State v. ORBRO

64 So. 3d 410, 10 La.App. 3 Cir. 1289, 2011 La. App. LEXIS 515, 2011 WL 1662380
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 4, 2011
DocketKA 10-1289
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 64 So. 3d 410 (State v. ORBRO) 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. ORBRO, 64 So. 3d 410, 10 La.App. 3 Cir. 1289, 2011 La. App. LEXIS 515, 2011 WL 1662380 (La. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

EZELL, Judge.

hOn April 12, 2006, the St. Landry Parish District Attorney charged Defendant, Damien Orbro, with two counts of assault with a dangerous weapon and with one count of second degree kidnapping. On July 29, 2010, Defendant was convicted of second degree kidnapping, in violation of La.R.S. 14:44.1. Thereafter, the sentencing court ordered Defendant to serve five years at hard labor; designated that the first two years would be served without benefit of probation, parole, or suspension of sentence; and gave Defendant credit for time served.

STATEMENT OF FACTS

Dr. Mark Oliver, an emergency physician, was the first witness called by the State. The court accepted Dr. Oliver as an expert in emergency room medicine. On February 13, 2006, Dr. Oliver treated Myra Orbro at the Opelousas General emergency room. Mrs. Orbro complained primarily of an injury to her right back along with other injuries to her face, right chest, middle back, right knee, and left elbow. Mrs. Orbro reported that she had obtained the injuries when she was pushed, pulled, and threatened by her husband. Examination revealed that Mrs. Orbro was ambulatory; that she had an abrasion below her right eye; that she was anxious and upset; that, though there were no bruises in the area, she had mild tenderness below her left wingbone; that she had a minimal tenderness in the left trapezius area, and that she had a contusion on her right chest wall.

On cross-examination, Dr. Oliver stated that the abrasion did not require stitches. Dr. Oliver examined Mrs. Orbro’s knee and found that it was not swollen and that it had a full range of motion. Although there were objective signs of some of her injuries, there were no objective signs of other injuries reported by Mrs. Orbro.

*412 |^Myra Orbro Broussard was the prosecution’s second witness. On February 13, 2006, Mrs. Broussard had been married to Defendant for twenty years, but she was in the process of separating from him; she has since remarried. At the time, Mrs. Broussard was living in the family home, and Defendant had been evicted therefrom. Mrs. Broussard worked at UPS; she usually went into work at 4:30 a.m. to load delivery trucks. She would also drive the trucks.

Mrs. Broussard reported that Defendant came into her place of business around 5:45 or 6:00 a.m. Although there are a lot of people around, they are usually in and out of their trucks because, when the conveyor belt was rolling, they were loading freight onto the delivery trucks. When Defendant walked in, he asked the young man across from Mrs. Broussard where she was, and the young man pointed her out. Mrs. Broussard saw Defendant when she walked out of her truck. He seemed really calm. Defendant asked her to speak with him, but Mrs. Broussard declined; she explained that she could not leave her truck when the conveyor belt was moving. She told him that they could probably get together if he called her later. Mrs. Broussard only took the time to speak to Defendant because he seemed calm and pleasant, and his eyes were clear. He was standing with his right hand behind his thigh.

Mrs. Broussard recalled that, before she finished speaking, Defendant grabbed her arm with his left hand and began to drag her out of the building. Though she pulled as hard away from him as she could and dragged her feet, he kept moving. While Defendant dragged her, Mrs. Broussard jerked her arm back as hard as she could. Mrs. Broussard’s actions caused Defendant to lose his balance, and “the gun flew up.” Defendant had the silver .32 caliber pearl-handled pistol he had inherited from his father. Defendant continued to hold the gun in his hand and pull Mrs. Brous-sard. At that point, Mrs. Broussard wrapped her arm and legs around a table | ¡¡holding the UPS punch-in clock, but Defendant pulled her away. Mrs. Broussard also grabbed at paperwork and anything else she could to stop Defendant from pulling her outside. Mrs. Broussard asserted that she steadily resisted by yelling at him, by beating on his arm in an effort to make him let go of her, and by grabbing at objects such as the door knob. Defendant calmly pulled on her until she let go of the door handle. Mrs. Broussard fell, and Defendant dragged her from the building and onto the ground outside.

Mrs. Broussard related that, once she was outside, she saw a 1997 Toyota Camry parked across the street. The vehicle was running, but Mrs. Broussard did not notice if any of the doors were open. Mrs. Broussard knew the car engine was running because she could feel the heat and see the smoke. Defendant pulled Mrs. Broussard all of the way through the parking lot. She yelled and screamed for him to let her go. Defendant kept dragging her and cursing her: “Shut up B_tch”; “Get your _ss in the car”; “Get your _ss up”; “Get up you know”; “Get up Mother F_cker”; “Get your Mother F_cking _ss up B_tch”; and “Get in the car.”

Defendant eventually picked Mrs. Broussard up by her neck and threw her against a small white building, which was located at the front of her workplace. Defendant again grabbed Mrs. Broussard by her neck; he then lifted her until her feet were off the ground. Defendant continued to curse Mrs. Broussard, instruct her to be quiet, and demand she get into the car. Mrs. Broussard could not breathe. Defendant pulled away from the wall and resumed dragging her.

*413 Mrs. Broussard reported that, as Defendant resumed dragging her, her supervisor Mike Hebert walked outside. Mr. Hebert drew Defendant’s attention by shouting for Defendant to leave the parking lot and to leave Mrs. Broussard alone because she did not want to go with him. Defendant turned around and put the gun |4in Mr. Hebert’s face. This enabled Mrs. Brous-sard to pull away and run. Defendant chased after Mrs. Broussard, caught her, and threw her into a fence across the road. She landed in the roadside ditch. Defendant then accused her of infidelity and repeatedly asserted that she had been “messing with” a cop. Mrs. Broussard denied the allegations, knelt in the ditch, and covered her face. Defendant held his gun to her head, so Mrs. Broussard thought he was planning to shoot her in the face. Ultimately, Defendant was frightened away by a passing eighteen-wheeler, that hit a pothole, and made a loud noise. Defendant got back into his car and drove away.

Mrs. Broussard explained that she did not want to leave with Defendant. She was frightened for her life. Mrs. Brous-sard repeated that Defendant held a gun to her head; he put it in her face as she crawled out of the ditch. Mrs. Broussard went to the emergency room; she had bruises all over, including a bruise to her right cheek. The bruises came out later; places turned blue after she left the hospital. She complained about her knee while she was at the hospital; it, too, later turned blue. Because of the bruising, the pain, and her swollen knee, Mrs. Brous-sard took a week off of work.

The third witness for the State was Mr. Hebert. At the time of the offense, Mr. Hebert was working for UPS as a Pre-Load Supervisor. He was in charge of loading seventeen trucks, and he had nine people working for him. Both Mr. Hebert and Mrs. Broussard were working around 6:00 a.m. on February 13, 2006. On that morning, Mr. Hebert was doing paperwork when Stuart Bob entered his office and hollered that “he” had Mrs. Broussard and that they were outside. Mr. Hebert did not know what was going on, so he ran outside with Mr. Bob. Once Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 So. 3d 410, 10 La.App. 3 Cir. 1289, 2011 La. App. LEXIS 515, 2011 WL 1662380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-orbro-lactapp-2011.