State v. McCord

85 So. 3d 210, 2011 La.App. 4 Cir. 0656, 2012 WL 503608, 2012 La. App. LEXIS 184
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 15, 2012
DocketNo. 2011-KA-0656
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 85 So. 3d 210 (State v. McCord) 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. McCord, 85 So. 3d 210, 2011 La.App. 4 Cir. 0656, 2012 WL 503608, 2012 La. App. LEXIS 184 (La. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

JOY COSSICH LOBRANO, Judge.

h The defendant, Kevin L. McCord, Sr., was charged by bill of information with attempted burglary of an inhabited dwelling, in violation of La. R.S. 14:62.2 and 14:27. Also charged in the bill of information was Michael D. Jackson, who subsequently pled guilty to the charge against him. Mr. McCord was found guilty by a jury of the lesser charge of attempted unauthorized entry of an inhabited dwelling, in violation of La. R.S. 14:62.8 and 14:27, and was originally sentenced to two years and six months at hard labor with credit for time served. The State then charged Mr. McCord as a multiple offender, and he pled guilty to that charge. The trial court vacated the original sentence, and resentenced Mr. McCord to three years and six months at hard labor with credit for time served. Mr. McCord now appeals.

On January 13, 2009, Detective Francis Jarrott of the New Orleans Police Department participated in a burglary investigation at a home located at 5419 South Ro-cheblave Street. Detective Jarrott met with the owner of the house, Andrew La-peyre, who showed him a rear door that looked as though someone had tried to pry it open with a crowbar or a flat-head screwdriver. Mr. Lapeyre told Detective Jarrott that he was unable to determine whether or not any items had | ?been taken from the house. Photographs taken at the crime scene by the NOPD crime lab were introduced into evidence. Included in these photographs were ones showing damage to the rear door of the house. Detective Jarrott testified that he learned that Mr. McCord and Mr. Jackson had been arrested for the attempted burglary, and that neither man had been given permission by the home’s owner to enter the home.

The next witness was Andrew Lapeyre, the owner of the home located at 5419 South Rocheblave Street. On January 13, 2009, Mr. Lapeyre went to his home in the middle of the day after learning that NOPD officers were in the neighborhood conducting a burglary investigation. No one in his family was at home at that time. Only the family dog was inside the home in the middle of the day. When Mr. Lapeyre arrived home, he noticed that one of the exterior doors was damaged and looked as though someone had tried to pry it open. Mr. Lapeyre testified that he did not know Mr. McCord or Mr. Jackson, and had not given either man permission to enter his home. When he left his home on the morning of January 13, 2009, there was no damage to the door that had been pried open when he returned home in the middle of the day. Mr. Lapeyre stated that there were no items taken from his home.

Detective Daniel Carter testified that he was doing surveillance in an unmarked vehicle on January 13, 2009, looking for suspicious persons in an area that had been plagued by burglaries. Another unit participating in the surveillance of this neighborhood alerted other officers by ra[212]*212dio of a blue Suzuki vehicle circling blocks in the area, and slowing down in front of several residences. The radioed call noted that one of the men in the Suzuki exited the vehicle at several locations. Detective Carter and officers in a couple of other unmarked vehicles |skept the blue Suzuki under surveillance for over an hour. He noted that there were two men in the vehicle. When the vehicle arrived in the 5400 block of South Rocheblave Street, the passenger exited the vehicle and walked down an alleyway to an area behind the house at 5419 South Rocheblave Street, nervously glancing over his shoulder while he did so. At that time, the driver of the blue Suzuki drove off and turned onto Octavia Street to a location that Detective Carter could not see. Detective Carter saw the man who went into the alleyway reemerge several minutes later, carrying the sweatshirt he had been wearing when he walked into the alleyway. The sweatshirt appeared to be bundled around something. The man carrying the sweatshirt walked onto Octavia Street, where the blue Suzuki was now parked. He entered the vehicle on the passenger side, and the two men drove off.

Believing the passenger of the blue Suzuki had just trespassed on the property or committed a burglary, Detective Carter followed the vehicle and called for marked units to perform a traffic stop on the vehicle. The vehicle was stopped several blocks away, and when Detective Carter arrived at the scene, the two subjects had been placed under arrest. He identified Mr. McCord as the driver of the vehicle, and Mr. Jackson as the passenger. He said Mr. Jackson was not carrying anything in his hands when he exited the vehicle on South Rocheblave Street.

Detective Guy Swalm participated in the burglary investigation of January 13, 2009. His role was as a “take-down unit,” which he explained is a unit that actually makes contact with the individual or individuals being investigated. He testified that he received a radioed description from the surveillance units of the vehicle and of the subjects in the vehicle. He initiated a stop of the vehicle after being informed that the passenger had been observed by Detective Carter going |4into a side alleyway of a residence, coming out minutes later with an unknown object wrapped in a sweatshirt, walking to the vehicle that was now parked around the block and leaving the area quickly. Detective Swalm testified that a decision was made to stop the vehicle on the belief that the occupants of the vehicle had been involved in a burglary of a residence. He identified Mr. McCord as the driver of the vehicle, and Mr. Jackson as the passenger. On the floorboard of the vehicle, Detective Swalm observed a sweatshirt matching the one described by Detective Carter, a knit cap, a couple of pairs of gloves and “two hand-held, like walkie-talkie radios.” Other items in the vehicle included a screwdriver wrapped up in the sweatshirt, reflective vests, jewelry, silverware, portable memory devices used with computers, razor blades and a pocket knife. After confiscating the items in the vehicle, Mr. McCord and Mr. Jackson were placed under arrest. Photographs of the items taken from the vehicle were introduced into evidence at trial.

Detective Heather Gore testified that she participated in the burglary investigation on January 13, 2009. She had conducted surveillance in the area that day and noted the blue Suzuki with two men inside, but did not see either of the men exit the vehicle. However, she said the vehicle “passed me a few times and slowed down and looked down alleys,” which suggested to her that the occupants of the vehicle were “casing the area.” The officers involved in the surveillance radioed their observations of the vehicle to each [213]*213other. Detective Gore did not participate in the stop of the vehicle. After learning that two burglary suspects had been arrested and brought to the 2nd District police station, Detective Gore went there, where she and Detective Launey Beckham interviewed Mr. McCord and Mr. Jackson after they were advised of their rights.

[sAt the interview, Mr. McCord stated that on the day in question, he took Mr. Jackson to his ex-girlfriend’s house so Mr. Jackson could retrieve his belongings. He stated that he had only known Mr. Jackson for a few months. Mr. McCord told the officers that while he waited for Mr. Jackson, he rode around the neighborhood looking at houses because he does construction work. Mr. Jackson, on the other hand, told the detectives that he had only met Mr. McCord that morning at a Burger King restaurant, and Mr. McCord had asked him if he wanted to break into some houses. He said he got into Mr. McCord’s vehicle and they drove to South Roche-blave Street. According to Mr. Jackson, Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
85 So. 3d 210, 2011 La.App. 4 Cir. 0656, 2012 WL 503608, 2012 La. App. LEXIS 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mccord-lactapp-2012.