State v. Wilhite

917 So. 2d 1252, 2005 WL 3582110
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 30, 2005
Docket40,539-KA
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 917 So. 2d 1252 (State v. Wilhite) 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. Wilhite, 917 So. 2d 1252, 2005 WL 3582110 (La. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

917 So.2d 1252 (2005)

STATE of Louisiana, Appellee
v.
Marcus Dewayne WILHITE, Appellant.

No. 40,539-KA.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

December 30, 2005.

*1253 Louisiana Appellate Project by Peggy J. Sullivan, Monroe, Marcus, Dewayne Wilhite, for Appellant.

Jerry L. Jones, District Attorney, George Daniel Ross, Assistant District Attorney, for Appellee.

*1254 Before BROWN, C.J., and WILLIAMS and DREW, JJ.

DREW, J.

Marcus Dewayne Wilhite was convicted as charged of second degree murder and sentenced to life imprisonment without benefits. The defendant now appeals his conviction and sentence. We affirm.

FACTS

THE INVESTIGATION

On March 23, 1999, Dwandya Hollins noticed something unusual in a thicket off Buckhorn Bend Road in Ouachita Parish on her way to the store. When she returned with her husband and others, the partially-clothed body of a black male was discovered on the west side of the roadway. The victim was identified as Arijoray Green. The Ouachita Parish Sheriff's Office was notified and upon arrival at that location, Sergeant Michael Goin found what appeared to be the victim's clothing scattered around the victim's body. There were drag marks on the ground from two bloodstains at the edge of the roadway leading toward the body's location in the thicket. The officers photographed and videotaped the crime scene and collected the physical evidence.

A couple of months later, the police received a call from a man who discovered a sunken car while putting his boat into the Ouachita River at the Lazarre Point area. When the car was pulled from the river, a check of the license tag and VIN number revealed that the car belonged to the victim.

Thereafter, a tip from an inmate led investigators to develop Marcus Wilhite and Percy Franklin as suspects in Green's murder. Investigators learned that Franklin was talking to other inmates about the murder and his black 9mm handgun. Detective Larry Ludlow of the Ouachita Parish Sheriff's Office researched this information and discovered that the weapon had been confiscated by the Monroe Police Department during the execution of a search warrant in an unrelated investigation at 1404 South Fourth Street.

Franklin was interviewed by investigators, including Det. Ludlow, and gave two custodial statements. The first statement, which was recorded, implicated only the defendant in the murder. The information "matched-up" with some of the details learned during the investigation, i.e., that the body was stripped and thrown on the side of the road, Green's clothes were thrown in the bushes, and the vehicle was dumped off Lazarre Point area. In Franklin's second custodial statement, which was not recorded, he confessed to his involvement in the crime but named the defendant as the person who shot and killed Green. Det. Ludlow showed the 9mm handgun to Franklin during one of the two statements, and Franklin identified the handgun as belonging to him, and as the weapon that Wilhite used to kill Green.

TRIAL TESTIMONY

Investigators, including Det. Ludlow, Sgt. Goin and others, testified at trial regarding the above facts. Det. Ludlow identified the photograph of the handgun at trial as the same handgun Franklin identified as his, and as the murder weapon, during one of his statements.

Dr. Steven Hayne

This forensic pathologist testified that:

• The victim was fatally wounded by gunshot from a large caliber handgun which entered the back of the head at very close range and exited the top of the bridge of the nose.

• This wound was consistent with the victim having been the driver of a car and *1255 having been shot by someone sitting behind him.

• The body also had a series of superficial skin abrasions indicative of being dragged a short distance at or about the time of death.

• The corpse was in the state of "early decomposition change."

Dwandya Hollins

Hollins additionally related that two or three days before the body was found, she was driving home at about 4:00 a.m. when she observed four or more men standing outside at the same location where the body was found. They were near a parked car, which was a dark blue four-door. One man was standing with his back turned to her and his head down, like he was urinating. He put his hand up to his face to shield it from her car's headlights.

Percy Franklin

Franklin testified that:

• Franklin, Wilhite, and Green were together on the night of the murder at the duplex where Franklin lived in the apartment adjacent to Jeffery ("Jethro") Jenkins on South Fourth Street in Monroe.

• Wilhite lived nearby, along with his girl-friend (Sheeir Williams), and her children.

• Green, Wilhite, along with "Hamp" and Derrick, were playing dice.

• Franklin didn't play dice because he doesn't gamble, but he was in and out of the house selling dope.

• The duplex was a drug house from which Franklin, Wilhite and Jenkins all sold marijuana, all three of them being supplied by Joe Orange.

• The gambling ended sometime after mid-night with Wilhite having lost some money to Green.

• Wilhite convinced Green to drive him to see some women staying in a house in Robinson Place and invited Franklin to come along.

• Green got into the driver's seat of his car, Franklin got into the passenger seat and Wilhite sat in the backseat behind Green.

• While Green was driving on Berg Jones Lane, the defendant shot Green in the back of the head and Green slumped over into Franklin's lap, soaking his pants.

• Wilhite told Franklin to grab the steering wheel, but he couldn't.

• Wilhite then grabbed the wheel and climbed over the seat while Franklin moved the defendant's feet away from the floor pedals.

• Wilhite told Franklin to get the money out of Green's pocket.

• Franklin complied, handing the bloody money over to the defendant.

• When the car came to a stop sign, Franklin climbed into the backseat.

• Wilhite drove to Buckhorn Bend Road and stopped in the curve.

• Franklin helped the defendant drag Green's body into some bushes.

• He helped Wilhite undress Green's body.

• The motive for the murder was robbery because Wilhite had lost money to Green in the dice game.

• Franklin denied keeping any of Green's money, explaining the roll of money on him that night as being the proceeds from a day of selling marijuana.

• Franklin admitted that the defendant told him earlier of his plan to rob and kill Green, but asserted that he thought the defendant was "lying" and didn't know the defendant was going to do it "right then."

*1256 • Franklin further volunteered that the defendant told him many times before that he was going to kill Green.

• He and the defendant drove Green's car to the boat launch at Lazarre Park in West Monroe, put it in neutral and pushed it into the river.

• Then Franklin and Wilhite walked to the house where Estella Wilson and Joe Orange lived and told Orange what happened.

• Wilson stayed in the bedroom and wasn't present during this conversation.

• Franklin was covered in blood, except for his face.

• Wilhite had some blood on his clothes, but not as much.

• He and Wilhite both went home.

• The 9mm handgun used by Wilhite to shoot Green belonged to Franklin, who usually kept the handgun under his mattress, but it had been missing for a week or two before the shooting.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
917 So. 2d 1252, 2005 WL 3582110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-wilhite-lactapp-2005.