State v. Pardon

703 So. 2d 50, 1997 WL 631721
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 15, 1997
Docket97-KA-248
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 703 So. 2d 50 (State v. Pardon) 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. Pardon, 703 So. 2d 50, 1997 WL 631721 (La. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

703 So.2d 50 (1997)

STATE of Louisiana
v.
Angelon PARDON.

No. 97-KA-248.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.

October 15, 1997.

*54 Laurie A. White, New Orleans, for Appellant.

Paul D. Connick, Jr., District Attorney, Alison Wallis, Assistant District Attorney, Research and Appeals, Gretna, for Appellee.

Before BOWES, WICKER and DALEY, JJ.

WICKER, Judge.

Angelon Pardon was indicted on October 15, 1995 for the second degree murder of John David Conner, a violation of La. R.S. 14:30.1. At arraignment the defendant pleaded not guilty. The case was tried from May 21 through 23, 1995 before a twelve-member jury, which returned a unanimous verdict finding the defendant guilty as charged. The defendant's motions for new trial and for post-verdict judgment of acquittal were denied. On August 5, 1996 the trial court sentenced the defendant to life imprisonment at hard labor without benefit of parole, probation or suspension of sentence. The defendant appeals. We affirm.

FACTS

The following evidence was presented at trial:

Pathologist Dr. Susan Garcia testified that John David Conner sustained a single stab wound to his chest that perforated his lung and punctured the pulmonary artery. The wound, which was four-and-one-half to five inches deep, resulted in bleeding into the left chest cavity and into the pericardium, the sac surrounding the heart. Dr. Garcia stated the decedent would have lost consciousness within three to four minutes and probably died within the next five to ten minutes. She also testified that toxicology testing of the victim's body fluids revealed an alcohol level of.38, a markedly elevated level within the lethal range, but that Conner died of the knife wound.

William H. Ingram testified he is a bartender at Pat's Bar in Gretna near the trailer park where Conner lived. He knew David Conner and Angel Pardon.[1] In the early morning hours of September 1, 1995, Pardon and Conner came into the bar, where another patron purchased a pitcher of beer for them. Conner drank a glass of beer, put his head on the bar, and went to sleep. Pardon drank about half the pitcher, then she and Conner left with the remaining beer in four small "go-cups."

Officer Herbert J. Este of the Gretna Police Department testified that about 3:00 a.m. on September 1, 1995 he was dispatched to 712 19th Street, Lot 14, a trailer park in Gretna. He was the first unit to arrive on the scene. As he entered the trailer he observed a woman sitting on a sofa on one side of the room and another woman, the defendant, sitting on another sofa. The defendant had a man lying across her with his head in her lap. As far as Este could see the man was unconscious. He found no vital signs. Este asked the defendant what had happened. She told him she had left her bedroom and found Conner lying on the sofa, and that she had no knowledge of how he was on the sofa or how he was in that condition. The other woman also denied any knowledge of what had happened. Este stated there was a bandage on the body (visible in State Exhibit 3, a photograph, on the left upper quadrant of the victim's chest). Este left the scene after emergency medical services personnel arrived.

Detective William Cambre of the Gretna Police Department testified he investigated the scene with a crime scene technician. They discovered a brown-handled knife, with *55 what appeared to be dried blood on the blade, beneath a plastic bag in a kitchen cabinet under the sink. They found another knife, black-handled, which did not appear to have blood on it. Based on the apparent bloodstains, Cambre believed the brown-handled knife was the weapon used on the victim. After interviewing other residents of the trailer park Cambre arrested the defendant for second degree murder. Cambre stated on cross-examination that Pardon had attempted to doctor the victim's wound with peroxide and the bandage.

Gretna Police Officer Randy Berggren testified he photographed and processed the scene for evidence. He found the brown-handled knife when he opened the cabinet door and noticed the handle sticking out from the plastic bag partially covering it. He also recovered the black-handled knife under the pillow on the sofa the victim was lying on.

Frances Plaisance, who also lived in the trailer park, testified that Pardon and Conner were staying with Virginia Keener in Keener's trailer. Plaisance was awakened around 2:25 on the morning of September 1, 1995 by a loud banging on her door. It was her neighbor, Rick Betts, who said he needed to use her phone to call 911. She had trouble unlocking the door and by the time she got it open Betts had run back over to Keener's trailer. In the mean time Pardon came running over and said, "David has been stabbed." She told Plaisance he was okay and that she didn't know how it happened. Plaisance described her as "hysterical ... just babbling like a brook." When Plaisance went over to Keener's trailer Pardon told her David was okay and didn't need medical attention. Plaisance thought David was sleeping or passed out drunk and returned home. Some time later Pardon telephoned her, crying, and said she didn't think David was breathing. Plaisance told her to call 911. In response to questions on cross-examination, Plaisance agreed that Pardon, Conner and Keener all "pretty much stayed drunk."

Richard Betts, another resident of the trailer park, testified Pardon came to his trailer that night. She told him that David was drunk and giving her a hard time, and she wanted to get away from him for a while. She stayed for 30 to 45 minutes. Shortly afterward Betts discovered she had left her shoes. He walked over to Keener's trailer and heard a "commotion" going on inside. He knocked on the door, Pardon opened it, and Betts saw Conner lying on the love seat, bleeding from a hole in his chest. Pardon told him, "I just stabbed the fuck out of David."

Virginia Keener testified that Pardon and Conner had been drinking a great deal and had been arguing. They were struggling and "fussing back and forth." She did not see Pardon stab him. When she saw David lying on the sofa she thought he had had a seizure. Pardon told her that Conner had twisted her hands back in the struggle. Pardon was trying to doctor him and said, "Virginia, I think he's dead." They tickled his feet to try to revive him. Pardon got panicky and ran to the neighbor's house.

Robert Conner, the victim's brother, stated that he lives in the same trailer park as Keener and the others. He testified that in February of 1995, he observed an argument between the defendant and the victim, in which "he [David] kind of restrained her, then she went back in the bedroom, grabbed that, you know, that sword or whatever ... just a homemade sword."[2] Robert Conner testified further that in April of 1995 the defendant confronted him with a butcher knife in each hand after having an argument with him, but he didn't call 911 because "she wasn't going to" cut him. He also stated that his brother had seizures when he couldn't get alcohol.

Pamela Williams, a forensic scientist for the Jefferson Parish Sheriff's Office and an expert in the comparison and analysis of human bodily fluids, determined there was human blood on the knife found at the scene.

Jeanie Smith testified she was staying in a friend's trailer at the trailer park at the time of the incident. On the previous morning *56 she saw Angie Pardon going in her trailer with a cup in her hand. Smith said every time she saw Angie, she "always had her mixed drinks ...

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
703 So. 2d 50, 1997 WL 631721, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-pardon-lactapp-1997.