State v. Rathore

262 So. 3d 1099
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 16, 2019
DocketNo. 52,386-KA
StatusPublished

This text of 262 So. 3d 1099 (State v. Rathore) 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. Rathore, 262 So. 3d 1099 (La. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

MOORE, J.

The defendant, Amethyst Baird Rathore, was charged by grand jury indictment with attempted first degree murder of Wildlife Enforcement Officer Tyler Wheeler. The indictment also charged Rathore with obstruction of justice, illegal possession of stolen things, and illegal possession of a stolen firearm. Rathore entered guilty pleas to all four charges pursuant to a plea agreement. In exchange for the plea, the state agreed to dismiss a pending obstruction of justice charge in Ouachita Parish. There was no agreement regarding Rathore's sentence, and the state advised that it would file an habitual offender bill in accord with La. R.S. 15:529.1.

After the habitual offender hearing, Rathore was adjudicated a second-felony habitual offender based on her prior conviction for possession of methamphetamine. Following the sentencing hearing, the court sentenced Rathore to 60 years' imprisonment at hard labor for the attempted first degree murder conviction, 40 years' imprisonment for the obstruction of justice, 10 years' imprisonment for the illegal possession of stolen things, and 10 years' imprisonment for the illegal possession *1102of a stolen firearm. All four sentences were imposed without benefit of parole, probation or suspension of sentence. The court subsequently signed a sentencing commitment order making the sentences concurrent with each other.1

Rathore filed this appeal alleging that her sentences are excessive.

After review, we amend three of the sentences to allow for parole eligibility as required by law, and, as amended, we affirm.

FACTS

At the sentencing hearing, the victim, Wildlife and Fisheries Agent Tyler Wheeler, testified that on January 7, 2017, he was working the 2:00 pm to 2:00 am shift with his partner, Agent John Hattaway. After their shift ended, the two agents traveled to their respective homes in separate vehicles. On his way home, at about 2:10 am, Agent Wheeler encountered a white Jeep erratically moving side to side in the outside lane, repeatedly hitting the center line and the outside shoulder line of the roadway. Since this occurred in an area outside of Bastrop where there are several bars, Wheeler suspected that the driver was impaired. He activated his blue emergency lights to initiate a stop. However, instead of stopping, the Jeep switched to the inside lane, turned off the road and looped through a grass field on the south side of a bar located on Gus Pryor Road. The Jeep came to a stop against a grill on the side of the building. Agent Wheeler followed and parked his vehicle some 5 to 7 feet behind the Jeep.

Agent Wheeler approached the driver in the Jeep, whom he identified in court as Amethyst Rathore, and advised her why she had been stopped. She handed him an identification card, but it was for a juvenile, and Rathore was obviously not a juvenile. Agent Wheeler returned to his vehicle and performed a "Think Stream" check on the vehicle's license plate, which revealed the plate did not match a white Jeep. He notified dispatch of his findings. Agent Hattaway informed Agent Wheeler that he was en route to the scene.

Due to Rathore's rapid speech pattern, quick movements, and impaired driving, Agent Wheeler walked up to the Jeep and asked her to exit the vehicle for a field sobriety test.

Rathore did not respond to his request. Instead, she produced a silver revolver with a red laser attachment and shot Agent Wheeler from the outside driver's side window. Although Agent Wheeler testified that he recalled Rathore firing only once, the evidence indicates, and police believe, that she shot him three times. Wheeler ran to the back of the Jeep, but could not get his service weapon out of the holster. He ran behind a tree on the south side of the bar. Still unable to unholster his weapon, Agent Wheeler ran toward his truck to retrieve his rifle or shotgun but fell forward face down. He heard Rathore exit the Jeep and walk toward him. He then heard a gunshot and felt a punch to his upper back. Agent Wheeler heard Rathore's vehicle back up and leave the scene.

Within a minute after Rathore left the scene, Agent Hattaway arrived and called for medical assistance. Agent Wheeler was airlifted to University Health in Shreveport. Although he had been shot four times, Agent Wheeler testified that he did not realize that the first three shots had struck him. One entry wound under his left arm traveled upward and lodged *1103around his collarbone, while two went through the left forearm into his head. The final shot by Rathore while she stood over him struck Agent Wheeler in the back. However, the bullet did not completely penetrate his armored vest, and left Agent Wheeler with a bruise.

Agent Wheeler testified that he remained at University Health for three to four weeks. Doctors removed his left jaw and right skull plate, and noted that a bullet which entered his left temple and ricocheted to the back of his skull still remains.

Rathore testified that she "did not fire any shot," as the gun just went off four times in succession, but that she had not aimed it. She stated that she never exited the vehicle to fire at Agent Wheeler, and he was still standing when she drove away. When asked how a bullet became lodged in the back of Agent Wheeler's vest, Rathore suggested that he might have been wearing it inside out. Rathore alleged that, several days before the shooting, she sustained a concussion during an altercation with her boyfriend; when she woke up the next day, she wasn't herself and was afraid of everything. When Agent Wheeler pulled her over, she was afraid of him as a result of the concussion. She testified that she pulled the gun out because she was afraid, not because she intended to shoot him.

On cross-examination, Rathore admitted that she did not seek medical attention for her alleged concussion, and that she was able to drive herself to Memphis, Tennessee, and back between sustaining the concussion and shooting Agent Wheeler. Rathore is 32 years old and has a nine-year-old daughter who lives with her sister in Charleston, South Carolina. She apologized to Agent Wheeler and his family.

Agent Ron Huey, of the Louisiana State Police, testified that in the course of his investigation of the shooting, he obtained text messages between Rathore and a witness, Ms. Starr. In messages sent in December 2016, Rathore acknowledged that the Jeep she was driving at the time of the offense was stolen, stating that the Jeep needed a new title and VIN. She also stated that she recently acquired a new handgun with a laser sight. Following the shooting, Rathore abandoned the Jeep near an RV park and instructed Ms. Starr to pick her up, saying that she had a life-and-death situation. Rathore told Ms. Starr that she had shot an officer because she had missed court and there was a warrant for her arrest. At Ms. Starr's residence, Rathore wiped down the gun and put it in a cabinet.

DISCUSSION

Excessive Sentence

In her sole assignment of error, Rathore alleges that her sentences of 60 years, 40 years, and two of 10 years, all at hard labor and all without benefit probation, parole or suspension of sentence, make the total sentence cruel and excessive. She asks this court to remand for resentencing.

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Bluebook (online)
262 So. 3d 1099, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-rathore-lactapp-2019.