State of Louisiana v. Khoi Q. Hoang ( 2019 )


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  •                          Supreme Court of Louisiana
    FOR IMMEDIATE NEWS RELEASE                                         NEWS RELEASE #014
    FROM: CLERK OF SUPREME COURT OF LOUISIANA
    The Opinions handed down on the 26th day of March, 2019, are as follows:
    PER CURIAM:
    2017-K-0100       STATE OF LOUISIANA v. KHOI Q. HOANG (Parish of Orleans)
    Here, from all of the evidence presented, a jury could reasonably
    infer (without speculating) that defendant removed the truck’s
    license plate or directed someone else to do so because the truck
    was going to be used in a murder or had just been used in a
    murder. Thus, the majority of the panel of court below erred in
    finding that “circumstantial evidence connecting Defendant to the
    removal of the license plate was nonexistent.” Accordingly, we
    reverse the court of appeal’s decision and reinstate defendant’s
    conviction and sentence for obstruction of justice. REVERSED.
    JOHNSON, C.J., dissents and assigns reasons.
    WEIMER, J., dissents and assigns reasons.
    03/26/19
    SUPREME COURT OF LOUISIANA
    No. 2017-K-0100
    STATE OF LOUISIANA
    VERSUS
    KHOI Q. HOANG
    ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE COURT OF APPEAL,
    FOURTH CIRCUIT, PARISH OF ORLEANS
    PER CURIAM
    Lien Nguyen was abducted from his home during the night on April 23,
    2013. His hands were bound behind and his back, he was shot twice, and he was
    left to die in an area off Old Gentilly Highway. He was still alive when he was
    found by James Mushatt, who called 911. Mr. Mushatt reported seeing a Nissan
    Titan truck speeding away and said the victim told him that his wife was
    responsible for the crime. The victim died at the scene shortly after.
    Video surveillance captured a Nissan Titan truck as it pulled into the
    victim’s driveway on the night of the murder and then drove off in the direction in
    which the victim was later found. During the investigation, a detective learned that
    Irene Booker owned a Nissan Titan truck, which she would loan out in exchange
    for narcotics. According to Ms. Booker, she loaned her truck to defendant on the
    afternoon of the murder. When defendant failed to return the truck to her at the
    time promised, she called him and he assured her, “We’ll be there shortly.”
    Someone other than defendant then returned the truck to her well after midnight
    and gave her $200. Ms. Booker later learned that her truck’s license plate was
    missing. She obtained a temporary license plate with an expiration date of June 24,
    2013. 1
    Defendant was indicted with conspiracy to commit second degree murder,
    solicitation to commit second degree murder, second degree murder, and
    obstruction of justice. At trial, the State presented evidence that defendant and the
    victim’s wife began an intimate relationship immediately after the murder. The
    State also presented evidence that the two had asked Joseph Hoang to kill the
    victim for them. The victim’s wife denied conspiring to kill her husband but
    suggested defendant killed the victim over money owed for drugs. The victim’s
    wife did not report his disappearance nor did she report it when defendant told her
    on the morning after the murder that he had “finished Lien . . . everything is done.”
    Although a detective believed, based on the dust found around where the victim’s
    missing security system had sat, that the security system was removed very
    recently, the victim’s wife claimed the system had not functioned for some time
    and had been removed earlier.
    The jury found defendant guilty as charged of obstruction but was unable to
    reach a verdict on the remaining charges. Defendant was sentenced to life
    imprisonment without parole eligibility as a third-felony habitual offender. The
    court of appeal reversed because it found the evidence insufficient to support the
    conviction. State v. Hoang, 16-0479 (La. App. 4 Cir. 2/21/16), 
    207 So. 3d 473
    . The
    majority found the jury could only speculate from the State’s circumstantial
    evidence that defendant removed the license plate from Ms. Booker’s truck and
    1
    R.S. 47:519(H) provides in pertinent part:
    Temporary registration plates or markers shall expire and become void upon the
    receipt of the annual registration plates or upon the expiration of sixty days from
    the date of issuance, depending on whichever event shall first occur.
    2
    removed the security system from the victim’s home. See Hoang, 16-0479, pp. 4–
    
    5, 207 So. 3d at 476
    (“While the circumstantial evidence presented at trial
    established that these two events may have occurred, no reasonable juror could
    have determined that Defendant was the person responsible for either the removal
    of the license plate or the security system based on the scant circumstantial
    evidence presented by the State.”). According to the majority, the State, at best,
    proved only that defendant borrowed the Nissan Titan truck from Ms. Booker the
    afternoon of the murder. Hoang, 16-0479, p. 
    6, 207 So. 3d at 466
    . Thus, “[w]hile
    the State was able to connect Defendant and Ms. Nguyen to the victim, the State
    failed to connect him to either [the removal of the license plate or the removal of
    the surveillance system].” Hoang, 16-0479, p. 
    7, 207 So. 3d at 477
    .
    Judge Lobrano dissented because she found the evidence sufficient to prove
    defendant acted as a principal to the crime of obstruction. In addition to finding the
    State presented sufficient evidence that defendant was a principal to the removal of
    the license plate and the surveillance system, Judge Lobrano agreed with the
    State’s contention that the jury could also have rationally concluded defendant was
    a principal to the disposal of the murder weapon and return of the truck after it was
    used to abduct and murder the victim, which acts also constitute obstruction. Thus,
    where the majority viewed the circumstantial evidence as only providing grist for
    the jury to speculate as to defendant’s guilt, the dissent found it provided the jury a
    sufficient basis to reject the “extraordinary coincidence” of defendant’s hypothesis
    of innocence. See Hoang, 16-0479, pp. 
    9–10, 207 So. 3d at 484
    –485 (Lobrano, J.,
    dissenting).
    Jurors were instructed that they could find defendant guilty of obstruction if
    they found he engaged in two specific acts (emphasis added):
    In order to convict the defendant of obstruction of justice, you must
    3
    find, first, that the defendant knew or had good reason to believe that
    his act may affect an actual, potential, present, past, future criminal
    proceeding, and two, that the defendant tampered with evidence by
    disconnecting a video surveillance system and removing a license
    plate from a vehicle, and three, that the defendant had a specific intent
    to distort the results of any actual, potential, present, past, future
    criminal proceeding or investigation, and four, that the evidence was
    reasonably likely to be relevant to an actual, potential, present, past,
    future criminal investigation or proceeding.
    The State argued in this court, consistent with the views of the dissenting judge
    below, that the jury, after reading the jury charges as a whole, could have found
    defendant guilty based on his commission of other acts beside removing the license
    plate or surveillance system—such as by disposing of the murder weapon or by
    returning the truck after it was used to commit the crime. We need not reach that
    issue, however, because we find the evidence sufficient, under the due process
    standard of Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 
    99 S. Ct. 2781
    , 
    61 L. Ed. 2d 560
    (1979), to prove defendant was a principal to the removal of the license plate,
    which was one of the means by which the jury was instructed defendant could
    commit obstruction.
    First, however, we note that the jury was incorrectly instructed that they
    could find defendant guilty of obstruction if they found he disconnected the video
    surveillance system and removed the license plate (i.e. he committed two acts)
    when all the law requires is that he commit a single act. The State did not object to
    the use of the conjunction “and” in the jury charge. Regardless, the United States
    Supreme Court has held that “when a jury instruction sets forth all the elements of
    the charged crime but incorrectly adds one more element, a sufficiency challenge
    should be assessed against the elements of the charged crime, not against the
    erroneously heightened command in the jury instruction.” Musacchio v. United
    States, 577 U.S. —, —, 
    136 S. Ct. 709
    , 715, 
    193 L. Ed. 2d 639
    (2016). The jury in
    Musacchio was erroneously instructed using the conjunction “and” when
    4
    describing two ways in which the charged crime (a violation of 18 U.S.C. §
    1030(a)(2)(C)) could be committed, similar to how the jury was instructed here,
    and the Government failed to object, as the State failed here. See Musacchio, 577
    U.S. at 
    —, 136 S. Ct. at 714
    (“By using the conjunction ‘and’ when referring to
    both ways of violating § 1030(a)(2)(C), the instruction required the Government to
    prove an additional element. Yet the Government did not object to this error in the
    instructions.”). Nonetheless, the United States Supreme Court found, for purposes
    of reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence, it did not matter that the prosecution
    acquiesced to incorrectly instructing the jury it must find an additional element that
    the prosecution had failed to prove:
    A reviewing court’s limited determination on sufficiency review thus
    does not rest on how the jury was instructed. When a jury finds guilt
    after being instructed on all elements of the charged crime plus one
    more element, the jury has made all the findings that due process
    requires. If a jury instruction requires the jury to find guilt on the
    elements of the charged crime, a defendant will have had a
    “meaningful opportunity to defend” against the charge. [Jackson v.
    Virginia], at 314, 
    99 S. Ct. 2781
    . And if the jury instruction requires
    the jury to find those elements “beyond a reasonable doubt,” the
    defendant has been accorded the procedure that this Court has
    required to protect the presumption of innocence. 
    Id., at 314–315,
    99
    S. Ct. 2781
    . The Government’s failure to introduce evidence of an
    additional element does not implicate the principles that sufficiency
    review protects. All that a defendant is entitled to on a sufficiency
    challenge is for the court to make a “legal” determination whether the
    evidence was strong enough to reach a jury at all. 
    Id., at 319,
    99 S. Ct.
    2781
    . The Government’s failure to object to the heightened jury
    instruction thus does not affect the court’s review for sufficiency of
    the evidence.
    Musacchio, 577 U.S. at 
    —, 136 S. Ct. at 715
    . Thus, under Musacchio, the district
    court’s error here in using the conjunction “and” when instructing the jury of two
    ways in which the crime could be committed—i.e. by disconnecting the
    surveillance system and removing the license plate—does not alter this court’s
    determination that the evidence is sufficient based solely on the State’s proof of
    one of those two means—i.e. defendant’s role as a principal in the removal of the
    5
    license plate.
    The crime of obstruction of justice is defined in R.S. 14:130.1 in part as
    follows:
    A. The crime of obstruction of justice is any of the following when
    committed with the knowledge that such act has, reasonably may, or
    will affect an actual or potential present, past, or future criminal
    proceeding as described in this Section:
    (1) Tampering with evidence with the specific intent of distorting the
    results of any criminal investigation or proceeding which may
    reasonably prove relevant to a criminal investigation or proceeding.
    Tampering with evidence shall include the intentional alteration,
    movement, removal, or addition of any object or substance either:
    (a) At the location of any incident which the perpetrator knows or has
    good reason to believe will be the subject of any investigation by
    state, local, or United States law enforcement officers; or
    (b) At the location of storage, transfer, or place of review of any such
    evidence.
    In addition, the law of principals provides:
    All persons concerned in the commission of a crime, whether present
    or absent, and whether they directly commit the act constituting the
    offense, aid and abet in its commission, or directly or indirectly
    counsel or procure another to commit the crime, are principals.
    R.S. 14:24.
    “In reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence to support a conviction, an
    appellate court in Louisiana is controlled by the standard enunciated by the United
    States Supreme Court in Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 
    99 S. Ct. 2781
    , 
    61 L. Ed. 2d 560
    (1979) . . . . [T]he appellate court must determine that the evidence,
    viewed in the light most favorable to the prosecution, was sufficient to convince a
    rational trier of fact that all of the elements of the crime had been proved beyond a
    reasonable doubt.” State v. Captville, 
    448 So. 2d 676
    , 678 (La. 1984). Where a
    conviction is based on circumstantial evidence, as is the case here, the evidence
    “must exclude every reasonable hypothesis of innocence.” La. R.S. 15:438.
    6
    In addition, the Jackson standard of review does not allow a jury to
    speculate on the probabilities of guilt where rational jurors would necessarily
    entertain a reasonable doubt. State v. Mussall, 
    522 So. 2d 1305
    , 1311 (La. 1988)
    (citing 2 C. Wright, Federal Practice & Procedure, Criminal 2d, § 467). The
    requirement that jurors reasonably reject the hypothesis of innocence advanced by
    the defendant in a case of circumstantial evidence presupposes that a rational
    rejection of that hypothesis is based on the evidence presented, not mere
    speculation. See State v. Schwander, 
    345 So. 2d 1173
    , 1175 (La. 1978).
    Here, from all of the evidence presented, a jury could reasonably infer
    (without speculating) that defendant removed the truck’s license plate or directed
    someone else to do so because the truck was going to be used in a murder or had
    just been used in a murder. Thus, the majority of the panel of court below erred in
    finding that “circumstantial evidence connecting Defendant to the removal of the
    license plate was nonexistent.” Hoang, 16-0479, p. 
    6, 207 So. 3d at 476
    . Defendant
    argued one could not even conclude the truck he borrowed from Ms. Booker was
    the one used in the abduction and murder of the victim. However, despite
    discrepancies in whether the truck, viewed at night, was perceived as silver, grey,
    or dark grey, Ms. Booker reviewed the surveillance video and identified her truck,
    which was just that day borrowed by defendant, as the one shown in it being used
    to abduct the victim. While defendant argued that the person who returned the
    truck was not defendant, defendant assured Ms. Booker that “we” would return the
    truck, and indeed the truck was returned. While there was equivocal evidence as to
    when the temporary tag was issued—with Ms. Booker first testifying it was issued
    on April 24 but then stating it might have been issued in May—a rational juror
    could conclude, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the
    prosecution, that defendant either removed the license plate or directed the removal
    7
    of the license plate with the specific intent to distort any investigation into the
    abduction and murder of the victim. See generally State v. Mussall, 
    523 So. 2d 1305
    , 1310 (La. 1988) (“If rational triers of fact could disagree as to the
    interpretation of the evidence, the rational trier’s view of all of the evidence most
    favorable to the prosecution must be adopted. Thus, irrational decisions to convict
    will be overturned, rational decisions to convict will be upheld, and the actual fact
    finder’s discretion will be impinged upon only to the extent necessary to guarantee
    the fundamental protection of due process of law.”) (emphasis in original). To
    accept defendant’s hypothesis of innocence, that the license plate went
    coincidentally missing at some point after the murder, would indeed be to accept
    an “extraordinary coincidence” when viewed in the context of the entirety of the
    State’s case, as noted by the dissent in the court below. See Hoang, 16-0479, p.
    
    10–11, 207 So. 3d at 484
    –485 (Lobrano, J., dissenting). Accordingly, we reverse
    the court of appeal’s decision and reinstate defendant’s conviction and sentence for
    obstruction of justice.
    REVERSED
    8
    03/26/19
    SUPREME COURT OF LOUISIANA
    No. 2017-K-0100
    STATE OF LOUISIANA
    VERSUS
    KHOI Q. HOANG
    ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE COURT OF APPEAL,
    FOURTH CIRCUIT, PARISH OF ORLEANS
    JOHNSON, Chief Justice, dissents and assigns reasons.
    In this case there is absolutely no rational interpretation of the circumstantial
    evidence by which a jury could convict this defendant of obstruction of justice. Thus,
    I find the appellate court correctly overturned defendant’s conviction.
    In reinstating the conviction, the majority of this court finds that, based on the
    evidence presented, “a jury could reasonably infer that defendant removed the
    truck’s license plate or directed someone else to do so because the truck was going
    to be used in a murder or had just been used in a murder.” (Emphasis added). My
    review of the record does not support this conclusion. The minimal evidence
    presented by the state proved, at best, that defendant borrowed the Nissan Titan truck
    from Ms. Booker the afternoon April 23, 2013, the vehicle was returned to Ms.
    Booker after midnight by a different unknown individual, and that at some point
    later in time, Ms. Booker realized the vehicle’s license plate was missing. There is
    not a scintilla of evidence proving defendant removed the license plate or ordered it
    removed.
    The state’s evidence connecting defendant to the Nissan Titan truck consisted
    solely of the testimony of Ms. Irene Booker. Ms. Booker, an admitted cocaine addict,
    1
    testified that she routinely lent out the vehicle to people in the neighborhood in
    exchange for drugs. Interestingly, although Ms. Booker claimed to specifically
    remember that she lent defendant the vehicle on the afternoon of April 23, 2013, she
    could not specify any other particular dates she lent out the vehicle to anyone else in
    2013. It is noteworthy that detectives talked to Ms. Booker months later, on August
    7, 2013, and showed her surveillance video of the victim’s home taken on April 23,
    2013, after which she stated she lent defendant her vehicle on that date and identified
    the Titan truck in the video as her vehicle. It is obvious to me that Ms. Booker did
    not have an actual independent recollection of lending her vehicle to this defendant
    on that date. Additionally, Ms. Booker’s testimony regarding the missing license
    plate was inconsistent and confusing.
    Relative to defendant’s connection to the vehicle and the missing license
    plate, Ms. Booker testified:
    State:              All right. Now, on the day of this incident, did you
    receive a phone call from Mr. Hoang, Khoi Hoang?
    Ms. Booker:         Well actually in person he asked me could he
    borrow my truck to go pick up dog kennels in
    LaPlace.
    ***
    State:              Now, on the day that Mr. Hoang talked to you about
    this vehicle, did you have a license plate on that
    vehicle?
    Ms. Booker:         Yes, ma’am
    ***
    State:              And, when Mr. Hoang asked you to borrow this
    vehicle, what did you do?
    Ms. Booker:         I allowed him to borrow it. I trusted that what he
    said he was going to do, he was going to do. He was
    going to pick up dog kennels in LaPlace.
    ***
    State:              All right. Now, did you personally give your keys
    to Mr. Hoang?
    2
    Ms. Booker:   Yes, I did.
    State:        And so can you explain to us how that happened?
    Ms. Booker:   He came in and he gave me the crack and I gave him
    the keys and he told me he would only be a couple
    of hours and then he left.
    State:        Did Mr. Hoang have anybody else with him at that
    time?
    Ms. Booker:   Not that I remember.
    State:        And so did you give him your vehicle on that day?
    Ms. Booker:   Yes, I did.
    State:        And did he - - did you tell him a time that you
    wanted your vehicle back?
    Ms. Booker:   Well, he told me he would be like two or three
    hours, so I was expecting him around five, five-
    thirty because I think it was like three o’clock in the
    afternoon that he came to get my keys.
    State:        Okay. And, to the best of your knowledge, you
    don’t have any sort of independent knowledge
    about how this man died on - - in the 4200 block of
    McCoy Street, correct?
    Ms. Booker:   No. I didn’t know nothing about it until Detective
    Hamilton hunted me down.
    ***
    State:        All right. Now, how can you be certain of the day
    that Mr. Hoang came to you and asked you for your
    vehicle?
    Ms. Booker:   How can I be certain?
    State:        Of the day?
    Ms. Booker:   There’s really - - I can’t be certain of date, but I’m
    certain of it because I know he’s the one that I
    handed by keys to and then I found out later by
    Detective Hamilton - - and then later I found out
    what had happened, actually happened on that date.
    ***
    3
    State:        Did you get your vehicle back within that two to
    three hour period that Mr. Hoang told you he would
    give it back to you?
    Ms. Booker:   No, ma’am.
    State:        When did you get your vehicle back?
    Ms. Booker:   It was actually after midnight.
    State:        And how do you know that it was after midnight?
    Ms. Booker:   Because around eight o’clock I tried calling Khoi
    and I never got an answer, so I left - - I tried calling
    again and when he answered I said, “Look, I need
    my truck back. If you don’t bring it back I’m going
    to call the police.” So he was like, “All right, I’m”
    you know, “I’m going to bring it right back. We’ll
    be there shortly.” And I don’t know who “we” were,
    but he said, “We’ll be there shortly.” So it still, I’m
    still getting high, of course, so the time after
    midnight comes, there was a knock at the door and
    I know it was after midnight because I was just
    getting ready to call again and I had picked up the
    phone. I didn’t know exactly how long after
    midnight, but I know it was after midnight. And
    somebody knocked at the door and just handed the
    keys and two-hundred dollars to “Shorty”, who
    answered the door. I don’t even know who that
    person was.
    ***
    State:        Okay. And so did you see the person who returned
    the vehicle?
    Ms. Booker:   I didn’t see them, but he had a hood on. They were
    tall. That’s all I know. And it’s dark there. There’s
    no lights back there on the end of Dwyer, Michoud.
    State:        When you got your vehicle back did you get your
    keys back?
    Ms. Booker:   Yes, I did.
    ***
    State:        Now, Ms. Booker, after this incident happened, this
    is the following day, correct, you have your vehicle
    back, correct?
    Ms. Booker:   Uh-huh.
    4
    State:        Okay. At some point did you go outside to look at
    your vehicle?
    Ms. Booker:   It didn’t dawn on me to like check it for anything
    because, like I said, I trusted that what he said he
    was going to do he went to do. And I didn’t - - later
    on a friend of mine was driving it and they realized
    there was no license plate on the truck and they was
    like, “Why did you let me drive your truck without
    a license plate?” And I was like, “What you mean
    there’s - - there’s a license plate on my truck.” He
    was like, “No, there is none.” So - -
    State:        And, when you found out that your license plate had
    been missing, what did you do?
    Ms. Booker:   I was questioning anybody that had been around the
    apartment building, if they seen anything and some
    - - they said, “Oh, somebody else’s license plate
    came up missing,” so then we throwed it off as if
    somebody was running around stealing license
    plates.
    State:        Okay. Did you get a temporary tag?
    Ms. Booker:   Yes, we did.
    State:        And when did you do that?
    Ms. Booker:   Actually Bud did.
    State:        And who is Bud?
    Ms. Booker:   Another friend of mine that I was let driving my
    truck because he would like give me - - him and his
    old lady been giving me a place to stay, so I let him
    use my truck because his vehicle was down and,
    Bud, he got from a friend of his that was a
    dealership owner, he got a license, a temp tag from
    him.
    ***
    State:        Alright. Now, this temporary tag that you obtained
    for your vehicle, if I were to show it to you, do you
    think you would be able to identify it?
    Ms. Booker:   Yes, Ma’am, I know it was issued on the 24th.
    State:        Alright. Do you know what month on the 24th, the
    month of the - - what day the 24th, what month?
    Ms. Booker:   4/24/13.
    5
    State:              Okay. Now, why are you back dating it for the
    temporary tag?
    Ms. Booker:         Uh?
    State:              You said 4/24 of 2013. What do you mean by that?
    Ms. Booker:         April.
    State:              Okay, you mean April 24 of 2013. What
    significance does that date mean?
    Ms. Booker:         It might be May.
    State:              Okay, If I - -
    Ms. Booker:         I know the date, the day of it was the 24th because
    when my father-in-law and mother-in-law came to
    get the truck, I had told them that somebody stole it
    out of the parking lot at the motel and that I had just
    got a temp tag and it was like two weeks. Oh, he’s
    like, “Why would they predate it? If you just got it
    yesterday why would they predate if for the 24th?”
    No evidence was presented at trial to demonstrate that the license plate was
    removed during the time defendant was in possession of the vehicle. Not only did
    Ms. Booker fail to provide the date she realized the license plate was missing, she
    did not suggest it was the next day or shortly after the vehicle was returned. She
    specifically denied checking or inspecting the vehicle when it was returned the next
    day. Moreover, Ms. Booker never suspected defendant removed the plate, instead
    believing it was one of several plates that were stolen in the neighborhood. Clearly,
    the timing of the issuance of the temporary plate is crucial in determining whether
    there was enough circumstantial evidence for a rational jury to find that Ms. Booker
    noticed her license plate missing the day after defendant borrowed her vehicle,
    thereby essentially eliminating the possibility that the license plate was removed or
    stolen by someone other than defendant. Yet, Ms. Booker’s testimony falls far short
    of establishing a reliable time frame. The majority even concedes the evidence on
    6
    this issue is equivocal. Although Ms. Booker first testified the temporary tag was
    issued on April 24, 2013, she immediately backpedaled and stated “it could be May.”
    Additionally, Ms. Booker’s testimony suggests the tag was obtained by a friend, and
    may have been purposefully pre-dated or back-dated. Although the temporary tag
    was introduced into evidence, it does not include the date of issuance.1
    In reversing the appellate court’s decision, the majority simply notes in a
    conclusory manner that while there was equivocal evidence as to when the
    temporary tag was issued, a rational juror could conclude that defendant either
    removed the license plate or directed the removal of the license plate with the
    specific intent to distort any investigation into the abduction and murder of the
    victim. It is compelling that the majority does not point to a single piece of evidence
    to support its conclusory assertions. There is reason for that: no such evidence exists
    in the record. Not only is there a complete lack of evidence to support a finding that
    defendant removed the plate or directed removal of the plate, there is also a complete
    lack of evidence from which a jury could find defendant had the requisite specific
    intent. Considering Ms. Booker’s testimony, and the lack of any other evidence, I
    find the record before us wholly inadequate to support defendant’s conviction for
    obstruction of justice.
    I agree with the court of appeal that “the only evidence presented by the State
    was circumstantial and of a speculative nature.” State v. Hoang, 16-1479 (La. App.
    4 Cir. 2/21/16), 
    207 So. 3d 473
    , 477. In considering a challenge to the sufficiency of
    the evidence, speculation and conjecture cannot take the place of reasonable
    inferences and evidence. Maquiz v. Hedgpeth, 
    907 F.3d 1212
    , 1217 (9th Cir. 2018).
    1
    The tag provides an expiration date of 6/24/13. The state argues in this court that it is “common
    knowledge” that temporary tags expire after sixty days, citing La. R.S. 47:519(H). The majority
    apparently finds merit in this argument. However, I do not find this information to be “common
    knowledge” such that we can assume it was known to the jury. Additionally, this information was
    not provided to the jury, nor was the district court asked to take judicial notice of the statute.
    7
    “A conviction must be overturned if it is based on speculation alone because [a]
    verdict may not rest on mere suspicion, speculation, or conjecture, or on an overly
    attenuated piling of inference on inference.” United States v. Rojas Alvarez, 
    451 F.3d 320
    , 333 (5th Cir. 2006) (quoting United States v. Pettigrew, 
    77 F.3d 1550
    , 1521 (5th
    Cir. 1996)). For these reasons, I find the court of appeal correctly reversed the
    conviction, and therefore I respectfully dissent.
    8
    03/26/19
    SUPREME COURT OF LOUISIANA
    NO. 2017-K-0100
    STATE OF LOUISIANA
    VERSUS
    KHOI Q. HOANG
    ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE COURT OF APPEAL,
    FOURTH CIRCUIT, PARISH OF ORLEANS
    WEIMER, J., dissents and assigns reasons.
    I agree with the dissenting opinion of the Chief Justice.
    Additionally, I note that circumstantial evidence can be powerful evidence, if
    it essentially establishes an inescapable circle of guilt around a defendant’s actions.
    The law requires that the pieces of evidence adduced by the state collectively form
    a complete circle, inasmuch as the circumstantial evidence “must exclude every
    reasonable hypothesis of innocence.” La. R.S. 15:438.
    Here, continuing with that analogy, the state presented–at most–one curve that
    the state never built on to form a completed circle. The defendant was charged with
    second degree murder, solicitation to commit second degree murder, conspiracy to
    commit second degree murder, and obstruction of justice. At trial, the state’s focus
    was on securing a guilty verdict on one of the charges directly tied to the murder; the
    state presented precious little evidence on the obstruction charge. The majority of
    this court tacitly concedes there was insufficient evidence to show any obstruction by
    removing a surveillance system, and instead finds sufficient evidence of obstruction
    by the defendant being responsible for removing the pickup truck’s license plate
    around the time of the crime. However, the witness who loaned the defendant the
    pickup truck used in the crimes was unable to establish when the license plate was
    removed; her testimony described two possible months. The witness also described
    that another license plate had been removed from a vehicle in her apartment buildings
    parking lot. There was simply nothing to show the critical facts of when, where, and
    by whom the license plate was removed.
    In conclusion, the appellate court correctly determined the state failed to prove
    obstruction beyond a reasonable doubt. For the obstruction charge, I would hold that
    “the lack of sufficient evidence to sustain the conviction would entitle defendant to
    an acquittal under Hudson v. Louisiana, 
    450 U.S. 40
    , 44–45, 
    101 S. Ct. 970
    , 
    67 L. Ed. 2d 30
    (1981).” State v. Crawford, 2014-2153, p. 19 (La. 11/16/16), 
    218 So. 3d 13
    , 25. However, because the jury was deadlocked on the murder charge and the
    related conspiracy and solicitation charges, it appears the defendant may be subject
    to being re-tried for those charges.
    Thus, I respectfully dissent.
    2