State v. Strother

990 So. 2d 130, 2008 WL 3854353
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 20, 2008
Docket43,363-KA
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 990 So. 2d 130 (State v. Strother) 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. Strother, 990 So. 2d 130, 2008 WL 3854353 (La. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

990 So.2d 130 (2008)

STATE of Louisiana, Appellee
v.
Shannon STROTHER, Appellant.

No. 43,363-KA.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

August 20, 2008.
Rehearing Denied September 11, 2008.

*132 Snell & Robinson, by A. Richard Snell, Bossier City, for Appellant.

J. Schuyler Marvin, District Attorney, John M. Lawrence, C. Sherburne Sentell, III, Assistant District Attorneys, for Appellee.

*133 Before BROWN, STEWART and GASKINS, JJ.

STEWART, J.

The defendant, Shannon Strother, was convicted of two counts of molestation of a juvenile, a violation of La. R.S. 14:81.2. The trial court subsequently sentenced the defendant to serve 12 years' imprisonment at hard labor, with all but three years' suspended, and with credit for time served. The defendant was also ordered to serve five years supervised probation after his release and to pay a fine in the amount of $3,000.00. He now appeals, urging six assignments of error. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the defendant's conviction and sentence.

FACTS

On September 2, 2006, the defendant's son, M.S.,[1] held a party at the defendant's house to celebrate the upcoming 18th birthday of M.S.'s girlfriend, W.S. M.S. invited several of his friends to the party, and approximately 10 teenagers gathered at the defendant's home that evening. The defendant was the only adult authoritative figure present at the home during the party. Two teenagers came to the party as guests of others; a 14-year-old female, J.S., was one of these uninvited guests. J.S.'s mother was not aware that J.S. was attending the party.

J.S. testified that the defendant was cooking food and serving alcoholic drinks made from Tequila and Bacardi at the party. J.S. stated that she remembered the defendant giving her three of these beverages to drink during the course of the evening. According to J.S., she played "quarters" with the defendant and several of the other guests, and during this time the defendant put his arm around her and said "that [J.S.] was going to be his girlfriend for the night."

J.S. said she thought little of this remark at the time it was made. She subsequently went swimming in the pool at the defendant's home. J.S. swam in a sports bra and a pair of shorts that she borrowed from W.S. W.S. testified that J.S. had to borrow shorts for swimming because J.S. was not wearing panties beneath her jeans. J.S. contradicted W.S.'s testimony by stating that she wore pink panties. The defendant was present at the pool most of the time when the guests were swimming. J.S. said that as she returned inside the house after her swim, the defendant kissed her on the neck. She explained that this "freaked [her] out."

J.S. related that she had consumed a large quantity of alcohol by this point and began to throw up in the toilet. J.S.'s friend, AM, testified that J.S. proceeded to enter into one of the smaller bedrooms to lie down. Some of the partygoers looked after J.S., who lay on the bed in one of the smaller bedrooms. Eventually one partygoer, M.S.'s friend SBB, moved the "passed-out" J.S. from that bed and put her on the couch.

M.S. testified that his father's only rule was that no one could leave this party if they had been drinking unless they were driven by someone who had not been drinking. Seven of the ten youths spent the night at the defendant's house. J.S. slept in the bed located in the master bedroom. M.S. expressed that someone, other than the defendant, put J.S. in the bed in the master bedroom. The defendant's ex-wife, Julie Strother, contradicted M.S.'s testimony by stating that she heard the defendant tell a third person that he (the defendant) had put J.S. in his bed to keep her from wandering around the *134 front yard. Later that night or early the next morning, the defendant joined J.S. in his bed in the master bedroom.

J.S. stated that the next thing she remembered was "waking up and [the defendant] was on top of me." J.S. explained that she was in the home's master bedroom in the bed and that the defendant was having sex with her. She stated that the act was painful, and she recalled that after the defendant was finished, he took a cloth and wiped off her stomach and face.

Sometime during the night, J.S.'s friend, AM, testified that she came into the master bedroom, searching for J.S. AM said that when she entered into the dark room, she asked the defendant, "Where's [J.S.]?" The startled defendant replied, "Right here."

The next morning, J.S. was awakened by W.S. Both J.S. and W.S. testified that J.S. was still in bed with the defendant. J.S. testified that the defendant was not wearing a shirt, and that she was wearing a shirt but was naked from the waist down. J.S. also explained that she found "white stuff" on the inside of her shirt. She claimed to have seen semen previously, and over the defendant's objection, she testified that she recognized the substance to be semen. She got out of bed and put on her blue jeans, after failing to find her panties. Then, W.S. and several others took J.S. home. SBB and W.S. said that J.S. appeared to have a normal demeanor, although one noted that she may have been upset about something related to her grandmother. J.S. said that her vagina was sore the day after the party.

Shortly after the incident, J.S. told her mother what happened, and J.S.'s mother called the defendant. J.S.'s mother said that the defendant told her some of the partygoers had put J.S. on the bed in the master bedroom and that he (the defendant) left the room at that point. Unsatisfied with this explanation, J.S.'s mother called the defendant back and recorded a portion of the conversation on her cell phone. In this conversation, the defendant told J.S.'s mother that he (the defendant) picked up J.S. and put her in his bed. The defendant admitted that he stayed in bed with J.S. that night. The defendant said he did not know how J.S. came to be naked. In both conversations, the defendant denied improper conduct with J.S.

The recording of this conversation is of poor quality and only captured the defendant's side of the conversation. The district attorney asked its information technology manager, Matthew Wright, to try to make the conversation more audible. By using a piece of Sony software he bought at a Best Buy store, Wright was able to enhance the recorded conversation. Wright is mostly self-taught in the field of audio enhancement, but he has been accepted as an expert in that field four times. The court accepted Wright as an expert in this case over the defendant's objection. The court heard the enhanced recording of the conversation, and J.S.'s mother confirmed that the conversation was as she remembered it.

Julie Strother, the defendant's ex-wife, discovered "a pot that had dried-up puke in the bottom of it, with a pair of navy blue wind shorts on top of it," while vacuuming the defendant's bedroom in September 2007. She stated that she found a pair of panties partially hidden by a file cabinet, located about a foot from the pot. The shorts and the panties matched the description that the victim gave of her clothing on the night of the party. The defendant repeatedly denied to Julie Strother that he touched J.S.

After police arrested the defendant based on J.S.'s statement, the defendant admitted to police that he had given alcohol *135 to the youths, but refused to speak about the molestation charge. Strother was subsequently charged with contributing to the delinquency of juveniles and with molestation of a juvenile.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
990 So. 2d 130, 2008 WL 3854353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-strother-lactapp-2008.