State v. Ross

28 So. 3d 475, 9 La.App. 5 Cir. 431, 2009 La. App. LEXIS 1985, 2009 WL 4043093
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 24, 2009
Docket09-KA-431
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 28 So. 3d 475 (State v. Ross) 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. Ross, 28 So. 3d 475, 9 La.App. 5 Cir. 431, 2009 La. App. LEXIS 1985, 2009 WL 4043093 (La. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

SUSAN M. CHEHARDY, Judge.

[ 2Samuel Ross appeals his convictions on two counts of indecent behavior with a juvenile and his sentences of ten years on each count. We affirm the convictions, but vacate the sentences and remand for re-sentencing.

On July 29, 2005, Samuel Ross was charged by bill of information with two counts of violation of La. R.S. 14:81, indecent behavior with a juvenile, occurring on or between March 1 and July 18, 2005. At arraignment Defendant pleaded not guilty. Defendant waived his right to a jury trial and, after a one-day bench trial, he was found guilty as charged.

On April 2, 2009, the trial court sentenced Defendant to ten years at hard labor on each count, without benefit of parole, probation, or suspension of sentence, to be served concurrently. Defendant takes this timely appeal.

FACTS

The gist of the State’s case was that Defendant committed indecent behavior with two female juveniles, K.S. and R.S., who were ages nine and seven at the time of the offense. 1

|sD.S., father of the victims, testified that on July 18, 2005 he arranged for his daughters, E.S., K.S. and R.S., to be taken care of by their grandmother, V.F. 2 D.S. said he and his wife (the girls’ stepmother) had to go to traffic court. D.S. dropped off the three girls and their grandmother at the Walmart store on Veterans Boule *477 vard in Metairie, where the grandmother worked. D.S. said the plan was for his daughters to stay at Walmart with their grandmother while she was on the job.

D.S. testified that while he was in court, his daughter E.S. phoned him to tell him the girls were going to the show with “Mr. Sam.” D.S. did not know who Mr. Sam was. E.S. told him Mr. Sam was her grandmother’s neighbor. He told E.S. to put Sam on the phone. When she did so, D.S. asked Sam what he was doing with his children, and told him, “[D]o not move, I’m on my way right now, I’ll be there in ten minutes to get them.”

D.S. went to Rye Street, where V.F. lived, and found the girls waiting for him on the sidewalk with Defendant. The girls got in his truck and he drove away. He did not recall speaking to Defendant. D.S. said he was a little upset, and was very shocked that V.F. would let the girls go with someone he had never met, without his permission. The girls had often visited V.F. prior to that.

D.S. said on the way home he and his wife talked to the girls about the dangers of going with strangers. While driving, he noticed K.S. seemed upset and she was crying. He asked whether there was something she wanted to tell him, and she admitted that Sam had touched her “privates.” She told him she was sitting on Mr. Sam’s lap and he was tickling her. While he was tickling her, he reached down and touched her “flower.” D.S. said “flower” was the word his daughters used for vagina.

|4P.S. said he spoke to R.S., who told him Sam had touched her “ta-ta’s,” which was the word she used for breasts. D.S. also spoke to the oldest daughter, E.S., who told him nothing had happened to her.

Afterward D.S. contacted the police. As a result of his complaint, he later met with Detective Horne. Subsequently he was asked to bring his children to the Children’s Advocacy Center for a forensic interview, where all three girls were interviewed. Later all three underwent medical examinations at the Care Center at Children’s Hospital.

Deputy Kevin Balser of the Jefferson Parish Sheriffs Office testified he responded to the complaint made by D.S. on behalf of his daughter K.S. Deputy Balser testified he spoke to D.S. and K.S. in person and to V.F. by phone. Deputy Balser testified K.S. told him she went to the apartment of a man she called Sam, and while she was there watching movies, “Sam had touched her by her vagina, on the outside of her clothes, and at some point tickled her.”

After speaking with K.S., who was upset and crying, Deputy Balser determined the charge should be investigated. He did not talk to the other children.

Deputy Balser testified he also spoke with the grandmother, V.F., by phone. She told him a gentleman named Sam arrived there and asked to watch the three children, and actually transported the girls to his apartment to watch them. She told him she was a next-door neighbor to Sam.

Pursuant to sheriffs office protocol, Deputy Balser contacted the Detective Bureau’s Personal Violence Section, which investigates sex crimes, and turned the case over to Detective Horne of that section.

Detective Kaye Horne testified she responded to the complaint on July 18, 2005. She said D.S. informed her that during a telephone call with his eldest daughter he learned his daughters were with a Mr. Sam, whom he did not know; 15that he went to pick them up; and that later his middle daughter, K.S., told him Sam had tickled her and “touched her in a bad place.”

*478 Detective Horne met privately with K.S., who told the detective “she had been touched inappropriately, and that it started off with tickling, and then Mr. Sam touched her on her vagina over her clothes.” Detective Horne said K.S. referred to her vagina by the word “flower.” According to Detective Horne, K.S. became very upset during questioning, so the detective halted the interview until K.S. could be brought to a more child-friendly atmosphere at the Advocacy Center.

Detective Horne also interviewed the youngest daughter, R.S., who told her that “Mr. Sam had touched her on her bare vagina and tickled her ta-ta’s.” The detective said “ta-ta’s” is the term R.S. used for breasts. Horne said R.S. looked a little upset, but less than K.S., whom Detective Horne described as “very upset, very withdrawn, very nervous.”

Subsequently, all three girls were taken to the Child Advocacy Center in Gretna for an in-depth forensic examination. Detective Horne monitored the interviews of all three girls and she said the stories given by the children were consistent.

As a result of the interviews, Detective Horne testified, she prepared and executed a search warrant for 4020 Rye Street, Apartment 2, Jefferson Parish, which Samuel Ross shared with Henry Owens, whom the children called “Mr. Hank.” The detective said Ross and Owens’ apartment was right next door to the apartment of the children’s grandmother.

Detective Horne found items geared toward juveniles, pictures displaying nudity, and books and magazines of a sexual nature in the apartment. She was able to determine from the children’s descriptions which bedroom belonged to Defendant and which belonged to Owens. The girls told her Defendant’s room had |fia huge DVD collection along the side of the wall. The girls also informed her they had previously gone to the apartment to retrieve juvenile videos from both Defendant and Owens.

Detective Horne testified that in Defendant’s room police found DVDs that included a Lizzie McGuire box set, a picture of Hillary Duff, as well as M and Twist magazines. Horne said all those items are geared to a juvenile audience. There also were a calendar and a signed poster of Hillary Duff in Defendant’s room. E.S.

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Related

State v. Lampton
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Bluebook (online)
28 So. 3d 475, 9 La.App. 5 Cir. 431, 2009 La. App. LEXIS 1985, 2009 WL 4043093, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ross-lactapp-2009.