State v. Strickland

683 So. 2d 218, 1996 WL 636146
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 1, 1996
Docket94-KA-0025
StatusPublished
Cited by129 cases

This text of 683 So. 2d 218 (State v. Strickland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Strickland, 683 So. 2d 218, 1996 WL 636146 (La. 1996).

Opinion

683 So.2d 218 (1996)

STATE of Louisiana
v.
Lawson Eugene STRICKLAND.

No. 94-KA-0025.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

November 1, 1996.
Rehearing Denied December 13, 1996.

*222 Gary Patrick Clements, Blaine Gerard LeCesne, New Orleans, for Applicant.

Richard P. Ieyoub, Attorney General, William E. Tilley, District Attorney, Ted R. Broyles, II, Leesville, Michelle W. Ghetti, Baton Rouge, for Respondent.

WATSON, Justice.[1]

A Vernon Parish grand jury indicted Lawson Eugene Strickland and Christian Boyd for first degree murder, armed robbery and conspiracy to commit the armed robbery of Jesse B. Pinsonneault. The indictment was amended prior to trial to charge only Strickland. A jury found Strickland guilty as charged on all counts. After a penalty hearing, the jury unanimously recommended a death sentence for the first degree murder, finding as an aggravating factor that the murder was committed during the commission of an armed robbery. The trial judge sentenced Strickland to death in accordance with the jury's recommendation. This is the direct appeal of his conviction for first degree murder and death sentence.[2] La. Const.1974, art. V, § 5(D).

On appeal, Strickland relies on eight unargued assignments of error noted by his trial counsel and 17 argued errors assigned by appellate counsel. All errors will be reviewed in this capital case. State v. Bourque, 622 So.2d 198, 208 n. 1 (La.1993). We affirm the conviction and conditionally affirm the sentence, remanding the matter to the trial court for the development of additional facts relative to the appropriate penalty.

FACTS

At 1:35 a.m. on November 3, 1992, the Vernon Parish Sheriff's Office responded to a report of robbery and shooting at the Merchants and Farmers Bank on Fort Polk Entrance Road southeast of Leesville, Louisiana. Officers dispatched to the scene saw Jesse Pinsonneault, the 23-year old assistant manager of a nearby Sambino's pizza restaurant, lying in a pool of blood. Pinsonneault had been shot once in the upper right chest; a spent .380 cartridge casing lay nearby. The victim told officers he had come to put the day's receipts into the bank's night deposit when a man approached him from behind and said something to him. Pinsonneault turned toward the man, saying "What?" and was shot in the chest. The man then grabbed one of the two bank bags the victim carried, which contained $106.91 in cash and checks, and ran away.

Pinsonneault described his assailant as a white male, five feet eight inches to five feet nine inches tall, wearing dark clothing. Pinsonneault was rushed to a nearby hospital for treatment and then transferred to Rapides General Hospital in Alexandria, Louisiana. He died later that morning of his injuries.

Officers interviewed Donald Baker and Rogena Cravens. Baker, Pinsonneault's friend, had waited at Sambino's while Pinsonneault made out the night deposit. Cravens, a Sambino's employee, had cleaned up for the night. Baker and Cravens waited in front of Sambino's while Pinsonneault drove approximately 300 yards to make the night bank deposit.

Baker heard voices coming from the direction of the bank, then he and Cravens heard a gunshot and someone yelling for help. Baker told Cravens to get into his car, then ran toward the bank. Baker saw a man on a nearby hill run back toward the woods. Cravens saw another man dressed in black running across a parking lot 100 feet away toward the woods and heard heavy footsteps. Baker did not see the second man but heard his heavy running footsteps.

Baker found Pinsonneault lying on his back, bleeding from a gunshot wound. Pinsonneault told Baker his assailant was approximately *223 Baker's build (5'10", 175 lbs). Baker ran across the street to a Shop Rite store, had them call an ambulance and ran back to Pinsonneault's side.

The police brought in tracking dogs which followed a trail through the woods. The scent was lost in a nearby military housing area beyond the woods. Officers canvassed the area without success.

On November 6, 1992 at 3:55 p.m., Dispatcher Lonnie Barrington of the Vernon Parish Sheriff's Office received a call from an anonymous male, stating that two escapees from the parish jail, Lawson Strickland and Christian Boyd, were staying with two girls named Amy and Jennifer in a trailer on Jeane Chapel Road. The caller gave directions to the trailer and warned that both men were armed and dangerous. Strickland and Boyd, facing burglary and theft charges, had escaped from the parish jail on October 28, 1992.

Police went to the described area. A young woman exited the trailer and was followed to her parents' residence in Leesville. The woman was Kimberly Atkins, known to the police as Lawson Strickland's girlfriend. When stopped, Atkins told police that Strickland and Boyd were not in the trailer she had just left and that she did not know where they might be. Police transported her back to the trailer, where she continued to insist that the men were not inside.

Police officers knocked on the trailer's front door; Amanda "Amy" Dempsey opened it. When officers asked if there were other people in the trailer, she stated that there were and called to the persons inside. Dempsey, Strickland and Boyd walked outside to the waiting officers, were placed on the ground and handcuffed. Jennifer McCormic, the trailer's lessee, was picked up from her job and escorted back to the trailer where she signed a consent to search form.

Police seized clothing worn by Strickland and Boyd, including two pairs of muddy boots found outside the trailer door, a box of.380 ammunition found in a kitchen drawer, loose .380 ammunition found under the bed in the master bedroom and pieces of a cut-up shirt which Strickland and Boyd had worn tied on their heads. Strickland and Boyd were arrested on simple escape warrants.

The three women were escorted to the sheriff's office for questioning as suspects for harboring escapees. All three were read their rights and signed waiver forms. Jennifer McCormic and Amanda Dempsey told officers the following information: the two women lived in the trailer. Kimberly Atkins, a friend, stayed there at times and had a key. On October 29, 1992, McCormic and Dempsey returned home from work to find that Atkins had brought Strickland and Boyd. Atkins asked if the men could stay there for awhile and McCormic and Dempsey consented. Atkins stayed there, too, living with Strickland in the master bedroom.

Strickland and Boyd told the women they needed to leave town and needed money. Atkins stole a .380 automatic pistol from her brother and gave it to Strickland and Boyd. Both men frequently carried the weapon in and out of the trailer.

McCormic and Dempsey returned from work at approximately 2 a.m. on November 3, 1992. They left the trailer but returned again between 4 and 4:30 a.m. to find muddy boots by the trailer door. Inside, Strickland was pacing around the living room with the gun in his hand. His forearms were scratched and bleeding. Boyd sat on the couch saying nothing. Strickland told the women he had shot a man making a Sambino's deposit. He had then grabbed the man's money bag and ran. Boyd had acted as lookout from a nearby hill. Strickland slipped down the slope, scratching his arms. The men ran through the woods. Hearing dogs, they ran through mud and water. Strickland hoped the man he shot in the face would not be able to identify him. The men had worn cut-up pieces of a shirt tied on their heads to avoid identification.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
683 So. 2d 218, 1996 WL 636146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-strickland-la-1996.