COURT OF APPEAL, _______ CIRCUIT
STATE OF LOUISIANA
NUMBER: _______
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STATE OF LOUISIANA
VS.
_______________
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CRIMINAL ACTION NO. _______
_______ JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT IN AND FOR THE
PARISH OF _______ , STATE OF LOUISIANA
HONORABLE _______________ , TRIAL JUDGE
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BRIEF IN SUPPORT OF MOTION
FOR REHEARING ON BEHALF
DEFENDANT/APPELLANT
_______________
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_______________
INDIGENT DEFENDER BOARD
_______ JUDICIAL DISTRICT COUR T
_______________
_______ , LA _______
(___ )_______
REPRESENTING DEFENDANT -
APPELLANT
1. JURISDICTION
This is an appeal from two felony convictions. Jur isdiction is vested in this Court by Article
V, Section 10, of the Louisiana Constitution of 1974, as amended, and by the provisions of Article
212.1 of the Louisiana Code of Criminal Procedure.
As to the sexual battery conviction, venue was waived at the Trial Court level thus vesting
jurisdiction over that charge with this Court as well.
II. SYLLABUS OF LAW
Louisiana Constitution, Article 1, Section 20
Louisiana Code of Criminal Procedure, Annual Article 894.1 (West 1984)
Louisiana Sentencing Guideline s, Sections 209 (A), 209 8
State v. Brogdon , 457 So.2d. 616, 625 (La. 1984)
Brogdon v. Louisiana , 471 U.S. 1111, 105 S.Ct. 2345, 85 L.Ed. 2d 862 (1985)
State v. Caston , 477 So.2d 868 (La.App. 4th Cir. 1985)
Stat e v. Soco , 441 So.2d 719 (La. 1983)
State v. Quebedeaux , 424 So.2d 1009 (La. 1982)
State v. Cornelius , 539 So.2d [93 -1636 La.App. 4th Cir 9]
State v. Guajardo , 428 So.2d 468, 473 (La. 1983)
State v. Coleman , 647 So.2d 1355 (La.App. 4th Cir. 1994)
State v. Soraparu , 93 -Ka -1636 (4th Cir. 1995)
State v. Wheat , 612 So.2d 176 (La.App. 1 Cir. 1992)
State v. Green , 1614 So.2d 758 (La.App. 2nd Cir. 1993)
State v. Smith , 539 So.2d 993 (La.App. 4th Cir. 1989)
II. STATEMENT OF THE CASE
Pursuant to two bill s of information alleging the offenses of Manslaughter and Attempted
Forcible Rape, the defendant, _______________ , was arrested and charged with the same.
On _______ ___ , 20 ___ , the defendant, _______________ , appeared before the Honorable
_________ ______ in the Parish of _______ and plead guilty to one count of Manslaughter. On the
same date, defendant waived venue and also plead guilty in _______ Parish to one count of Sexual
Battery on a charge arising out of _______ Parish.
IV. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On _______ ___ , 20 ___ , _______________ appeared before the Honorable
_______________ , and was sentenced to a term of imprisonment of forty years at hard labor on the
charge of Manslaughter, and ten years at hard labor on the ch arge of Sexual Battery, both of which
are the maximum allowed by law. It was also ordered that these sentences were to be served
consecutively with each other.
Defendant/Appellant timely filed a Motion for Appeal with the _______ Circuit Court of
Appeal, State of Louisiana, and judgment was rendered on _______ ___ , 20 ___ . In that judgment
the convictions were affirmed, sentences were affirmed as amended to give credit for time served,
and the case is remanded with order.
V. ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
Assign ment of Error No. 1
THE TRIAL COURT AND/OR THE APPELLATE COURT ERRED BY FAILING TO
TAKE INTO CONSIDERATION ANY MITIGATING FACTORS PURSUANT TO THE
SENTENCING GUIDELINES AND SENTENCED THE DEFENDANT TO A TERM OF
IMPRISONMENT FAR EXCEEDING THE TERM AS LISTED I N THE SENTENCING
GUIDELINES.
Assignment of Error No. 2
THE TRIAL COURT AND/OR THE APPELLATE COURT ERRED IN SENTENCING
THE DEFENDANT TO A TERM OF IMPRISONMENT OF FORTY YEARS ON THE
MANSLAUGHTER CONVICTION AND TEN YEARS ON THE SEXUAL BATTERY
CONVICTION TO RUN CONSECUTIVELY, AS SUCH WAS AN EXCESSIVE SENTENCE
WHICH IS CRUEL AND UNUSUAL PURSUANT TO THE U.S. AND LOUISIANA
CONSTITUTIONS.
VI. ISSUES PRESENTED FOR REVIEW
1. Whether the Trial Court and/or the Appellate Court erred by failing to take into
conside ration any mitigating factors pursuant to the sentencing guidelines.
2. Whether the Trial Court imposed a constitutionally excessive sentence.
VII. ARGUMENT
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR NO. 1:
Section 209 -A, of the Louisiana Sentencing Guidelines states:
A. Procedure for Departure
1. The designated sentence range provided in the Grid is appropriate for a
typical case; that is, an offense committed without aggravated o r mitigating
circumstances.
2. A departure from the designated sentence range occurs whenever the Court
imposes a sentence which is different from the types of sentences or outside the
designated sentence range provided in the zone and cell appropriate to the case.
3. The Court should depart from the designated sentence range when suffic ient
aggravating or mitigating circumstances are present significantly to differentiate the
case from the typical case arising under the offense of conviction.
4. When departing from the designated sentence range, the Court shall:
a. Pronounce a senten ce which is proportio nal to the seriousness of the offense
and the officer =s criminal history; and
b. State for the record the reasons for the depa rture which shall specify the
mitigating or aggravating circumstances, and the factual basis therefor.
5. Reasons for departure from the designated sentence range are appropriate only
when such reasons are based on mitigating or aggravating circumstances.
According to Section 209 -A of the Louisiana Sentencing Guidelines, the Trial Court did not
state for the record, nor does it appear it even considered, any mitigating circumstances in regards to
this defendant. (See Tr. 753 -756). Of the eighteen mitigating circumstances itemized in Section
209 -C of the Louisiana Sentencing Guidelines, a minimum of four specifically apply in this case.
First of all, _______________ committed these offenses without any significant
premeditation. This fact is supported throughout the record. _______________ =s judgment was
also impaired because of his extreme youth. _______________ was in his early twenties when both
of the incidents occurred. Furthermore, _______________ cooperated with law enforcement
authorities with respect to the current crime of conviction. The record ref lects that without
_______________ =s help, the body of _______________ would never have been found and the
crime would never have been solved. Finally, _______________ did in fact plead guilty and
otherwise accepted the responsibility for the offense and expressed genuine remorse.
_______________ , in his statement to the Court at the sentencing hearing, stated both that he did
everything he could to help _______________ and that he was very sorry for what had happened to
her. (See Tr. 747).
Additionally, the defense contends that excessive weight was gi ven to the aggravating
circumstances cited by the Trial Court in that most, if not all of them, do not apply or are not
supported by the evidence. To begin with, the use of violence and actual bodily injury in the Darby
case is not supported by the eviden ce. Also, the threat of bodily harm to the victim is highly
disputed.
In the _______________ case, the use of violence cannot be considered an aggravating
circumstance. It has been widely held that the use of violence in a manslaughter case is not an
aggravating circumstance because, virtually all manslaughters or homicides are violent in nature.
Also, th e allegation of deliberate cruelty in _______________ =s fail ure to seek medical treatment
for the victim lacks merit in that _______________ testified that he did in fact try to administer CPR
to the victim coupled with the belief of Detective _______________ that _______________ did in
fact try to help the victim. As far as economic loss to the victim =s family in the _______________
case, the money spent by the victim =s family was in fact unnecessary because a wide spread search
by several police departments was ongoing, and at least some o f the money spent by the
_______________ family was on highly unscientific methods, such as psychics an d the like.
Consequently, the Trial Court =s failure to balance, or to even consider, the many mitigating
circumstances applicable to this case coupled with the misapplication of several aggravating
circumstances resulted in the Court rendering a sentence of more than five times the sentence called
for by the sentencing guidelines in a first time offender case such as this one. But for these errors by
the Trial Court, _______________ would have been sentenced within the sentencing guidelines,
which called for a combined sentence of no more than 72 to 102 months. Therefore, the Trial Court
sentence was excessive and should be vacated, and this Court should sentence the defendant within
the range called for by the sentencing guidelines for a typical case of this nature.
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR NO. 2:
Article I, Sec. 20 of the Louisiana Constitution (West 1977) provides tha t A[n]o law shall
subject any person... to cruel, excessive or unusual punishment. @ A sentence within the statutory
limit is considered excessive and unconstitutional if it is Agrossly out of proportion to the severity of
the crime @ or is Anothing more than the purposeless imposition of pai n and suffering. @ State v.
Brogdon , 457 So.2d 616, 625 (La. 1984), cert. den. Brogdon v. Louisiana , 471 U.S. 1111, 105 S.Ct.
2345, 85 L.Ed.2d 862 (1985); State v. Caston , 477 So.2d 868 (La.App. 4th Cir.1985). G enerally, a
reviewing Court must determine whether the Trial Court adequately complied with the sentencing
guidelines set forth in La. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 894.1 (West 1984) and whether the sentence is
warranted in light of the particular circumstanc es of the case. State v. Soco , 441 So.2d 719
(La.1983); State v. Quebedeaux , 424 So.2d 1009 (La.1982).
After establishing there is adequate compliance with Article 894.1, a reviewing Court must
determine whether the sentence imposed is too severe in light of the particular defendant and the
circumstances of his case, keeping in mind that maximum sentences should be reserved for the most
egregious violators of the offenses so charged. State v. Cornelius , 539 So.2d [93 -
1636 La.App. 4th Cir. 9] 919 (La.App. 4th Cir.1989); State v. Guajardo , 428 So.2d 468, 473
(La.1983).
While maximum sentences for first offenders convicted of Manslaughter have been upheld in
the past, not since the legislature increased the maximum sentence from twenty -one to forty years for
a manslaughter conviction has this been the case. In the case of State v. Coleman , 647 So.2d 1355
(La.App. 4th Cir. 1994), a sentence of fifteen years for manslaughter on a first offender was
imposed. In that case, the Trial Court found the defendant A >intentionally and coldly murdered
_______________ ,@ was Avery fortunate not to have been convicted of second degree murder, @
used a dangerous weapon, and lacked remorse or willingness to claim responsibility. = @ The Trial
Court found few mitigating circumstances. In a second case, State v. Soraparu , 93 -Ka -1636 (4th Cir.
1995), the facts were virtually identical and a forty year maximum sentence at hard labor for a first
time felony offender in a manslaughter charge was overturned as excessive.
In comparing these cases to the instant case, _______________ is a first time offender, the
aggravating circumstances are questionable, and there are many mitigating circumstances that the
Trial Court failed to recognize in the sentencing proceeding. In reviewing the record in this case, the
Court should find that this is no more than a typical case and hold that the sentence rendered by the
Trial Cour t is constitutionally excessive and should be overturned.
With regards to the sexual battery conviction, the sentencing guidelines call for a term of
twenty -four to forty eight months for a first time felony offender. Case law abundantly provides that
fir st time offenders with similar situations to the present case consistently fell within the guidelines.
This Court in State v. Wheat , 612 So.2d 176 (La.App. 1 Cir. 1992), recently upheld a conviction and
sentence of a defendant who, among other things, had a significant criminal history with a length y
arrest record. The defendant also failed to show remorse and had not accepted responsibility for the
crime. However, that defendant was only sentenced to five years at hard labor. In the present case,
the T rial Court sentenced ___________ to the maximum ten year sentence. The record in no wa y
reflects that this is anything but a typical case and upward deviation from the recommended range is
not supported by the evidence. The aggravating circumstances cited by the Court are both
questionable and disputed, and mitigating circumstances were no t considered. This being so, this
Court should find this sentence constitutionally excessive as well.
Finally, the Trial Court held that these sentences, which are the maximum sentences on both
charges, shall run consecutively. When consecutive sentences are imposed, the Trial Court shall
state the factors considered and its reasons for the consecutive terms. State v. Green , 614 So.2d. 758
(La.App. 2nd Cir. 1993). Additionally, the Trial Court must articulate particular justification for
consecutive sen tences beyond simple articulation of Article 894.1's guidelines. State v. Smith , 539
So.2d 993 (La.App. 4th Cir. 1989). In the current case, the Trial Judge does not articulate, nor does
the record justify, the imposition of consecutive sentences. There are several mitigating
circumstances which the Trial Judge failed to consider, and the aggravating circumstances stated on
the record are disputed and are at best questionable. Accordingly, the defendant argues that this
sentence was excessive and asks t his Court to vacate the sentence handed down by the Trial Court,
and to sentence this defendant in line with the designated sentencing range for a typical case under
the sentencing guidelines.
VIII. CONCLUSION
The sentence of fifty years at hard labor r eceived by _______________ is constitutionally
excessive for several reasons. The defendant is a first time offender without any prior convictions
whatsoever. There is nothing in the records to support that this is anything but a typical case. The
sentencing guidelines call for a range of sixty to ninety months on a typical manslaughter charge and
a range of twenty -four to forty -eight months on a typical sexual battery charge. Additionally, several
mitigating f actors exist in this case that were not even considered by the Trial Judge, and the
aggravating circumstances articulated by the Trial Judge do not carry the weight that was afforded
them. Furthermore, the Trial Court failed to articulate any justificatio n for the imposition of
consecutive sentences, which is required under State v. Green, supra.
Therefore, the Defendant/Appellant request that this Honorable Court grant a rehearing and
at the rehearing the sentence of the Trial Court should be vacated and the defendant should be
sentenced according to the designated range called for in the typical case under the sentencing
guidelines.
Respectfully Submitted,
______________________________
_______________
_______ Judicial Distr ict
Indigent Defender Board
_______________
_______ , LA _______
(___ )_______
Bar No. _______
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I HEREBY CERTIFY that I have forwarded a copy of the above original brief to the records
of all counsel by placing a copy thereof in the United States Mail, postage prepaid and properly
addressed.
Signed in _______________ , Louisiana , on this ____ __ da y of _ ____________ ______,
20 ___ .
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