State v. Stewart

46 So. 3d 714, 2010 La. App. LEXIS 1134, 2010 WL 3156778
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 11, 2010
Docket45,333-KA
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 46 So. 3d 714 (State v. Stewart) 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. Stewart, 46 So. 3d 714, 2010 La. App. LEXIS 1134, 2010 WL 3156778 (La. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

LOLLEY, J.

11 This criminal appeal arises from the First Judicial District Court, Parish of Caddo, State of Louisiana. The defendant, Mario Stewart, was convicted of second degree murder, a violation of La. R.S. 14:30.1, and was sentenced to the mandatory term of life imprisonment without parole. He appeals his conviction and sentence, which we affirm for the following reasons.

Facts

At about 9:00 p.m. on December 24, 2003, the Robins family was at their home on Lowery Road in rural Caddo Parish when the family members heard a series of gunshots outside. The family went outside and found a man, later identified as Curtis Ewing, lying on the ground bleeding.

Paramedics responded to the call and found Ewing to be badly wounded; they called for a helicopter transport. One of the responders, Deputy Chief Jefferson Akes, noticed that the victim had duct tape on his right arm. The victim was able to convey his name and address to Dep. Akes, but his condition steadily deteriorated despite immediate care from the medics. Ewing was gravely wounded. Deputies from the Caddo Parish Sheriffs Office arrived at the scene and asked the victim *717 what happened to him. Ewing was reluctant to speak, but Dep. Akes told the victim that if he had something to say, “he needed to tell us right now ... this might be your last time to tell anybody.” According to Dep. Akes, he had this conversation with the victim:

[T]hey came to his house and got him. And I was like ... what do you mean they came to your house, did they snatch you off the street, he said, “no,” he got in the car with them, and they had taken him out there. I remember asking him ... |2who did this to you, and the only thing he would say was “Mario,” that’s the only thing I heard him say.

Another one of the deputies who responded, Deputy Joel Griffin, testified:

Initially, he was just saying he was hurting, he was in a lot of pain, and I said, sir, I understand that, as far as I know right now we don’t have any known witnesses, it’s very important for you to answer the question. And then I said, do you know who shot you, and he said “Mario,” and I said “Mario,” and he nodded. He said, “yeah, Mario.”

Still another investigator with the Sheriffs office, Sergeant Micky McDaniel, spoke with the victim at the scene. He said that Ewing was able to give him his date of birth, and then Sgt. McDaniel had this exchange with the victim:

I asked him again, Curtis, who shot you, and he told me “Mario.” And I said “Was Mario with anyone?” and he said, “yes, a black male, yes,” “do you know his name?,” “no.” I asked him about the vehicle and he told me it was a blue Ford Escort that they had come to the scene in, and I asked him where they had come from, and he told me [Mooretown].

The helicopter arrived and paramedics transported Ewing to LSU Medical Center, where he died of his wounds. Investigators gathered a number of items of evidence from the scene including several spent .45 cartridge cases and a Styrofoam cup. In addition, a doctor who treated Ewing gave an investigator bullets the doctor extracted from the body.

The deputies’ investigation of the crime led them to Mario Stewart and his friend Drexell Tolliver. Stewart and Tolliver ultimately turned themselves in for questioning. After taking the men’s statements, investigators arrested them for Ewing’s murder. Stewart eventually admitted that he had picked up Curtis Ewing that evening but denied that he |ashot the victim. He first claimed that he, Tolliver and Ewing had planned to rob a drug dealer but that Tolliver discovered that Ewing was carrying a large sum of cash so Tolliver decided to rob Ewing. The defendant claimed that he then left the men’s company and that Tolliver and Ewing drove off together, and that Tolliver later returned, alone, to pick up the defendant. Later, he claimed to have been part of a plan with Tolliver to rob, but not kill, Ewing, and said that Tolliver was the one who duct taped Ewing’s arms prior to the killing.

Stewart was initially indicted for the first degree murder of Curtis Ewing, but the indictment was later amended to second degree murder, a violation of La. R.S. 14:30.1. On January 12, 2009, a jury trial against Stewart commenced.

At the trial, the victim’s brother, Clifton Ewing, testified that prior to his brother’s murder on December 24, 2003, he was at his aunt’s house in Shreveport when Stewart came to the door and asked to speak with the victim, whom Stewart explained he knew “from middle school.” Clifton said that his brother spoke with Stewart and then got into the car with him. Clifton recalled that Stewart and his brother *718 were the only people in the car, a Ford Escort, when they drove away. That was the last time that Clifton saw his brother alive. Ewing identified the defendant in a photo lineup as the person who left with his brother.

Stewart’s girlfriend, Shaqueta Datcher, testified that on December 24, 2003, at about 5:00 p.m., the defendant, who was by himself, came to her home and borrowed her car, a Ford Escort. Datcher stated that Stewart | Returned with the car later that night at about 10:00 p.m., and he was accompanied by two men, Tolliver and Jhi-marcus Mitchell. The three men stayed at Datcher’s home for about 30 minutes and then left on foot. Datcher used her car to go to her cousin’s house later that night but did not notice anything unusual about her car.

Yashika Bennett, Datcher’s cousin, was also at Datcher’s house that night. Bennett also testified at trial and remembered that Stewart picked up the car between 8:30 and 9:00 p.m. and returned, alone, at 10:30 or 11:00 p.m.

After examining the physical evidence, investigators found fingerprints on the Styrofoam cup. The fingerprints were identified as Tolliver’s. A search of Datcher’s car revealed blood spots, several pieces of duct tape in the back of the car and the defendant’s fingerprints above the trunk latch, on the passenger’s side roof, and the driver’s side door glass. The murder weapon was never recovered.

Stewart never admitted to police that he shot the victim. Tolliver gave police several statements with very different versions of the facts. In the first statement, he denied any knowledge of the events. In the second statement, Tolliver admitted to shooting the victim. In the third statement, he said that the defendant shot the victim, and in the fourth statement, he said that he cooperated with Stewart, who shot the victim, as part of a contract killing paid for by two men whom the victim had wronged. In Tolliver’s statements, he had no specific knowledge about the murder | ¿weapon; however, in Stewart’s statements, he knew that the weapon was a .45.

Tolliver testified at the defendant’s trial. Tolliver told the jury that he was originally charged with murder because of his involvement in this offense, but had pled guilty to manslaughter and had been promised a sentence of between 20 and 40 years’ imprisonment after his testimony in the defendant’s trial. He admitted giving different statements to investigators, including admitting to the shooting itself, but he explained that he did so because the investigators continued to assert that Tol-liver was guilty of the murder.

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Related

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152 So. 3d 1056 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2014)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 So. 3d 714, 2010 La. App. LEXIS 1134, 2010 WL 3156778, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-stewart-lactapp-2010.