State v. Lacey

669 So. 2d 1303, 95 La.App. 4 Cir. 0449, 1996 La. App. LEXIS 191, 1996 WL 67566
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 15, 1996
DocketNo. 95-KA-0449
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 669 So. 2d 1303 (State v. Lacey) 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. Lacey, 669 So. 2d 1303, 95 La.App. 4 Cir. 0449, 1996 La. App. LEXIS 191, 1996 WL 67566 (La. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

liKLEES, Judge.

On September 30, 1993 the appellant, Richard Lacey, was charged by bill of indictment with second degree murder of Harold Henderson, Jr. A trial was held on January 11,1994, which resulted in a hung jury. The appellant was retried on May 11-12, 1994, at which he was found guilty of the lesser offense of manslaughter. A hearing was had on July 28, 1994, at which the district attorney was permitted to put forth victim impact testimony. On August 5, 1994 the appellant was sentenced to serve eighteen years at hard labor.

After the record was lodged in this court, appellant’s counsel subsequently filed a motion to supplement the record and suspend the briefing schedule, which motion was granted. The record was thereafter supplemented on July 7, 1995 with a volume containing transcripts of the voir dire, opening statements and closing arguments. On August 7 counsel submitted a brief containing two arguments which encompass ten of the twelve original assignments of error as well as two supplemental assignments of error.1 Because the brief raised the issue of the appellant’s sentence, on September 15, 1995 the record was supplemented with transcripts of the sentencing and victim impact hearings.

FACTS

On August 2, 1993, appellant Richard Lacey fatally shot his across-the-street neighbor, Harold Henderson, Jr. The appellant contends that he shot the decedent in defense of his mother and younger brother.

12Pebra Lacey and her family moved to their Boston Drive home in 1991. The Lacey family consisted of Mrs. Lacey, her oldest son, Richard, her next oldest son, Robert, a nephew, Tim, and three younger children. As brought out by the defense, there had been bad blood between the Laceys and the decedent for some time prior to the shooting.

The decedent and Robert Lacey had been involved in an altercation in May of 1992, in which the decedent, then forty-one, beat up the considerably younger Robert, then fifteen. The decedent’s father and another state witness diminished the extent of the beating and alleged that Robert began the dispute. The triage nurse and hospital medical records supported that Robert was injured. As a result of the beating, Debra Lacey brought a battery charge against the decedent in Municipal Court. The decedent pled guilty to the charge on January 20, 1993. Sentencing was deferred.

Defense witnesses testified that, on the night of January 20, the decedent threatened them with a gun pointed across the hood of his ear towards Robert, Tim and Richard. Mrs. Lacey called the family lawyer, Craig Sussaman, who went to court the next morning and obtained an attachment which resulted in the decedent’s arrest.

On July 20, 1993, the decedent was sentenced to one year’s probation and placed under a peace bond. Robert Lacey was out-of-town, working for his uncle in Houston, at that time. August 2, 1993, the date of the shooting, was the first time Robert saw the decedent since his return.

The events which led directly to the shooting began when Robert drove up in a car with Richard and Tim. Richard and Tim went into their house, but Robert remained outside. He crossed the street to the Henderson side to talk to some young girls, Leslie McDaniels and Sabrine Johnson. As they passed the Henderson residence, the decedent came out of his house and began [1306]*1306walking to his hear and mumbling something. According to neighbor Louis Magee, Jr., the girls tried to pull Robert back to his side of the street, but he ran over to the decedent. Magee told Robert to remember that his mother was inside sick, then went over to the decedent and told him to “cool it,” while another neighbor, Byron Paine, went to tell Mrs. Lacey that there was a problem.

Debra Lacey and Tim came out first. Debra Lacey had words with the decedent and threatened to call the police. Richard came outside, too, after first retrieving a firearm from under the sofa. He came out eating olives from a glass, with the firearm in his pocket. He fired five shots, one of which hit the decedent in the head and was fatal. The decedent was shot while seated in the driver’s seat of his car with his left leg outside the car. Other bullets hit the window of another car, made a hole in the driveway fence, and made a hole in the top of a front window of the Henderson home.

The testimony relative to the moment of the shooting and the aftermath is conflicting. The state witnesses claim that the decedent was sitting erect when he was shot, that he slumped over from the gunshot. They did not hear the decedent utter any threatening words. At least two state witnesses heard Mrs. Lacey call out “murderer, now you’re going to jail,” to Richard after the shooting. Louis Magee testified that he was there by the car until the police arrived, that only the decedent’s father went to the car to comfort his son, and that nothing was removed. The police found no weapon in the decedent’s ear.

The defense witnesses heard the decedent say “I got something for you all,” saw him reach down for something, and saw the shooting as the decedent came up. They did not hear Mrs. Lacey call her son a murderer, but they did see someone go to the car and walk away as if he was carrying something. They also saw someone come out of the Henderson’s house with a weapon after the shooting.

_yAfter the shooting, Robert and Tim Lacey went back into the house with Mrs. Lacey. Richard fled. He turned himself in to the police the next day.

ERRORS PATENT REVIEW

A review of the record for errors patent reveals that there were none.

ARGUMENT ONE

The appellant first argues that the state’s introduction of irrelevant, inadmissible, and hearsay evidence calculated to paint the defendant and his family as bad people, and its exploitation of that evidence in closing argument, denied defendant a fair trial. The appellant cites various particular instances of this alleged introduction of inadmissible and prejudicial evidence.

The first instance of alleged hearsay evidence is the state’s reference to a petition of neighbors seeking to have the Laceys relocate. It was purportedly confected and circulated in the appellant’s neighborhood prior to the shooting of the decedent. The petition was first used on cross-examination of Debra Lacey. Its purpose was to show that the decedent was not necessarily the aggressor in the prior conflicts between the decedent and Robert Lacey. It was used to rebut Mrs. Lacey’s testimony that the decedent’s hostility to her family was unprovoked. Mrs. Lacey denied knowing that her neighbors had grouped together to get her to leave the neighborhood. Considering that the defense urged by the appellant was self-defense, by showing the dangerous propensity of the victim towards the appellant’s family, the petition was clearly relevant to rebut this theory.

As to the hearsay argument, the allegations of the petition were not read to the jury. Rebuttal witness Louis Magee did sign the petition and read its title. As such, it was not hearsay, at least as to his signature. It remained a hearsay document as to the other signees. However, considering the other evidence against |sthe appellant, in that all the confrontations, including the final one, occurred on the Henderson side of the street, the jury would have concluded, without refer[1307]*1307ence to the petition, that the Laceys were not wholly innocent in the altercations.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Batiste
947 So. 2d 810 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2006)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
669 So. 2d 1303, 95 La.App. 4 Cir. 0449, 1996 La. App. LEXIS 191, 1996 WL 67566, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lacey-lactapp-1996.