State v. Savoy

11 So. 3d 1184, 2008 La.App. 3 Cir. 1444, 2009 La. App. LEXIS 1051
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 3, 2009
Docket08-1444
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 11 So. 3d 1184 (State v. Savoy) 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. Savoy, 11 So. 3d 1184, 2008 La.App. 3 Cir. 1444, 2009 La. App. LEXIS 1051 (La. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

PETERS, J.

LA jury convicted the defendant, Courtney Paul Savoy, of simple escape in violation of La.R.S. 14:110. Thereafter, the trial court sentenced the defendant to serve five years at hard labor and ordered that the sentence run consecutive to the sentence he was serving at the time of the offense. On appeal, the defendant’s counsel raises one assignment of error, and the defendant raises eleven pro se assignments of error. For the following reasons, we vacate the defendant’s conviction and sentence and remand the matter to the trial court for further proceedings.

DISCUSSION OF THE RECORD

The defendant’s conviction arises not from his own escape from legal custody, but from the January 20, 2007 escape of a fellow inmate, Jacob Shaw. On that day, both the defendant and Shaw were inmates at the Winn Correctional Center (Winn prison) in Winn Parish, Louisiana, and had been transported to the Huey P. Long Hospital in Pineville, Louisiana. Before being transported, they were placed in handcuffs, leg shackles, and waist chains.

After the transportation van arrived at the hospital mid-morning, Beeky Morgan, one of the two guards transporting the prisoners, opened the door of the prisoner *1186 compartment and reached for Shaw’s waist chain to help him exit the vehicle. Once he exited the van, Officer Morgan immediately observed that Shaw’s chain was not in place, but was in his hand. She slammed the door of the van, leaving the defendant inside. Shaw ran from the scene and disappeared into an adjacent wooded area.

Law enforcement authorities apprehended Shaw the next day, and the defendant’s prosecution as a principal in the escape arose from a statement made by Shaw soon after his capture. Specifically, Shaw told Detective Bo Edmonds of the | gPineville Police Department that the defendant helped him plan the escape and picked the lock of one of his leg irons on the way to the hospital.

Shaw’s implication of the defendant in the escape did not come immediately after his apprehension. When Detective Ed-monds first interviewed him after his capture, Shaw did not implicate the defendant. Furthermore, Detective Edmonds interviewed the defendant at the hospital immediately after the escape and received no information that caused him to suspect the defendant’s involvement. 1 However, after Shaw was returned to the Winn prison, Tim Wilkinson, the prison warden, contacted the detective and informed him that Shaw wished to change his statement.

Detective Edmonds traveled to Winn Parish and interviewed Shaw a second time. In that interview, Shaw informed the detective that the defendant helped him plan the escape and even picked the lock on one of his leg irons during the trip to Pineville. Detective Edmonds then conducted a second interview with the defendant on January 29, 2007, in the presence of the warden and Correctional Officer Bobby Tollar. In that interview, the defendant admitted that the hospital trip was part of a larger plan of escape. According to the defendant, he “undid one of [Shaw’s] [shackles] with a bobby pen [sic]” while on the way to the hospital, but was unable to remove the other because the bobby pin had become bent. The defendant asserted in his statement that he did not plan to escape and that his involvement was to “better insure [sic] the hospital trip” because of his shoulder problems. He only removed his hands from the waist chains to pick the lock on Shaw’s leg irons.

The defendant testified at trial that his first statement was accurate and that his second statement was coerced through threats from Warden Wilkinson. Aecord-ing |3to the defendant, when he was returned to the Winn prison he was placed in lock down and questioned by the warden and his assistant two or three times. He asserted that Warden Wilkinson told him that he would remain in lock down unless he said what the warden wanted him to say- — that he was involved in the planning and implementation of the escape attempt. The defendant testified that the warden informed him that if he admitted to his involvement, he would be immediately transferred out of the prison. In fact, within two weeks of his statement implicating himself in the escape, he was transferred to the Wade Correctional Center.

Warden Wilkinson also testified at trial, denying that he threatened or intimidated either Shaw or the defendant or that he made any promises to obtain the second statements. He explained that the defendant has the ability to dislocate his own shoulder and that he has used this ability many times to effect a trip to the hospital. This, according to the warden, explained the defendant’s comment in his second *1187 statement that his shoulder “could better insure [sic] the hospital trip” as part of the escape plan. Furthermore, the warden testified that the configuration of the leg irons required the assistance of another person to get to the lock.

At trial, Shaw was called as a witness by the defense but was of no help because he basically restated the particulars of his second statement. According to Shaw, after they began the trip to Pineville, the defendant removed his hands from the handcuffs attached to his waist chain and helped him remove the leg iron. When he arrived in Pineville, Shaw was surprised to see that the defendant had put his handcuffs back on. He then “weighed [his] options” and decided to escape alone. However, when confronted with a letter he had written to the defendant, Shaw J^admitted that he told the defendant in the letter that he had informed the authorities that he alone had removed himself from his shackles. 2

OPINION

In this appeal, the defendant’s counsel raised one assignment of error:

The trial court denied Savoy his fundamental right to present a defense and to confront his accuser when it prevented him from impeaching Shaw with evidence of two prior inconsistent statements.

In his pro se brief filed with this court, the defendant raised eleven additional assignments. However, since we find merit in the defense counsel’s assignment of error, we need not address the defendant’s -pro se assignments.

During Shaw’s testimony, counsel for the defendant asked him about conversations he had with two other inmates at the Winn prison. The defendant’s counsel implied that Shaw told these two men, Quin-dele Addison and Travis Richardson, that the defendant had nothing to do with the planning or effecting of Shaw’s escape. Shaw acknowledged that he had after-the-fact conversations regarding his escape with both men, but denied that he told either man anything different from his testimony at trial. 3 In fact, Shaw suggested in his testimony that while they were awaiting their appearance in the trial, both men told him that they lied concerning statements made by him to get an “extended vacation from lock down” by being transported for the trial.

|fiIn response to this testimony, the defendant’s trial counsel announced his intention to call Addison and Richardson to impeach Shaw’s testimony.

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Related

State v. Savoy
103 So. 3d 564 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2012)
State v. Savoy
93 So. 3d 1279 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 2012)
State of Louisiana v. Courtney Paul Savoy
Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2011

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Bluebook (online)
11 So. 3d 1184, 2008 La.App. 3 Cir. 1444, 2009 La. App. LEXIS 1051, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-savoy-lactapp-2009.