LeFever v. State

2013 Ohio 4606
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 17, 2013
Docket12AP-1034
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2013 Ohio 4606 (LeFever v. State) 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
LeFever v. State, 2013 Ohio 4606 (Ohio Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

[Cite as LeFever v. State, 2013-Ohio-4606.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO

TENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

Virginia LeFever, :

Plaintiff-Appellant, : No. 12AP-1034 v. : (C.P.C. No. 12CVH-01-973)

State of Ohio, : (REGULAR CALENDAR)

Defendant-Appellee. :

D E C I S I O N

Rendered on October 17, 2013

Cooper & Elliott, LLC, Rex H. Elliott, Charles H. Cooper, Jr., Bradley A. Strickling and Barton R. Keyes, for appellant.

Michael DeWine, Attorney General, and Debra Gorrell Wehrle, for appellee.

APPEAL from the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas

CONNOR, J. {¶ 1} Plaintiff-appellant, Virginia LeFever ("appellant"), appeals from a decision of the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas granting summary judgment in favor defendant-appellee, State of Ohio ("the State"), as to her complaint for wrongful imprisonment brought pursuant to R.C. 2743.48. I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY {¶ 2} Appellant and William LeFever were getting a divorce. The final hearing was scheduled for September 27, 1988. Once the divorce was final, appellant planned to move to California with her children Alex, Sarah and Cory. William died on September 22, 1988, one week before the hearing. No. 12AP-1034 2

{¶ 3} The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals summarized the facts surrounding William's death and appellant's prosecution for aggravated murder in LeFever v. Money, 225 F.3d 659 (6th Cir.2000), as follows: On September 19, 1988, [appellant], who is a registered nurse, went to the office of her then-employer, Medical Personnel Pool. She told Anita Cullison, the staff coordinator there, that she was looking for a specific type of syringe for use on a Pool patient whom [appellant] was scheduled to see later that day.

The next afternoon, [appellant] called Cullison * * * and * * * brought up a conversation they had several months before in which they discussed the fact that someone could be "eliminated" for $50 and a bus ticket. That same afternoon, William [LeFever] arrived at [appellant]'s home to pick up his tools. * * * At 8:30 that evening, [appellant] called Cullison, this time at home, and explained to her that she was not serious about eliminating anyone. [Appellant] also said that William had nothing to offer her except a life insurance policy, and that he would likely remove her as beneficiary after the divorce. William fell asleep on the family room couch and was still asleep when [appellant] went upstairs to bed at 10:30.

Around midnight, Cory LeFever heard loud banging and then saw William running around naked and grabbing and talking to the trash. When Cory told [appellant] how William was acting, she told him that his dad would be all right. After hearing more banging, Cory went to [appellant] again, and this time she got up and went downstairs to check on William. When she and Cory went downstairs, they saw the bathroom in a state of disarray, and William had bruises and a big gash on his knee. [Appellant] then took William upstairs to her bedroom.

At 6 a.m. that morning [appellant] noticed that her bottle of Elavil was missing. When she returned to her bedroom, she saw the bottle containing one-half tablet of Elavil on the floor near the nightstand. At that point, she surmised that William had taken 20, 100 mg tablets of Elavil. At 8:30 a.m., [appellant] called Cullison, again at home, and said that she let William in because he was making a scene, and that he had taken an overdose of pills. [Appellant] said she monitored his vitals and he would be all right, but she could not report to work that day. At 10:30 a.m. [appellant] called Cullison again, this time at the office, and asked her if she had called [appellant] at home, because she was keeping a "low profile." No. 12AP-1034 3

That afternoon, between 2:15 and 2:30, [appellant] and her children went into the Pool office looking for a bandage. William was left behind at her home.

Later that same afternoon, [appellant] telephoned Vernon Breese, William's best friend, and said that William was "pretty bad off," and that he was bruised and beaten up from bumping around the house. He told her to call the emergency squad. She said she did not want to do that, because she did not want people to know about the overdose, especially because of their impending divorce. When he arrived at [appellant]'s home, Breese found William lying in a supine position on the bathroom floor with pale gray skin, bruises, and a bad, unbandaged cut below his knee. As he began wiping William down in an effort to revive him, he told [appellant] to call the emergency squad. She offered to call a doctor she knew instead.

[Appellant] told Breese that Dr. Wesley Filipow told her that "it would pass," to wait it out, and that, if he did not get better, to then bring him to the hospital. At that point, Breese insisted that she call the emergency squad, which she did.

At the hospital William * * * said that his bruises were from [appellant] who would "beat the shit out of him" whenever he passed out. William died that morning at 11:37.

Pursuant to a warrant, the police later found the following items while searching [appellant]'s bags of garbage: a can of poison peanuts used to kill rodents; a 35 mm film canister with a residue consistent with the strychnine-laced peanuts; a can of Forces Ro-Dex used to kill pocket gophers, which contains a strychnine base; a pink dye consistent with that used in Ro-Dex; an empty bottle of Terro ant killer, which contains an arsenic base; the charred remains of a burnt fumigant stick called "Smoke 'Ems," a mole killer that contains sulfuric dioxide; household deodorizer; syringes; and hypodermic needles.

In trying to determine the cause of William's death, medical examiners for the county found the following poisons in William's system: amitriptyline; its metabolite, nortriptyline; strychnine; arsenic; and sulfate.

[T]he chief toxicologist for the county coroner's office found pieces of cracked corn, peanuts, seeds, and dye in William's No. 12AP-1034 4

body that were identical to that found in the Ro-Dex rodent bait and the poison peanuts located in [appellant]'s garbage. * * * In William's blood he found 16 times the amount of sulphate that would normally be present; he said the amount was consistent with an individual breathing in the fumes from a sulfur candle. After considering all of this evidence, the examiners opined that William died from acute amitriptyline and nortriptyline poisoning that was administered intramuscularly and rectally. (Footnotes omitted.)

{¶ 4} On November 30, 1988, the Licking County Grand Jury indicted appellant on one count of aggravated murder in connection with the death of her husband. Following a bench trial, appellant was convicted of aggravated murder and sentenced to life in prison. The court of appeals affirmed the conviction in State v. LeFever, 5th Dist. No. CA-3535 (Nov. 18, 1991). {¶ 5} In 2010, after appellant had served 22 years of a life sentence, the sentencing court granted appellant's motion for a new trial due to the fact that the State's toxicologist had lied about his qualifications.1 The Licking County Prosecutor, Ken Oswalt, subsequently dismissed the indictment "without prejudice." {¶ 6} Thereafter, appellant filed a complaint against the State seeking a declaration that she was a wrongfully imprisoned individual pursuant to R.C. 2743.48.

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Bluebook (online)
2013 Ohio 4606, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lefever-v-state-ohioctapp-2013.