 |
|
to fill out a simple form to connect to DUI Lawyers in your area.
|
|
|
|
|
State v. Guillory3/11/1998 taying in a room rented by the Defendant, Christopher "BB" Guillory. Lieutenant Lewis found Mr. Tezeno in the motel room, and he was taken to the police station for questioning.
Later, Mr. Narcisse found the Defendant at his parents' home, and they drove to the Gates Food Store where the two men talked and drank beer. The Defendant eventually said he wanted to meet with "Lieutenant" Lewis, so Mr. Narcisse called Lieutenant Lewis to come to the store. When Lieutenant Lewis met with the Defendant, he advised the Defendant of his Miranda rights, and the Defendant was allowed to go to his parents' home to change clothes. While they drove to the police station, the Defendant and Lieutenant Lewis began to talk about Jeff Tezeno and the murders.
At that point in the investigation, the Defendant was not a suspect. Jeff Tezeno was the leading suspect and the Defendant was wanted simply as a possible witness to Mr. Tezeno's comings and goings since the murders. However, while Lieutenant Lewis talked with the Defendant he became very suspicious that the Defendant may have been with Mr. Tezeno when the murders occurred or the Defendant himself may have committed the murders. Lieutenant Lewis told the Defendant about his suspicions.
At the police station, the Defendant continued to talk with Corporal Kevin Kirkum while Lieutenant Lewis stepped away, and the Defendant eventually confessed that he committed the murders. After Lieutenant Lewis again talked with the Defendant, the lead investigator, Detective Denise Hughes, informed the Defendant of his Miranda rights, and the Defendant gave a videotaped confession.
It appears that the Defendant and Jeff Tezeno went on a weekend-long cocaine and marijuana binge while they were at the Melrose Motel . To get money to buy the drugs, the Defendant and Mr. Tezeno would steal items from Mr. Dougay's shop and pawn or sell the items to others. When the Defendant was brought to the police station, he turned over pawn slips from two local pawn shops; the items pawned were those used in automotive paint and body work done by Daniel Dougay at his shop. The Defendant also sold a four-wheeler and a Skil saw to Willie Fontenot the morning after the murders on Saturday, March 20, 1993. On the Friday night of the murders, both the Defendant and Jeff Tezeno had ridden to Mr. Fontenot's home on Daniel Dougay's Honda motorcycle and unsuccessfully tried to sell him an air compressor. In his confession, the Defendant said he went to the Dougay shop after midnight and knocked on the door asking if Jeff Tezeno was there, even though he knew that Jeff Tezeno was at the Melrose Motel. When Daniel Dougay answered the door, he told the Defendant that Tezeno was not there, and while he went back to sleep on the mattress on the floor, he complained that he would report Tezeno to the police because Tezeno had stolen a compressor from him. The Defendant said he held a pen-light in his mouth while he drew a .22 caliber pistol stolen from Daniel Dougay and proceeded to shoot Daniel Dougay, then Robert Dougay and finally Aaron Guidry. The coroner testified that all three men suffered two fatal gunshot wounds to the head.
After the shootings, the Defendant stole Daniel Dougay's car, but abandoned it later. It appears that the Defendant told Jeff Tezeno about the shootings and then he told others about the shootings. The victims' bodies remained in the shop until the police were called the following Monday. That is not to say that the bodies were not discovered or seen by anyone else until Monday; to the contrary, there were a couple of visits to the shed by the Defendant, Mr. Tezeno and others after the murders.
Early in the morning of Saturday,
Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 Louisiana DUI Attorneys
DUI Lawyers
|
|
to fill out a simple form to connect to DUI Lawyers in your area.
|
|