State v. Honore

31 So. 3d 485, 9 La.App. 5 Cir. 313, 2010 La. App. LEXIS 22, 2010 WL 99114
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 12, 2010
Docket09-KA-313
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 31 So. 3d 485 (State v. Honore) 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. Honore, 31 So. 3d 485, 9 La.App. 5 Cir. 313, 2010 La. App. LEXIS 22, 2010 WL 99114 (La. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

MARION F. EDWARDS, Judge.

| gDefendant/appellant, Steven M. Hon-oré (“Honoré”), appeals his conviction of one count of second degree murder, a violation of LSA-R.S. 14:30.1. We affirm.

Following his arraignment, Honoré filed various pre-trial motions. The trial court denied his motions to suppress evidence, statement, and identification. Honoré proceeded to trial on March 10, 2008 throughout which he moved for mistrials and a new trial, all of which were denied. Ultimately, a twelve-person jury found Honoré guilty as charged. Following the denial of *488 a motion for new trial, Honoré was sentenced to life imprisonment at hard labor without benefit of parole, probation, or suspension of sentence.

On November 19, 2004, between 3:22 and 3:25 a.m., Ernie Jacobs (“the victim”) was the victim of a shooting homicide in Kenner that occurred outside of a club known as Robinson’s Place in the 500 block of Taylor Street in Jefferson Parish. The victim sustained three non-lethal gunshot wounds to his arm, shoulder, and thigh and died as a result of one lethal gunshot wound to his head.

|aBetween 3:22 and 3:25 a.m., Officer Anthony Roach (“Officer Roach”) of the Kenner Police Department was on Airline Highway, making a turn onto the 700 block of Taylor Street, when he saw a small gray vehicle speeding across the railroad tracks. Officer Roach got behind the vehicle, turned on his lights and siren, and initiated a traffic stop. Officer Roach pulled the vehicle over at the intersection of Airline and North Bengal, after the vehicle had passed Waldo Street.

The driver immediately opened his vehicle door and exited. At the same time, Officer Roach saw the front and rear passenger doors open. The front passenger stuck his head out and looked back at him, and the other passenger exited the rear passenger door. Officer Roach told the rear passenger to get back into the vehicle, and he complied. Officer Roach believed there were four or five people in the car.

The driver approached Officer Roach and said he did not have a driver’s license on him. Officer Roach testified that the driver said his name was Corey Fisher (“Fisher”). He handcuffed the driver. At the time, he intended to cite the driver for reckless operation and no driver’s license. However, three or four minutes into the stop, Officer Roach was advised by radio of a shooting on Taylor Street near “Robinson Bar.” Because he was close to the scene, Officer Roach removed the handcuffs from the driver and released him. Officer Roach testified that he had an “uneasy feeling” about the vehicle, so before he left he wrote down the vehicle’s license plate number.

When Officer Roach arrived at the scene of the shooting, the victim was lying on the ground. Another officer told Officer Roach that he spoke with a witness who advised him that the vehicle that had been stopped was involved in the shooting. Thereafter, Officer Roach notified headquarters of the license plate Rnumber, and they put out a bulletin for the 2003 Toyota Corolla as being a vehicle that was possibly linked to the homicide. Officer Roach gave descriptions of the occupants in the vehicle he stopped to Detective Keith For-sythe (“Detective Forsythe”) of the Ken-ner Police Department. Officer Roach described the driver, the passenger trying to exit, and the front passenger who looked back at him.

At approximately 4:11 a.m., Officer Michael Schmitt, a Crescent City Connection police officer, stopped the speeding Toyota vehicle at a gas station. There were two occupants in the vehicle — Honoré and Donnell James (“James”). They were searched, handcuffed, and placed into separate police cars. Thereafter, Detective Forsythe and then Officer Roach arrived. Officer Roach told Detective Forsythe that the two subjects were the same subjects he observed earlier at the traffic stop on Airline Highway. He identified Honoré as the driver of the car he had previously stopped and stated that James was one of the passengers trying to exit the vehicle stopped on Airline Highway. Detective Forsythe testified that Honoré was wearing a tan-colored Dickies button-down shirt with matching Dickies long pants and *489 a yellow T-shirt underneath, which had a large picture on the front of it.

After Honoré was removed from the rear of the police unit, five $100 bills were found hidden underneath the seat of the unit where he had been detained. James was in possession of $740, which was found hidden underneath the insole of his shoe. After Detective Forsythe advised Honoré of his Miranda rights, Honoré stated that he was at the club in Kenner, in that vehicle, and that he was the only one who had operated the vehicle that night. He refused to identify anyone else with him in the vehicle, and he denied that he had been stopped by the police that night in the vehicle.

| fiAt trial, Detective Forsythe testified that his investigation revealed Honoré was not the driver but, instead, was the rear passenger. As such, after a three-month investigation, Detective Forsythe realized that Officer Roach made a mistake. He explained that Officer Roach’s identification of Honoré did not fit with what multiple witnesses had advised him in taped statements.

Officer Roach testified that, on January 11, 2005, Detective Forsythe showed him a photographic lineup. From the lineup, Officer Roach identified Fisher as the driver of the vehicle he stopped. Officer Roach testified that he made a mistake in identifying Honoré as the driver. He testified that Honoré was the rear passenger who had tried to get out of the vehicle. Officer Roach also admitted that he made a mistake as to the identification of James as the passenger exiting the vehicle, when he was really the front passenger who stuck his head out while looking back at Officer Roach.

Clifton Coston (“Mr. Coston”), an eyewitness to the shooting, identified Honoré as the shooter. Mr. Coston, who identified Honoré in a photographic lineup on November 24, 2004, knew him from before the incident. Mr. Coston also knew the victim and Rory Hebert (“Mr. Hebert”) from work in the daytime. (It appears that Mr. Hebert was a witness to the shooting.) Mr. Coston also had a job at night working at the club in security as a bouncer and had been working there for about three months at the time of the shooting.

Mr. Coston testified that, on November 18, 2004, he saw the victim and Mr. Hebert together at the club where he was working. Mr. Coston testified that Honoré was also in the club and appeared upset after a woman posed for a photograph with the victim. According to Mr. Coston, Honoré walked off and kept “eyeing [the victim] down.”

|f;According to Mr. Coston, the victim later walked out of the club, and Mr. Hebert went to tell Mr. Coston that he and the victim were about to leave. Minutes later, Mr. Coston followed a female out of the club. He testified that he saw a white Grand Prix down the street and that there was a person, who was later identified as the victim, bent over and leaning into the car talking to someone. He stated that a small car that was grey, tan, or brown, pulled up behind the Grand Prix, and that Honoré got out of the driver’s side, walked behind the car and around to the victim, and shot the victim while the victim was still bent over. He testified that the victim fell and the shooter stood over him and shot a couple of more times.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 So. 3d 485, 9 La.App. 5 Cir. 313, 2010 La. App. LEXIS 22, 2010 WL 99114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-honore-lactapp-2010.