State v. Sarkozy

755 So. 2d 345, 2000 La. App. LEXIS 256, 2000 WL 202306
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 26, 2000
DocketNo. 99-KA-0386
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 755 So. 2d 345 (State v. Sarkozy) 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. Sarkozy, 755 So. 2d 345, 2000 La. App. LEXIS 256, 2000 WL 202306 (La. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

[,BYRNES, Judge.

Lance Sarkozy was charged by bill of indictment on April 2, 1998, with second degree murder, a violation of La. R.S. 14:30.1. At his arraignment on April 7 th, he pleaded not guilty. The trial court found probable cause and denied the motions to suppress the evidence and the confession on June 18 th. After trial on August 10th, a twelve-member jury found him guilty of the lesser included offense of manslaughter. He was sentenced on August 19 th to serve forty years at hard labor. The defendant’s motion for reconsideration of sentence was denied, and his motion for an appeal was granted.

At trial, Sheila Tebay testified that she and the defendant had been living together [347]*347for about nine months prior to March 5, 1998, the day of this incident. She and the defendant were renting an apartment at 1439 St. Andrew Street with Richard Miz-zell, a friend of Ms Tebay’s for about eight years. On cross-examination, Ms Tebay said that although she was never romantic with Mi-. Mizzell, he had “always” been in love with her. On March 5, 1998, the defendant returned from work about 6 p.m., and when Richard Mizzell came in about an hour later, they resumed an argument begun earlier that day. The defendant wanted to borrow a quarter from Mizzell, who would not lend more money because the | {.defendant already owed him $10. While Richard Mizzell was sitting on the couch eating, the defendant went into the bedroom and returned with a table leg. The defendant hit Mizzell with the table leg so hard that Mizzell fell from the couch. When Mizzell tried to get up, the defendant hit him between five and ten times and told him that he was not going to get up. Mr. Mizzell asked the defendant why he was being attacked, and the defendant replied, “because ... [Mizzell] was an ass hole and because he caused us so much trouble, he [the defendant] said he was going to make him suffer like he made us suffer.” The defendant then sat down on the couch still holding the table leg. Ms Tebay said he warned her not to go out or call the police; she said she was frightened that he would hit her. Meanwhile Mr. Mizzell began to move and groan, and the defendant hit Mizzell’s arms and legs, saying “he [the defendant] was going to cripple him so he [Mizzell] couldn’t use his legs and ... arms.” The defendant and Ms Tebay then watched television for about an hour. At that point, the defendant said, “Well, it’s time for you to die. I’m tired of sitting here listening to you.” The defendant took a hammer from a drawer; he told Ms Tebay to turn away and not to look, and he hit Mizzell on the head with the hammer several times. Mizzell “gagged a few times” before becoming silent. The defendant then said, “He’s dead now,” and “[W]e can go get us something to eat. Go out and get us a beer at the bar.” The couple walked to St. Mary’s Tavern where they stayed until about 11:30 p.m.; they left because the bar was closing. As they were walking to a nearby pizza restaurant, Ms Tebay asked what the defendant planned to do, and he replied, “We’re going back to the house and pretend like nothing happened.” He also suggested that they “[s]ay somebody must have broke in or something.” Ms Tebay told him that she had left her ulcer medicine at her friend’s, and she was going to get it; she agreed to meet him back |sat the apartment to eat the pizza. When she got to her friend’s place, Ms Tebay asked for a ride to the police station. She tried to find the station, but got lost and found police officers at the Trolley Stop Restaurant on St. Charles Avenue. She told the officers of the murder and accompanied them in the police car to the apartment. When they arrived, the defendant was asleep in the bedroom. Under cross-examination, Ms Tebay admitted she had two prior felony convictions. She also said she “probably” mentioned that she would get a life sentence if she were convicted again.

Dr. William Newman, an expert in forensic pathology, testified that on March 6, 1998, he performed an autopsy on Richard Mizzell. He determined that Mr. Mizzell died of multiple head injuries. Dr. Newman found the following:

He had lacerations of his scalp. He had fractures of his skull. He had fractures of his nose. He had lacerations of his face. And multiple skull fractures, many of them depressed. Which means that the skull itself was sunken into the head. And there was also damage to his brain. There was an accumulation of blood beneath the dura or covering of the brain between the dura and the brain tissue itself. And there were contusions on both sides, which are like bruises, also on brain tissue.

The doctor also reported four bruises on the left shoulder, bruises on his hand, [348]*348blood blisters on his hands, lacerations on his lip, cheek, left brow and above the left ear. The doctor concluded that the victim was hit multiple times by a blunt object, but he could not say the wounds were a result of being hit with a hammer and/or, a wooden table leg.

Officer Michael Russell testified that after midnight on March 6, 1998, he and his partner, Cyril Evans, were having coffee at the Trolley Stop Restaurant on the corner of St. Andrew Street and St. Charles Avenue when a white woman | ¿approached them. After a conversation with her, the officers accompanied her to an apartment at 1439 St. Andrew Street. There they found a man’s body in the living room, and a bloody hammer and chair post next to him; in a bedroom the defendant was asleep or passed out on a bed. The officers woke him.

Sergeant Gary Márchese testified that he was in charge of the investigation into the death of Richard Mizzell. Sergeant Márchese had photographs of the scene which were shown to the jury. The sergeant also took a statement from the defendant; the jury heard a tape of that statement. Sergeant Márchese said that when he arrived at the apartment, the defendant and Ms Tebay were seated in the kitchen. When he heard the defendant call her a “fucking bitch,” he decided to separate the couple. The sergeant said the defendant appeared to be hostile.

Lance Sarkozy testified that on March 5, 1998, he was in the process of moving into another apartment, and Ms Tebay had moved out about a week before; however, they were both in the apartment drinking beer late in the afternoon. The defendant said Ms Tebay was “pretty drunk.” The argument between the defendant and Miz-zell had been about $10 that the defendant owed Mizzell, and it occurred in the morning. When Mizzell came in that evening, he turned the television volume to the maximum and picked up a hammer. He .approached the defendant, lifted the hammer, and brought it down so that “it just barely nicked my face.” The defendant picked up a table leg that was in the room and hit Mizzell, who fell at the defendant’s feet. The defendant picked up the hammer and sat on the couch until he noticed Mizzell getting up and coming toward him with the table leg. Then the defendant hit him three times on the head with the hammer. Mizzell “spun around and hit his head on this ... park bench kind of thing. .... He didn’t move. It killed him.” The defendant decided to leave the apartment, and he and|sMs Tebay went to a bar where they drank for two hours. They spoke of telling the police about it, and the defendant said he realized his fingerprints were “all over it.” The defendant said that after they got the pizza, Ms Tebay decided to go to her own apartment, and he went upstairs to go to sleep. When she came in with the police, he was not asleep but he had his eyes closed. He confirmed Ms Tebay’s story that she had nothing to do with the incident; he said they had agreed that she would call the police from her apartment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
755 So. 2d 345, 2000 La. App. LEXIS 256, 2000 WL 202306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-sarkozy-lactapp-2000.