State v. Lormand

771 So. 2d 734, 0 La.App. 3 Cir. 0435, 2000 La. App. LEXIS 2309, 2000 WL 1509974
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 11, 2000
DocketNo. 00-0435
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 771 So. 2d 734 (State v. Lormand) 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. Lormand, 771 So. 2d 734, 0 La.App. 3 Cir. 0435, 2000 La. App. LEXIS 2309, 2000 WL 1509974 (La. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

| JETERS, Judge.

A jury convicted the defendant, Jason Keith Lormand, of two counts of first degree murder, violations of La.R.S. 14:30. However, the jury could not reach a unanimous decision during the sentencing phase of the trial, and the trial court then sentenced him on each count to life imprisonment at hard labor without benefit of probation, parole, or suspension of sentence. The defendant has appealed, asserting three assignments of error. For the following reasons, we affirm the convictions and sentences in all respects.

DISCUSSION OF THE RECORD

The victims of the double homicide were Justin Price Fitzgerald and Heidi Studler, a young couple in their early twenties. They were killed during the early morning hours of August 21,1997, in a rural area of Lafayette Parish, and their bodies were dumped at another location in the same general area. Fitzgerald and Ms. Studler had spent their last hours in a number of nightclubs in the city of Lafayette, Louisiana, celebrating with friends the recent reconciliation of their personal relationship after a brief separation. The friends with whom they were celebrating left them sometime around midnight and never saw them alive again. A few hours later, Fitzgerald and Ms. Studler were each shot in the back of the head with a .22 caliber pistol. Officers of the Lafayette Parish Sheriffs Office discovered their badly decomposed bodies covered with plywood in a dumpsite in rural Lafayette Parish at approximately 3:00 a.m. on August 29, 1997. The investigation into their deaths resulted in the defendant’s arrest, indictment, and ultimate conviction. The defendant admits being present when the two were shot but claims that Jason Vidrine, an acquaintance of a few weeks, killed the couple.

The evidence is overwhelming that the killings were drug related and involved | ¡.a concern by the defendant and Vidrine, both drug dealers, that the victims were supplying law enforcement personnel with information concerning their illegal activities. In fact, an ongoing investigation into the defendant’s involvement in the trafficking of illegal drugs played a critical part in the evidence-gathering process of the double homicide.

The defendant’s involvement in trafficking illegal drugs had come to the attention of local law enforcement personnel about a month before the killings, and the evidence gathered in that encounter along with the defendant’s awareness of the potential criminal liability associated with the evidence against him caused him to agree to be a confidential informant for the Lafayette City Police. On July 29, 1997, he met with Officer Thomas Parker of the Lafayette Narcotics Unit and signed a confidential informant agreement wherein he [736]*736agreed to assist in combating the illegal drug activity in the Lafayette area. However, the defendant failed to provide any usable information. At trial, the defendant admitted that he never intended to comply with the confidential informant agreement and that he signed it for the sole purpose of avoiding prosecution for his activity.

What the defendant did not know was that his longtime friend, Todd James Gir-ouard, had also signed a confidential informant agreement with the Lafayette Narcotics Unit and was cooperating with law enforcement personnel. Girouard arranged an August 6, 1997 purchase of cocaine from the defendant by an undercover police officer. However, the police made no arrest at the time because they intended to attempt to arrange more purchases from the defendant.

It took little time for Girouard to obtain an agreement from the defendant to supply additional cocaine. On August 19, 1997, he met with the defendant and | aVidrine at a Lafayette residence and negotiated the purchase of a large quantity of cocaine (one-half kilo) for $10,000.00. Girouard testified that, during the discussion of how the cocaine transaction would take place, the defendant and Vidrine informed him that two. people had “ratted” on them and that they were going to “take care of them.” Initially, Girouard did not relate this part of the conversation to the officers with whom he was working because he did not really think the two men were serious.

The negotiation at the Lafayette residence resulted in an agreement to meet at a Lafayette hotel on August 21, 1997, to complete the transaction. On that evening, police officers wired the hotel room with audio and video monitoring devices and stationed themselves in the adjacent room in anticipation of arresting the defendant and Vidrine upon the completion of the transaction. However, although the narcotics transaction did not take place as planned, the event resulted in the acquisition of the most damaging evidence against the defendant concerning his involvement in the double homicide-a description of the murders from his own mouth captured on video.

The defendant appeared at the hotel room at approximately 10:30 p.m. but without the cocaine. In the video tape of the transaction, the defendant was shown making a number of telephone calls on a cellular telephone in an attempt to have the cocaine delivered. More important to the matter before us, the video tape also clearly revealed the defendant telling Girouard that he had taken care of “a couple of rats” the night before. He described in detail how he had held the male victim’s girlfriend as he shot him behind the left ear. The defendant then stated that the female victim was not even aware of what was happening until the male victim fell. She then screamed, “[0]h, my God,” and he shot her in a similar fashion. At one point during the exchange between the defendant and Girouard, the defendant placed his finger at 14the back of Girouard’s neck immediately behind Girouard’s left ear and told Girouard how he had shot the male victim at that point.

Despite the defendant’s telephone request, the cocaine he proposed to sell to Girouard never materialized. Ultimately, he left the hotel room without being apprehended. Despite the chilling nature of the defendant’s statements concerning the homicide, the police officers working the narcotics portion of the investigation had no information that anyone was missing, much less murdered. However, the information gained in this encounter was soon shared with other law enforcement officers investigating missing persons reports filed in relation to the disappearance of Fitzgerald and Ms. Studler. The information gathered in this continuing investigation ultimately led law enforcement personnel to discover the victims’ bodies in the early morning hours of August 29.

[737]*737A subsequent search of the defendant’s truck seized pursuant to a search warrant resulted in the discovery of blood and human hair in the bed of the truck. Christopher Harold Henderson, an expert forensic chemist, testified that the recovered hair was “microscopically indistinguishable” from the hair samples taken from Ms. Studler’s remains. Julie Golden, an expert forensic scientist at ReliaGena Technologies, a private DNA analysis firm in New Orleans, Louisiana, testified that there was only a 1 in 82,000,000 chance that the blood recovered from the truck was not Ms. Studler’s blood. Finally, Mary H. Manag-in, an expert in the field of forensic anthropology, testified that she examined the victim’s remains and determined that Ms. Studler was shot in the back of the head and that Fitzgerald was shot behind the left ear-both entrance wounds being the same as described by the defendant in the August 21 video.

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Bluebook (online)
771 So. 2d 734, 0 La.App. 3 Cir. 0435, 2000 La. App. LEXIS 2309, 2000 WL 1509974, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lormand-lactapp-2000.