In Re R.G., 90389 (12-11-2008)

2008 Ohio 6469
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 11, 2008
DocketNo. 90389.
StatusUnpublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2008 Ohio 6469 (In Re R.G., 90389 (12-11-2008)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re R.G., 90389 (12-11-2008), 2008 Ohio 6469 (Ohio Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION
{¶ 1} This case arises out of an April 14, 2006 drive-by shooting, which began after an altercation over a hat and resulted in the murder of Donta Dinkins and the shooting of Gregory Barnes. Defendant-appellant, R.G., appeals from a judgment of the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas adjudicating him delinquent of murder, felonious assault, and obstructing justice. For the reasons that follow, we affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.

{¶ 2} In June 2006, a complaint was filed against R.G. in the Cuyahoga County Juvenile Court for one count of murder, in violation of R.C. 2903.02; one count of felonious assault, in violation of R.C. 2903.11(A)(1); two counts of felonious assault, in violation of R.C. 2903.11(A)(2); and two counts of obstructing justice, in violation of R.C. 2921.32(A)(2). Each count had a one-, three-, and five-year firearm specification, and a criminal gang activity specification. R.G. denied the allegations.

{¶ 3} In September 2006, the Juvenile Court held a probable cause hearing to determine if R.G. was amenable to the juvenile justice system. The court held that he was and denied the state's request to proceed in the adult court. After the court's ruling, the state filed a notice of intent to seek an indictment against R.G. to add serious youthful offender specifications to each count. These specifications mandate that the case be bound over to the adult felony court. The case proceeded to a jury trial in the adult court. We have gleaned the following facts from the record adduced at trial. *Page 4

{¶ 4} Around 5:00 p.m. on April 14, 2006, Barnes, Dinkins, Dominic Perry, Bernie Burkhalter, and Dyrone Smith were standing outside Barnes's mother's house on East 151st Street, near Bartlett Avenue. While they were standing there, a white Cutlass Ciera drove by them. Antonio Anderson was driving the Cutlass and Robert Gordon was in the passenger seat. Gordon stuck his head out of the window and, according to Smith, "exchanged words with" Barnes. When Gordon stuck his head out of the window, his hat, which had "HVD" on it, fell into the middle of the street. Gordon yelled that he would be back for his hat. Barnes and Perry walked four or five houses down the street, where Gordon's hat had fallen, and stepped on the hat. After they stepped on it, they placed it in some bushes nearby. Barnes and some others walked toward the corner of "151st and Bartlett."

{¶ 5} One witness, Burkhalter, stated that he saw a red Chevrolet Blazer during the initial exchange between Barnes and Gordon. He said it was "sitting midway down the street kind of like stopped," and he wondered why it was just sitting there. After the white Cutlass drove past that first time, he said the "red Blazer goes the opposite way like up Hamstead going towards like Lee Road." He said that he told Barnes to "chill, stay here." He did not want him to walk to the store "right then and right now."

{¶ 6} A few minutes after Gordon had dropped his hat, the white Cutlass returned. Gordon was hanging out of the passenger window and began shooting. *Page 5 When the white Cutlass turned the corner, it hit a gold car, and then hit a tree (or the tree lawn) and lost control, but Gordon continued to shoot at Barnes and the others.

{¶ 7} Several witnesses, including Burkhalter, Smith, Perry and Danielle Winfield (Barnes's sister), saw the red Blazer stopped in the middle of the intersection at East 151st and Bartlett during the shooting. Smith said the red Blazer was "directly behind the white car in the middle of the street." Perry said the red Blazer arrived right before the white Cutlass hit the gold car. Perry further testified that when he and Dinkins took off running through a backyard, the red Blazer "went to 153rd to cut us off."

{¶ 8} Burkhalter stated that "for a good 30 seconds while the shooting was going on," the red Blazer was "blocking traffic on 151st and Bartlett." Burkhalter said that he saw Barnes begin running "towards like Lee Road towards 153rd, then the Blazer takes off in the same direction that they take off." Burkhalter testified that he saw R.G. hanging his head out of the driver's side window of the red Blazer.

{¶ 9} Barnes got shot in the cheek and Dinkins got shot in the neck. Dinkins died at the scene.

{¶ 10} Barnes testified that Gordon and Anderson are "Harvard Boys." He explained that the Harvard Boys were a gang that "stays on Harvard." He did not know the names of all the gang members of the Harvard Boys because *Page 6 "[t]here's so many of them *** from 131st to 189th." Barnes further explained that he was a "Bartlett Boy," and that the Harvard Boys and the Bartlett Boys "don't get along." Barnes did not consider the Bartlett group a gang, but said the police labeled them as that.

{¶ 11} Perry explained that he was a Bartlett Boy. He said, "[w]e ain't nothing but guys that hang out together in the same neighborhood." He also said the Harvard Boys are "like the same." The two groups do not get along. The Harvard Boys hang out at Harvard Deli. Perry said that the Harvard Boys came into the Bartlett Boys' neighborhood before and shot at them.

{¶ 12} Winfield testified that "[a]fter the shooting, the red truck had come up at the stop sign, stopped, a light-skin guy got out, grabbed the hat, got in the truck and pulled out." She explained that this was after the white car had fled the scene and said that was how she knew the red truck was connected to the white car, "because all of this was over a hat." She was able to view the license plate of the red truck and gave it to police.

{¶ 13} Burkhalter testified that a few weeks after the shooting, R.G., his mother, and his sister approached him. R.G.'s mother asked him to tell her what happened that day, but he refused to talk to her. A couple of minutes later, R.G. approached him and said, "if I [had] a problem, `[w]e can take care of it right now or he'll kill me too.'" *Page 7

{¶ 14} Officer Richard Varndell of the Cleveland Police Department testified that he responded to a call of two males being shot. They also received information about the red Blazer being involved, the direction it had gone after the shooting, and its license plate number. Two to three minutes after the call, Officer Varndell and his partner stopped the red Blazer. It was a two-door Blazer, with no windows in the back. Its license plate matched the license plate given to police. There were five individuals in the truck: Andrew Dorsy was driving and Demario Golson was in the front passenger seat, Robert Gordon was sitting behind Dorsy, Antonio Anderson was sitting behind Golson, and R.G. was sitting in the back center seat, between Gordon and Anderson.

{¶ 15} Officer Varndell had heard of the Harvard Boys, but knew them as the "Harvard Mob." He said that he "usually interacted with probably six of the regulars." He testified that they usually hang out in front of the Harvard Deli and sell marijuana. He also knew the Bartlett Boys as "BTO" or "Bartlett Taking Over."

{¶ 16}

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