State v. Holt

12 So. 3d 502, 8 La.App. 5 Cir. 1276, 2009 La. App. LEXIS 978, 2009 WL 1464135
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 26, 2009
Docket08-KA-1276
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 12 So. 3d 502 (State v. Holt) 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. Holt, 12 So. 3d 502, 8 La.App. 5 Cir. 1276, 2009 La. App. LEXIS 978, 2009 WL 1464135 (La. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

MARION F. EDWARDS, Judge.

| gDefendant/appellant, Derrick Holt (“Holt”), appeals his conviction on two counts of second degree murder committed on September 6, 2003, violations of La. R.S. 14:30.1. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

Following his indictment for the murders, Holt filed a Motion to Appoint a Sanity Commission to Determine Competency to Stand Trial. The trial court ordered that a sanity commission be appointed to determine his competency to stand trial and to determine his I.Q., i.e., his level of mental retardation. Subsequently, after a sanity hearing, the trial court found that Holt was mildly mentally retarded but competent to stand trial. Two omnibus motions, including a Motion to Suppress, as well as Motion to Quash the Indictment as Constitutionally Deficient were denied. After a two-day trial, a twelve-person jury found the Holt guilty as charged, on both counts. A Motion for New Trial was filed, which the trial court denied, and, after sentencing delays were waived, the trial court sentenced Holt to life at hard labor without benefit of parole, probation, or | ^suspension of sentence on each count with the sentences to be served consecutively.

On appeal, Holt argues that the trial court erred in failing to give his requested *504 jury charges on self-defense and in giving the jury an improper jury charge on reasonable doubt; he further argues that the erroneous jury instructions were not harmless error.

TRIAL PROCEEDINGS

Detective Nick Vega (“Detective Vega”) with the Jefferson Parish Sheriffs Office testified that, on September 6, 2003, at approximately 8:00 p.m., he assisted in responding to 911 hang up calls at 2037 Tuskegee Drive, in Marrero, Louisiana. Upon arrival, he saw a naked female, later identified as Narcissa Laymon (“Lay-mon”), lying face down half in the doorway. The door was ajar with the woman butted against it. As he approached the woman, he saw blood inside the doorway and into the living room. He called for medical assistance after he observed that the woman was struggling to breathe and had stab wound injuries to her back with blood seeping out.

Detective Vega also noticed another victim, a male later identified as L.C. Lewis (“Lewis”), who was located at the house next door, on the sidewalk by the driveway. The victim’s eyes were open; however, he was unresponsive. Detective Vega observed a “slit” in the male victim’s chest. Later in his investigation, Detective Vega interviewed the next-door neighbor who called the police, and then he searched the area for the suspect.

Ronald Jacks (“Jacks”) testified that, on the date of the incident, he drove to his mother’s home, which is next door to the crime scene. A neighbor of his mother’s, whom he identified as Holt, approached him and calmly asked for a big screwdriver because he had locked the children in the house. Jacks had seen Holt |4taking the children, who lived at 2037 Tuskegee, to school several times over a three-month period. Jacks offered Holt a small screwdriver and also offered to help him get into the house, but Holt declined. Jacks testified that he left Holt by the front window at 2037 Tuskegee. According to Jacks, a few minutes later his sister informed him that Holt dove through the window. Jacks testified that he called 911, and informed the police that he had given Holt a screwdriver. When he walked outside, he saw people standing in front of Laymon’s door. After he asked them to move, he saw Laymon lying down. Then, he saw a person in shadow running behind the house. Jacks gave a statement to the police, and he subsequently identified Holt in a photographic lineup.

Cindy Jacks, Jack’s sister, testified that, on the night of the incident, she saw a man walk across her mother’s yard, and then turn back around. According to Cindy Jacks, the man got the screwdriver after talking to her brother, Jacks. Then, the man returned to the house he shared with his girlfriend, who was killed that evening. She had seen the man on two prior occasions with his girlfriend and the two children. Cindy Jacks testified that later she saw the man hit the window with a screwdriver, and then throw his whole body into the window. She testified that she told her brother to call the police. A minute later, she saw a man, not Holt, run out of the house through the garage. Then, a few minutes later she saw another man run out of the front door of the house and collapse approximately two houses away. Cindy Jacks could not identify Holt in court.

Homicide Detective David Morales (“Detective Morales”) testified he participated as the scene investigator in the investigation with Sergeant Eddie Klein (“Sergeant Klein”). On the scene, Detective Morales noticed that a pane of glass in the lower left corner of the front twenty-pane window was broken. Some glass from the broken pane remained in the aluminum *505 frame and one piece of glass |5was on the ground in front of the window. Detective Morales opined that there had been a struggle where Laymon was found, near the front door, because there were areas of blood caused by an arterial wound, disheveled furniture, and a broken chair. He also found a knife with a blood-like substance on it on a couch near the front door. In addition, he found a robe with cut marks between two sofas in the living room, close to the hallway and a torn piece of the robe was also found in the master bedroom connected to the doorknob. Detective Morales opined that the cut marks on the robe were caused by stabbing. There were also some blood patterns in the middle of the floor in the hallway and a blood-like substance on the rear bottom of the door and above the doorknob.

More bloody evidence was found in the kitchen, and there were footprints in blood that appeared to go toward the garage. In the garage, there was a vehicle and a washing machine, inside of which was a hammer with a blood-like substance on the head and a black-colored knife with a five-inch blade, towels, and a large shirt with a blood-like substance on them. There were more bloodied footprints of a tennis shoe leading out of the garage, as well as a swipe pattern blood transfer along the driver’s side of the vehicle, which Detective Morales opined was caused by someone passing by the vehicle, the only way in and out of the garage.

Dwanne Wiltz (“Wiltz”) testified that she was a co-worker and best friend of Laymon, She had met Holt, whom she identified in court, through Laymon at their jobsite. Wiltz testified that Laymon and Holt were dating, but not living together. Wiltz testified that, the morning after Laymon’s murder, and after she learned of the murder, Holt called her a few times. According to Wiltz, during the first telephone call at her jobsite, Holt identified himself and Wiltz also recognized his voice. Wiltz testified that Holt asked her if he had talked to Laymon, then told her, “[You] needed to call her because she was hurt real bad and that he had hurt her, |Bthat I needed to call and check on her.” Wiltz testified that she directed her co-workers to call 911, and kept Holt on the telephone as long as she could, in order for the police to catch him. According to Wiltz, in the first telephone call, Holt continued to repeat that he hurt Laymon and that Wiltz should call her. Holt did not describe the details at that time.

Wiltz testified that Holt called her a second time on her cell phone.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 So. 3d 502, 8 La.App. 5 Cir. 1276, 2009 La. App. LEXIS 978, 2009 WL 1464135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-holt-lactapp-2009.