State v. Chaiffetz, Unpublished Decision (6-17-1999)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 17, 1999
DocketCASE NUMBER 9-98-20
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Chaiffetz, Unpublished Decision (6-17-1999) (State v. Chaiffetz, Unpublished Decision (6-17-1999)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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State v. Chaiffetz, Unpublished Decision (6-17-1999), (Ohio Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION This appeal arises from a judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of Marion County, entered pursuant to a jury verdict finding Ira N. Chaiffetz guilty of Conspiracy to Commit Murder, a felony of the first degree, in violation of R.C. 2923.01(A). Chaiffetz was sentenced to nine years in prison and fined $20,000 for the offense. For the reasons expressed in the following opinion, we affirm the conviction and sentence.

The legal case against Ira Chaiffetz began on May 15, 1997, when a grand jury returned a single count indictment, alleging that from September 1, 1996 through May 13, 1997, Chaiffetz, with purpose to commit or facilitate a murder, did plan or aid in the commission of a murder with another person, that one or more of them would engage in conduct facilitating the commission of the murder. Chaiffetz allegedly had conspired to murder his ex-wife, Bronwen Bello.

The events leading up to the indictment began months earlier, at the North Central Correctional Institution ("N.C.C.I."), a prison in Marion County, Ohio. In October 1995, Chaiffetz took a job as a physician at N.C.C.I. In this capacity, he became acquainted with an inmate named Victor Gatto, who was serving a sentence for forgery and drug trafficking offenses. Gatto suffered a heart condition that required regular medical attention; consequently, Gatto and Chaiffetz spent a great deal of time together throughout 1996. Ultimately, the two became very familiar with each other's personal lives.

It was no secret among Chaiffetz's co-workers and his inmate patients that the doctor had been involved in an ongoing custody battle with his ex-wife, Bronwen Bello. Chaiffetz and Bello had been married in 1983 and had two children, David and Sarah, before they divorced in 1987. Custody of the children was frequently in dispute.

By 1996, Bronwen was remarried, to a man named John Bello. The Bellos maintained custody of Sarah in Florida. Meanwhile, Chaiffetz had custody of David in Ohio. In the spring of 1996, the latest in a line of custody battles erupted. As the intensity of this dispute increased, so too it seems, did Chaiffetz's animosity toward Bello. In August of that year, a Florida domestic relations court awarded custody of both children to Bello.

Following the devastating loss of his children to a woman he publicly referred to as "Godzilla," Chaiffetz made an agreement with Gatto to pay $12,000 to hire hitmen to kill Bello. From stories Gatto told, Chaiffetz believed Gatto had Mafia connections and would be able to arrange this assassination. Chaiffetz and Gatto agreed that Chaiffetz would pay $4,000 up front, with the remainder due when Bello was dead.

According to the plan, Chaiffetz would make three separate payments totaling $4,000, to Mary McCauley, Gatto's Las Vegas girlfriend. The evidence at trial confirmed that on September 23, 1996, Chaiffetz clocked out of work at 3:40 p.m., drove to a Huntington National Bank branch in Marion, Ohio, and withdrew $2,200 from his account. By 4:25 p.m., Chaiffetz purchased a cashier's check for $2,000 from a Huntington National Bank branch in Delaware, Ohio. Chaiffetz used cash to purchase the check, making it payable to Mary McCauley, and gave the name "John Smith" as purchaser. On October 12, 1996, and again on November 20, 1996, bank surveillance cameras recorded Chaiffetz purchasing $1,000 cashier's checks from State Savings Bank in Columbus, Ohio. Bank tellers confirmed that Chaiffetz used cash for these transactions, that the checks were made out to Mary McCauley, and that he gave the name "James McCauley" as purchaser.

It was Gatto's testimony at trial that although he took this money from Chaiffetz (via McCauley) he never intended to carry out any plans to execute Bronwen Bello. Indeed, Gatto apparently instructed McCauley to use the money Chaiffetz sent to place bets on his behalf. Taped conversations between Gatto and McCauley supported the fact McCauley was upset with Gatto for gambling this money away. It seemed that McCauley had hoped to use the money toward a future real estate purchase and did not want to alienate Chaiffetz from future participation in a real estate venture by squandering his money. Nevertheless, the evidence at trial also confirmed that McCauley used $500 of the money to purchase a secured credit card for herself.

Although there was some evidence that McCauley had hoped to use the money she had received for a future real estate purchase, it was McCauley's contention at trial that she did not know exactly why she was receiving the cashier's checks through the mail. She was aware that they had come from Chaiffetz (the two had some brief telephone conversations on the matter) as a result of his relationship with Gatto. She assumed that it had something to do with drugs since Gatto had a long history in the drug trafficking trade and McCauley recalled Gatto stating that Chaiffetz was interested in hearing about the business. It was not until about December 4, 1996 that she learned the purpose behind the checks. Gatto informed her in a letter "that the doctor wanted his wife whacked."

According to Gatto, after Chaiffetz sent payments totaling $4,000 to McCauley, Chaiffetz began to question Gatto about when the hitmen would complete their job. In order to stall Chaiffetz, Gatto made up a story that the hitmen had been arrested and detained in Florida and that he would have to arrange for different hitmen to kill Bello. In February 1997, unable to further stall Chaiffetz, and believing that "one way or another" the doctor would see that the execution took place, Gatto wrote a letter to the Attorney General of Ohio, Betty Montgomery, informing her of the violence he feared would take place.

As a result of Gatto's letter, Trooper Kevin Smith from the Ohio State Highway Patrol was assigned to investigate Gatto's allegations. Gatto subsequently agreed to assist police in apprehending Chaiffetz in exchange for the State's promise of assistance in his upcoming parole hearing. To further the investigation, Gatto wore a recording device in April and May 1997, during three of his medical appointments. In the conversations recorded, Chaiffetz and Gatto discussed how Bello could be killed in a drive-by shooting; that "eight grand" was due when the execution was complete; that the hitmen would make Bello disappear the way Chaiffetz wanted and that, if he got in the way, the hitmen would take out John Bello as well. Moreover, the two men discussed how this wasn't the first time someone had tried to kill "the broad"; that she would "be killed before the week's up;" it would happen right away; and that Chaiffetz was afraid he would have the "heat" on him.

According to Trooper Smith's instructions, Gatto told Chaiffetz to send the "hitmen" photographs of Bello. Gatto gave Chaiffetz the address of a specific Cleveland, Ohio, post office box that was then monitored by police. An envelope addressed to "James McCauley" containing pictures of Bronwen Bello was sent through the Columbus, Ohio Post Office, with a postmark dated April 11, 1997. The postal inspector in Cleveland recovered the envelope on April 14, 1997 and turned it over to Trooper Smith. No fingerprints were recovered from the envelope or photos; however, a handwriting analysis of the address written on the envelope claimed "similarities" to Chaiffetz's known handwriting.

Also at the trooper's direction, Gatto requested Chaiffetz make an additional payment to McCauley. Gatto suggested to a reluctant Chaiffetz that he should pay $2,000 more, half the contract price, before the hitmen would be sent to kill Bello.

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State v. Chaiffetz, Unpublished Decision (6-17-1999), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-chaiffetz-unpublished-decision-6-17-1999-ohioctapp-1999.