State v. Rogers

132 So. 2d 819, 241 La. 841, 1961 La. LEXIS 599
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 29, 1961
Docket45370
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 132 So. 2d 819 (State v. Rogers) 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. Rogers, 132 So. 2d 819, 241 La. 841, 1961 La. LEXIS 599 (La. 1961).

Opinion

HAMLIN, Justice.

This is an appeal by Ora Lee Rogers from his conviction and sentence to death for the murder of Selma Vizinat, Wife of Lumney Guillory, on May 1, 1959.

Twenty-four bills of exceptions were reserved during the course of trial; all except four are presented for our consideration.

The facts of the instant crime are to the effect that the victim, Mrs. Guillory, and her husband operated a grocery store in Reddell, Evangeline Parish, Louisiana, and in addition to being a retail merchant Mr. Guillory drove a school bus. On the morning of May 1, 1959, at approximately 7:15 a. m., Mr. Guillory left home to transport his riders to school, and at about 8:00 a. m. the murdered body of Mrs. Guillory was discovered in the grocery store; there were no eyewitnesses to the crime. Around noon of the same day, the defendant was apprehended between Palmetto and Melville, Louisiana, and was taken to the courthouse in Alexandria, Louisiana, where he confessed to the instant crime; he was incarcerated in the Rapides Parish Jail, Alexandria, Louisiana, almost all of the time until the time of trial.

Bill of Exceptions No. 1 was reserved to the trial court’s denial of defendant’s application for change of venue. In his motion for such change, the defendant alleged :

“Your mover avers that he has good reason to believe, and, so believing, alleges, that by reason of prejudice existing in the public mind against him, growing out of articles and items of news published in the general press in the Town of Ville Platte and Parish of Evangeline, the citizens of the Town have become so inflamed and prejudiced against your defendant that it will be impossible for your defendant to secure a fair and impartial trial as is guaranteed him by the Constitution and laws of the State of Louisiana and of the United States of America.
“That your mover makes this application as soon as he has discovered the fact that it will be impossible for your defendant to secure a fair and impartial trial in the Parish of Evangeline, and that this application is made, not for the *851 purpose of delaying the trial of your defendant, but for the purpose of securing an impartial trial, as has been made evident by virtue of the fact that mover has been removed from the Parish Jail in this Parish and kept incarcerated in the Parish Jail in Rapides Parish for safe keeping, in order to prevent his being illegally molested during the pendency of these proceedings.”

Issues of the “Gazette,” a weekly newspaper circulated in Reddell, Louisiana, were introduced and filed in evidence by the defense. The issue of May 7, 1959, (D-l), sets out on its first page a picture of the victim with the caption:

“The brutal Friday morning slaying of Mrs. Lumney Guillory, prominent and highly regarded Reddell housewife, shocked the nation and saddened those who knew her family. Funeral services for Mrs. Guillory, the 35 year old former Selma Vizinat of Mamou, were conducted in that community on Saturday morning.”

The same issue also carries a picture of the accused accompanied by a deputy sheriff. It is captioned:

“This huge and powerful Ville Platte negro, 23 year old Ora Lee Rogers, photographed here with Evangeline’s Chief Deputy Eraste Vidrine, last Friday morning shocked the nation with his brutal .murder of Mrs. Lumney Guillory at her store in Reddell. No stranger to the police, Rogers had several times been arrested for molesting women and once convicted of burglary in Allen Parish. He was immediately suspected, tracked down and finally caught by state police near Melville. His indictment for murder by a grand jury is regarded a certainty, and the crime to which he has admitted carries the death penalty.”

The news story relating the homicide is captioned, “Brutal Murder at Reddell Friday is Shock for Nation,” and the first paragraph reads:

“The colorful pages of Louisiana’s history have often been darkened by crimes of violence, but few can compare in brutality and terror with the shocking slaying of Mrs. Lumney Guillory, 35 year old white woman, who was murdered and ravished Friday morning by a gigantic negro man. Once the deed was done Ora Lee Rogers, 23 year old Ville Platte negro, left the Guillory store building at Reddell with $800 he took from the safe.”

Other editions of the “Gazette” contain accounts of events following defendant’s arrest, and they relate the proceedings preceding trial.

Mr. Jules Ashlock, Editor of the “Gazette,” testified at the hearing of the mo *853 tion for a change of venue that his weekly-newspaper had a circulation of about 2,500 and that the bulk of the circulation was within the Parish of Evangeline. He stated that he had discussed the case with officials of the parish, and that the material in the news stories came mostly from official sources. He said that he had lifted an interview with Dr. Savoy from another newspaper and reproduced it. Mr. Ashlock was of the opinion that the defendant was despised in the parish, but he believed that the defendant would get a fair and impartial trial from the people of the parish. He affirmed that he did not know the opinion of the people in the parish with regard to the Ora Lee Rogers case or any other pertinent question at the time.

Frank C. Fontenot, Sheriff for the Parish of Evangeline, testified that under the circumstances he felt that the defendant could get a fair and impartial trial in the Thirteenth Judicial District. He stated that his prison was not federally and state approved as a house of detention — being an old jail out of style — and admitted that several persons had escaped therefrom; that he was accustomed to taking prisoners to Alexandria, because it was his understanding that the Rapides Parish Prison was approved. The sheriff said that he knew of no rumors of demonstration against the defendant; that he put the defendant in the Rapides Jail, because he did not want him to escape. When questioned as to whether he feared mob violence as against the defendant, the sheriff testified:

“Well, you’re never sure of anything but we are pretty sure of our people. I wasn’t afeared of that at all. I put him out there because, if you want to know, because it’s less trouble for me, less risk, and he’s out there and taken care by this government and we pay the bill.”

Dr. Frank Savoy, Sr., Coroner for the Parish of Evangeline, testified that he investigated the death of the victim, being the first officer to get there, and that there was no mob hysteria. The coroner admitted that he had told a reporter that the instant crime was one of the most brutal murders he had ever investigated; he said, “And I told him this, I said we have — the kind of people we have in this country, I said, we’re not supposed to have that kind of murder around here. We had some imported citizens that were not raised around here and we could expect that. We’re not supposed to have that kind of murder happen among people that are reared around here.” Dr. Savoy was questioned as to whether he had said any thing to any newspaper reporter or to any other person about a lynching mob, to which he replied, “No, I said nothing about a lynching mob, but I said this, the way we felt about it, if there was to be one, I’d like to.

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Bluebook (online)
132 So. 2d 819, 241 La. 841, 1961 La. LEXIS 599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-rogers-la-1961.