State v. Washington

952 So. 2d 798, 2006 La.App. 4 Cir. 1014, 2007 La. App. LEXIS 479
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 14, 2007
DocketNo. 2006-KA-1014
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 952 So. 2d 798 (State v. Washington) 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. Washington, 952 So. 2d 798, 2006 La.App. 4 Cir. 1014, 2007 La. App. LEXIS 479 (La. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

MICHAEL E. KIRBY, Judge.

STATEMENT OF CASE

On December 29, 2004 the State charged the defendant Bennie Washington with one count each of purse snatching and armed robbery. At his arraignment on January 5, 2005 he pled not guilty to both counts. On January 31 the State amended the bill of information as to the date and the name of the victim in the robbery count, and Washington pled not guilty to the amended charge. The State amended the bill again on the day of trial, March 28, to charge Washington with attempted armed robbery, and again Washington pled not guilty to the amended charge. On that date, a twelve-person jury found him guilty as charged in the purse snatching count; it could not reach a verdict on the robbery count. The State filed a multiple bill against Washington on April 15, to which he pled not guilty, and the court reset the matter. On April 26, Washington filed a motion to quash the multiple bill, and the court denied the motion. After a hearing, the court found Washington to be a second offender and ordered a presentence investigation report. On July 8, 2005 the court sentenced Washington to serve thirty years at hard labor without benefit of probation or suspension of sentence and without good time eligibility. The court denied Washington’s motion to reconsider sentence but | ¡.granted his motion for appeal. On July 18, 2005 the court amended Washington’s sentence to delete his ineligibility for good time.

FACTS 1

Nita Breckenridge testified that on October 24, 2004 she lived at 1222 Antonine Street. She testified that at approximately 9:30 p.m. on that date she left her house [800]*800to pick up her son from work and then dropped him off at Tulane University. She stated that at approximately 11:00 p.m. she returned to her home, parking down the street from her condo because she could not get a parking place right in front. She testified that she walked down the middle of the street until she reached the sidewalk leading to her home. As she turned and started walking down the sidewalk, a man she positively identified as the defendant Bennie Washington came out from behind a tree and started following her. She stated that Washington fumbled under his shirt as he approached her, but he did not remove anything from under the shirt. She stated that she tried but failed to push her car’s panic button as Washington approached. She testified that Washington then grabbed her purse, pushing her sideways and taking the purse as she fell to the ground. Ms. Breckenridge testified that she screamed, and the man ran off toward Magazine Street. She stated that she got up and yelled after him that the purse contained nothing valuable and that she could identify him. She stated that she also chased him down Antonine Street until she lost him somewhere in the vicinity of Camp Street. She stated that she then went back home and called the police, describing | sher assailant as having short hair and a medium black complexion, and wearing a white shirt and black pants and shoes.

Ms. Breckenridge stated that she was able to get a good look at Washington’s face because she could see it plainly in the streetlight. She testified that approximately one to two hours after the purse snatching police officers told her that they had captured a suspect that they wanted her to view. She stated that they took her to the corner of Magazine and either Peni-ston or Amelia Streets, where they took a man out of the back of a police car and put lights on him. She stated that she identified the man, Washington, as the person who snatched her purse. She stated that he was wearing at the time black pants and shoes, as well as a white shirt that was not the same shirt he was wearing when he snatched her purse.

Ms. Breckenridge testified that at the time it was taken her purse contained a wallet with credit cards, her driver’s license, keys, a brush, perfume, lipstick, cigarettes, and a lighter. She testified that after she identified Washington, the officers searched him and found a pack of cigarettes that was the same type as was in her purse and a lighter which, like the one in her purse, was almost out of fluid and had the top piece broken off of it. She also testified that her purse was later found by someone in the area, but it did not contain her keys or her wallet. She did, however, find her keys in the grass near the purse.

On cross-examination, Ms. Breckenridge estimated that she saw her assailant for thirty seconds during the purse snatching and then made her identification one to two hours after the purse snatching. She reiterated that the shirt that the assailant was wearing at the time he snatched the purse was a white |/T-shirt, while Washington was wearing a shirt with a small symbol on it when she identified him.

Sgt. Anthony Micheu, IV, testified that he was on patrol on Magazine Street when he saw a man running down Amelia Street holding something like a person would hold a football. Sgt. Micheu testified that the man then turned and ran toward Peni-ston, and Sgt. Micheu began following him. At that point, he heard a broadcast concerning the purse snatching, and the man he saw running matched the description given. He testified that he saw the man run down an alleyway between two houses and jump a fence, and Sgt. Micheu called [801]*801for backup. Sgt. Micheu stated that he and other officers set up a perimeter of Magazine, Camp, Amelia, and Peniston Streets, and soon thereafter other officers positioned in the 900 block of Peniston apprehended a man. He testified that he went to that location and identified the man, Washington, as the man.he saw running down Amelia Street. Although Sgt. Micheu could not remember the description given of the purse snatcher, he testified that Washington fit that description.

Officers Andres Gonzalez and Ronald Bodenheimer were responding to the purse snatching call when they heard Sgt. Micheu’s call for backup. While Off. Bo-denheimer remained at the corner of Peni-ston and Magazine, Off. Gonzalez walked to the middle of the 900 block of Peniston. Off. Gonzalez stated that after approximately thirty minutes, he saw Washington, who fit the description given of the purse snatcher, walk down an alleyway next to a house into the street. Off. Gonzalez stopped Washington, who told him that he had entered the alleyway because he had to urinate. Off. Gonzalez testified that he later walked into the alley and found no wet spot on the ground. Sgt. Micheu soon arrived and identified Washington as the man he saw running down Amelia Street clutching Issomething. However, Washington was not carrying anything when he walked out of the alley. Ms. Breekenridge later arrived and identified Washington as the man who snatched her purse. Off. Gonzalez arrested Washington, advised him of his rights, and searched him, finding a wallet (apparently not the victim’s), a pack of cigarettes, a lighter, and a cell phone. Ms. Breekenridge then identified the pack of cigarettes as the same brand which had been in her purse and the lighter as the one that had been in her purse. Off. Gonzalez identified the clothing Washington was wearing at his arrest: a grey shirt with “Bourbon Street” written on the front, a white undershirt Washington had been wearing under the grey shirt, and dark pants. Off. Gonzalez testified that the cell phone seized from Washington was not identified by Ms. Breekenridge. Off. Bodenheimer testified that he heard Ms. Breekenridge state that she had gotten a good look at Washington’s eyes during the offense and recognized them when she viewed him in the 900 block of Peniston.

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Related

State v. Washington
952 So. 2d 798 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2007)

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Bluebook (online)
952 So. 2d 798, 2006 La.App. 4 Cir. 1014, 2007 La. App. LEXIS 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-washington-lactapp-2007.