State v. Jarreau

921 So. 2d 155, 2005 La. App. LEXIS 2859, 2005 WL 3701480
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 14, 2005
DocketNo. 2005-KA-0355
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 921 So. 2d 155 (State v. Jarreau) 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. Jarreau, 921 So. 2d 155, 2005 La. App. LEXIS 2859, 2005 WL 3701480 (La. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

LEON A. CANNIZZARO, JR., Judge.

[ t This case involves an appeal regarding the length of the sentence received by the defendant, Oliver J. Jarreau, Jr., under the Habitual Offender Law, La. R.S. 15:529.1, as it was in effect on November 25, 1998, the date that Mr. Jarreau committed a third offense under that statute. Mr. Jar-reau was sentenced to life in prison without the benefit of probation, parole, or suspension of sentence, and he is appealing his sentence as being excessive.1

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

Mr. Jarreau was charged in a bill of information with possession of cocaine in violation of La. R.S. 40:967. He pled not guilty at his arraignment. He was tried by a jury and was found guilty as charged. Six months later he was adjudicated a third-felony offender and sentenced to life imprisonment under the Habitual Offender Law. His motion for an appeal was granted.

In State v. Jarreau, 2000-2013 (La.App. 4 Cir. 12/27/01), 810 So.2d 585, unpub., writ denied, 2002-0291 (La.10/25/02), 827 So.2d 1171, this Court rendered an opinion in connection with Mr. Jarreau’s appeal. Among the assignments of error raised by Mr. Jarreau on appeal were his claims that his sentence was excessive and that the trial court had failed to rule on his motion to reconsider his sentence. This Court found that there had been no ruling by the trial court on the motion to reconsider his sentence and, therefore, preter-mitted any consideration of Mr. Jarreau’s assertion that his sentence was excessive. On appeal this Court considered Mr. Jar-reau’s other assignments of error and affirmed Mr. Jarreau’s conviction but remanded the case to the trial court for a ruling on his motion to reconsider his sentence.

On remand on July 8, 2003, the trial court denied the motion to reconsider the sentence. Mr. Jarreau asserts that he was never notified of the ruling on the motion, and there is nothing in the record to contradict his assertion. Never having received notice that the motion to reconsider his sentence had been denied, on December 18, 2004, Mr. Jarreau filed in the trial court a motion to compel the trial court to rule on the motion to reconsider his sentence and a request for an appeal if the court denied the motion. In January of 2005, the trial court entered a judgment (1) denying the motion to compel on the ground that it was moot, because the motion to reconsider the sentence had already been denied, and (2) granting a pro se appeal solely on an assignment of error regarding Mr. Jarreau’s sentence.

STATEMENT OF FACTS

New Orleans Police Department (“NOPD”) Officer Bret Charles testified at [158]*158Mr. Jarreau’s trial that as he was driving down the street in a marked patrol car with his partner, NOPD Officer Lamar Davis, they observed two people sitting on [3the steps of an abandoned house in the 1000 block of North Robertson Street in New Orleans. Officer Charles testified that he was familiar with the area and that the steps of the abandoned house were a known location for drug sales. According to Officer Charles’ testimony, as he and his partner drove in front of the abandoned house, Mr. Jarreau immediately stood up and walked away from the police car. Officer Charles then stopped the ear, exited the vehicle, and asked Mr. Jarreau to approach the police car. Officer Charles testified that he called Mr. Jarreau several times but that instead of approaching the police car, Mr. Jarreau continued walking past two additional houses and then threw an object into the yard of the residence located at 1022 North Robertson Street. Because Mr. Jarreau had not stopped as requested, Officer Charles pursued him and was only a few feet away from him when he threw the object.

As soon as he saw Mr. Jarreau throw the object, Officer Charles told Mr. Jar-reau to walk back to the police car, which he did, and Officer Davis detained Mr. Jarreau. Meanwhile, Officer Charles climbed over a chain link fence and retrieved the object that had been thrown. The object, which was a glass tube with a white substance in it that Officer Charles believed to be crack cocaine, was found on a sidewalk running alongside the residence at 1022 North Robertson Street. The glass tube was recovered in a cracked condition, and Officer Charles speculated that it might have broken when it fell on the concrete sidewalk where it was found.

Officer Davis testified at the trial also, and his testimony corroborated Officer Charles’ testimony. Officer Davis further stated that he saw Mr. Jarreau discard an object that, based on his experience, he believed to be some type of contraband. After Officer Charles recovered the glass tube, Officer Davis placed |4Mr. Jarreau under arrest and searched him. When he searched Mr. Jarreau, Officer Davis found in one of Mr. Jarreau’s pants pockets some wire mesh and a plastic bag. Officer Davis testified that these items could be used as drug paraphernalia.

At the trial NOPD Officer Harry O’Neal, a crime laboratory chemist, identified a laboratory report that reflected that a piece of glass pipe containing residue and an accompanying piece of metal mesh had tested positive for cocaine. NOPD criminalist William Giblin, who was not in court, had performed the testing on the pipe and the mesh for the presence of cocaine, and the test was positive. It was stipulated that had Officer Giblin testified at the trial, (1) he would have been qualified as an expert in analyzing and identifying controlled dangerous substances, (2) he would have testified that he had tested the crack pipe and accompanying mesh seized in connection with this case and introduced into evidence at the trial, and (3) he would have testified that the pipe and the mesh had tested positive for cocaine. Officer O’Neal also stated that the amount of cocaine on the crack pipe was an extremely small amount, which he admitted was possibly one one-thousandth of a gram. He further said that theoretically one could scrape the residue out of the crack pipe and smoke it but that it probably had no value. Officer O’Neal also explained that the wire mesh that accompanied the pipe was normally inserted inside of the glass tube of the pipe and that crack cocaine was normally placed on the wire mesh in the end of the tube, lit, and then inhaled through the tube.

[159]*159Mr. Jarreau, who was fifty years old at the time of the trial, testified that when he was arrested, he had been dropped off at North Robertson Street and Orleans Avenue by his boss so that he could go to his sister’s home four blocks away at North Robertson and Ursuline Streets. He stated that he had walked past | Rtwo men he knew who were sitting on the steps of an occupied house. He spoke to the two men and continued walking. When he got to the abandoned house next door to the house where the two men were sitting on the steps, he testified that one of the men who had been sitting on the steps rushed past him at the time that a police car arrived. Mr. Jarreau further testified that the police officers in the car used a loudspeaker system in their car to tell him to stop.

Mr. Jarreau said that he stopped and turned around and that Officer Charles exited the police car and used a flashlight to check the gutters and the porch of the abandoned house. Then, according to Mr. Jarreau’s testimony, Officer Charles jumped over a fence at an occupied house and retrieved a brown bag with a crack pipe in it. Mr. Jarreau said that it was dark at 6:30 p.m. in November when Officer Charles retrieved the crack pipe. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
921 So. 2d 155, 2005 La. App. LEXIS 2859, 2005 WL 3701480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-jarreau-lactapp-2005.