State v. King
This text of 886 So. 2d 598 (State v. King) 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.
Opinion
STATE of Louisiana, Appellee
v.
Larry KING, Jr., Appellant.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
Louisiana Appellate Project, by Carey J. Ellis, III, for Appellant.
Jerry L. Jones, District Attorney, Charles L. Brumfield, Assistant District Attorney, for Appellee.
Before STEWART, DREW and LOLLEY, JJ.
DREW, J.
By a vote of 11-1, a Morehouse Parish jury convicted Larry King, Jr., of armed robbery, as charged. The defendant was *599 sentenced to 25 years at hard labor without benefit of parole, probation, or suspension of sentence. He appeals, alleging only insufficiency of the evidence. We affirm his conviction and sentence in all respects.
FACTS
At trial, the victim, Ray Yarborough, testified that:
He had returned to his insurance office from a trip to the bank about 1:30 p.m. on October 5, 2001, and was alone at his desk, when a robber came in, pointing a .45 automatic pistol at him.
The robber demanded money, and Yarbrough gave the intruder approximately $100.00 from his pocket and desk drawer.
The robber then rummaged through his desk and tried to pull the telephone cord out of the wall.
Failing to accomplish that, the thief noticed an answering machine in the corner of the room.
The robber knocked down trays to get over to that area, yanking on the answering machine to disconnect it.
He advised the robber to leave before customers arrived.
The robber told him to get on the floor.
As he complied, Yarborough noticed that the gunman had on "real white tennis shoes."
When the robber left, he called the authorities via 911.
Madeleine Prater, testifying through an interpreter because of a hearing impairment, declared that:
On the day of the robbery, she twice saw the defendant walking "cool like" in her yard around the time of the robbery.
Even though she asked him to move into the street and out of her yard, he went around her house anyway.
The second time the man was near her house, he suddenly darted and jumped a ditch because police were chasing him.
She got a good look at his "pretty face," noticing that he was wearing a royal blue shirt.
She later identified the suspect at the police station and in open court.
Another witness, Investigator Ron Lara, later established that Prater's house was one street over from the insurance office.
Cindy Beach, a mail carrier, testified Yarborough told her he had been robbed and gave her a description of the robber. On her mail route a few minutes later, she saw someone fitting the description getting out of a vehicle in front of Gray's Barbershop. She indicated that it was the eyes and shoes that made her think this person was the robber. She alerted the police.
Gerald Boley testified that he was working patrol for the Bastrop Police Department on the day of the crime. He and a trainee, Kirk Brown, were looking for the robber in the vicinity of the crime and were told by the dispatcher to go to Gray's Barbershop. There they approached King because he matched the physical description of "a black male wearing a dark blue sweatshirt or sweater with blue jeans, very light complected with hazel or green eyes."
Boley testified that the defendant told him he had been at the barbershop "for a while." He testified that when the defendant was taken to the insurance agency, Yarborough identified him as the armed robber.
The barbershop owner, Isaac Calvin Gray, testified that the defendant had been in his shop for about five or ten minutes before the police arrived.
*600 Barbara Patton, a dispatcher with the Bastrop Police Department, produced and identified the log of incoming and outgoing contacts for October 5, 2001.
Bastrop Police Department Investigator Ron Lara testified that:
The police log reflected that Yarborough had reported the description of the robber as "black male, six feet tall, blue pullover sweatshirt, blue pants, white shoes, green eyes, short hair."
The barbershop where the defendant was picked up was 3/10 of a mile from the insurance office.
King was taken back to the insurance office, where Yarborough immediately identified him as the armed robber.
Two wads of money were found in the suspect's pockets (four twenty-dollar bills, two ten-dollar bills, and a five-dollar bill were together, and another group of bills contained one twenty, seven fives, and twenty ones).
Yarbrough had told him that he gave the robber one twenty-dollar bill, eight five-dollar bills, and twenty one-dollar bills from the register and two ten-dollar bills from his wallet;
When asked how much money he thought he had, the defendant's answer as to amount and origin kept changing.
King denied being at or near the insurance agency that day, claiming that he was with Terrance Smith during the time of the robbery.
No weapon was ever recovered.
Brad Fife, a lieutenant with the Morehouse Parish Sheriff's Department, testified that he had taken fingerprints from the defendant and identified the card with his signature on it.
A police officer for the Bastrop Police Department, Steve Fuller, testified that he had retrieved the telephone and answering machine from the crime scene. He told in detail how he had found a partial print on the answering machine and why he had opted to photograph it instead of lifting it.
Brian Shoemaker, a deputy with the Morehouse Parish Sheriff's Office, was tendered as an expert in classification and comparison of fingerprints. The trial judge removed the jury and required the state to present its evidence outside their presence before he would qualify him as an expert. The trial court then gave the state an opportunity to make a better exhibit of the prints. The defense counsel did not object to this procedure. The state brought Fuller back to testify about the new photographs he had taken, showing the latent fingerprint on the answering machine.
After more testimony from Shoemaker, the trial court found that he was an expert in fingerprint identification and that the charts of King's fingerprints could be used as evidence. The witness then testified at length about the comparison of the defendant's known prints to the photograph of the partial print taken from the answering machine, finally opining that the prints were a match.
The last witness called by the state was Curtis Stephenson of the Bastrop Police Department, who testified that the minimum number of fingerprint point comparisons established by the FBI was seven.
The defense called Juane Perry as an alibi witness. Perry, who was identified as the defendant's cousin, testified that he was with the defendant from approximately 12:30 p.m. to 1:30 p.m. on the day of the robbery. During cross-examination, he said he could not recall what the defendant was wearing that day. He denied selling drugs with the defendant that day. He denied that Terrance Smith had been with *601 him and the defendant during the time of the robbery.
DISCUSSION
Defendant argues these points:
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
886 So. 2d 598, 2004 WL 2388275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-king-lactapp-2004.