State v. Robertson

712 So. 2d 8, 1998 WL 93283
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 4, 1998
Docket97-KA-0177
StatusPublished
Cited by97 cases

This text of 712 So. 2d 8 (State v. Robertson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Robertson, 712 So. 2d 8, 1998 WL 93283 (La. 1998).

Opinion

712 So.2d 8 (1998)

STATE of Louisiana
v.
Allen ROBERTSON, Jr.

No. 97-KA-0177.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

March 4, 1998.
Rehearing Denied April 3, 1998.

*14 Nicholas J. Trenticosta, New Orleans, Paula M. Montonye, New Haven, CT, for Applicant.

Richard P. Ieyoub, Attorney General, Douglas P. Moreau, District Attorney, Premila Burns, Richard C. Nevils, Baton Rouge, for Respondent.

KIMBALL, Justice.[*]

Allen Robertson, Jr. was indicted by a grand jury for the first degree murders of Morris and Kazuko Prestenback in violation of La. R.S. 14:30. After a trial, the jury found defendant guilty as charged and recommended a sentence of death. The trial court sentenced defendant to death in accordance with the jury's recommendation. In this direct appeal from that conviction and sentence,[1] defendant raises 37 assignments of error, both argued and unargued, which he alleges implicate the Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution, and Article I, Sections 2, 3, 5, 9, 12, 13, 15-17, 19, 20, and 22-24 of the Louisiana Constitution. Finding no reversible error in any of the assignments, we affirm both the conviction and the sentence.

FACTS

On January 1, 1991, at some time after 10:00 p.m., defendant left a nightclub with the intention of stealing something which he could sell for money to buy drugs. He entered the home of Morris and Kazuko Prestenback, an elderly couple whom defendant knew lived a few houses down from defendant's mother's house on Dalton Street in Baton Rouge. Defendant entered the back of the house through a screen door which the Prestenbacks had left open for the convenience of their pet cats. Defendant searched the darkened house and observed the Prestenbacks asleep in separate bedrooms. He proceeded to the living room, where he removed a vase and a framed photograph from atop a color television set, and then left the house with the set, selling it down the street for $20.00.

A very short time later, defendant returned. This time, however, he paused to take a 13" butcher knife from the kitchen before heading to the bedroom of 76-year-old Morris Prestenback. Defendant then proceeded to hit, cut, slash and stab Mr. Prestenback on the top of his head, and in his eye, face, throat and chest. In a prolonged struggle on the bed and floor of the bedroom, the victim suffered numerous fractures of the facial and nasal bones, and multiple stab wounds to the head, face and chest. Some of the eight stab wounds to the chest hit vital organs and major blood vessels, severed eight of the victim's ribs, and were almost 7" deep. Blood was spattered over the bed, headboard, ceiling and walls. The victim bled to death.

While defendant was brutally murdering her husband, 71-year-old Kazuko Prestenback awoke, left her bedroom, came upon the carnage, and attempted to flee. Defendant turned and stabbed the 5-foot, 90-pound woman in the back. Mrs. Prestenback then returned to her bed where defendant stabbed her multiple times in the chest. As with her husband, several of Mrs. Prestenback's ribs were severed completely through, and the *15 savagery of the attack splattered blood on the ceiling and walls of her room. She also bled to death and was found in a fetal position in her bed.

After remaining in the house for some time to insure the victims were dead, defendant took Morris Prestenback's watch, car keys, and wallet containing $260.00 from a shelf in the headboard of his bed and left the house. Once outside, he got in the Prestenbacks' gray Oldsmobile Cutlass and backed out of the driveway, uprooting and driving over a chain link fence and gate which had blocked his way. An off-duty police officer in a marked unit saw the Oldsmobile run a stop sign a half block from the victims' home around 10:30 p.m. The officer followed the car, and when the car sped up and made an illegal turn, the officer turned on his lights and siren. After making the turn, the officer observed the Oldsmobile abandoned in a yard. On the front seat of the car was the butcher knife, covered with blood and dirt. When fleeing the scene, defendant also tore the lining of his shoe on a fence, leaving fibers caught on the fence. Defendant ultimately made his way to the home of his girlfriend, Michelle Alexander.

Over the course of the night and next day, defendant confessed the crime to various family members. Authorities received anonymous tips implicating defendant in the murders. In the very early morning of January 3, defendant was arrested at Alexander's home and taken to the police station where he gave a series of taped statements to investigators.

Defendant was indicted on two counts of first degree murder. After a trial in 1991, defendant was found guilty as charged and sentenced to death on both counts. On direct appeal to this court, the conviction was reversed because the trial judge erred in failing to sustain a particular challenge for cause by defendant. State v. Robertson, 92-2660 (La.1/14/94), 630 So.2d 1278. A second trial was held in May of 1995, and defendant was again found guilty as charged on each count of first degree murder.[2] The jury also unanimously recommended imposition of the death penalty, finding three statutory aggravating circumstances applicable to each crime: that the murder occurred during commission of an aggravated burglary, that the murder occurred during commission of an armed robbery, and that the offender knowingly created a risk of death to more than one person. With respect to the murder of Morris Prestenback, the jury found the additional aggravating circumstance that it had been committed in an especially heinous, atrocious or cruel manner. La.C.Cr.P. art. 905.4.

Defendant assigns 37 assignments of error, six of which are unargued. The unargued assignments of error do not present reversible error and are governed by clearly established principles of law. They will be reviewed in an unpublished appendix which will comprise part of the record in this case.

LAW AND DISCUSSION

VOIR DIRE

Gubernatorial Commutation and Pardon Powers/Assignment of Error 1

Defendant argues the trial court committed reversible error when it advised various jury panels during voir dire on the commutation and pardon powers of the governor. The record reveals the trial judge referred to the governor's commutation and pardon powers during voir dire of various sub-panels on seven occasions. First, in response to a question by a potential juror as to the certainty that a defendant sentenced to life in prison would actually remain in prison for that length of time, the trial judge responded:

Judge: Yes, ma'am. I'm glad you asked that question. I usually remember to tell you all and I forgot. In Louisiana, when a person is sentenced to life imprisonment without benefit of probation, parole, or suspension of sentence, that's basically what it means. No probation, *16 no parole, the sentence can't be suspended. You don't get good time, if you've ever heard of that. You do life imprisonment unless the governor were to pardon you or commute your sentence. I don't know how often that happens. I can't give you numbers, but in my life time, since I've been doing this, I don't remember it happening very often, if at all in a first degree murder case. So, yes, in effect, if somebody is sentenced to life imprisonment in Louisiana, it's not like a lot of states where life means that you are eligible for parole after a certain number of years and that kind of thing. It's not like that.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
712 So. 2d 8, 1998 WL 93283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-robertson-la-1998.