State v. Parker
This text of 812 So. 2d 86 (State v. Parker) 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.
Opinion
STATE of Louisiana
v.
Albert PARKER.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.
*87 Paul D. Connick, Jr., District Attorney, Mickey S. deLaup, Terry M. Boudreaux, Walter Amstutz, Frank Brindisi, Assistant District Attorneys, Gretna, LA, Attorneys for Appellee.
Frederick Kroenke, Baton Rouge, LA, Attorney for Appellant.
Panel composed of Judges SOL GOTHARD, MARION F. EDWARDS and CLARENCE E. McMANUS.
MARION F. EDWARDS, Judge.
The defendant, Alfred Parker, appeals as excessive his sentence as a multiple offender. We affirm.
*88 Parker was charged with one count of armed robbery and four counts of second degree kidnapping, violations of LSA-R.S. 14:64 and 14:44.1, respectively. He was also charged with violating LSA-R.S. 14:95.1, felon in possession of a firearm, but this charge was ultimately dismissed. Following his plea of not guilty, Parker was tried by a twelve-person jury which found him guilty as charged on all counts.
Before sentencing Parker, the trial court denied his motions for new trial and arrest of judgment. The trial judge then sentenced Parker to fifty years of imprisonment at hard labor for armed robbery and ten years of imprisonment at hard labor on each of the four counts of second degree kidnapping. The sentences were ordered to run concurrently with each other. Parker filed a motion for appeal, which the trial judge granted. Parker's motion for appeal was premature when it was filed after conviction and sentence on the offense but before he was sentenced as a multiple offender. However, that procedural defect was cured by the subsequent resentencing.[1]
The State subsequently filed a multiple offender bill of information against Parker alleging him to be a fourth felony offender, which he denied. At the multiple offender hearing, the assistant district attorney determined not to use one of the listed predicate offenses and no evidence regarding that predicate was introduced. After the hearing, the trial judge found Parker to be a third felony offender, vacated the sentence on count two (second degree kidnapping) and sentenced him to life imprisonment without benefit of parole, probation, or suspension of sentence.
The facts of the case are as follows. On the evening of July 4, 2000, Nancy Adams and her three children, Taylor, Chase, and Jack, ages three, seven and five, were driving home from a gathering of her boyfriend's family in Kenner. En route to her home in Marrero, Ms. Adams changed her mind about driving across the river and decided to telephone her boyfriend to ask if she and the children could spend the night at his father's home in Kenner.
Ms. Adams stopped at a telephone booth near Dean's Deli at the corner of Airline Highway and Williams Boulevard. While she was on the phone with her boyfriend, a black man approached her. As this man, later identified as the Parker, reached the phone booth, he hung up the telephone and pressed an object, which Ms. Adams said felt like a gun, into her back. The man entered the passenger's side seat of her car and ordered her to drive into New Orleans. He initially told her that he wanted to go to the intersection of Tulane Avenue and Carrollton Avenue, but changed his mind after Ms. Adams reached that destination. The man told Ms. Adams that his sister lived nearby, and he instructed her to let him out further down on Tulane Avenue. Ms. Adams followed the man's instructions, but became very frightened when he told her to stop the car, because there were no people or houses in the surrounding vicinity. When she stopped the car, Parker raised his hand as if to strike her, but instead, he reached over and took her purse containing cash and sentimental jewelry before running away.
Shortly before the man told Ms. Adams to stop, seven-year-old Taylor woke up. Parker engaged Taylor in a conversation, in which he told Taylor that he had been in a fight with his girlfriend earlier in the *89 evening and needed a ride into New Orleans to his sister's house. Although Ms. Adams did not see a gun after the man entered the car, Taylor testified that she saw the man's gun while he was sitting in the front passenger's seat.
After the man fled, Ms. Adams returned to the home of her boyfriend's father where she called police. Detective Brian McGregor of the Kenner Police Department responded to the call. In the course of the investigation, Detective McGregor learned that a disturbance of the peace had been reported in Kenner near Dean's Deli earlier that evening. Detective McGregor discovered that Parker was the perpetrator in this incident. Bridgette Robinson, Parker's former girlfriend, testified at trial that she had called the police around 10:00 p.m. that night after the defendant refused to leave her home.
Detective McGregor also learned that Officer Glaser of the Kenner Police Department had responded to the disturbance call. Officer Glaser testified that he arrived at Ms. Robinson's home at 10:43 p.m. Parker was not there at the time, but Officer Glaser saw him walking along Airline Highway. The officer conducted a "field-interview" with him, and then drove away. At approximately 11:50 p.m., Officer Glaser saw Parker at the B & C Supermarket located at 1801 Williams Boulevard. As he drove past the supermarket, Officer Glaser instructed Parker, by means of his vehicle's speaker system, to stay away from Ms. Robinson's home. According to Officer Glaser, that supermarket was one block away from Dean's Deli.
Once Detective McGregor learned that Parker was the person involved in the disturbance incident, he compiled a photographic lineup containing the defendant's photograph. Both Ms. Adams and Taylor selected Parker's photograph from the lineup and both of them positively identified him as the perpetrator at trial.
The only error assigned by Parker is that his life sentence as a third felony offender is constitutionally excessive. The State responds that this mandatory minimum sentence is not excessive.
The Eighth Amendment of the United States Constitution and Article I, Section 20 of the Louisiana Constitution prohibit the imposition of excessive or cruel punishment. The Louisiana Supreme Court has recognized that a mandatory minimum sentence under the Habitual Offender Law may still be reviewed for constitutional excessiveness.[2]
The court specifically held that when a trial court determines the minimum sentence mandated by LSA-R.S. 15:529.1 makes no "measurable contribution to acceptable goals of punishment" or that the sentence amounts to nothing more than "the purposeful imposition of pain and suffering" and is "grossly out of proportion to the severity of the crime," the trial judge must reduce the sentence to one that would not be constitutionally excessive.[3] However, the Louisiana Supreme Court has consistently reiterated that "a sentencing judge must always start with the presumption that a mandatory minimum sentence under the Habitual Offender Law is constitutional. A court may only depart from the minimum sentence if it finds that there is clear and convincing evidence in the particular case before it which would rebut this presumption of constitutionality."[4]
*90 In order to rebut the presumption of constitutionality, the defendant must clearly and convincingly show that he is "exceptional, which ...
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812 So. 2d 86, 2002 WL 220077, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-parker-lactapp-2002.