State v. Hawthorne

623 So. 2d 899, 1993 La. App. LEXIS 2711, 1993 WL 316513
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 19, 1993
DocketNo. 92-KA-2091
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 623 So. 2d 899 (State v. Hawthorne) 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. Hawthorne, 623 So. 2d 899, 1993 La. App. LEXIS 2711, 1993 WL 316513 (La. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinions

LANDRIEU, Judge.

We are asked to review the proceedings in the trial court in the case of a double homicide, for which the defendant has pled self-defense as justification. Concluding that the trial court erred in failing to give instruction to the jury in the matter of circumstantial evidence, we reverse defendant’s conviction in this case and remand for a new trial.

FACTS AND PROCEDURE:

On December 7, 1990, at 8:19 p.m. the police operator received a call of a disturbance at 926 Esplanade Avenue, New Orleans. The caller identified himself as “Mark.”1 An officer, Maxie Walker, was not [900]*900dispatched, however, until 9:27 p.m., and he arrived within minutes. When Walker went to the door of the residence, which he found ajar, he could see a man on the floor of the hallway. At that time, Louis K. Hawthorne, the defendant, called to Walker from the neutral ground, and, with hands raised, said “I did it, officer. I shot them both.” Walker arrested the defendant, handcuffed him and advised him of his rights. The defendant then told him that he had thrown the gun used in the shootings in a storm drain at the corner, where it was later recovered. He claimed he left the house to call a friend, David Lovelle, from a nearby Circle K, with the gun in hand, and threw it in the drain because people on the street were frightened.

In the house, Walker found Danny Hall dead in the hallway. This victim was wearing a bath robe, and his left hand was in the pocket of his robe. One .25 caliber casing and one .25 caliber live bullet were found next to Hall. Mark Gegenheimer was found dead on the floor of the bedroom, known as the Marie-Michelle Room, in a space between the bed and the far wall. Three .25 caliber casings were located in the vicinity of this victim. Another officer testified that the telephone in the room where Gegenheimer was found was off the hook. According to pictures of the crime scene, the base of the telephone appeared to be on the bed and the cord, which led to the handset, appeared to run down the side of the bed opposite Gegen-heimer’s body. The defendant testified that, after the shootings, he tried to put the telephone back on the hook. However, he claimed that the receiver got caught in the bed, and the cord pulled out of it.

According to Hawthorne’s statement to police2 and his trial testimony, Danny Hall, described as his business partner and lover,3 came to the apartment at 5:45 p.m. on that date, and the two men had drinks. They began discussing their business, Hawthorne House, a bed and breakfast establishment.4 When the defendant confronted Hall about missing money, an argument ensued. During dinner at a local restaurant, they continued the argument, and Hall asked the defendant how much money he wanted for his share in the business. The defendant responded, “at least $100,000.” Hall then said, “I’ll kill you. You don’t get a free ride.” The defendant threatened that if he did not “get what [he] deserved David [Lovelle] [had] a lien against the house.”

Lovelle had designed and decorated the renovation to the guest house, known as Hawthorne House. The defendant testified [901]*901that although he was supposed to receive 50% of the income from the house and he was aware that the business was taking in a lot of money, neither he nor Lovelle was ever paid. When defendant called the bank, he learned that Hall routinely had made withdrawals from the corporate account for his personal use shortly after deposits were made. Furthermore, defendant saw a stack of certified checks written on that account, as Hall’s mother, who resided in Tennessee, was leaving after a visit. The checks had been cashed and represented Hall’s personal transactions. Therefore, in early December, Lovell and the defendant decided to take legal action against Hall. Lovell called the defendant at 6:00 p.m. on the night of the crime to tell him that an appointment with a lawyer had been scheduled and that he planned to place a lien on the house.

After the defendant and Hall returned to the house from the restaurant, the defendant overheard an apparent call by Hall to his mother in Tennessee during which he told her, “You were right. He was after my money all the time.”5 When he hung up the telephone, Hall contacted Marc Gegenheimer, a former employee and ex-convict, and asked him to come over. Gegenheimer arrived as the defendant made the 911 call. The defendant claimed that Hall struggled with him for the telephone; that Gegenheimer started to take off his shirt to assist, but Hall told him, “Don’t hurt him now;” and that he thereafter relinquished the telephone. Left alone in the Desire Room, adjacent to the Marie-Michelle Room, without keys which Hall had taken from the table, the defendant claimed to hear doors slamming throughout the house. Closed doors at Hawthorne Manor could not be opened without a key.

Subsequently, Hall and Gegenheimer went into the Marie-Michelle Room and closed the door. The defendant stated he heard Hall tell Gegenheimer he wanted the defendant dead that night. To arm himself, the defendant described how he went out the back door of the breakfast area that opened into the Desire Room and, from there, into an office on the third floor. He knew that Hall kept several guns in the office, but these weapons were missing.6 He located a semiautomatic handgun, a Titan .25, used by Hall’s mother during her stay, which defendant had hidden behind a vase.

Back on the first floor and armed with the handgun, the defendant claimed that Hall rushed him and grabbed him by the throat with one hand. When Hall turned his head to call Gegenheimer,7 the defendant shot him at close range. Defendant further testified that Gegenheimer then ran out of the Marie-Michelle Room, where he had been talking on the telephone. Although the defendant claims that he pointed the gun at him and told him to get out, Gegenheimer ran back into the Marie-Michelle Room, where the defendant allegedly thought he was going to get from under the bed one of the missing rifles. The defendant followed Gegenheimer into the bedroom and fired three times at him.

Autopsies were performed by Dr. Tom Carson, a pathologist. He said Hall died of a bullet which entered the left rear side of his head and exited through the right. The injury to the brain stem would have resulted in instantaneous death. Gegenheimer suffered a wound to the left shoulder but died of a [902]*902wound to the head. Gegenheimer’s blood alcohol level was .09%. Hall tested negative for alcohol or other drugs.

Dr. Paul MeGarry, forensic pathologist for the Coroner’s Office of Orleans Parish, said that Hall was shot from behind or at least with his head turned away from the shooter. He said that, as to Gegenheimer, the shooter had to have been shooting down at the victim.

Dr. Irving Stone, of the Institute of Forensic Sciences in Dallas, an expert in firearms identification, gunshot residue and wound ballistics, said he found blood on the weapon suggesting that it was fired within six or eight inches of one or both victims. Although he did not type the blood to determine whether it was Hall’s or Gegenheimer’s, Stone testified that the blood splatter could be consistent with someone shooting at close range. He stated he had never seen a self-defense case where the victim was shot either from behind or from a downward angle.

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Bluebook (online)
623 So. 2d 899, 1993 La. App. LEXIS 2711, 1993 WL 316513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hawthorne-lactapp-1993.