State v. Crisp

2012 Ohio 1730
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 3, 2012
Docket10CA3404
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2012 Ohio 1730 (State v. Crisp) 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. Crisp, 2012 Ohio 1730 (Ohio Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Crisp, 2012-Ohio-1730.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT SCIOTO COUNTY

State of Ohio, : Case No. 10CA3404

Plaintiff-Appellee, :

v. : DECISION AND JUDGMENT ENTRY Mark Crisp, :

Defendant-Appellant. : RELEASED 04/03/12 ______________________________________________________________________ APPEARANCES:

Timothy Young, Ohio State Public Defender, and Jeremy J. Masters, Ohio State Assistant Public Defender, Columbus, Ohio, for appellant.

Mark Kuhn, Scioto County Prosecutor, Portsmouth, Ohio, for appellee. ______________________________________________________________________ Per Curiam

{¶1} Amber Howard, a 21-year-old pregnant mother, disappeared in 2007 and

months later her skeletal remains were discovered in a state park. After authorities

found Howard’s blood and DNA in Mark Crisp’s former rental home, he was convicted

of: (1) the murder by termination of Howard’s pregnancy and the felonious assault of her

unborn fetus; (2) the murder of Howard and the murder by termination of her pregnancy;

(3) tampering with evidence by concealing Howard’s body and gross abuse of a corpse

by burying her body in a shallow grave.

{¶2} Crisp contends that he committed these respective crimes with the same

conduct and thus, the trial court was required to merge them at sentencing under Ohio’s

multiple-count statute. The state candidly concedes that the murder by termination of

Howard’s pregnancy and the felonious assault to her unborn fetus required merger as Scioto App. No. 10CA3404 2

the evidence indicated that Crisp terminated the pregnancy by causing significant

trauma to the unborn child in a single attack and with a single animus. We agree.

{¶3} But Howard’s murder and murder by the unlawful termination of her

pregnancy do not require merger even though the same conduct arguably led to the

completion of both crimes. Because Crisp knew that if he killed Howard he would also

terminate the pregnancy, we conclude the two crimes were each committed with a

separate animus.

{¶4} We also conclude that the trial court was required to merge Crisp’s

conviction for tampering with evidence and gross abuse of a corpse in light of the

State’s concession that it relied on the same acts in support of both charges and its

failure to identify a separate animus for each crime.

{¶5} Accordingly, we remand this case for resentencing on the murder by

termination of pregnancy and the felonious assault of Howard’s unborn fetus and on the

tampering with evidence and gross abuse of a corpse.

I. Summary of the Evidence

{¶6} Two days prior to her disappearance on August 10, 2007, Amber Howard

visited a clinic and tested positive for pregnancy. At the trial her mother, grandmother,

and a pregnancy clinic worker testified that she was “showing.” However, both also

indicated Howard was slight in build and only had what one of them described as a “pop

belly”, i.e., she was in the early stages of pregnancy.

{¶7} The night she disappeared Amber Howard, Mary Howard (her mother)

and Mark Crisp, “partied” and smoked crack together at Mary Howard’s residence in

Portsmouth, Ohio. Around midnight, Amber Howard left the residence in a vehicle Scioto App. No. 10CA3404 3

driven by Mark Crisp to obtain more crack cocaine. No one saw or heard from her

again. Crisp later told Mary Howard and Amber Howard’s grandmother that he dropped

Amber off in Portsmouth that night, although he told both women inconsistent stories

about where that drop-off occurred.

{¶8} A week later, law enforcement authorities in Scioto County opened a

missing person investigation, which made little progress for many months. Then in the

spring of 2008, a mushroom hunter located a human skull in Shawnee State Park. Law

enforcement recovered the skull and other skeletal remains, which were scattered over

a large area, apparently due to animal activity. Investigators sent the remains to Ohio’s

Bureau of Criminal Investigation (BCI) for analysis, where employees matched DNA

found on the remains to Howard’s known DNA profile.

{¶9} Months later, Detective Triggs of the Scioto County Sheriff’s Department,

received a tip that a Jennifer Lindsey (a former girlfriend and acquaintance of Mark

Crisp) had information about Howard’s disappearance. When detectives interviewed

Lindsey, she told them of a possible crime scene in a rental home that Crisp occupied at

the time of Howard’s disappearance.

{¶10} Detectives searched the vacant rental home and located a small

rectangular area in Crisp’s former bedroom corner where the carpeting and floorboards

had been removed, revealing the baseboards. Some of the carpet around this area had

apparent bleach stains. The drywall in the same corner was cracked and impacted, as

if a large object collided with it. A test conducted by a BCI agent detected blood in

carpet fibers, baseboards, and on the impacted drywall. The agent removed these

materials and sent them to BCI for further analysis. Forensic analysts at BCI matched Scioto App. No. 10CA3404 4

blood found on the carpet fiber and baseboards to Amber Howard’s DNA profile. They

could not obtain a DNA profile from the drywall.

{¶11} Detectives also obtained a search warrant for a Geo Tracker automobile

that Crisp allegedly drove at the time Howard went missing. The BCI agent located

blood in the rear cargo carpeted area of the car. BCI forensic analysts later positively

matched this blood with Howard’s DNA.

{¶12} Detective Triggs then interviewed Crisp, who admitted “partying” and

smoking crack with Amber Howard on the night of August 10, 2007 at Mary Howard’s

residence. But he denied leaving with Amber Howard and also claimed that she had

never been in the home he rented in 2007. Crisp admitted driving a Geo Tracker in

2007. When asked why floorboards and carpeting were missing from the bedroom,

Crisp admitted removing these items as the result of a fallen candle, which caused a

fire.

{¶13} Detective Triggs then told Crisp that law enforcement found Amber

Howard’s blood and DNA in his home. Crisp could not explain the presence of

Howard’s blood or DNA and repeatedly denied knowing anything about her

disappearance and murder.

{¶14} The state indicted Crisp and charged him in Count One of murder with the

underlying crime being felonious assault, which was separately charged in Count Three

of the indictment. In Count Two, the state charged Crisp with murder by unlawful

termination of pregnancy. Count Four charged Crisp with another felonious assault

relating to Howard’s unborn fetus. The remaining counts relevant to this appeal are: Scioto App. No. 10CA3404 5

Count Six, tampering with evidence, concerning Crisp’s attempt to “conceal” Howard’s

corpse; and Count 8, gross abuse of her corpse.

{¶15} After the jury found Crisp guilty of these charges, the trial court merged

Count Three, the felonious assault of Howard, with Count One, her murder, but refused

to merge any of the remaining convictions. After the court sentenced him to a long

prison term, Crisp filed this appeal.

II. Assignment of Error

{¶16} Crisp assigns one error:

{¶17} The trial court erred when it imposed separate sentences for offenses that

arose from the same conduct, were not committed separately or with a separate

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2012 Ohio 1730, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-crisp-ohioctapp-2012.