State v. Ramirez

30 So. 3d 833, 9 La.App. 5 Cir. 350, 2009 La. App. LEXIS 2221, 2009 WL 5125363
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 29, 2009
Docket09-KA-350
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 30 So. 3d 833 (State v. Ramirez) 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. Ramirez, 30 So. 3d 833, 9 La.App. 5 Cir. 350, 2009 La. App. LEXIS 2221, 2009 WL 5125363 (La. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

*837 JUDE G. GRAVOIS, Judge.

|2Pefendant, Michele Ramirez, appeals her conviction of manslaughter, a violation of LSA-R.S. 14:31. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY AND FACTS

A Jefferson Parish Grand Jury indicted defendant, Michele Ramirez, for second degree murder of Edwina Ulfers in violation of LSA-R.S. 14:30.1. She pled not guilty and filed several pre-trial motions, including motions to suppress the evidence and statement, which were denied after hearings. 1 She proceeded to trial on November 10, 2008. After a four-day trial, a 12-person jury found defendant guilty of the lesser charge of manslaughter. The trial court sentenced defendant to 40 years at hard labor. She timely appealed her conviction.

On appeal, defendant raises the following assignments of error:

|;il. The trial court erred in denying the defense’s right to present a defense regarding a statement made by the victim to a trial witness right before the actual attack happened.
2. The trial court erred in allowing hearsay evidence under the guise of a “dying declaration” made by the victim.
3. The trial court erred in failing to grant a mistrial when the defense only learned at trial during the state’s direct exam that a witness had been a paid informant of the JPSO for years and thus was an agent of the state.
4. The trial court erred in allowing an excessive number of gruesome photos of the victim into evidence that were merely cumulative and prejudicial to the defense in that they were used solely to pander to the jury’s sympathy.
5.The evidence was insufficient to support the verdict of manslaughter since identity was not proven beyond a reasonable doubt.

On August 30, 2006, Officer Peter Caza-lot with the Jefferson Parish Sheriffs Office responded to an emergency call involving an aggravated burglary at 417 Shrewsbury Court in Jefferson Parish. He immediately responded to the scene, which was two blocks from his location. When he arrived, he saw a man, Joseph Ulfers, sitting on the porch, and an elderly female, Edwina Ulfers, lying on the living room floor. Mrs. Ulfers, age 94, was covered in blood and was bleeding from the back of her head. Her face and eyes were swollen.

Officer Cazalot secured the house and called for an ambulance because of Mrs. Ulfers’ injuries. He noted the house was ransacked. Officer Cazalot helped Mrs. Ulfers sit up. She told him she was beaten with a telephone by a female wearing black pants and a sleeveless shirt. Officer Cazalot immediately put the description of the perpetrator out over his police radio so that police units en route to the scene could canvas the area and look for the perpetrator. He called a second time for an ambulance as he noticed Mrs. Ulfers’ condition deteriorating.

Mrs. Ulfers was ultimately transported to Ochsner Hospital. That night at the hospital, Mrs. Ulfers told Deputy Anthony Bennett that she was sitting in her bedroom chair when a white female entered the room, grabbed her by the throat, |4and demanded money. Mrs. Ulfers said she stood up out of her chair at which time the *838 female grabbed the telephone off of her dresser and repeatedly hit her in the head with it, causing her to fall to the floor. Mrs. Ulfers saw the female grab another object, which Mrs. Ulfers could not identify and which the female used to hit her again. Mrs. Ulfers told Deputy Bennett that she then crawled from the bedroom to the living room.

Joseph Ulfers, the victim’s son, stated that prior to the incident, a woman whom he later identified as defendant came to the back door of his residence looking for a friend and asked to use the bathroom. Defendant was allowed to enter the home, but was not allowed to use the bathroom. Defendant then asked for a drink of water, which Mr. Ulfers gave her. After defendant left at his request, Mr. Ulfers checked on his elderly mother, who was sleeping in her bedroom, and then got a beer and sat out on his front porch. He next heard his mother yelling for him and found her on the living room floor bleeding profusely from her head.

According to Mr. Ulfers, his mother told him that the woman they gave water to had come back and hit her. Mr. Ulfers called 911 from his cell phone because he could not find the phone in his mother’s bedroom. He stated everything in his mother’s room was a mess. Mr. Ulfers noted that $20 cash and a checkbook were taken from the house.

Meanwhile, later that evening, defendant had been detained in the 900 block of Shrewsbury Road after fitting the description of the perpetrator who had earlier been described by Deputy Cazalot over his police radio. The police then took Mr. Ulfers there to see if he could identify the person detained. Defendant had what looked like dried blood on her right foot and scratches on her right palm and on the back of her legs. Mr. Ulfers, who was in a patrol car, was driven past defendant and positively identified defendant while she stood in front of a patrol car as the | .¡person who had earlier been to his residence. Mr. Ulfers noted that defendant was wearing the same shirt she had been wearing when she was at his house, but she was wearing different pants.

Defendant was advised of her rights and evidence was collected from her person. The blood on her foot was found to be consistent with the victim’s DNA. Defendant waived her rights and gave a few statements to the police. At the location of her arrest, defendant denied being at the victim’s house on Shrewsbury Court. In a later statement made at the detective bureau, however, defendant admitted to going to the victim’s house. She stated that she met Mr. Ulfers at a gas station and went back to his house “to turn a trick” with him. She then said that she simply drank a beer with him. The next day, defendant gave another statement, which was taped, to the police. In this taped statement, defendant stated that she and a girl named Sunny met Mr. Ulfers at a Spur station, and that Sunny was “going to trick the guy” at his house. Defendant explained that Mr. Ulfers left them in a back area outside the house, after which she and Sunny went inside the house to find money. Defendant stated that she then saw Sunny start beating the victim so she ran out of the house.

Sunny Williams testified at trial and denied ever going to the victim’s house. Sunny stated she had not seen defendant since the two were arrested together in June 2006 for possession of cocaine and drug paraphernalia. Sunny’s DNA was not found on anything at the victim’s house.

Defendant’s jail cellmate, Christine Newman, testified that defendant told her about the incident while they were in jail together. According to Newman, defendant told her she was going to the victim’s *839 house to “turn a trick.” Defendant also told her she beat a lady, who was lying in chair, with a phone. Another inmate, Trudy Hotard, also testified that defendant told her she hit the victim with |,;a phone. Both Newman and Hotard stated that defendant did not mention the involvement of a second person until she talked to them a second time.

Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 So. 3d 833, 9 La.App. 5 Cir. 350, 2009 La. App. LEXIS 2221, 2009 WL 5125363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ramirez-lactapp-2009.