|tThe state charged defendant by grand jury indictment with second degree murder in violation of La.R.S. 14:30.1 following the shooting death of her live-in boyfriend/husband. After trial by jury, defendant was found guilty as charged. The trial court sentenced her to the mandatory term of life imprisonment at hard labor without benefit of parole, probation, or suspension of sentence. On appeal, the Third Circuit reversed defendant’s conviction and sеntence on grounds that the evidence presented at trial did not support her conviction for second degree murder and would not support a judgment of guilt on the lesser included and responsive offenses of manslaughter and negligent homicide. State v. Trahan, 11-148, p. 13 (La.App. 3 Cir. 7/6/11),
The evidence introduced at trial established that on April 20, 2009, defendant called 9-1-1 to report that her boyfriend/husband had been shot and required assistance. Defendant identified herself by name and when asked if the shooter was still present, she replied, “It’s me.” The first officer to respond did so within three minutes, and encountered defendant
The coroner testified that the bullet fired from the gun entered the victim’s right lower back shoulder and exited from his upper chest area approximately five inches above the entrance wound. He stated the bullet passed upwards through the lower right lung, through two chambers of the heart, severed the aorta and pulmonary arteries, and traveled through the upper left lung, before exiting the victim’s body and embedding in the bathroom wall. He agreed with Detective Angelle that the stippling indicated the victim had suffered a close-range wound, and estimated the distance as anywhere from a few inches to up to four feet away. ^Though ultimately not relevant to defendant’s case, the coroner determined the victim had amphetamine, methamphetamine, and MDMA (“ecstasy”) in his urine at the time of his death. In response to a question by defense counsel, the coroner stated his understanding “that there was some sort of altercation” before the shooting took place.
No state witness could testify as to what made the gun fire, or whether the shooting itself was accidental. A blood spatter analyst testified that in his opinion, the victim was probably standing bent over the bathroom sink when he was shot. Because the bullet had severed his aorta artery, causing his blood driven by arterial pressure to splash out against the wall in a characteristic pattern, the victim would have gone down “real fast.” Based on the relatively small size of powder stippling at the entrance wound, the expert placed the outside distance of the gun when it fired at three feet.
Defendant did not testify at trial but to a significant degree, the evidence presented at trial was shaped by a statement she gave to the police on the night of the shooting that jurors never heard. In that statemеnt, defendant characterized her relationship with the victim as abusive because he had “a lil’ mean streak in him,” and that they had quarreled in the past, often over his drug use, and intermittently throughout the day before the shooting. Defendant explained that the .357 Magnum belonged to her, a gift from her ex-husband, and that she knew how to shoot
Neither side introduced defendant’s statement at trial, although the state had filed a notice pursuant to La.C.Cr.P. art. 768 of its intent to introduce the statement as well as the 9-1-1 call. However, reflecting the substance of the interview, in opening statements, the state remarked that “obviously there was some kind of disturbance going on between the two of them,” and defense counsel, conceding that he had not yet made the decision whether to call defendant to the stand, informed jurors that one way or another, through police testimony or through defendant, jurors would hear “her story,” ie., the narrative given by defendant to the police which he then outlined for jurors.
In the end, jurors heard no evidence that defendant had been in a tumultuous relationship with the victim or that they had quarreled that day, or that she had slipped on the bathroom floоr as the victim confronted her. Instead, both sides argued the case from the perspective of what happened after the shooting occurred. The state emphasized that the police found no evidence of footprints in the blood
The failure of either side to establish a larger context for the shooting played a critical role in the court of appeal’s decision to reverse defendant’s conviction and sentence. The majority on the panel readily acknowledged that there were two circumstances from which jurors could have inferred a specific intent to kill: the victim was shot at clоse range and defendant had been involved in some sort of altercation with the victim on the day of the shooting. As to the former, while the | ^deliberate shooting of someone at close range may support a finding of specific intent to kill as a circumstantial inference from the evidence presented, see, e.g.. State v. Williams,
The court of appeal thus reversed defendant’s conviction for secоnd degree murder. The majority further discounted the possibility of entering a judgment for the lesser included offense of manslaughter, as to which the State failed to prove specific intent, or negligent homicide, as to which “the State did not meet its |7burden of proving that Defendant acted below the standard of care expected to be maintained by a reasonably careful person under like circumstances.” Trahan, 11-148 at 12,
We do not agree with the premise of the court of appeal’s decision that the due process question under Jackson v. Virginia, whether the evidence was sufficient for a rational trier of fact to find defendant guilty of second degree murder, must be resolved entirely outside of the context of what counsel for the state and defense did or did not say in their opening and closing remarks. It clearly appears that most of the extra-record information provided by counsel came not from the state but from the defense when counsel outlined in his opening remarks the hypothesis of innocence, based on a statement jurors would never hear, that defendant slipped in her bathroom after disarming the victim and fired accidentally in the culminating event of an abusive relationship and a day-long argument. The |strial court appropriately instructed jurors at the close of the case that “opening statement and the closing arguments are not to be considered as evidence.” However, the trial court also appropriately informed jurors that in оpening statements, “the attorney[s] were permitted to familiarize you with the facts they expected to prove.” See 1 Louisiana Judges’ Criminal Bench Book, § 3.07, p. 22 (Louisiana Judicial College 1995) (Model Instruction: “In opening statements the attorneys were permitted to tell you the facts they expected to prove. In closing arguments the attorneys were permitted to present for your consideration their contentions regarding what the evidence has shown or not shown and what conclusions they think may be drawn from the evidence. The opening statements and closing arguments are not to be considered as evidence.”) (citing State v. Green,
Jurors were therefore entitled at the close of the evidence to hold the defense accountable for its failure to introduce any evidence in support of the hypothesis of innocence proрosed by defense counsel, apart from the coroner’s vague statement in response to questioning by the defense that he understood some sort of altercation had occurred earlier on the day of the shooting, a detail far more helpful to the state than the defense because it provided the only evidence of motive in the case. Jurors were also entitled to consider thе direct evidence defendant provided in her admission to the 9-1-1 operator that she had shot the victim and to the first responders that the victim’s body and the gun were still inside the house, the source for defense counsel’s own judicial admission in his opening and closing remarks that defendant had killed the victim with the gun found by the police in the residence. See Martinez v. Bally’s Louisiana, Inc.,
It clearly appears that jurors reasonably rejected the hypothesis of innocence proposed by the defense which produced no evidence in support of it. The due process question under Jackson therefore is not whether “another possible hypothesis ... could explain the events in an exculpatory fashion,” but whether, viewing the evidencе in a light most favorable to the state, an alternative hypothesis exists that is “sufficiently reasonable that a rational juror could not ‘have found proof of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.’ ” State v. Captville,
A rational trier of fact could find from this evidence that defendant discharged the high-рowered hand gun by pulling the trigger while holding the gun |nno more than three or four feet from the victim as
We therefore reverse the decision below, reinstate defendant’s conviction for second degree murder and life sentence, and remand the case to the district court for exeсution of sentence.
Notes
. Counsel thus informed jurors:
And what her story is that George [the victim] had a temper. She has a temper. They argued a lot. And when George would get mad, he would go get the gun and he would wave the gun and point the gun while they were arguing. And it scared her because she’s going to testify — you’re going to hear testimony that George had a drug problem and abused drugs, and she was afraid .... they were in a, sadly, an abusive relationship. And on this particular occasion, he came into the bathroom where she was already. He didn’t retreat into the bathroom. He came after her into the bathroom, waving the gun around. And she said, George, give me the gun. So then he gave the gun. There was some water on the floor; she slipped. The gun discharged. It struck George, and ultimately, he dies. Okay. And it's tragic. It’s horrible. It's a horrible thing that happened. But let’s talk about what she did thereafter.
