A jury found John Wayne Broussard guilty on alternative counts of malice and felony murder of Terrence Greene, as well as six counts of aggravated assault on other individuals. Concluding that the evidence supported the verdict as to malice murder, the trial court entered judgment of conviction and imposed a life sentence for that offense and thereby vacated the felony murder verdict by operation of law.
Malcolm v. State,
1. While Appellant was attending a party, an argument broke out between one of his friends and Greene. The two went outside, where each was joined by a number of his supporters. Suddenly, a gun was fired at those gathered around Greene’s van. As he and his friends fled, Greene exclaimed that he was shot. When the police arrived, they found the abandoned van, but did not find Greene. The next morning, Greene’s body was discovered down the street from his parked vehicle. He died from a gunshot to the back. Greene had a shotgun shell clutched in his hand and, some distance away, the investigators found a shotgun. After the shootings, Appellant admitted to a friend that he intentionally fired at the crowd. In his statement to officers, however, he claimed that he was not armed, that he shot no one and that he never saw a weapon in the possession of Greene or any of Greene’s friends.
When construed most strongly in support of the jury’s guilty verdicts, the evidence was sufficient to authorize a rational trier of fact to find proof of Broussard’s guilt of malice murder and six counts of aggravated assault beyond a reasonable doubt.
Jackson v. Virginia,
2. Appellant enumerates as error the trial court’s refusal to give a requested charge on self-defense. According to Appellant’s own statement to the police, however, he did not fire any weapon. Justification is an affirmative defense whereby the defendant admits acting with the intent to inflict an injury, but claims that he did so while in
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reasonable fear of suffering immediate serious harm to himself or another.
Austin v. State,
Broussard correctly asserts that the jury was not required to believe his statement, and that it was authorized to credit the prosecution’s evidence identifying him as the shooter. However, nothing supported a finding that, if he did shoot, he acted in self-defense. The undisputed direct evidence, including Appellant’s own statement, indicated that he was not aware that any member of the opposing crowd, including Greene, was armed. If he did not have a reasonable belief that firing the gun was necessary to defend himself or another from any of the victims’ imminent use of unlawful force, his act was not justified.
Alexis v. State,
Under the evidence, either Appellant did not shoot at all, as he claimed to the police, or he intentionally fired the gun at the fleeing crowd, as the prosecution showed. Because no construction of the evidence would support a finding that he shot in self-defense, the trial court properly refused to charge on that issue.
Conner v. State,
3. The trial court failed to charge on voluntary manslaughter as a lesser included offense. However, it does not appear that Appellant submitted a written request for such an instruction.
State v. Stonaker,
Appellant and the State did reach a plea bargain in which he was to plead guilty to voluntary manslaughter. However, he withdrew his offer and elected to go to trial on an indictment which charged him with murder. Whether a jury charge on voluntary manslaughter was authorized is determined by the evidence produced at trial, and not by the terms of a withdrawn plea bargain. The prosecu
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tion may have agreed to accept Broussard’s offer to plead guilty to a lesser crime, but he withdrew it and cannot now complain that, in accordance with the proof adduced at trial, he was guilty of the greater offense or none at all. See
Thompson v. State,
Judgments affirmed.
Notes
The crimes occurred on October 3, 1999. The grand jury indicted Broussard on June 30, 2000. The jury returned the guilty verdicts on August 24, 2001 and, on that same day, the trial court entered judgments of conviction and imposed the sentences. Appellant filed a motion for new trial on September 6, 2001, which the trial court denied on May 10, 2002. He filed a notice of appeal on June 6, 2002. The case was docketed in this Court on September 11, 2002, and submitted for decision on November 4, 2002.
