State v. Abner, Unpublished Decision (9-1-2006)

2006 Ohio 4510
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 1, 2006
DocketC.A. No. 20661.
StatusUnpublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 2006 Ohio 4510 (State v. Abner, Unpublished Decision (9-1-2006)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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
State v. Abner, Unpublished Decision (9-1-2006), 2006 Ohio 4510 (Ohio Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION
{¶ 1} Julie Ann Abner appeals from her conviction and sentence on charges of aggravated murder, attempted aggravated murder, and aggravated arson.

{¶ 2} Abner advances six assignments of error on appeal. First, she contends the trial court erred in overruling a motion to suppress incriminating statements obtained in violation of her constitutional rights. Second, she claims the trial court erred in excluding expert testimony that would have cast doubt on the reliability of her confession. Third, she asserts that the trial court erred in excluding testimony from witnesses who heard her son confess to starting a fire that killed his sister. Fourth, she argues that the trial court erred when it made evidentiary rulings excluding evidence favorable to her and admitting unduly prejudicial evidence presented by the prosecution. Fifth, she maintains that she received ineffective assistance of trial counsel. Sixth, she claims her convictions are based on legally insufficient evidence and are against the manifest weight of the evidence.

I. Factual Background
{¶ 3} The present appeal stems from a fire in an upstairs apartment that Abner shared with her two children, five-year-old William and two-year-old Ashleigh. At approximately 2:00 p.m. on August 28, 2002, Abner ran downstairs from the apartment, screaming that it was on fire with Ashleigh inside. A customer in a bar below the apartment, Ewing Hill, grabbed a fire extinguisher and rushed to the top of the stairs leading to the apartment. Because of the density of the smoke emanating from the apartment, Hill could go no further.

{¶ 4} The Miamisburg Fire Department arrived on the scene, but firefighters initially were unable to enter the apartment because of the fire's intensity. After fighting the fire for some time, however, they were able to enter the apartment where they discovered Ashleigh's charred remains.

{¶ 5} Miamisburg detective Rodney Stanley arrived on the scene at 2:40 p.m. and met Abner, who was at the back of the building in an ambulance. Abner agreed to speak with him and stated that her son, William, had set fire to a mattress in the bedroom. Stanley met Abner again later that day at Sycamore Hospital, where she still asserted that William had set the fire on the bed.

{¶ 6} During the next three days, lieutenant Mark Shockman of the Miamisburg Fire Department examined the apartment extensively to determine the fire's origin and cause. Shockman observed that the heaviest fire damage was in the living room. Although the bedroom also had sustained some damage, the walls, ceiling, and furniture there were relatively intact. Shockman also noted that there was padding within the mattress, and the floor underneath the bed was not burned at all. The living room walls and ceiling, however, were completely consumed, and the furniture in that room showed significant fire damage. The heaviest damage was to the furniture in the northeast quadrant of the room, particularly in the area between the couch and the coffee table. The damage suggested to Shockman that the furniture had been attacked locally at floor level and that the fire did not fan out in equal directions across the ceiling and come down the walls, as a fire normally would do. There also were what appeared to be irregular burn patterns on the floor between the couch and coffee table, suggesting to Shockman that an ignitable liquid had been poured on the floor.

{¶ 7} Based on his observations, Shockman requested an accelerant-detection canine to respond to the scene. Dennis Cummings from the Ohio Fire Marshall's office and his dog, Harvey, arrived the next day. Harvey alerted to five areas where he detected the presence of an ignitable liquid. Three of the alerts occurred between the couch and the coffee table. Later laboratory testing, however, failed to confirm the presence of an accelerant in any of the areas where Harvey had alerted. Nevertheless, based on his observations, Shockman concluded that the fire did not start in the bedroom on the mattress, as Abner had claimed. Rather, he concluded that the fire had been set in the living room between the couch and the coffee table by pouring an ignitable liquid on the floor in that area. Ohio Fire Marshals Michael McCarroll and Dennis Cummings, who conducted independent examinations of the scene, essentially concurred in Shockman's conclusion.

{¶ 8} On the night of August 29, 2002, as Shockman and Stanley were leaving the apartment, an elderly woman from the neighborhood approached and told them she had found a gas can behind her apartment. The woman, Shirley Hill, led them to her nearby apartment, where they observed a red, plastic gas can and a red Bic disposable lighter.

{¶ 9} Stanley subsequently contacted Abner a third time on September 9, 2002, at approximately 1:00 p.m. He and his partner, detective Jeff Crumbley, asked her to accompany them to the Miamisburg Police Department to talk about the fire. She agreed, and they drove her there. Upon their arrival, Stanley told Abner she was under no obligation to speak to them, she was not under arrest, and she was free to leave any time. Abner agreed to stay and sat at a table with the two detectives and Shockman, who had joined them. During the interview, she gave various versions of how the fire started. After about ninety minutes, Abner asked to see her mother, Tina Robinson, who was brought to the police station. Robinson told her daughter "to quit feeling sorry for herself and tell the truth." Stanley told Abner her story did not make sense and he thought she was lying. Stanley and Shockman showed Abner photographs of the fire scene in an effort to show her the fire could not have started as she claimed it did. According to Stanley, Abner eventually blurted out, "I started the fire."

{¶ 10} Stanley then read Abner her Miranda rights and asked if she understood them. He also asked Abner if she had any questions about the warnings, and Abner asked whether they meant "that somebody is getting me an attorney?" Stanley said he told Abner that if she could not afford a lawyer, the public defender's office would provide an attorney for her. Stanley also said he explained to Abner that she could stop answering questions until she talked with a lawyer. Abner said she understood, and she agreed to waive her rights and speak further with the police. Abner then told him she could write but had trouble reading. As a result, she provided a taped confession, which was admitted at trial.

{¶ 11} In her confession, Abner told the officers that she had been upset due to a phone conversation with her husband in Florida shortly before she set the fire. She stated that her husband "didn't care anything about her[,] [d]idn't care anything about the kids[,] [e]ssentially left them on their own to survive however they could." During their conversation, he had called her an unfit mother and a "fucking retard." She was angry and lit the fire on the floor of the living room with the purpose of killing herself and her two children. Abner stated, "I wanted to kill us all." She told the officers she had retrieved a red gas can from the back stairwell, where the owner of the building kept maintenance equipment, poured gasoline in a couple of spots on the carpet between the couch and the coffee table, and lit it with a lighter while Ashleigh and William were watching television. William ran down the stairs when he saw her light the fire.

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Bluebook (online)
2006 Ohio 4510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-abner-unpublished-decision-9-1-2006-ohioctapp-2006.