Cade Fuxan guilty of murdering his roommate in Kenner

A Jefferson Parish jury on Thursday night (Feb. 1) convicted Cade Fuxan of killing his roommate, rejecting his assertion that he was defending himself when he shot James Parker five times in the apartment they shared in Kenner.

Fuxan, 26, is guilty as charged of second-degree murder, jurors unanimously decided after five hours of deliberation.

Parker, 22, died June 1, 2022 on the hallway floor inside in their apartment in the 4500 block of Williams Boulevard. Fuxan called 911, telling the operator he was defending himself.

The shooting was the culmination of months of hard feelings over a roommate’s intrusion into personal space, physical fights and hurt pride. Two days before the shooting, Parker bested Fuxan in a fight, leaving him with a black eye. Fuxan didn’t let it go.

“He had damaged pride. He had his feelings hurt. He was beaten up, and he couldn’t get over it.” – Assistant District Attorney Piper Didier

Fuxan fired five bullets at Parker. His wounds included one to the back of his head that severed his brain stem, an injury that dropped him to the floor unable to move. That bullet’s trajectory shows that Fuxan fired the pistol while standing over Parker, who was bent over toward the floor in a posture that belies claims of self-defense.

“That back-of-the-head shot is an execution shot,” Assistant District Attorney Piper Didier told jurors in opening statements Tuesday.

Fuxan and Parker shared the two-bedroom apartment with Fuxan’s girlfriend – who was Parker’s sister – and Parker’s brother. Parker’s siblings were at their jobs when he was killed.

Tensions in the apartment had been simmering for months. Parker owed Fuxan money for bills, so in October 2021, Fuxan removed Parker’s keyboard, computer and skateboard from his bedroom and wrote a note to Parker saying that it would get “ugly” if he tried to retrieve his property.

Two days before the shooting, Parker wrote a note to Fuxan, telling him to stay out of his bedroom. Fuxan went into Parker’s bedroom, found the note and wrote on it “F— around and find out.” He left it for Parker to find.

Upon reading it, Parker closed his door and was heard speaking dismissively about Fuxan. Fuxan went to Parker’s bedroom door, knocked on it and yelled. This led to a physical fight that left Fuxan with a black eye and superficial scratches.

That night, Parker sent a text message to Fuxan, apologizing and offering to move out. Parker wrote that he would continue to pay rent as long as his siblings could remain in the apartment.

The following day, Parker apologized to Fuxan in person. Parker’s brother sent a text message to Fuxan, saying he wanted everyone to get along. Fuxan responded, “just my pride hurt.” Later that night, Fuxan unpacked the Ruger 9mm semiautomatic pistol that he purchased a week earlier and said he was going to test fire it at Lake Pontchartrain.

In the hours before the shooting, Fuxan used his cellphone to photograph the injuries that Parker inflicted upon him. His text messages with family members showed both his anger over losing the fight and his unwillingness to let it happen again.

“He is not over that fight,” Assistant District Attorney Douglas Rushton told jurors in closing argument Thursday. “He’s sitting here documenting his injuries. June 1st. 12:36 (p.m.).”

Parker returned to the apartment from his job at about 5 p.m. and went to his bedroom. Fuxan placed his pistol in his pocket and went to Parker’s bedroom, supposedly in search of a pet cat. It was an act that he knew could reignite a fight. “And this time he was going to win,” Rushton told jurors. “And if he started losing again, he’s got his gun. It’s his backup plan. It’s the Plan B.”

At 9:14 p.m., Fuxan called 911 and told the operator he had just shot someone who was “running at” him.

Kenner Police Department officers found Parker’s body on the hallway floor and his bedroom in disarray, with a television knocked over and clumps of his braided hair littering the floor. A trail of bullet casings was strewn from the living room through the hallway. Bullet holes were found in the door frame, a door and walls.

Fuxan initially told police at the apartment that Parker attacked him with a hammer, so he shot and killed Parker. The hammer was on the hallway floor just outside Parker’s bedroom (The hammer belonged to Fuxan, who kept it in his bedroom).

He willingly went to Kenner police headquarters to speak with a detective and without having a lawyer. Once there, he abandoned the hammer-as-a-weapon assertion. He said he had been using the hammer to practice finding wall studs behind the drywall because he planned to work in the air conditioning business.

Fuxan then told the detective that he went into Parker’s room to find their cat because it needed medicine. As he stooped down to look for it under a bed, Parker attacked him, Fuxan told the detective.

Fuxan also told the detective that he was standing stationary in the apartment’s living room when he fired the pistol. However, his description is inconsistent with the evidence, such as where four of the five bullet cases landed in the hallway after they were ejected from his pistol and where bullets struck the hallway walls after passing through Parker’s body, an expert in crime scene reconstruction told jurors.

Kenner police booked Fuxan with manslaughter. A Jefferson Parish grand jury indicted him with second-degree murder.

Fuxan testified Thursday, accusing Parker of physically attacking him twice and maintaining he was defending himself. He asserted that he was only joking when he wrote “F— around and find out” on Parker’s note. He was so fearful for his safety in the apartment that he carried the pistol in his pocket on the night he and Parker were alone in the apartment, he said. His attorney told jurors that Fuxan had no duty to retreat in his home, alluding to the state’s stand-your-ground law. Fuxan also was “firing wildly” at Parker, the attorney told jurors.

Prosecutors argued that Fuxan was the aggressor who by law could not then claim self-defense. He was seething over having lost the fight, and then knowing that he and Parker would be alone, he armed himself and went to Parker’s bedroom.

“He had damaged pride,” Didier told jurors. “He had his feelings hurt. He was beaten up, and he couldn’t get over it.”

Judge Stephen Enright of the 24th Judicial District Court is scheduled to sentence Fuxan on Feb. 26.

Assistant District Attorneys Piper Didier and Douglas Rushton prosecuted the case.