State v. Hebert

688 So. 2d 612, 1997 WL 20897
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 22, 1997
Docket29062-KA
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 688 So. 2d 612 (State v. Hebert) 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. Hebert, 688 So. 2d 612, 1997 WL 20897 (La. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

688 So.2d 612 (1997)

STATE of Louisiana, Appellee,
v.
Ernest Drew HEBERT, Appellant.

No. 29062-KA.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

January 22, 1997.

*614 Lavelle B. Salomon, for Appellant.

Richard Ieyoub, Attorney General, Jerry Jones, District Attorney, J. Michael Ruddick, Assistant District Attorney, for Appellee.

Before NORRIS, HIGHTOWER and BROWN, JJ.

BROWN, Judge.

Defendant, Ernest Drew Hebert, was convicted of armed robbery, La. R.S. 14:64, and sentenced to ten years at hard labor. Defendant has appealed his conviction and sentence. We affirm.

Facts

In March 1994, defendant was a student at Northeast Louisiana University in Monroe, Louisiana, and a part-time employee of Only a Buck, a business located in the West Monroe Plaza. On March 25, 1994, the West Monroe Police Department received a call that an armed robbery had just occurred at Only a Buck. Upon their arrival, the police questioned the two employees on duty when the robbery occurred, Laverne Hill and defendant. The officers took statements from both employees and quickly became suspicious of defendant, who was arrested later that night, along with his former roommate, Keith Jones.

Laverne Hill's Testimony

In March 1994, Laverne Hill was an assistant manager at Only a Buck and defendant was a part-time stock person and cashier. Ms. Hill stated that defendant had been employed at Only a Buck for about six months.

Fridays and Saturdays were the store's busiest days. On Friday, March 25, 1994, defendant and Ms. Hill closed the store at approximately 6:00 p.m. Ms. Hill testified that while she counted the money from the day's sales in the rear of the store, defendant took the trash out back. According to Ms. Hill, taking the trash out was part of defendant's daily duties. On that Friday, however, when defendant came back into the store, there was a man behind him.

Ms. Hill stated that at first she assumed defendant knew the other man because the two of them appeared very calm. The second man walked behind defendant toward Ms. Hill. They were walking very slowly, and as the two neared Ms. Hill, she saw that the second man was wearing dark clothing, a baseball cap and a dark blue bandanna over his face. As the two men approached, defendant stepped aside and the masked man pointed a chrome, black-handled gun in Ms. Hill's face and told her not to look at him. Ms. Hill stated that defendant urged her to comply with the man's demands and to get down on the floor.

Ms. Hill sat down in a chair and defendant got down on his knees and began praying aloud that they would not be shot. Ms. Hill stated that she was not afraid until defendant started praying, because until that time the robbery did not seem real to her. She testified that the masked man took the money from the register, apparently taking time to count it. He told Ms. Hill and defendant that he would shoot them if they left the building, then exited through the back door.

Ms. Hill testified that defendant did not want her to leave the store, saying that the robber would shoot them. Despite defendant's warning, she went to an adjacent business establishment and called the police. She testified at trial that the robber took approximately $600-700.

According to Ms. Hill, for approximately three weeks prior to the robbery, defendant had parked his car, a white Ford Mustang, behind the store when he came to work. Ms. Hill stated that employees normally only go *615 behind the store to retrieve deliveries and that she parked her own car in the front of the store, as had defendant up until three weeks before the robbery.

Detective Lawrence Moore's Testimony

West Monroe Police Officer Lawrence Moore, the detective who investigated the robbery of Only a Buck, interviewed both Ms. Hill and defendant after the robbery. Defendant related that after he deposited the trash, an unidentified black male stuck a gun to the side of his head and ordered him to walk back into the store. Defendant reported seeing a red Chevrolet Cavalier in the rear parking lot; however, the vehicle was no longer there when the officers arrived. An alert was issued for a car matching the description given by defendant, though no such vehicle was ever found. After taking the employees' oral statements, Detective Moore took recorded statements from both at the police department. After giving his statement, defendant left the police station.

Detective Moore stated that he had observed conflicts in the statements and that he wanted to see what defendant's next move would be. Det. Moore followed defendant from the West Monroe Police Department to a dormitory at Northeast Louisiana University. Defendant got out of his car and went into Room 107. Det. Moore then observed defendant leaving Room 107 with a black male who roughly matched the physical description of the gunman at Only a Buck. The two men went briefly upstairs to Room 245 before returning to Room 107.

N.L.U. campus police were called for backup; Det. Moore and the responding officers knocked on the door to Room 107. Keith Jones, the registered occupant of 107, answered the door. After being informed of his constitutional rights, Jones chose to speak to the officers and confessed to them his involvement in the robbery. A search of Jones' room revealed a black sweatshirt in the closet; however, a blue and white bandanna was not found.

Jones led the officers to the money, which was stuffed in a sofa in Room 108, an adjoining dorm room, and he turned over to the officers two handguns. Jones told the officers that defendant was involved in the robbery; based on this information, the officers arrested both Jones and defendant.

Detective Moore testified that he did not recover any of the checks reported stolen from Only a Buck; he believed that the checks had been burned in the bathroom between Jones' room and the adjoining suite. Ms. Hill subsequently identified Jones as the gunman who robbed the store from a photo lineup.

On cross-examination, Det. Moore admitted that the handguns seized from the dorm room were black, not chrome, and that they belonged to Keith Jones, not defendant. He also admitted that Ms. Hill had originally reported approximately $400 stolen, not the $600-700 she testified to at trial. Neither the money nor the guns were examined for fingerprints. Detective Moore stated that because currency is handled so frequently, it normally does not yield legible prints.

Keith Jones' Testimony

Keith Jones testified that in March 1994, he was a full-time student at N.L.U. and that he worked at the school as a custodian. Jones stated that he and defendant were roommates for approximately a year; however, as Det. Moore testified, at the time of the robbery, defendant lived off-campus.

Jones testified that defendant first suggested that they rob the store approximately two months prior to the robbery. Defendant took Jones to the store and showed him the back exit. Defendant wanted to rob the store on a Friday, the day that the store took in the most money. On March 25, 1994, before defendant left for work, the two decided to rob the store that evening.

Jones stated that he got a ride to West Monroe from someone he knew as "Carlton Kong" (Roderick LaFitte). Jones took a loaded 9 mm handgun with him. Kong parked his car at a fast food restaurant within walking distance of Only a Buck.

Jones got out of Kong's car and walked to Only a Buck; he then sat in defendant's car until defendant walked out of the store's back door with the trash.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
688 So. 2d 612, 1997 WL 20897, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hebert-lactapp-1997.