United States v. Alfred Bourgeois

423 F.3d 501, 2005 WL 2043294
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 25, 2005
Docket04-40410
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 423 F.3d 501 (United States v. Alfred Bourgeois) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Alfred Bourgeois, 423 F.3d 501, 2005 WL 2043294 (5th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

WIENER, Circuit Judge:

Defendant-Appellant Alfred Bourgeois was convicted of murdering his two-year-old daughter (“JG”) and sentenced to death under the Federal Death Penalty Act (“FDPA”). Bourgeois challenges his conviction and sentence on grounds that (1) the government failed to charge any aggravating factors in the indictment, (2) the FDPA statutory-intent factor that renders a defendant with a reckless state of mind eligible for the death penalty violates the Eighth Amendment, (3) the district court erred when it delegated to the Director of the Federal Bureau of Prisons supervision over Bourgeois’s execution, and (4) the aggravating factors used in his sentencing were vague and ambiguous.

I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. JG’s Life Before Bourgeois

JG was born to Katrina Harrison in October, 1999. For the first two and one-half years of her life, JG lived with her mother and grandmother in Livingston, Texas. In April of 2002, Harrison petitioned a local court to have JG’s paternity determined. The paternity test showed that Bourgeois, of LaPlace, Louisiana, was JG’s biological father. At the time, he was married to Robin Bourgeois, with whom he had two children (“AB1994” and *503 “AB2001”). Bourgeois also had a child from a previous marriage to whose mother he was paying child support.

In May of 2002, Bourgeois appeared in Texas for a child-support hearing regarding JG. He brought his niece to Texas with him with the intention of telling the judge that she was his daughter and had kidney problems in the event that the court ordered high child support payments. Bourgeois, however, was not allowed to take his niece (or any other family member) into the hearing with him. At the conclusion of the hearing, the court ordered Bourgeois to pay Katrina Harrison $160 per month in child support for JG. The court also granted Bourgeois’s request for visitation rights with JG for the ensuing seven weeks, and he took custody of JG that afternoon. When JG left her mother and grandmother, she was in good health and free of injuries.

B. The Final Weeks of JG’s Life

Initially, JG lived with the Bourgeois family at their home in LaPlace, where they remained until May 28, 2002. After that, JG accompanied the family on Bourgeois’s long-haul trucking route, residing with the other four in his 18-wheel tractor/trailor until her death, approximately one month later. From the outset, Bourgeois systematically abused and tortured his two-year-old daughter in several ways. For example, Bourgeois became fixated on JG’s toilet training. Her training potty became JG’s primary seat during the day, and Bourgeois even forced her to sleep on it when they were traveling at night. When she had “accidents,” Bourgeois would strike JG and then tell his older daughter, AB1994, that it was her fault.

In addition, Bourgeois constantly beat and otherwise assaulted JG. He punched her in the face with enough force to give her black eyes. He whipped her with an electrical cord, and he beat her with a belt so hard that it broke. Bourgeois hit JG in the head with a plastic baseball bat so many times that her head “was swollen like a football.” Later, when he was in jail, Bourgeois laughed to a fellow inmate that “[t]hat f — ing baby’s head got as big as a watermelon.” There was also evidence that, before the Bourgeois family left LaPlace, Bourgeois had thrown JG against the wall of the master bedroom. He scratched and pulled her ears, bit her hands, feet, and forehead, and burned the bottom of her foot with a cigarette lighter. Bourgeois’s wife, Robin, and others noticed that bruises and other injuries appeared on JG’s body shortly after she came to stay with the Bourgeois family,- and that, between the middle and end of May, JG’s hands and feet had become extremely calloused and swollen. When others tried to clean the sores on JG’s feet, Bourgeois would stop them and jam his dirty thumb into the wounds, then force JG to walk on her injured feet.

In addition to physically torturing JG, Bourgeois traumatized her emotionally. For example, on one occasion, Bourgeois decided that it was time for JG to learn how to swim, despite her tender years and fear of the water. Bourgeois picked up the two-year-old and tossed her several feet in the air and into a swimming pool. He allowed her to sink for several seconds before pulling her out, then repeated the “lesson” for thirty minutes while JG choked and gasped for air. Similarly, when the family visited a California beach on Bourgeois’s long-haul trucking route, he forced JG into the ocean even though she was terrified of the water, holding her under the water and letting the waves roll over her. By the time they left the beach, JG had swallowed so much salt water that she had difficulty walking and was ill with a swollen stomach.

*504 There was also evidence of sexual abuse. When the family was staying in LaPlace in May, Bourgeois slept in the master bedroom with JG and AB1994 behind a locked door, while Robin slept in a different bedroom. Late that month, a family friend noticed blood in JG’s diaper and convinced Bourgeois and Robin to take JG to Louisiana Child Protective Services (“CPS”) for an evaluation. There, the examining physician concluded that the source of the blood was external irritation to JG’s genitalia. Although the doctor determined that the cause of the injury was inconclusive, he noted that it could have been the result of vaginal trauma. The same doctor examined JG after her death and found a similar but more severe irritation to JG’s genitalia, this time concluding that the irritation was likely caused by vaginal trauma. Furthermore, after JG’s death, rectal swabs revealed the presence of semen.

C. Concealed Abuse; Planning for JG’s Death

Bourgeois actively tried to conceal the evidence of his continuous abuse. For example, he covered JG’s injured feet with socks, made her wear sunglasses to hide her battered face, and told people that she had been in a terrible ear accident to explain her swollen head.

Around the time that the blood appeared in JG’s diaper, Bourgeois reported to Texas CPS that JG had been abused while living with Katrina, that Katrina was living with a convicted sex offender, and that the house was unsuitable for a child. CPS investigated Bourgeois’s complaint and concluded that it was not only untrue, but also was made “in bad faith.” Similarly, Bourgeois told friends along his trucking route that JG’s mother had neglected and abused JG and that she had been sexually molested with a finger.

Furthermore, Bourgeois fostered the misleading appearance that everything was fine by sending postcards to Katrina, stating that JG was well and having fun on the trucking route/family vacation, and that they had visited, inter alia, Disneyland and the Elvis Presley Museum. Bourgeois signed the postcards “JG.” None of the information on the postcards, however, was true.

In stark contrast to these postcards’ Rockwellian portrayals, Bourgeois told little JG that she made him want to kill her. When Robin asked him what he would do if he killed JG, Bourgeois replied unhesitatingly that he would throw her out of the truck, and they would concoct a story for the police.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
423 F.3d 501, 2005 WL 2043294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-alfred-bourgeois-ca5-2005.