the suspect ran across Vallette Street toward Eliza Street. When the suspect tripped on the sidewalk, Mr. Ballard noticed the suspect was wearing red plaid boxer shorts. Mr. Ballard followed the suspect in his car. However, Mr. Ballard lost sight of the man momentarily and drove around the area until he saw the suspect again on Sequin Street. The suspect met a man on Opelousas Street, and the two walked to Teche Street. Thereafter, the pair walked back to Vallette Street, and Mr. Ballard lost sight of them; however, as Mr. Ballard was following the men, he called 911, reported the situation and provided a description of the suspect's clothing-tan pants and dark brown leather jacket. Mr. Ballard then drove back to his shop. When the police arrived at his shop, Mr. Ballard accompanied them in the patrol car, retracing the suspect's flight route. Mr. Ballard said he viewed the suspect from a vantage point of no more than twenty feet; however, Mr. Ballard was unable to make an identification from the photo lineup the police presented him.

Troy Dickerson, the NOPD expert crime scene and fingerprint analyst, testified he was called to the shooting scene. By the time he arrived, crime scene technicians had already begun photographing and processing the area. Mr. Dickerson photographed and processed Ms. Hedgepeth's vehicle. He swabbed the vehicle's driver side door handle, steering wheel, radio knob, gear shift, AC switch and driver's side arm rest for DNA. Mr. Dickerson also processed the vehicle for latent fingerprints *414and hair and fibers. The swabs and samples taken during the process were sealed, identified and placed in Central Evidence and Property for further processing/testing.

Sergeant Jeff Rodrigue of the Homicide Division of the Jefferson Parish Sheriff's Office testified that in January and February 2012, he was assigned to the New Orleans FBI Violent Crimes Task Force. Sergeant Rodrigue assisted Detective Tanisha Sykes in obtaining a buccal swab from the defendant.

Acadiana Crime Lab forensic DNA analyst Jeremy Dubois tested the swab samples obtained by Troy Dickerson from the Hedgepeth vehicle. Mr. Dubois also performed DNA testing on the blouse Ms. Hedgepeth wore the day of the shooting. He issued a report of his test results on February 8, 2012. Mr.

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State v. Degregory
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Bluebook (online)
239 So. 3d 406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-harrison-lactapp-2018.