State v. MM

802 So. 2d 43, 2001 WL 987775
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 29, 2001
DocketCR00-1296
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 802 So. 2d 43 (State v. MM) 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. MM, 802 So. 2d 43, 2001 WL 987775 (La. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

802 So.2d 43 (2001)

STATE of Louisiana
v.
M.M.

No. CR00-1296.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

August 29, 2001.
Rehearing Denied November 21, 2001.

*47 Jerry L. Jones, District Attorney, Monroe, LA, Counsel for State/Appellee, State of Louisiana.

R. Neal Walker, Attorney at Law, New Orleans, LA, Counsel for Defendant/Appellant, M.M.

Court composed of BILLIE COLOMBARO WOODARD, MARC T. AMY, and ELIZABETH A. PICKETT, Judges.

WOODARD, Judge.

In this criminal litigation, a jury convicted M.M., the Defendant. for the triple murder of his father, L.M.; his mother, H.L.M.; and his son, R.M. In essence on appeal, the Defendant argues that the evidence was insufficient to convict him and that every reasonable hypothesis of his innocence was not excluded, as required.

After reviewing the evidence in light most favorable to the prosecution, we find that it is sufficient to satisfy a rational juror of the Defendant's guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. Further, finding no merit in the Defendant's remaining assignments of error, we affirm his conviction.

* * * * *

This criminal litigation ensued from events which occurred on December 30-31, 1995. On December 31, 1995, shortly after noon, M.M. (the Defendant), and his daughter, K.M., arrived at his parents' house, to pick up R.M., his son, who had spent the night with his grandparents. L.M. and H.L.M. lived in a house located on Collinston Road, just outside of Bastrop, Louisiana, and immediately across from Audrey's grocery store.

Upon arriving, K.M. noticed that the carport door was wide open but did not think much about it—her grandparents would air out the house on pretty days. Also, the Defendant noticed the Sunday paper in the driveway, but, albeit unusual, he "didn't think nothing of it." When they entered the house, K.M. heard the telephone ring and answered it. A person *48 asked to speak to her grandmother. K.M. placed the person on hold. As she tried to open her grandparents' bedroom, she noticed that the door would not open all the way. Looking inside, she found her grandparents lying on the floor. She immediately found her father, the Defendant, and told him that "Ma Maw and Pa Paw are asleep on the floor." K.M. explained that his "eyes got real (sic) big, and he was kinda looking at me crazy ... and he kinda freaked out." Immediately, he realized that they had been lying there, dead, for some time.

He and his daughter started calling for his son, but there was no response. He called 9-1-1 and requested assistance. Afterwards, he also called his sister, L.S., and said that "Mama and Daddy are on the floor." L.S. could not obtain any further information from him. He appeared so upset that she could hardly recognize his voice. Thereafter, he left the house, saw one of his father's friends pulling up in his pickup truck, and explained the situation. Then, he ran to Ms. Sherry McDonald's house, a neighbor, to determine whether she had heard or seen anything. On his way back to his parents' home, he noticed that his sister and "the emergency people" had arrived.

Deputy Jim Culp of the Morehouse Parish Sheriff's Department (MPSD) and Mr. Buddy Henderson of the Wildlife and Fisheries Department responded first to the murder scene. Upon arrival, Deputy Culp remembers seeing the Defendant; K.M.; Ms. McDonald; L.S.; and Mr. L.M. McIntyre, another neighbor, at the crime scene. Both the Defendant and Mr. McIntyre informed him that the victims were dead. Inside the house, Deputy Culp did a visual sweep. Meanwhile, Deputies Keith Robertson and Scott Floyd reached the murder site. Sheriff Frank Carroll, the MPSD Sheriff, arrived shortly after Deputy Culp left the house. He recalls the Defendant greeting him jovially and stating: "I'm glad to see the high sheriff is on the job," adding: "I don't think you're going to find anything, it looks like the perfect crime to me." Unaware of the Defendant's connection, Sheriff Carroll kept on walking. Nevertheless, the Defendant followed him, stating: "[You're] going to find that they have been shot in the head at close range with a .22." When Sheriff Carroll informed him that he did not know which type of weapon had been used in the crimes' commission, the Defendant replied: "[I]sn't that the way all assassins do it[?]"

Following his brief interaction with the Defendant, Sheriff Carroll called the Louisiana State Police Crime Laboratory (LSPCL) in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and secured the area surrounding the house. By that time, Deputy Huey Shingley had joined in the effort. After implementing the usual precautionary measures, such as "taping" the victims' house surroundings, local law enforcement started to investigate. Outside the house, they found a footprint and a cigarette butt. Inside, they found L.M. and H.L.M. lying dead on their bedroom floor. In the kitchen, a pork chop was in an uncovered dish on the counter. A white sock, L.M.'s wallet, and his glasses, with one glass out of its frame, laid on the hallway floor.

When Deputy Bill Franks secured the crime scene, the Defendant told him that "this was the biggest case that ever hit Morehouse Parish," that it "was going to be [sic] put Morehouse Parish on the map." He added that he would spend every cent of the insurance money he received to find the culprit.

Following the gruesome discovery, the police investigation intensified. Mainly, friends and family began searching for R.M., but, immediately, the Defendant *49 started saying to a variety of individuals, ranging from law enforcement officers to bystanders, that R.M. would not be found alive. Deputy Franks overheard him explain to another person that they would only find R.M. when plea-bargaining, that they were directing the search effort in the wrong direction—that they needed to look a couple miles down the road near a bridge over water. Sheriff Carroll recalled that the Defendant similarly told him: "I don't know why they're going out there; y'all [sic] are going to find his body in a shallow grave near water." Nevertheless, the Defendant, also, told Deputy Robertson that R.M. could be in the woods located behind the victims' house.

Mr. Ray Waller, a neighbor who lived across the street from the victims' house, saw the Defendant walking around the yard, claiming that he would give a $100,000.00 reward to anyone who could find the killer. Mr. Waller began helping others in R.M.'s search effort. However, when he returned, the Defendant told him that searching for R.M. in such a location was a waste of time—that R.M. could not be in the woods because he was dead.

The early search efforts remained unsuccessful. When Mr. Waller and others expressed their concern that R.M. may be cold, the Defendant responded that they should not worry because he was wearing his San Francisco 49ers pajamas and one sock. Mr. Todd Matice, a bystander, corroborated this. Then, when Mr. Waller suggested that someone investigate the report that a redheaded boy was seen wandering around Collinston, Louisiana, approximately five to six miles south of the murder scene, again, the Defendant dismissed it, claiming that his son was dead. Mr. Waller explained that he never saw the Defendant participate in R.M.'s search. Instead, at some time in the afternoon, the Defendant walked to his car lot, complaining that the police gave him a hard time. He told Mr. Waller that "if the dumb mother fuckers [sic] would look under the bridges, they would find [R.M.]," and lamented that should the police not find his son, it would take him seven years to obtain his inheritance.

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Related

State v. As
24 So. 3d 1009 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2009)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
802 So. 2d 43, 2001 WL 987775, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mm-lactapp-2001.