State v. Bevins, Unpublished Decision (12-29-2006)

2006 Ohio 6974
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 29, 2006
DocketNo. C-050754.
StatusUnpublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 2006 Ohio 6974 (State v. Bevins, Unpublished Decision (12-29-2006)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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State v. Bevins, Unpublished Decision (12-29-2006), 2006 Ohio 6974 (Ohio Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

DECISION.
{¶ 1} Following a jury trial, defendant-appellant Andrew Bevins was convicted of aggravated burglary and rape. The trial court sentenced him to consecutive ten-year prison terms. Bevins now appeals.

{¶ 2} Bevins argues that (1) the prosecutor engaged in misconduct; (2) the trial court erred by denying his request to represent himself; (3) the prosecutor and the court violated his rights under Brady v.Maryland1; (4) his convictions were against the weight of the evidence and were not supported by sufficient evidence; and (5) his sentences were unconstitutional. In a sixth assignment of error, Bevins' appellate counsel submits for our review several issues that Bevins has requested "without counsel due to difference of opinion on the merit of same."

The State's Case
{¶ 3} After midnight on November 8, 2000, Nina Gipson and her eight-year-old daughter were asleep in Gipson's bed when Gipson was awakened by the creaking of the stairs outside her bedroom door. Gipson jumped out of bed and saw a "shadow peeping around the corner." So Gipson grabbed a glass from a dresser and lunged at the person who had come up the steps.

{¶ 4} Gipson struck the intruder in the forehead, above his left eye, with the glass. The man turned Gipson around and held her in a headlock and choked her. As Gipson was screaming and struggling, her daughter tried to fight the man.

{¶ 5} The man continued to choke Gipson and to "fling [her] around." Her daughter was yelling, "[G]et off my momma." The man told Gipson to stop struggling and to have her daughter go into the bedroom, or he would kill Gipson. Gipson testified that her daughter "finally went to the bedroom. Well, after I told her, I said, babe, you have to listen and go and do what the man says or he going to kill mommy."

{¶ 6} Gipson repeatedly tried to turn on the lights, but the intruder kept turning the light switch off. Gipson grabbed a can of disinfectant spray and tried to spray the man in the face, but the man said, "[H]oney, you going to have to do better than that."

{¶ 7} The struggle carried Gipson and her assailant into her daughter's bedroom and into a closet where some clothing was hanging. When Gipson's daughter jumped on the man, he threw the little girl against a bedpost, where she hit her back before falling to the floor. Gipson then bit the man on the forearm.

{¶ 8} The man pulled Gipson back into the hallway, just outside her open bedroom door and in view of her daughter, who was sitting on Gipson's bed. As he choked Gipson, the man digitally penetrated her vagina. The man then pushed Gipson into her daughter's room and began to unbuckle his belt. Gipson bumped the man, and he slipped.

{¶ 9} Gipson ran out of the apartment, screaming. She ran to the home of Francine Jackson, a neighbor, and called the police.

{¶ 10} Gipson described her attacker as an African-American man who wore a white T-shirt, blue "work pants," and dark blue flip-flops with white writing and designs on them. She testified that she could not see the man's face because he had been holding her from behind.

{¶ 11} Gipson testified that "Ms. Bevins" and her children had moved into the adjoining apartment a few weeks before the attack. She had seen Andrew Bevins, but had never spoken to him or allowed him to enter her apartment. In contrast to later testimony by Bevins' son, Gipson said that Bevins had never carried laundry for her.

{¶ 12} Erica Renee Moore, another neighbor, testified that when she had heard Gipson's screams, she looked out her window. Within a few minutes, she saw Bevins walking swiftly to his car: "If he would have walked any faster, he would have been running." Moore said that Bevins was wearing a "workman's uniform" consisting of a light blue shirt and dark blue pants, and blue Adidas flip-flops "with white" on them. Moore saw Bevins drive off in a gray truck.

{¶ 13} At about 8:30 that morning, Moore saw Bevins return to his estranged wife's apartment, which adjoined Gipson's apartment. Moore noticed that Bevins was wearing the same clothing and shoes that she had seen earlier, but this time Bevins was also wearing a skull cap that covered his forehead.

{¶ 14} Ann Renee Steele, a sexual-assault nurse examiner at University Hospital, testified that she had examined a distraught and tearful Gipson shortly after the attack. Steele described Gipson's injuries, which included abrasions on her face and neck, bruises on her arms, and cuts on her lip and under a toe. Gipson also had vaginal abrasions and redness that were consistent with forced digital penetration. Steele saw what appeared to be blood stains on Gipson's T-shirt, so she submitted the T-shirt to the coroner's laboratory for testing.

{¶ 15} Detective Steven Ventre testified that he had met Gipson at her apartment a week or so after the attack. In Gipson's daughter's bedroom closet, Ventre found a child's dress and pants that had what appeared to be blood on them. Ventre submitted the items to the coroner's laboratory.

{¶ 16} Testing of Gipson's T-shirt and of the child's dress and pants revealed human blood stains. Deoxyribonucleic Acid ("DNA") testing of the T-shirt and of the pants revealed Bevins' blood on both items. No DNA testing was conducted on the dress.

The Defense Case
{¶ 17} Bevins presented the testimony of a Bevins family friend named Francine Jackson, who stated that, on the night of the attack, Gipson had called the police from her home, and that Gipson had pointed out a white van that she had seen driving away from the scene.

{¶ 18} Annette Bevins testified that she had been married to Bevins for 25 years, but that they were separated. She and their two children lived in the apartment next to Gipson's. She testified that on the evening of November 7, 2000, she, Bevins, and her sister-in-law had driven in Bevins' light gray pickup truck to her daughter's home in North Carolina. They had arrived there the following morning.

{¶ 19} Bevins' son testified that on November 8, 2000, which he remembered "plain as day, because [his] niece was born that day," he saw his father carry some bags or a bundle of clothes into Gipson's apartment. His father had a "busted up knuckle" from an incident that had occurred earlier that day. When his father came out of Gipson's apartment, his father's knuckle was bleeding.

{¶ 20} Bevins' daughter, Patricia Slaughter, testified that she was living in North Carolina and that her family had visited her on November 8, 2000.

{¶ 21} Bevins also called Cincinnati Police Officer Phillip Black to identify three photographs that he had taken of Bevins on November 15, 2000. Black said that he took the photographs because he had observed a scar over Bevins' left eye and some scars on his hand.

{¶ 22} Black also identified three photographs of another man, one of which showed that man standing by the side of a white van. The man had been stopped by a patrol officer the night of the attack as a result of the descriptions that had been broadcast about the attack.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2006 Ohio 6974, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bevins-unpublished-decision-12-29-2006-ohioctapp-2006.