O'Donnell v. Yezzo

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedJune 2, 2023
Docket3:17-cv-02657
StatusUnknown

This text of O'Donnell v. Yezzo (O'Donnell v. Yezzo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Donnell v. Yezzo, (N.D. Ohio 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO WESTERN DIVISION

Debra O’Donnell, et al., Case No. 3:17-cv-02657-JGC

Plaintiffs

v. ORDER

G. Michele Yezzo, et al.,

Defendants.

This is a civil rights case under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. It arises from the, since vacated, 1993 conviction of James (Jim) Parsons, who passed away in 2017. Plaintiff, Debra O’Donnell, is Parsons’ daughter and administratrix of his estate. She maintains claims on behalf of Parsons’ estate against defendant, Michele Yezzo, for fabrication and suppression of evidence in violation of Parsons’ constitutional right to due process.1 For the following reasons, I deny Defendant’s Motion to Exclude Plaintiff’s expert reports, deny Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment, grant in part and deny in part Plaintiff’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment, and deny Plaintiff’s Motion to Strike. Factual Background On February 12, 1981, Barbara Parsons was beaten to death in the home that she shared with her husband, Jim2, and their daughters in Norwalk, Ohio.

1 This action originally included state law claims by O’Donnell and James Parsons’ other daughter, Sherry Parsons, on behalf of themselves. (Doc. 1, pgID 20-22). The only claims that remain are the ones under § 1983 that O’Donnell brings on behalf of her father’s estate. (Doc. 121, pgID 5001-02). 2 Because Jim Parsons, Barbara Parsons, and Sherry Parsons share a common last name, I refer to all three infra by their first names. Sherry discovered her mother’s lifeless body after returning from school that day. (Doc. 88-3, pgID 3818-20). Jim found out while working at his auto repair shop. (Doc. 85, pgID 3418). He complied fully with the Norwalk Police’s investigation. He sat for a custodial interrogation. (Doc. 88-4). He admitted having marital problems with his wife but denied any involvement in

the murder. (Id., pgID 3829, 3835). He consented to a search of his car, home, and auto shop. (Id., pgID 3846). He turned over his clothes for examination. (Id.). No scratches, cuts, or blood were present on his body upon police inspection. (Doc. 88-5). After examining Barbara’s scalp wounds, the coroner stated his opinion that the possible murder weapon was a narrow instrument that was octagonal, triangular, or square-shaped. (Doc. 88-7, pgID 3967-70). The Norwalk Police identified three breaker bars, i.e. long metal tools designed to loosen fasteners, as possible murder weapons. One of these was a Craftsman- branded bar that the investigators recovered from Neil Burras, a friend of Mr. Parsons. (Doc. 88- 11, pgID 3587). Burras explained how he came to find the Craftsman bar in an affidavit. On January 31, 1981, shortly before Barbara’s murder, he purchased a car from Jim. (Doc. 88-12,

pgID 3990). A few days after the murder, he cleaned out the car before embarking on a trip to Arizona. (Id.). He found no bar. (Id., pgID 3991). Once he arrived in Arizona, he cleaned out the car again and found the bar. (Id.). He turned it over to the Norwalk Police. (Id.). The FBI analyzed it and found no traces of blood. (Doc. 60-10). The investigation led to no charges, including against Jim, and the case went cold. In 1986, Michael White joined the Norwalk Police. (Doc. 82, pgID 1747-48). By 1988, he had joined the department’s detective bureau and reopened the investigation into Barbara’s unsolved murder. (Id.). He reviewed the entire case file and associated evidence, including the Craftsman bar and a bloody bedsheet. (Id., pgID 1748-49). He thought he saw blood imprints of the Craftsman bar on the bedsheet – one “specific linear mark and then two other diminished marks . . . .” (Id., pgID 1750-51, 1771). He submitted the Craftsman bar and bedsheet to Linda Luke, a scientist with the Cuyahoga County Coroner’s Office, for further analysis. (Doc. 85, pgID 2994-95). Luke was unable to match the Craftsman bar conclusively to the bedsheet marks.

(Id., pgID 3012). White then submitted the bar to Dr. Henry Lee of the Connecticut State Crime Lab. (Doc. 88-14, pgID 3997). Lee ultimately declined to undertake a full forensic analysis of the evidence. (Doc. 82, pgID 1755-56). In January 1993, White brought the Craftsman bar, bedsheet, and Barbara’s bloody nightgown to defendant Yezzo, a forensic analyst with the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation (B.C.I.). (Id., pgID 1763-64; Doc. 88-16, pgID 4002; Doc. 60-14). Yezzo documented her analysis in two reports – one on February 10, 1993, (Doc. 60-14) and another on May 4, 1993, (Doc. 60-15). She later offered her analysis in testimony to the grand jury and at trial. She concluded: • Chemical enhancement of the bloody bedsheet, specifically of a “linear impression deposited in blood,” revealed the letters “S” and “N” matching the letters from the word “CRAFTSMAN” from the Craftsman bar. (Docs. 60-14; 60-15) (emphasis added). The aforementioned letter “N” was visible on the bedsheet prior to chemical enhancement.3 (Doc. 60-14).

• The nightgown had a “partial impression in blood” that was “consistent in size and shape to the head of the [Craftsman bar].” (Doc. 60-14). Chemical enhancement of bloody “impression” revealed “individualizing characteristics” – specifically an “eye shape” – matching the head area of the side of the breaker bar containing the “CRAFTSMAN” engraving. (Docs. 60-15; 60-24, pgID 662). However, Yezzo testified in her January 2020 deposition that the eye-shaped mark was on the opposite side of the bar. (Docs. 60-34; 116-3, pgID 4752).

• Although Yezzo admitted that she never issued a report on the matter, she testified at trial that she performed a blood spatter experiment. Specifically, she put blood on the breaker bar to see what kind of blood spatter castoff patterns the

3 Notably, White testified in his deposition that he did not observe any letters on the sheet prior to Yezzo’s chemical enhancement of it. (Doc. 82, pgID 1770). bar created when swung. (Doc. 73-4, pgID 1268-71). Her experiment informed her opinion linking Jim and the Craftsman bar to the murder – i.e. that the castoff patters come from a narrow instrument swung by a right-handed person. (Id., pgID 1248-51). However, Yezzo testified in her January 2020 deposition that she had not performed the blood spatter experiment. (Doc. 83, pgID 2118).

A jury found Jim guilty of murdering Barbara, and he received a sentence of fifteen years to life. State of Ohio v. Parsons, Case No. CR 9300098, at 1 (Huron Common Pleas 2016) (Doc. 78-1, pgID 1557). In 2015, over two decades later, the Ohio Innocence Project obtained Yezzo’s personnel file through a public records request. (Id., pgID 1557). The personnel file revealed concerns about Yezzo’s workplace behavior and performance. It detailed “[i]ncidents involving her threats to kill others and herself, engaging in assaultive behavior toward co-workers, and contemptuous behavior toward her superiors . . . .” (Id.). A 1989 memo from Daniel Chilton, the assistant superintendent of BCI, concludes that Yezzo’s workplace issues “affect[] her overall performance.” (Doc. 88-15, pgID 3999). The memo goes on to state that Yezzo’s “findings and conclusions regarding evidence may be suspect” and that she “will stretch the truth to satisfy a department.” (Id.). The memo reflected Chilton’s conversations with Ron Dye, Cheryl Siler, Ken Ross, and Dale Laux, FOP 48 union representatives. (Id., pgID 3998). Dye, who has since passed away, worked in the Firearms Section of BCI and shared a lab with Yezzo. (Id.; Doc. 88-25, pgID 4209). Due to her workplace issues, BCI placed Yezzo on administrative leave in June 1993. (Doc. 78-1, pgID 1557). She returned from her leave shortly before testifying in Jim’s trial for murder.

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