State v. McKnight

665 So. 2d 768, 95 La.App. 1 Cir. 1486, 1995 La. App. LEXIS 3576, 1995 WL 743588
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 15, 1995
DocketNo. 95 KA 1486
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 665 So. 2d 768 (State v. McKnight) 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. McKnight, 665 So. 2d 768, 95 La.App. 1 Cir. 1486, 1995 La. App. LEXIS 3576, 1995 WL 743588 (La. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinions

LOTTINGER, Chief Judge.

Evelyn P. McKnight was charged by bill of information with obstruction of justice (of a criminal proceeding in which a sentence of death or life imprisonment may be imposed). La.R.S. 14:130.1. She pleaded not guilty and filed a motion for change of venue. After a hearing, the court granted the motion for change of venue. The state has appealed, urging in a single assignment of error that the court erred when it granted the motion for change of venue.

FACTS

Testimony introduced at the preliminary examination indicates that, on the morning of July 15, 1994, the Sheriffs Office in Livingston Parish was notified that twenty-two-month-old Matthew Populis was missing. Defendant had often served as the child’s baby-sitter, and Matthew had spent the previous night at defendant’s residence in Holden. Over the next few days, law enforcement officers and numerous volunteers conducted an intensive search in the neighboring areas as they attempted to locate the child. Initially, defendant told the authorities that she was not aware of what had happened to Matthew, and authorities believed the child had been kidnapped by one of his parents or by a stranger.

As part of the investigation, investigators spoke with defendant’s twelve-year-old son, who told them he and Bobby Jordan (a man who lived at defendant’s residence) had taken [770]*770Matthew to the Tiekfaw River, whereupon Jordan threw the child into the river. As a result of this information, investigators secured a warrant and arrested Jordan for first degree murder. Aided by the defendant’s son, the authorities located the child’s body on July 20. When investigators later questioned defendant about the child’s disappearance, she admitted that her son had told her what had happened to the victim. Based on defendant’s awareness of the child’s death at a time when she was leading authorities to believe the child had merely disappeared (and the destruction of evidence which resulted from the delay), on July 21 investigators arrested defendant for obstruction of justice. When the investigators next talked to defendant’s son, the boy told them that he had been with his mother when she (and not Jordan) had thrown the child off the bridge. When investigators questioned defendant further, she insisted that she wanted to take Matthew to the hospital after finding him bleeding and unconscious, but Jordan refused and it was Jordan who threw the child into the river. She also said that it was she and not her son who was with Jordan. Eventually, authorities released Jordan from custody on the ground of insufficient evidence. The record does not indicate that anyone is currently 13charged with the child’s murder.

Defendant sought a change of venue on the ground that prejudicial pretrial publicity made it impossible for her to receive a fair trial in Livingston Parish. At the hearing held on the motion, she introduced three types of evidence: (1) copies of newspaper articles and videotapes of television news broadcasts; (2) testimony of an expert in the area of psychology and the designing and conducting of surveys; and (3) testimony concerning a survey conducted of people previously called for jury duty in Livingston, Tangipahoa, and St. Tammany Parishes. The state did not call any witnesses or introduce any exhibits.1

The newspapers introduced by defendant were 14 editions of the Denham Springs-Livingston Parish News, a newspaper of general circulation issued twice each week in Livingston Parish. The papers date from July 17, 1994, until January 19, 1995. According to an affidavit included with the exhibit, the paper has an average distribution of 9,903 copies. Each edition of the paper included at least one or more articles about the incident. In addition to including factual accounts of the search efforts, the subsequent arrests of Jordan and defendant, and the status of court proceedings, the articles contain repeated references to statements by “authorities” that defendant might be arrested for first degree murder because of evidence she participated in causing the child’s death and in disposing of the body. The articles also include an extensive discussion of the mysterious death of a baby left in defendant’s care about two years earlier.

At the hearing, defendant also introduced videotapes from three television stations: WBRZ-Channel 2, WAFB-Channel 9, and WVLA-Channel 33. A list introduced in connection with the two tapes from WBRZ indicates there were fifty-eight broadcasts on this case dating from July 15 through January 26. (The station apparently has as many as five news programs each day.) The tape from WAFB includes several news reports; the exact number of broadcasts and the dates are not evident. The tape from WVLA includes only brief footage of an apparent press conference and does not reveal any actual news broadcast. No testimony was introduced in connection with the videotapes; and there is no evidence concerning the viewing areas or ratings of these television stations.

| Nhe broadcasts from WAFB and WBRZ reveal fairly extensive coverage of the search for the victim, the discovery of his body, the funeral, the arrests of Jordan and defendant, and the subsequent court proceedings. On [771]*771several occasions, defendant is shown in prison clothing; and on more than one occasion cameras were allowed inside the parish jail to film defendant’s prison cell and to show her as she walked within the jail. The broadcasts refer to having received information from the District Attorney’s Office and the Sheriffs Office. There are several interviews with officials from these offices, in which authorities indicate they have reason to believe defendant was involved in the murder and, thus, charges might be upgraded to first degree murder upon the receipt of additional evidence. In one report, the District Attorney indicates authorities have reopened the investigation into the death of the baby who died two years earlier while in defendant’s custody. The broadcasts also include interviews with Jordan (after his release) and Jordan’s mother, in which they blame defendant for the death of Matthew Populis and the other child. Several reports focus upon the grief felt by family members of the victim and by the mother of the other child. At least one report mentions that authorities at one time were investigating the possibility Matthew had been molested before his death. One of the reports indicates defendant twice failed a polygraph test.

In support of the motion for change of venue, defendant called Dr. Hunter Downing, a professor from Southeastern Louisiana University who was accepted as an expert in the area of psychology and in the designing and conducting of surveys. Downing testified that, when she conducted an informal survey of graduate students from Livingston, Tangipahoa, and St. Tammany parishes, she found the students from Livingston Parish were more opinionated and knowledgeable about the case than students from St. Tammany Parish. She then conducted a formal survey of people previously called for jury duty in those same parishes.

The two investigators who conducted the-survey for Downing randomly selected the people to be surveyed from a list of people called for jury duty on a previous occasion in Livingston Parish and St. Tammany Parish.2 According to Downing, 96.8 percent of the respondents from Livingston Parish said they had knowledge of the Matthew Populis case, while only 21.4 percent of those people surveyed in St. Tammany Parish |5replied similarly.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
665 So. 2d 768, 95 La.App. 1 Cir. 1486, 1995 La. App. LEXIS 3576, 1995 WL 743588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mcknight-lactapp-1995.