State v. Hughes

900 So. 2d 168, 2005 WL 896477
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 16, 2005
Docket2004-KA-1797
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 900 So. 2d 168 (State v. Hughes) 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. Hughes, 900 So. 2d 168, 2005 WL 896477 (La. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

900 So.2d 168 (2005)

STATE of Louisiana
v.
Tron HUGHES.

No. 2004-KA-1797.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

March 16, 2005.

*169 Eddie J. Jordan, Jr., District Attorney, Zata W. Ard, Assistant District Attorney, New Orleans, for Plaintiff/Appellee.

Sherry Watters, Louisiana Appellate Project, New Orleans, LA, for Defendant/Appellant.

(Court composed of Judge CHARLES R. JONES, Judge JAMES F. McKAY III, Judge EDWIN A. LOMBARD).

EDWIN A. LOMBARD, Judge.

The principal issue in this case is whether sufficient evidence supports the defendant's conviction for manslaughter, a violation of La.Rev.Stat. 14:31. After review of the record in light of the applicable law, we find that the evidence is insufficient to support the conviction.

Relevant Facts

On August 17, 2002, at approximately 7:30 p.m., Shannon Williams was shot twice in the head in the kitchen of his residence at 14824 Emory Road in New Orleans East. Shortly thereafter, the 911 operator received two calls from Ryan Smith. Smith first declared that he walked up to the open door of a friend's house and an unknown person shot his friend and ran out. In a second call to the 911 operator, Smith stated that he only saw the perpetrator from behind and did not know the identity of the person who shot his friend.

The Investigation

The New Orleans Police Department (NOPD) dispatched officers to the scene in response to the reports of shots fired on Emory Road. Officer Yancy Dixon and his partner, Officer Harry Brown, were the first to arrive and were flagged down by a black male who related that his co-worker, Mervyn Duckworth, took Williams to his residence, saw Williams enter the house with two of three men who were waiting for him, and fled the area after hearing two gunshots. Officer Dixon walked to the front door, announced his presence, and entered the residence where he[1] observed two bullet casings on the floor and found the victim lying on his side in the kitchen (the second room of the house) bleeding from the head. Two shoeboxes, containing a digital scale and a Crown Royal bag, were on the kitchen dinette table. After determining that Williams was unresponsive, Officer Dixon and his partner secured the scene, notified the appropriate authorities, and waited for personnel from the detective division, the coroner's office, and the crime laboratory ("the Crime Lab"), to arrive.

After being notified of the homicide, Detective Bernard Crowden[2] went to the crime scene to take charge of the investigation. He directed the Crime Lab personnel *170 to collect the two bullet casings[3] and the two shoeboxes with their contents,[4] and to dust the front door for fingerprints.[5] Detective Crowden returned to the 7th District police station where Mervyn Duckworth was waiting. In a taped statement, Duckworth stated that he had driven Williams to his house at approximately 7:30 p.m.; that Ryan Smith and two other individuals were waiting for Williams in a burgundy car and one individual was waiting in a white car; that Smith and the individual seated in the front passenger seat of Smith's car got out of the car and went into the house with Williams; that Smith's passenger was carrying a shoebox; and that he heard two gunshots and saw Smith run out of the house. Duckworth identified Smith in a photographic lineup as the man he saw leaving the victim's house immediately after hearing gunshots.[6]

Detective Crowden also interviewed Smith that evening at the police station. Smith stated at Williams' request he accompanied his nephew, Clarence Emilien, and Emilien's friend to Williams' house to buy a car from Williams; that he drove to Williams' house with Emilien and his friend and then followed Williams and Emilien's friend into Williams' house; that Emilien's friend pulled a gun out of a shoebox and shot Williams and he (Smith) ran out into the street; that Emilien's friend ran out of Williams' house and jumped into a white car containing Emilien and another man; and that the white car drove quickly away and he (Smith) ran back into Williams' house to retrieve his car keys before driving home and calling the police. He described Emilien's friend as a little shorter than himself (5'11") with nappy hair and identified Emilien in a photographic lineup.

Detective Crowden obtained a warrant for Emilien on the charge of first degree murder, noting in his contemporaneous report that an unnamed witness reported seeing Emilien, one of the three perpetrators in the offense, flee the vicinity in a white unknown vehicle shortly after the incident, and that "[t]he other male who did the shooting is at large along with the driver of the white vehicle."[7] When Detective Crowden went to Emilien's residence the next afternoon (August 19, 2005), he was advised that Emilien was not at home.[8] Late that evening at approximately *171 11 p.m., Emilien arrived at the police station with his mother. In a taped statement given at 1:15 a.m. on August 20, 2005,[9] Emilien identified Tron Hughes, an acquaintance since childhood, as the third person on the scene and identified Hughes in a photographic lineup. Emilien was arrested as a principal to the 1st degree murder of Williams in violation of La.Rev. Stat. 14:24:30.

Shortly after the arrest of Emilien, Smith was also arrested as an accessory after the fact to the murder and identified Hughes in a photographic lineup as the person who shot Williams. Detective Crowden arrested Hughes several days later on August 27, 2002, at the Greyhound Amtrak Station when Hughes approached him, working a paid detail in full uniform and sitting at the security desk, to ask where he could catch a taxicab. In the search incident to the arrest, Detective Crowden recovered a Houston-New Orleans bus ticket purchased by Donny Minor dated August 26, 2002, and $585.00 in cash. Hughes stated that he was returning home from Texas because his mother called to tell him his face was on the news, that his cousin purchased the bus ticket, and that he planned to turn himself into the police after talking to a lawyer.

Hughes was indicted on October 17, 2002, on the charge of 1st degree murder and entered a plea of not guilty on October 23, 2002. On November 2, 2002, at a hearing on the defendant's motion to suppress, Detective Crowden testified that Smith and Emilien identified Hughes in a photographic lineup but that Duckworth had never been shown a photographic lineup or asked to identify Hughes. Smith also appeared at the hearing, testifying that when Detective Crowden first interviewed him he identified Emilien in a photographic lineup and that he identified Hughes in a photographic lineup shown to him several days later at the time he was arrested as an accessory to the murder.

At an evidentiary hearing on March 14, 2003, Emilien testified that he owned a 40 caliber semi-automatic pistol purchased in 2001, but that the gun had been confiscated by the police in conjunction with a traffic stop.

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Related

State v. Hughes
951 So. 2d 1157 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2007)
State v. Hughes
943 So. 2d 1047 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 2006)

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Bluebook (online)
900 So. 2d 168, 2005 WL 896477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hughes-lactapp-2005.