State v. Bey

2019 Ohio 423, 130 N.E.3d 1031
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 8, 2019
DocketL-17-1288
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2019 Ohio 423 (State v. Bey) 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. Bey, 2019 Ohio 423, 130 N.E.3d 1031 (Ohio Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

OSOWIK, J.

Introduction

{¶ 1} On October 18, 2017, a jury found Darnell Bryant Bey, the appellant herein, guilty of felony murder with a gun specification, and the Lucas County Court of Common Pleas sentenced him to a mandatory term of 18 years to life in prison. Appellant appealed.

{¶ 2} In this case, we address whether appellant's failure to raise the issue of a defective indictment until after the jury was empaneled waives all but plain error review; whether the indictment's failure to identify an underlying offense and/or the mens rea of that underlying offense amounts to a defect; and if so, whether the filing of a bill of particulars that identified felonious assault as the predicate offense, remedied any defect. As set forth below, we answer all three questions in the affirmative. That is, under a plain error review, the bill of particulars in this case cured the otherwise defective indictment and provided adequate notice of the underlying offense supporting appellant's murder charge. We also find that appellant's conviction is not against the manifest weight of the evidence and that the court's order of restitution was proper. Accordingly, the trial court's November 9, 2017 decision is affirmed.

Facts and Procedural History

{¶ 3} The state presented evidence that appellant, aged 19, shot and killed "S.H.," aged 16, on the afternoon of June 11, 2017, in the street next to Sherman Elementary School, in Toledo.

{¶ 4} The victim's friend, "A.J.," testified that, on the day of his murder, the victim texted her and asked her to meet him on the school playground. A.J. met him there, and the two talked while seated on a bench, located inside a fenced area of the school's playground. Within ten minutes, three "boys," all of them unknown to A.J., rode up on their bikes. The victim got up from the bench and, walking backward with his eyes on the boys, exited the gate. The victim then turned and began to run across Peck Street, which borders the school. A.J. watched as appellant, who was in the middle of the street, "pulled out a gun and shot [the victim]." The victim "fell immediately."

{¶ 5} Appellant was the last to pedal away, and before he did, he looked directly at A.J., who remained near the bench. A.J. testified that appellant "was standing up on the bike almost like dropping a gun while he was looking at me." A.J. could not recall what appellant was wearing, except to say that he was not wearing a hat. After they were gone, A.J. flagged down the driver of a car to ask for help, and the driver called 911.

{¶ 6} Officer Gary Bunting and his partner were the first to respond to the dispatch. When Bunting turned his patrol car onto Peck Street, he saw a person standing in the middle of the road flagging him down and another person lying near the curb, on his left side, face up, close to the intersection of Peck and Walnut Street. Bunting testified that the victim was alive, but non-responsive. "Within a minute," an ambulance arrived, and the victim was transported to the hospital, where he died later that day.

{¶ 7} Toledo Police Detective Jeffery Jackson, who works in the scientific investigations unit, processed the crime scene and took photographs. When he arrived at the scene, about 3:15 p.m., he collected evidence, including a fired 9 millimeter shell casing that police found on the sidewalk, near the intersection of Peck and Walnut Streets. Later, Jackson attended the autopsy and observed bullet fragments that were removed from "inside the victim's skull." According to the coroner, who testified, the bullet entered the back of the victim's skull and exited on the opposite side. The actual bullet was not recovered.

{¶ 8} The police viewed videos captured by three surveillance cameras that were in the area. The first video, taken by a camera attached to the school, shows the victim walking backward, exiting the playground through the gate. A second or two later, three males on bikes follow him. All four then moved out of view of the camera. The second video, taken from a private residence on a nearby street (Locust), shows two boys on bicycles riding down the road, followed ten seconds later, at 2:32:12 p.m., by a third boy, who was later identified as appellant. The third video is similar to the second, taken around the same time, from a front porch of a home on Peck Street and shows the same two boys on bikes, followed seconds later by appellant. After appellant and his friends biked out of view, two police cars can be seen driving down Peck Street, toward the school (in the opposite direction of the bikers), in response to the 911 dispatch.

{¶ 9} Portions of the videos were released to the public, and "within a few days" the three young men on bicycles were identified as appellant, Omar Sykes, and Antonio Scott. A warrant was issued for appellant, and a photo array, that included appellant's picture, was shown to A.J. on June 27, 2017. A.J. identified appellant as the shooter.

{¶ 10} Detective Anderson interviewed appellant at 10:00 p.m. on July 3, 2017, after his arrest. The interview was played for the jury. When asked if he knew why a warrant had been issued for his arrest, appellant asked if it had something to do with "the bike situation." Det. Anderson responded that appellant was there because of "the thing that happened at Walnut and Peck * * * near Sherman School." Appellant asked, "I'm here because I'm a witness, right?" Anderson told appellant that the police had viewed videos and talked to "eye-witnesses" including "Sykes." At that time, Anderson provided appellant with his Miranda rights.

{¶ 11} During the course of the interrogation, appellant admitted that he had been with Sykes and Scott; that they were on their bikes; that he had seen the victim near the playground; and that the victim was with a "female." Appellant told the detective that he tried to talk to the victim, but the victim "got up and walked away." He maintained that "that's when somebody shot him." Appellant heard a gunshot, but he did not see the shooter, because he was facing the victim and watched him fall after being shot. Appellant confirmed that he was the last of this friends to bike away. He maintained that he was fixing his bike chain, which caused him to be momentarily delayed.

{¶ 12} Appellant admitted that he had, in the past, "fought it out" with the victim over something the victim said about one of appellant's friends, but ever since then, their relationship was "cool," and appellant "had no trouble with the man." Appellant maintained his innocence, throughout the interrogation. When it ended, the police notified appellant that he would be charged with murder.

{¶ 13} The victim's mother, "F.H.," testified that her son and appellant had gone to Sherman Elementary School together and that there was "bad blood" between them. Sometime in 2016, appellant knocked on the door of her home and asked to see the victim. Outside, the victim and appellant exchanged words. When F.H. went to see what was going on, she observed appellant put his fists up in the air, as if to fight. Appellant told F.H., "no disrespect, but they telling me your son want to fight me." F.H. told appellant not to listen to what others were saying and then told appellant to leave. As he did, appellant told the victim, "I catch you."

{¶ 14} After her son's murder, F.H. captured several "screen shots" from appellant's Facebook page.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2019 Ohio 423, 130 N.E.3d 1031, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bey-ohioctapp-2019.