State v. Vicks

798 So. 2d 308, 2000 La.App. 4 Cir. 1700, 2001 La. App. LEXIS 2170, 2001 WL 1219196
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 26, 2001
DocketNo. 2000-KA-1700
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 798 So. 2d 308 (State v. Vicks) 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. Vicks, 798 So. 2d 308, 2000 La.App. 4 Cir. 1700, 2001 La. App. LEXIS 2170, 2001 WL 1219196 (La. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

1Chief Judge WILLIAM H. BYRNES III.

The defendant was charged by grand jury indictment on July 15, 1999 with aggravated rape of a child under twelve, La. R.S. 14:42, and aggravated rape, La. R.S. 14:44. He was arraigned and pled not guilty. He filed a motion to suppress which was denied after a hearing October 1, 1999. After a judge trial on March 22, 2000, the defendant was found guilty as charged on the aggravated rape count, and guilty of the lesser offense of second degree kidnapping, La. R.S. 14:44.1. On April 3, 2000, the trial court sentenced him to life imprisonment without the benefit of parole, probation, or suspension of sentence on the aggravated rape, and twenty years at hard labor on the second degree kidnapping charge, with the first two years to be served without benefit of parole, probation or suspension of sentence. The sentences are to be served concurrently. The defendant immediately filed a motion to reconsider sentence, which was denied, and a motion for appeal.

ERRORS PATENT:

A review of the record for errors patent reveals none.

J¡FACTS:

The mother of the then ten year old victim began searching for her when she did not return from a corner store after having been gone about a half an hour. Near the store, the mother asked a neighbor, Ina Davis, if she had seen the child. Ms. Davis said she had not. Ms. Davis asked the mother if she could hear a child’s screams coming from behind an abandoned house. The mother told the store owner to call the police. She called out the child’s name, heard screams and then a muffled sound from behind a house, went behind the house while banging and screaming loudly, and heard the sound of someone jumping the fence.

The victim appeared, naked from the waist down, with dark pieces of material around her neck and one wrist. She was frightened and shaking and told her mother she had been raped. The police arrived [310]*310within two minutes. The mother was so upset she got sick. The police took mother and daughter to the hospital.

Ina Davis testified that she heard a child screaming, “Help, Help, Help, please somebody help me, Help me, Help me,” coming from an abandoned house that is behind Bob’s Grocery Store and that is very near her own house. She called 911. She ran into the street and found the child’s mother looking for her, and together they went toward the house.

Officers responded to the report of screams at the intersection of St. Roch and Urquhart between 9:00 and 10:00 p.m. The victim was crying and upset, and her hands were bound so tightly that she was in pain. The officers found a snack and a soft drink in the back yard of the abandoned house, and a t-shirt on the sidewalk in front of the house.

I a At the. scene, Sergeant Claude Flot spoke to Lillie Mae Davis. She testified that she had seen a man, wearing a black t-shirt and dark jeans, talking to the victim in front of the store. She stopped to speak to the man (the defendant) because she thought he was Donald Vicks. The defendant said he was Donald Vicks’s twin brother, Allen, and that Donald was in jail. She said no more than ten minutes passed between her seeing the defendant with the victim and then hearing the commotion in the neighborhood.

The parties stipulated that Donald Vicks was in jail the day of the crime.

An anonymous witness on the scene.said the suspect lived at 2131 Marais Street, and the officers immediately went there.

Sergeant Flot, Detective Arnould Williams and Officer Dewight Roussive went to the house, and the door was answered by the owner, Ken Lintingua. Williams told Lintingua he was investigating a rape and gave Lintingua a description and a name. Lintingua let the officers into the house and said that the defendant did in fact live there. The officers went into the house and spoke to another resident of the house, Sabrina Seals, who said the defendant had just gone out of the rear door. He was arrested as he tried to flee.

Seals said she had been living at 2131 Marais with Ken Lintingua, who is her cousin, and Donald and Allen Vicks, who are identical twins. The house was Ken’s, and he paid the bills. Ken and the defendant were lovers. She said the defendant had left the house around 5:00 p.m., wearing all black. He returned around 10:00 p.m. and was sweating. She gave the officers a pair of black jeans she had seen the defendant wearing when he left the house. She also identified the black shirt found at the scene as the one the defendant had been wearing.

|4The officers took the defendant to the hospital where the victim identified him. He was handcuffed and not wearing a shirt at the time.

Dr. Janet Rossi examined the victim and found scratches and bruises on her face consistent with her having been choked, and scratches and cuts on her wrists and hands. Rossi could find no trauma to her genitals, but the victim told her that the penetration had been a quick rather than a prolonged process.

The victim said she and her mother had returned home from a school pageant, and she asked her mother if she could go to the store to get a sandwich. Her mother placed the order, and she walked the block and a half to the store. The order was not ready, so she began playing with her friend Cassandra, a clerk in the store. The defendant started asking the girls their age, and they told him Cassandra was sixteen and to leave them alone. The vie-[311]*311tim told the defendant that she was ten, and the victim guessed his age as nineteen. He left the store, and she waited on the steps where Cassandra could watch her. She saw two friends, fourteen and eleven, playing nearby. The defendant again approached her, asked her whether she had a boyfriend to which she responded “no”, and whether she would be his girlfriend to which she said, “no.” The defendant then told her that he had had an eleven year old girlfriend with whom he had not had sex, but with whom he had made love, and that she had been hit by a car.

After the victim got her food and left the store, she noticed the defendant following her. She turned around and walked back in his direction so that he would not know where she lived. She crossed the street, and so did he. She saw two women walk up to the man and start talking to him. She thought he had stopped following her, so she stopped near the abandoned house to catch her breath ^because she had bronchitis and had gotten nervous. At that point, she was grabbed from behind and dragged into the yard.

The defendant told her that he would cut her throat if she did not stop screaming, but she continued to scream anyway. He tried to get her into the house, but she successfully struggled against him. The defendant took off his black t-shirt, tore it into three pieces, and used the pieces to tie and gag her. He made her take off her shorts and underwear. She tried to get away, but the defendant tried to choke her and threatened to kill her. She felt her “eyes closing” from being choked. He made her he down on the ground on her stomach. He tried to put his “private part” into her rear, but when he was unsuccessful, he turned her over and put his “private part” inside her. She then heard her mother calling her. The defendant ran, and she later identified him at the hospital. She identified him again at trial.

The defendant said he had not gone out the night of the crime, but had stayed home with his homosexual lover, Ken. He said he was putting the garbage out when he was arrested. He denied wearing black jeans.

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Related

State v. Williams
54 So. 3d 98 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2010)
State v. Stovall
977 So. 2d 1074 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2008)
State v. Harold
861 So. 2d 262 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2003)

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Bluebook (online)
798 So. 2d 308, 2000 La.App. 4 Cir. 1700, 2001 La. App. LEXIS 2170, 2001 WL 1219196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-vicks-lactapp-2001.