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Jurors get case Friday in Memorial Day triple homicide at swimming pool

37 minutes 9 seconds ago Friday, August 23 2024 Aug 23, 2024 August 23, 2024 12:38 PM August 23, 2024 in News
Source: WBRZ

BATON ROUGE — A state prosecutor urged a jury to convict an accused triple-murderer Friday, telling members of the panel that the youngest victim would have been starting school this month if she had survived a Memorial Day shooting at a swimming pool three years ago.

Ladarius Coleman, 18, is on trial for three counts of second-degree murder in the 2001 deaths of three people at the Fairway View Apartments swimming pool. He faces a mandatory life term if convicted; last month he rejected a plea bargain that would have seen him sentenced to 33 years for manslaughter.

Prosecutor Morgan Johnson said Coleman and his brother and co-defendant David Williams showed a complete disregard for life by attacking two others at the College Drive apartment complex. The state's theory is that the intended victims were ambushed because Coleman and Williams had had a beef with them.

A girl just shy of her second birthday, Ja'Tyri Brown, was caught in the crossfire and also killed.

“Ja’Tyri should be five years old. She should be starting kindergarten," Johnson said. 

Defense lawyer Javier Claiborne said the victims — Reginald Thomas Jr., 20; and Dwayne Dunn, 16 — had shown up with weapons at the pool first and that his client armed himself for protection.

"The prosecutor forgot to tell you one thing: who was there first," he said, calling the victims the aggressors, and suggesting they wouldn't have taken guns to the pool unless they were planning on doing something themselves.

Johnson said, however, that Thomas fired a weapon because he was provoked.

“Reggie jumped up in response to a stimulus,” the prosecutor said. “Nothing they did that day justified their death.”

Coleman was 15 when the killings occurred, and had been set for trial with Williams, 22. Williams' trial was separated from Coleman's and scheduled for March.

Jurors saw videotape evidence so gruesome that one member of the panel said she couldn't continue and was excused. Judge Fred Crifasi also warned spectators in the courtroom about what was on the apartment complex surveillance video so anyone wishing to avoid it could leave.

The prosecution wrapped up its case with a purported confession from Coleman. Coleman asked Crifasi to suppress the evidence, with his lawyer arguing that, 11 minutes into an interrogation, Coleman asked to speak to an attorney, but questioning continued.

Crifasi granted the suppression and an abridged version of the interrogation was shown. 

During the June 2021 interrogation, Coleman said that he did not know Dunn and Thomas, saying that he told his brother “I think we should go.”

Several witnesses testified Thursday that Coleman and Williams had interacted with the victims before the shooting by saying “I told you I was gonna catch you,” and “Bitch, don’t move.”

The siblings’ mother, LaToya Coleman, is to go on trial in December on charges that she helped to pair flee to Texas to avoid arrest. Another man, Kaleb Turner, pleaded guilty as an accessory after the fact and was sentenced to probation an a deferred sentence. A revocation hearing has been scheduled for Sept. 3.

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