State v. Shelvin

720 So. 2d 124, 1998 La. App. LEXIS 2814, 1998 WL 690865
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 7, 1998
DocketNo. K98-400
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 720 So. 2d 124 (State v. Shelvin) 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. Shelvin, 720 So. 2d 124, 1998 La. App. LEXIS 2814, 1998 WL 690865 (La. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

| iYELVERTON, Judge.

The defendant in this case is Lucretia Shelvin, and the State has charged her with murdering her newborn baby. Defendant filed a motion to suppress two statements given after the death of the baby. The trial judge denied the motions and Lucretia applied for writs. In an unpublished writ disposition, a majority of the panel reversed the ruling of the trial court and ordered the suppression of the two statements in the following language:

[126]*126WRIT GRANTED AND MADE PEREMPTORY: The trial court erred in denying the motion to suppress the two statements given by the Defendant on May 31,1995, and June 1,1995. The Defendant invoked her right to remain ^silent on more than one occasion on May 31, 1995, and the police failed to scrupulously honor her invocation of that right. Thus, the Defendant’s waiver of her right to remain silent given after she had told the police she did not want to talk to them and after the nurse caring for the Defendant relayed the same message to them, and after the police wore down the Defendant’s resistance, is not valid and the first statement should have been suppressed. We further find that the trial court erred in denying the motion to suppress the second statement of the Defendant given on June 1, 1995, because the Defendant again invoked her right to remain silent, but the police failed to honor the invocation of that right.
Accordingly, the ruling of the trial court denying the motion to suppress both statements is reversed and vacated, and this matter is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings consistent herewith. Decuir, J. dissents, finding no error in the trial court’s ruling.

State v. Shelvin, 98-400 (La.App. 3 Cir. 3/31/98), unpublished.

The State of Louisiana sought supervisory review in the Louisiana Supreme Court. The supreme court granted the writ application and remanded the matter to this court for filing of briefs, oral arguments, and issuance of a full opinion. State v. Shelvin, 98-979 (La.6/5/98); 720 So.2d 1203. The State has submitted to this court its writ application to the Louisiana Supreme Court as its brief; the State did not file a brief when the defendant filed the original writ application in March 1998.

The original two-to-one writ decision of this court was based upon credibility and weight-of-the-evidenee determinations. We believed that the testimony of the disinterested Nurse Dena James on the critical question of whether Lucretia had invoked her right to remain silent had not been given sufficient weight. A different panel (except for the author of this opinion), after having considered additional briefs hand oral arguments, and upon re-examining the totality of the evidence presented at the hearing on the motion to suppress, now concludes that the writ application should be denied.

FACTS

Before daylight on Wednesday morning, May 31, 1995, the 18-year-old defendant, Lucretia Shelvin, gave birth to a baby in the bathroom of her grandmother’s home. The State alleges that the defendant then drowned the baby in the bathtub, placed its body in plastic bags, and hid it under her bed. When the grandmother got up and saw blood, she called the police.

Detective MeCullan Gallien of the Lafayette City Police was the lead investigator. During the course of talking with several of Lucretia’s relatives at her grandmother’s home, Detective Gallien learned that she had been charged as a juvenile and put on probation for the suspicious death of another newborn baby two years earlier in 1993. Detective Gallien felt homicide was a possibility in the present case. The detective called Probation Officer Vanessa Bob, who had supervised Lucretia during her juvenile probation, for assistance. Detective Steven Bergeron was also summoned. Lucretia had been taken to University Medical Center, and the officers went to see her there in the hospital.

Detective Gallien saw Lucretia while she was in an examining room and before she was put in a regular room. Dena James, the hospital nurse caring for Lucretia, informed Detective Gallien that Lucretia had not been given any mind-altering medications.

hLucretia gave two taped oral statements in the hospital, one on May 31, and the other the next day, June 1. She moved to suppress both.

The May 31 Statement

Detective Gallien recorded Lucretia’s first statement at about mid-morning. He testified that she never told him she did not want to talk about the case. She appeared to him to be “very reserved” and quiet. Once the detective went into the examining room with Probation Officer Bob, identified himself, and [127]*127asked Lucretia if she wanted to talk, she agreed. According to the detective, Lucretia asked that everyone leave the room except Detective Gallien, Probation Officer Bob, and Nurse James. Nurse James was going in and out of the room. The defendant was read the Advice of Rights form between 8:42 a.m. and 8:47 a.m., and she began to give a tape-recorded statement at 9:02 a.m.

Detective Gallien could not recall all that he said to Lucretia during the time he was with her before she gave the statement. He denied he ever told Lucretia that if she told the truth things would go easier: “I can’t remember anything in particular. But I do remember that those are things I do not do.”

Lucretia testified that when the police arrived at the examining room at the hospital and told her they wanted a statement, she told the police she did not want to give a statement, but the police persisted. She also testified that she told the nurse caring for her to tell the police she did not want to give a statement.

Nurse Dena James was the labor and delivery nurse in charge of Lucretia’s postpartum care, and she had been attending the patient all morning. Nurse | sJames recalled that Lucretia was crying and upset when she was first admitted. She remembered that a social worker and a policeman came to the examination room, but she was unable to associate Probation Officer Bob or Detective Gallien either by face or name with those persons. Nurse James could not remember whether any of the officers spoke to her about Lucretia. But she remembered “very clearly” that Lucretia “adamantly said I don’t want to talk about it.” Although she could not remember the order of what was said, it being a very busy unit that morning, she remembered that Lucretia said more than once that she did not want to talk about it, but later she began talking about it. The nurse’s perception was that Lucretia was convinced to talk because “[tjhey encouraged her and told her that if she did tell everything and say what happened and was honest about it, it would be easier for her when she went to trial or however they said that.” Nurse James was present when the May 31 statement was taken. Asked whether she was present for the whole statement, she at first said yes, but later testified she was there at the beginning but could not remember whether she was there at the end. She said that during the statement there were a few people present, but she could not remember who they were or who was doing the questioning.

She summarized her testimony as follows:

„A. She and I spent a good bit of time alone together. As her nurse, I mean, I had to do that. I remember people coming up there and they wanted to question her and question her, and I wouldn’t allow anyone to talk to her at that point. I had to take care of her immediate needs.

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Related

State v. Rodriguez
761 So. 2d 14 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2000)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
720 So. 2d 124, 1998 La. App. LEXIS 2814, 1998 WL 690865, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-shelvin-lactapp-1998.