State v. Brinkley

105 Ohio St. 3d 231
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedApril 13, 2005
DocketNo. 2002-2032
StatusPublished
Cited by180 cases

This text of 105 Ohio St. 3d 231 (State v. Brinkley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Brinkley, 105 Ohio St. 3d 231 (Ohio 2005).

Opinions

O’Connor, J.

{¶ 1} On November 6, 1999, Grady “Snoop” Brinkley, defendant-appellant, robbed Rick’s City Diner in Toledo, and police pursued and arrested him that same afternoon. On December 17, 1999, Brinkley’s girlfriend, Shantae Smith, posted bond for him, and he was released from pretrial confinement. On January 7, 2000, Brinkley killed Smith in her apartment by cutting her throat. Then he stole her ATM card and winter coat and fled to Chicago. On January 13, 2000, the FBI arrested Brinkley in Chicago. Thereafter, Brinkley was convicted of the aggravated robbery of the City Diner and the aggravated robbery and aggravated murder of Smith and was sentenced to death.

City Diner Robbery

{¶ 2} In November 1999, Brinkley worked at Rick’s City Diner on Monroe Street in Toledo. Though scheduled, Brinkley did not report for work on November 6, but he arrived at the diner at 1:00 p.m. and told the staff that he was waiting for the owner. At times, Brinkley waited inside the diner and joked with Marissa Brown, the hostess. At other times, he waited outside with Olivia Hunter, who had driven him to the diner. After the 2:00 p.m. closing time, Brown counted the money in the cash register, placed a bank deposit slip and the day’s proceeds, $2,211, into a paper bag, and put the paper bag into her orange purse.

{¶ 3} After Brown got into her car, Brinkley “came up with a [silver] gun and told [Brown] to give him the bag.” Brown “thought he was joking” and “slapped the gun out of [her] face.” In response, Brinkley “cocked the gun back and then punched [her] and told [her] he wasn’t playing, so [she] gave him the bag.” Brinkley then demanded her orange purse and car keys and “told [her] to get out of [her] car and run.” Hunter confirmed that Brinkley had a small, “silver” handgun with him that day.

{¶ 4} After Hunter and Brinkley drove off, Brown went back into the diner and told the cook, “Snoop robbed us.” The cook noticed that Brown’s “mouth [was] full of blood” and “she was all scared.” Toledo police were called and responded.

[232]*232{¶ 5} Hunter testified that after Brinkley got back into her car, he told her to drive him to the Greyhound bus station. He then changed his mind and directed Hunter to drive to a house on Junction Street. Once there, Brinkley introduced Hunter to his girlfriend, Shantae Smith, and gave the orange purse to an older man. Then Hunter drove Brinkley to an apartment complex in Toledo. Police later recovered the purse, which contained the City Diner bank-deposit slip, from a trash can behind that Junction Street house.

{¶ 6} After talking with witnesses at the City Diner, police traced Hunter and Brinkley to the Toledo apartment complex and arrested them that afternoon. Police found $800 hidden in Brinkley’s sock and recovered $400 from Hunter. However, police never recovered the balance of the City Diner receipts, approximately $1,011.

Events After the Robbery and Before the Murder

{¶ 7} On December 3, 1999, Brinkley was arraigned on the City Diner robbery charge, and a bond of $20,000 was set. A pretrial hearing was scheduled for January 6, 2000, and Brinkley’s trial was scheduled for January 18, 2000. Brinkley was confined in the county jail from November 6 until being released on bond on December 17,1999.

{¶ 8} Brinkley’s 18-year-old girlfriend, Smith, changed her life after Brinkley’s arrest. She moved into an apartment on Collingwood, started a new job, and met new co-workers and friends, Lamont Pettaway and Valarie Vasquez. Smith told Vasquez that she wanted to “be free from” Brinkley, and she told Vasquez and Pettaway that she was afraid of Brinkley. Smith became romantically involved with Pettaway; they planned to live together and talked of marriage.

{¶ 9} While in the county jail, Brinkley talked with fellow inmate Samuel Miller about the City Diner robbery. Brinkley told Miller that he had “waited on [Brown] to come out and stuck the pistol in her face and took the money from her.” Brinkley told Miller that “the gun was real.”

{¶ 10} Brinkley told Miller that Brinkley’s girlfriend, Smith, had visited him every week during most of November but less frequently after Thanksgiving. Brinkley also told Miller that Smith “was sleeping with [a co-worker] and riding back and forth to work with him, and she [Smith] wanted to know * * * was [Brinkley] going to do anything to her if she got him out on bond.” Brinkley told Miller that “he played along with [Smith] so she can go ahead and pay the bond. * * * [But] when he got out he was going to hit a lick [i.e., get some cash],” and he “wasn’t coming back to court * * * on the robbery charge.” Instead, he “was going back home, to Chicago.” Brinkley also said, “I’m going to kill that bitch [Smith] before I leave town.”

[233]*233{¶ 11} On December 17, 1999, Smith withdrew $2,000 from her Huntington Bank account and arranged with a bail bond company to post a $20,000 bond to secure Brinkley’s release. Smith and Brinkley each personally guaranteed payment of $20,000 if Brinkley did not show up for future court appearances. Brinkley was released that day, and after his release, he stayed with Smith at her Collingwood apartment.

{¶ 12} On January 6, 2000, at approximately 12:35 p.m., Smith withdrew $50 from her bank account using her Huntington Bank automatic teller machine (ATM) card. That day, Smith worked her normal shift of 3:00 p.m. until 11:00 p.m. In the early morning of January 7, Pettaway dropped her off at home after work. Smith never arrived at work that afternoon.

{¶ 13} On January 6, 2000, Brinkley did not appear for his pretrial hearing on the City Diner robbery charge, and the trial court issued a capias warrant for Brinkley’s arrest. Ameritech business records establish that on January 6 and 7, several telephone calls were made from Smith’s home telephone to the Greyhound bus terminal, and on January 7, a call was made to the Huntington Bank. Also on January 7, a call was placed from the Chicago residence of Brinkley’s mother to Smith’s telephone number.

{¶ 14} Huntington Bank records show that on January 7, 2000, someone tried 16 times to use Smith’s Huntington ATM card in various ATMs to access her bank funds. These attempts failed because no valid personal identification number (PIN) was entered.

{¶ 15} Nine of these attempts to use Smith’s ATM card occurred between 3:37 p.m. and 3:42 p.m. at the Madison Avenue ATM that Smith herself had successfully used the previous day. Photographs taken at the ATM do not fully reveal the face of the person who tried to withdraw funds. A Huntington Bank investigator explained that the ATM cameras, set for users of average height, did not capture the user’s face because the user was too tall. Brinkley is six feet, four inches tall. The photos do depict a male wearing a winter coat identical to a coat that Smith owned. Smith’s blue winter coat was later recovered from Brinkley in Chicago.

{¶ 16} According to Greyhound Bus Company business records, a prepaid ticket was purchased in Chicago at 3:29 p.m., CST, on January 7, 2000, and electronically forwarded for pickup in Toledo. The password needed to pick up the ticket was Alberta, the name of Brinkley’s mother. The ticket was issued for a Grady Brinkley to travel to Chicago and was in fact used to travel on the 6:50 p.m. bus from Toledo to Chicago that night. Bus terminal surveillance video depicts Brinkley in the terminal at 6:29 p.m., when the ticket was claimed.

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Bluebook (online)
105 Ohio St. 3d 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-brinkley-ohio-2005.