State v. Knapper

555 So. 2d 1335, 1990 WL 8530
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 5, 1990
Docket89-K-0841
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 555 So. 2d 1335 (State v. Knapper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Knapper, 555 So. 2d 1335, 1990 WL 8530 (La. 1990).

Opinion

555 So.2d 1335 (1990)

STATE of Louisiana
v.
Corneal KNAPPER.

No. 89-K-0841.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

February 5, 1990.

*1336 Robert Glass, Lori R. Fregolle, Glass & Reed, New Orleans, for applicant.

William Guste, Jr., Atty. Gen., Harry F. Connick, Dist. Atty., Sandra Pettel, Jack Peebles, Kim Garvey, Asst. Dist. Attys., for respondent.

CALOGERO, Justice.

We granted writs in this case, wherein relator complains of the court of appeal's affirming his conviction and sentence for second degree murder, to determine the merit of defendant's motion for a new trial based upon newly discovered evidence. That motion was denied by the district court judge and found nonmeritorious by the court of appeal. For the reasons which follow we find that the motion has merit, reverse the rulings of the district court and court of appeal, and remand the case for retrial.

On April 11, 1986, Corneal Knapper was convicted of second degree murder in the July 10, 1985, shooting death of his one time friend, Timothy Loving. On June 16, 1986, Knapper moved for a new trial based on newly discovered evidence. The court denied the motion and then sentenced Knapper to life imprisonment without benefit of parole, probation, or suspension of sentence. Finding that the new evidence would not have produced a different verdict, the court of appeal found no error in the district court's denial of the motion for new trial and affirmed Knapper's sentence and conviction. State v. Knapper, 538 So.2d 702, 706 (La.App. 4th Cir.1989).[1]

The defendant Corneal Knapper had been acquainted with Timothy Loving since Loving was released from prison in the spring of 1984. Knapper knew Loving through Knapper's sister, Hazel Lee, who was Loving's girlfriend. Also he and Loving had been co-workers at the Louisiana World's Fair during the summer of 1984. During the summer of 1985, Knapper was living with his sister uptown in New Orleans in order to be closer to his place of employment. Loving also stayed there overnight from time to time. On Friday, July 5, 1985, Loving drove Hazel, who was going out of town, to the airport. Knapper, who was at Hazel's house, received a call from Loving asking Knapper to meet Loving downtown at Loving's parents' house. Knapper went to their address, waited for Loving to arrive, talked to Loving for awhile, and then returned to Hazel's house. When he entered the house, he noticed that it was not as he had left it and discovered that $2000 in cash which he was saving to purchase Hazel's car, was missing.[2]

The following Wednesday, July 10, Knapper had a conversation with a neighbor, Terrel Pierre, who informed Knapper that he had seen Loving enter Hazel's house with a key the previous Friday before Knapper had arrived. Since Loving was not authorized to have a key to Hazel's house, and since Loving had drawn Knapper away from the house with his request to come downtown, Knapper suspected Loving of taking his money. That Wednesday Knapper also met with his nephew Rogers Johnson who reported that he had just found Loving inside Clara Lee's house and that Clara Lee was missing some articles of jewelry and money. (Clara Lee was Johnson's grandmother and Knapper's mother.) Johnson and his girlfriend had entered Clara Lee's locked house, found Loving inside, waited for him to leave, and then reported the incident to the police. Johnson accompanied the police to Loving's parents' house in search of him, but he was not there.

Johnson and Knapper set out for the Loving residence to talk to Eula Loving *1337 who did not want charges brought against her son, and to find Loving. They each carried a gun. When they did not find Loving at his parents' house, they went to the home of Byron Snead, a close friend of Loving's, who lived in the St. Bernard Housing Project. Loving was indeed there and had been there for several hours. Also there, were Byron Snead, Snead's wife, Carrie, and Carrie's four-year-old nephew.

Accounts differ as to the events which occurred next. However, Loving, Knapper, and Johnson had a loud discussion about the thefts, in front of Snead's apartment. Knapper stood on the steps to the porch, Johnson stood on the grass in front of the apartment, and Loving stood on the front porch facing the other two. Then Loving turned away from Knapper and Johnson as if to enter the front door of the apartment. According to Knapper's account and the account of an eye witness, George Smith, after reaching the screen door, Loving pulled a gun from his waistband, turned, and fired at Johnson and Knapper. According to Snead's version, Loving had no gun on him when Johnson and Knapper shot him down.

Loving was shot nine or ten times with bullets from two different guns. He had entry wounds to his chest, back, arms, left buttock, and left hip and fell face down in the apartment doorway. Neither Knapper nor Johnson was injured, and they both ran. Then Knapper disposed of his gun in the Mississippi River.

Byron Snead, who, while serving time for armed robbery, had been a fellow inmate of Loving's at Angola State Penitentiary, initially told police that he had not witnessed the shooting. However, on July 15, Snead told police that he did witness the shooting, that Loving was unarmed, and that Knapper and Johnson had shot Loving. He explained to police that he had been afraid to come forward with the facts until after he was able to relocate his family to another neighborhood. Later, at a pre-trial hearing, Snead admitted that Loving had had a gun when he first arrived at the apartment but that Snead had made him remove the gun and leave it in an upstairs bedroom while he remained in Snead's home. Snead reported that the day after the shooting he removed Loving's gun from the upstairs bedroom and threw it into Lake Pontchartrain. He explained that as an ex-convict, he was not supposed to have a gun in his possession, and he feared being sent back to jail. Snead testified that he was on the front porch at the time of the shooting. He stated that when Knapper and Johnson began firing at Loving, he ran from the porch, jumped the fence next to his apartment, reentered the apartment from the back door, then found Loving lying inside the front doorway.

Although Snead claimed that no other adults were in the courtyard to witness the shooting or the events leading up to it, the defense offered the testimony of George Smith who stated that he was visiting friends in the St. Bernard Project on the day of the shooting and was carrying a sack of groceries en route from the grocery store to his friend's apartment when he happened to see Loving, Johnson, and Knapper outside of an apartment, holding a conversation. He was acquainted with the men and cut across the courtyard intending to greet them. Smith spoke briefly to Johnson, and, as he stood there near the porch, he became aware that they were arguing about a break-in at Johnson's grandmother's house. Smith testified that a fourth man came to the screen door and tried to get those arguing to come inside. Next Smith saw Loving move toward the door as if to go inside, pull a gun from his waist, and then whirl around shooting. Smith had noticed the imprint of a gun through Loving's shirt which imprint appeared more distinct as Loving raised his left arm to open the door. It appeared to Smith as though Loving were "trying to shoot and get into the house at the same time." He testified that Johnson and Knapper returned fire, that he ran, and that they ran toward St. Bernard Avenue.

As Smith was giving direct testimony of these events, the trial judge interrupted defense counsel and began to question Smith from the bench.

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Bluebook (online)
555 So. 2d 1335, 1990 WL 8530, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-knapper-la-1990.