State v. Axson, Unpublished Decision (5-1-2003)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 1, 2003
DocketNo. 81231.
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Axson, Unpublished Decision (5-1-2003) (State v. Axson, Unpublished Decision (5-1-2003)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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State v. Axson, Unpublished Decision (5-1-2003), (Ohio Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION
{¶ 1} Defendant-appellant Bentley L. Axson ("Axson"; d.o.b. November 21, 1970) appeals from his jury trial convictions of (1) kidnapping; (2) rape; (3) aggravated robbery; (4) felonious assault; and, (5) attempted murder, all with firearm specifications, the imposition of consecutive sentences, and the determination that he is a sexual predator.1 For the reasons adduced below, we affirm and remand.

{¶ 2} The record on appeal indicates that the offenses in question occurred on February 5, 2001 in Cleveland, Ohio, during a car jacking and subsequent high speed chase.

{¶ 3} The female victim, who was thirty-five years of age and a divorced mother of four minor children, had stopped her car at a convenient-type store on Madison Avenue at approximately 6:00 p.m. After purchasing some cigarettes, the victim drove off toward a local grocery store. She pulled her car over and stopped in the vicinity of West 74th Street to look in her purse for money. While stopped, Axson, armed with a shotgun, opened her car door and forcibly pulled her from the car. The victim heard Axson repeatedly call her a "stupid bitch" and that he was going to kill her as he pointed the shotgun at her and demanded money. The victim searched her pockets and retrieved some money, which Axson took from her. Axson next took the victim to the rear of the car, by the tree lawn, where he struck the victim's head with the wooden butt stock of the shotgun, causing the victim, bleeding heavily from the laceration caused by the blow, to fall to the ground. Some of her blood was deposited on Axson's shirt, which caused Axson to become more angry. The victim testified that a gray shirt with blood on it, admitted into evidence, was the shirt Axson was wearing at the time of the offenses.

{¶ 4} At that point another male came up and went to search the interior of the victim's car for her purse.

{¶ 5} The victim stood up from the ground at which time Axson demanded that she perform fellatio on him. Despite her pleas not to do it, he forced her to. He then struck the victim in the back of her head with the shotgun, causing the victim to briefly lose consciousness. When she came to, Axson kicked her several times as the other male watched, and told her to get up and repeated that he was going to kill her. These kicks caused bruising to the victim's back and sides.

{¶ 6} Axson then asked the other male whether he would like to have intercourse with the victim. The other male declined the offer. Axson next demanded that she lay down on the ground so that he could shoot her. The other male then told Axson not to do it, to instead put the victim into the trunk of the victim's car.

{¶ 7} The victim identified Axson in court as the perpetrator with the shotgun.

{¶ 8} Axson and the other male then put the victim, against her will, into the car trunk. The car then left that location with Axson driving. While in the trunk, the victim made noise, begged to be let out and attempted to free herself, causing Axson to tell her to be quiet, that he would kill her.

{¶ 9} Approximately twenty-five minutes after being abducted, the car stopped at a gasoline station where it was refueled. During this refueling the victim heard the other male inquire of Axson whether he really intended to kill the victim; the victim heard Axson answer affirmatively.

{¶ 10} The car then left the gasoline station and stopped briefly approximately ten minutes later before again proceeding.

{¶ 11} Some time later the victim heard sirens as the car was traveling at a high speed. Within the trunk the victim, still pleading for her life, was jostled around by the movement of the car. The car then struck something and came to a stop. The victim next heard police officers outside the car. The victim cried out to the police for help, at which time the police asked her about the location of the keys to the trunk. The victim responded that the keys were in the ignition. The police recovered the keys and freed the victim from the car trunk. The victim, shaken and bleeding from her head wound, was transported by emergency personnel to a local hospital where she received medical treatment for two head lacerations, which each required eight to ten surgical staples to close. The victim stayed overnight at the hospital.

{¶ 12} The next day, February 6, 2001, the victim inspected her car at the police impound lot. She found her purse, which had been ransacked, inside the car, but there was no money in the purse. In all, the victim testified that, apart from her car, between $180 to $190, her Nike jacket, and some medications were taken from her during these offenses.

{¶ 13} On February 7, 2001, the victim met with Cleveland Police Detective Maurice Hamilton at which time she identified Axson from a six photograph array and also identified Axson's voice from a tape recording as the same voice as the man who had struck her with the shotgun and repeatedly threatened to kill her.

{¶ 14} The victim testified that she suffered from anxiety, severe headaches, and troubled sleeping as a result of these offenses. The victim also admitted to suffering chronic back pain prior to the offenses for which she took medications.

{¶ 15} Police officers testified at the trial that their attention was first drawn to the victim's car when they observed it run a red light. The police gave chase but the driver of the victim's car would not obey police signals to pull over. Eventually, Axson was observed jumping out of the moving car. The car continued to roll along a short distance before striking a guardrail and stopping. The police chased Axson on foot, caught him a short distance later, arrested him, and put him into the back seat of a squad car. Axson's clothing was blood stained. Police then returned to the hijacked car where they heard the victim's cries for help emanating from the locked car trunk. The police found the car keys still in the ignition, set the victim free, and called for medical assistance for the victim.

{¶ 16} Axson, after being advised of his Miranda rights, was hostile to the police, threatening them and using profanities. Axson claimed to the police that he had purchased the victim's car in a drug transaction and denied knowing that the victim was in the trunk. According to the police, Axson generally denied any part in the offenses against the victim. In booking Axson, money taken from Axson's person was tinged with blood.

{¶ 17} Scientific testing by the police department of stains on a pair of blue jeans, a gray t-shirt, and a gray glove taken from Axson's person after his arrest, tested positive for human blood. DNA testing on these stains indicated that the victim's blood was on the t-shirt and on the gray glove.2 The blood on the t-shirt was, according to the testifying DNA expert, Mr. Tony Tambasco, definitely not Axson's. Furthermore, DNA testing on the bloody glove, which showed a mixture of DNA including the victim's, could not exclude Axson as being a contributor to this mixture.

{¶ 18}

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Axson, Unpublished Decision (5-1-2003), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-axson-unpublished-decision-5-1-2003-ohioctapp-2003.