State v. Hopkins

897 So. 2d 854, 2005 WL 474824
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 2, 2005
Docket39,258-KA
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 897 So. 2d 854 (State v. Hopkins) 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. Hopkins, 897 So. 2d 854, 2005 WL 474824 (La. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

897 So.2d 854 (2005)

STATE of Louisiana, Appellee,
v.
Willie Earl HOPKINS, Appellant.

No. 39,258-KA.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

March 2, 2005.

*857 Samuel Thomas, Tallulah, Louisiana Appellate Project, by Kenota Pulliam Johnson, Carey J. Ellis, III, Rayville, for Appellant.

*858 James D. Caldwell, District Attorney, Kenneth A. Brister, Laurie R. Brister, Assistant District Attorneys, for Appellee.

Before CARAWAY, PEATROSS and MOORE, JJ.

MOORE, J.

Willie Earl Hopkins was indicted for aggravated rape, armed robbery, simple arson resulting in damage of over $500, simple burglary, and illegal possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. A 12-member jury found him guilty as charged on all counts. The district court imposed the mandatory sentence of life imprisonment at hard labor without benefits for the aggravated rape, and consecutive and concurrent sentences for the remaining offenses. Hopkins now appeals, advancing five assignments of error. For the reasons expressed, we affirm.

Factual Background

The charges arose from a crime spree in which Hopkins was joined by his brothers Roy and James,[1] his nephew Ronald Coleman, and his sister's fiance Ronnie Barnes. James and Barnes testified at Hopkins's trial. By their account, several men met at Roy's apartment on Foster Street in Lake Providence on the evening of December 28, 2001 and began drinking gin and beer. Hopkins joined the group around 9:30 or 10:00 PM. At some point Coleman went out to his car and fetched a black handgun with a silver handle, apparently a .380, which he passed around to everybody in the room, including Hopkins, a convicted felon on parole at the time. Another person present in Roy's apartment, Ricky Frith, corroborated that Hopkins handled the gun.

Hopkins said, "I know where to hit a lick at"; according to James, Hopkins said the place was Panola Pepper Company, a hot sauce processing plant on U.S. Hwy. 65 in Lake Providence where Hopkins and Barnes were formerly employed. Hopkins added they just needed a car to get there; Coleman replied that he was low on gas. The five men piled into Coleman's car and drove off.

They first stopped at Hopkins's apartment, where he got a down-filled jacket and some latex gloves; he handed a pair to each man in the car. They then stopped at a gas station, picking up more gin and some fuel. Then Hopkins directed Coleman to take back roads down the levee until they parked near Panola Pepper. Hopkins and Roy got out of the car first and ran to the office building; by the time James and Barnes got there, Hopkins had broken out the front door glass but was unable to enter because of the deadbolt. After Hopkins and Roy tried a screwdriver without success, Barnes went back to the car, got a tire tool and pried the front door open. While James stood lookout, Hopkins, Roy and Barnes ran inside, entered various offices and stole a cash box, some bank bags and a telephone. Before they left, both Barnes and James saw Hopkins light a piece of paper in the owner's office, drop it and run out the building. The men returned to the car, where Coleman had been waiting for them, and drove back to Roy's apartment. Barnes could see Panola Pepper in flames as they drove away. On the road, Hopkins and Roy tossed several items out the rear windows; at Roy's apartment, Barnes threw the telephone over the rear fence.

Inside Roy's apartment, the men pried open the cash box, finding less than $100 *859 in it. They divided the money equally, but Hopkins was irked at getting only about $18. He said he knew where they could "hit another lick." Hopkins changed out of the down jacket and into a black leather jacket. The men loaded back into the Coleman's car and drove toward the Economy Inn on Hwy. 65. Coleman pulled in the second entrance and stopped the car; as Hopkins and Roy got out, Coleman handed Hopkins the handgun they had passed around the apartment earlier. Coleman, Barnes and James then drove to a nearby parking lot and waited.

Within moments, a silver Hyundai Accent drove up to the Economy Inn and parked under the canopy. The driver, a 21-year-old woman from Kansas, was stopping there to get a room. She testified that as soon as she opened her car door, two black men ran up and demanded her money. One of the men, wearing a black leather jacket, held a gun on her and threatened, "I'm not playing." He fired a shot into the air, struck her in the side of the face and took the $15 in her wallet. The men demanded more money; the victim gave her wedding ring to the other assailant, who was dressed in a button-down shirt. The gunman then reached and stroked her breasts and genitals, grabbed her shoulder and pulled her through bushes and behind the motel. There, the men stripped her except for her socks. They then took turns repeatedly raping her at gunpoint, orally, vaginally and anally.

The manager of the motel, Ashwin Bhatt, heard the gunshot and called 911. Deputy Terrance Brown, who had already reported to the blaze at Panola Pepper, was dispatched to the Economy Inn, where Mr. Bhatt told him two black men had dragged a white woman behind the motel. Dep. Brown shone a flashlight down the muddy field and saw two men dragging a naked woman. He identified himself as an officer and fired a shot into the air; the two men took off running. Dep. Brown walked the woman back to the Economy Inn and put her in an ambulance. She was taken to East Carroll Parish Hospital, where she reported that she had been hit in the face with a gun, robbed, dragged around the corner of the motel, and raped. The emergency room physician on duty, Dr. Amin El-Malah, confirmed her injuries and diagnosed rape. He performed a rape kit test which was sent to the North Louisiana Crime Lab in West Monroe.

As the victim was leaving the motel in the ambulance, Dep. Brown received a dispatch that a man was running along the top of the levee. Dep. Brown, along with Dep. Huey George, ran to the levee and found a running man dressed in a black leather jacket, torn T-shirt and sweat pants. They recognized him as Hopkins, an in-law of Dep. George's. Hopkins told the deputies that two white men in a red truck from Arkansas had just tried to rob him. Accepting his story, the deputies let him go.

A short while later, the sheriff sent another dispatch that the man running on the levee should be arrested. Deputy Wilbert Johnson located Hopkins, who was soaking wet. Hopkins explained that he was walking to a grocery store near the Economy Inn, some quarter- to half-mile away, to get something to drink. Dep. Johnson did not believe him, as it was past midnight and all nearby stores were closed. He arrested Hopkins.

From their vantage point down the highway, Coleman, James and Barnes had seen the sheriff's vehicles and ambulance converging on the Economy Inn. They left and drove around, intending to return and pick up Hopkins; however, when they passed the motel and saw him in handcuffs, they decided to flee. Coleman *860 dropped off Barnes and James, but James walked back to Roy's apartment, arriving about 1:00 or 2:00 AM. James testified that Roy phoned him there, saying that deputies had caught Hopkins, and that he (Roy) had kept running, got muddy and lost his shoes.

Two of Roy's in-laws, John Williams and Genevieve Thompson, testified that shortly after 1:00 AM, Roy knocked on their door, wet, muddy and in his stocking feet. They gave him a change of clothes.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
897 So. 2d 854, 2005 WL 474824, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hopkins-lactapp-2005.