[Update: Paul Marx, district defender with the 15th Judicial District Public Defender's Office, tells IND Monthly former ADA Stutes did an excellent job on the case and was aggressive in confirming that Lavergne did not suffer from any kind of mental illness. "I believe it's going to stand forever and ever," the public defender says of the dual first-degree murder conviction. "Clients often forget what happens if they were to prevail in post conviction," Marx adds. Should Lavergne get his pleas vacated, he would be returned to Lafayette Parish and the case would start over; he would face the death penalty at trial. "He's got a huge burden," Marx says of Lavergne's claims. Marx says Lavergne's counsel of record, Burleigh Doga and Clay LeJeune, will have no comment on any post-conviction relief matters unless they are ordered to testify in a hearing.]
Former Assistant District Attorney Keith Stutes and current ADA Danny Landry believe they were meticulous in their efforts last year to lawfully secure guilty pleas from Brandon Scott Lavergne in the 1999 murder of Lisa Pate and the May 2012 murder of UL student Mickey Shunick.
The ADAs fully expected he would challenge his conviction, and they were right.
In hand-written December and January filings from Angola State Penitentiary, where Lavergne is serving two life sentences for the brutal killings, Lavergne claims he was abandoned by his attorneys and coerced into pleading guilty. He also alleges law enforcement leaked misleading information to local news outlets that led to a media firestorm, tainting the case and potential jury pool, and that Lafayette Parish was not the proper venue for his indictment in the Pate case.
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| Photo by Travis Gauthier |
| Brandon Scott Lavergne, being led into district court on Aug. 24, 2012, where he pleaded guilty to two counts of first degree murder for killing Lisa Pate and Mickey Shunick. Lavergne is asking the court to vacate his guilty pleas. |
The two Aug. 24, 2012, guilty pleas allowed the 34-year-old offshore worker to avoid a death penalty trial.
Lavergne also claims he never kidnapped Shunick, which he says the state cited as the aggravating factor to support its charge of first-degree murder. He says that after he trailed her (there is evidence he did just that while he was on his cell phone calling escort services) and struck her in the early morning hours of May 19, throwing her from her bike, he acted in self-defense because he feared for his life. Using Lavergne’s confession to piece together what happened the night he murdered her, prosecutors said in court documents that Shunick was enticed, persuaded or forced into his truck and that Lavergne was in possession of a knife and semi-automatic handgun. In a violent struggle, Lavergne stabbed her at least four times and, believing she was dead, drove to Acadia Parish to bury her. When a slumped over Shunick jumped and stabbed him in the chest, Lavergne put a bullet through her head. Read those details here.
In multiple filings, Lavergne lodges a litany of allegations that he was mistreated and denied his rights by local officials.
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| In the opening page of Brandon Scott Lavergne's application for post-conviction relief, the convicted killer claims he acted in self-defense. View the hand-written court documents here. |
“The state even used torture in the form of solitary confinement,” he writes. “Petitioner was not allowed outside once for recreation the whole time he was in the parish prison even though he was not a disciplinary problem or escape risk. This is a privilege afforded to all other pretrial detainees in the parish prison and proscribed (sic) by federal law.”
The registered sex offender also tries to convince the court that the conditions of his confinement were inhumane. “Also for AT LEAST the first 7-10 days of his detention the petitioner was held without writing material, religious material, tooth paste, under clothing, TV, radio, or reading material.” And, making matters much worse, he says, he was denied access to his medically prescribed C-PAP machine for his sleep apnea for nearly a month. “Not to mention for the first 2-3 days of his confinement he was stripped naked and placed on ‘suicide watch’ without a mattress to lay on even though he had never threaten (sic) to hurt himself. This was psychological torture purposely done,” he writes.
Lavergne further claims he was once handcuffed and shackled for several hours without a bathroom or running water and with no place to sit down. He says he requested to use a bathroom times and ultimately had to relieve himself on the floor he was locked in. “Again this was all calculated mind games,” he says.
Lavergne says parish officials and social workers told him he would remain in solitary confinement until he went to trial, which would likely be a couple of years. For the first time, Lavergne confirms that a woman (not his fiancee) was pregnant with his child when he writes about the pressure the case brought on his family. He says his fiancee had abandoned him, his family was being harassed and threatened, and his bank assets — including a college fund for his daughter — were illegally seized. Those concerns, along with the “impending birth of his son” caused him to have a mental breakdown that he claims impaired his ability to make rational choices.
Despite his alleged diminished state of mind and insistence of his innocence, Lavergne claims his lawyers, Burleigh Doga and Clay LeJeune, advised him to waive his 5th Amendment rights and speak with police officials. He then alleges they abandoned him during the interrogation. “...[D]uring the interrogation the detectives loaded up the Petitioner handcuffed and shakled [sic] into a city of Lafayette owned police unmarked truck with a video recording system on him at all times and proceeded to drive the Petitioner around Lafayette, Acadia, and Evangeline parishs [sic] retracing the events of the morning of May 19th 2012 and asking the petitioner questions the whole time without his counselors present because, they left.”
He further asserts that his lawyers had no intention of mounting a meaningful defense and therefore caused "permanent and irreparable damage" to his capital case.
Doga did not immediately return a phone message left on his cell phone.
In alleging improper venue in the Pate case, Lavergne says the matter should have stayed in Acadia Parish where her body was found and where a grand jury declined to indict him for second-degree murder in 2008. Prosecutors argue that the crime originated in Lafayette, thereby making it proper venue.
Lavergne alleges that the state tainted the grand jury by indicting him for Pate’s murder and then asking the same jurors to indict him for Shunick’s murder.
District Judge Herman Clause denied Lavergne’s application for post-conviction relief, motion for discovery and motion by owner for release of seized property on procedural grounds, saying he had improperly filed. For instance, Lavergne did not use the uniform post-conviction application, Clause writes, and failed to attach a copy of the judgment of conviction and sentence. View the hand-written court documents here.
“If he refiles it, there may be a hearing,” Landry tells IND Monthly. If he is granted a hearing, Lavergne is asking the public defender's office to assign him an attorney.
“We anticipated something like this would occur. That’s why we were so thorough in the pre-stages of the plea agreement,” Landry says. “Anytime somebody receives two life sentences, they have a lot of time on their hands.”
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MAY 24 Jarvis DeBerry posts here about the redonkulus rhetoric that would have us believe NOLA is a safe city with a murder problem. Maybe the city's crime stats don't compare with its murder stats because you can't manipulate a murder, he says: a dead body's a dead body. It just doesn't make sense, he says, and his readers agree: a poll asks if they believe the city is safe, and more than 90 percent say no.
MAY 24 Jindal administration officials announced Thursday that the privatization of public health care is going to cost a lot more than they budgeted for, the Advocate reports here. "I'm so surprised," said no one. Anywhere. The cost they're projecting now is more than $1 billion - a lot more than the $626 million budgeted for it. And, it's more than it cost the state to operate those hospitals. So why are we doing this again?
MAY 24 Blogger CB Forgotston ridicules the recent PR campaign by the state GOP in the wake of a legislative auditor's request to both major parties. The GOP (apparently unaware that the Dems got the same request) started yammering about being targeted because it had "killed" a tax increase. CB finds that laughable, but it's also pretty funny that the GOP was comparing this episode to the IRS scandal (Because the President has so much to do with our state auditor. Right?).
MAY 24 Politico details some recent fund-raising efforts by Sen. David Vitter, which have raised the question of his future political plans. This time, it is a $5,000 per head "bayou weekend" that includes "Cajun cooking" and an all-caps "alligator hunt," the story reports. Funds raised go to a super PAC that can spend money to support Vitter in federal or state races, the story points out.
MAY 24 The pink building on Royal in the quarter was sold at a sheriff's sale Thursday, this Picayune story reports. An injunction that would have halted the sale wasn't enforced because the family failed to post a $150,000 bond, the story reports. So the owner of the mortgages on the building bought it, for nearly $7 million. Now the feuding family will have to negotiate with that company to get a lease on the building that has housed their business for close to 60 years.
MAY 23 This post in Louisiana Voice tells us about a bill by a Winnsboro lege that would require all public high school students to take at least one Course Choice online class in order to graduate. (What?) Blogger Tom Aswell says it's a monument to "waste and corruption," especially in light of the problems he's exposed with the program in recent weeks. Idaho had a similar program, but voters removed it by a 2-1 margin, Aswell says.
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