State v. Broe, Unpublished Decision (6-13-2003)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 13, 2003
DocketAppeal No. C-020521, Trial No. B-0106816.
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Broe, Unpublished Decision (6-13-2003) (State v. Broe, Unpublished Decision (6-13-2003)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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State v. Broe, Unpublished Decision (6-13-2003), (Ohio Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION.
{¶ 1} Appellant John P. Broe was convicted of murdering his wife, Shannon Broe, and the 5-month-old fetus she carried. (Because appellant and his murdered wife share the same surname, we refer to them by their first names.) A jury found John guilty of two counts of aggravated murder in violation of R.C. 2903.01(A) and one count of tampering with evidence in violation of R.C. 2921.12(A)(1). The trial court sentenced John to life imprisonment with parole eligibility after twenty years for each of the aggravated murders and to five years' incarceration for tampering with evidence. It ordered the sentences to be served consecutively.

{¶ 2} John raises seven assignments of error. He contends that the trial court erred by (1) overruling his motion to suppress the statements that he had made to the police; (2) denying his motions for a mistrial and for curative instructions following the state's deliberate elicitation of hearsay; (3) erroneously admitting expert opinion evidence about the cause of the fetus's death; (4) denying his Crim.R. 29 motion and accepting the jury's verdict where the evidence was insufficient to support his conviction for aggravated murder in connection with the unlawful termination of a pregnancy; and (5) denying his motion for a mistrial in response to prosecutorial misconduct. In his last two assignments, John claims that he was denied the effective assistance of counsel and that the record fails to support the imposition of maximum, consecutive sentences.

{¶ 3} We affirm the conviction and the two consecutive life sentences, but modify the sentence for tampering with evidence.

I. John and Shannon's Relationship

{¶ 4} John and Shannon met when they were in their early teens and had been married almost two years on the morning that John killed her. Shannon was employed as a clerk in a retirement community, and John worked at a shoe store. Shannon was 24 years of age and expecting the couple's first child in four months. She had made preparations for the birth of the child, had chosen a name, had bought baby clothing, and had designed the nursery.

{¶ 5} Shannon and her family were very close. She and her mother, Sharon Nolan, spoke to each other several times every day. John and Shannon lived in a home purchased from Shannon's parents, and Shannon drove a car that had belonged to Nolan.

{¶ 6} The couple had been experiencing marital problems for several months. In fact, John had moved out of their home for a two-month period approximately six months before he killed Shannon. And John had been having an affair with a co-worker, who was also pregnant.

II. Shannon's Disappearance

{¶ 7} The last time Nolan saw Shannon was Tuesday, September 4, 2001, when Shannon joined her parents and siblings for dinner at Nolan's home. That night Shannon prepared a list of persons to invite to her baby shower, and the family traveled to a store to see the items that Shannon had chosen for the nursery. The last time Nolan spoke to Shannon was the following Thursday when Shannon called to tell her that she had arrived home from work.

{¶ 8} The next morning Nolan learned that Shannon had failed to appear for a doctor's appointment. When Nolan called Shannon's employer, she learned that Shannon had failed to come to work. When she received no response to messages she had left on Shannon's home and cellular telephones, Nolan called John's cellular telephone. John said that he had been called into work and had not noticed whether Shannon had been home the previous evening. He had assumed that she was sleeping upstairs. John had slept in the downstairs bedroom. John later told Nolan that he and Shannon had argued during a telephone conversation the previous evening.

{¶ 9} Nolan asked John to look for Shannon in the house. He called Nolan and told her that Shannon's wallet, purse, and cellular telephone were present, but that Shannon was not there. Nolan told John to wait for her arrival.

{¶ 10} Nolan drove to the house. Discovering that no one was home, she entered the house with her set of keys. When she called John's cellular telephone, he answered, explaining that he had left to purchase cigarettes. After calling Shannon's friends and family, Nolan called the police.

{¶ 11} Family and friends searched for Shannon over the weekend. According to Nolan, John seemed unconcerned. He stayed in the basement washing clothes and talking to co-workers on his cellular telephone. When Nolan asked John to help her search for Shannon, he accompanied her to two houses and then left.

{¶ 12} On Monday, Nolan received a telephone call from John asking her if the police had been there. She told him that three officers had been to her house and that her husband had told them that John was at work. John told her that two officers were at the shoe store asking him to leave with them. Later that day, several police officers and clergy informed Nolan that they had found Shannon's body.

III. John's Statements

{¶ 13} According to John's confession, he and Shannon had been arguing on Thursday, and she had told him that she would not be home after work. When John returned home, his girlfriend met him there. She left early Friday morning. Soon after his girlfriend left, Shannon returned home. When she asked if John's girlfriend had been in the house, John, to anger Shannon, told her that he and his girlfriend had engaged in sexual intercourse. He and Shannon began arguing. Shannon took a knife with a five-inch blade from the kitchen and advanced toward him. He picked up a child's aluminum bat from the top of a dresser located in the first-floor bedroom. He warned Shannon that if she came near him he would hit her with the bat. He shoved her away from him twice. The third time she came toward him, John swung the bat in an attempt to hit Shannon's shoulder. Instead, he hit her "square in the middle of the face." She fell on the bed. When she started to get up and to come at him again, John swung and hit Shannon in the head several times.

{¶ 14} John then brought a plastic bin from the basement and placed Shannon's body in it. After he took her body to the basement, he cleaned blood from the bedroom curtain, a wall, the ceiling, the windowsill, and the top of the window. He then backed his car down the driveway, opened the garage door, and placed the bin containing Shannon's body in the trunk of his car. He put the bloody sheets and pillow, and the clothes that he had been wearing in a garbage bag. He disposed of the bag and the baseball bat in a location that he could not recall. He drove off an interstate exit ramp and hid the bin containing Shannon's body in some underbrush. On the way home, John received a call on his cellular telephone asking him to report to work.

{¶ 15} Saturday night, John returned to where he had concealed Shannon's body and buried it with a shovel that he had taken from his grandfather's storage facility. (He later hid the shovel at the shoe store.) He then cleaned his car, returned home, and, after taking a shower, sat down with the family.

{¶ 16} Before his confession, John had spoken to the police several times in relation to Shannon's disappearance. On the Friday following Shannon's disappearance, he spoke at his house to police officers who had responded to Nolan's call reporting that Shannon was missing. Cincinnati Police Officer Stephen Bender talked to John at the house and noted that John had a fresh scratch on his neck.

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Broe, Unpublished Decision (6-13-2003), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-broe-unpublished-decision-6-13-2003-ohioctapp-2003.