State v. Ducic

834 N.E.2d 880, 162 Ohio App. 3d 721, 2005 Ohio 4291
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 18, 2005
DocketNo. 84900.
StatusPublished

This text of 834 N.E.2d 880 (State v. Ducic) 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. Ducic, 834 N.E.2d 880, 162 Ohio App. 3d 721, 2005 Ohio 4291 (Ohio Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

Kenneth A. Rocco, Judge.

{¶ 1} Defendant-appellant, Mark Ducic, appeals from his convictions on two counts of aggravated murder with specifications and the sentences subsequently imposed upon him.

{¶ 2} Ducic asserts that his convictions are based upon insufficient evidence. He further asserts that his convictions are the result of the admission during trial of improper “other acts” evidence. Lastly, Ducic claims that the trial court failed to comply with statutory requirements in imposing consecutive terms for his convictions.

{¶ 3} After a thorough review of the lengthy record, however, this court cannot agree with Ducic; therefore, his convictions and sentences are affirmed.

{¶ 4} Ducic’s convictions result, in part, from his own inability to remain quiet about his role in the deaths of two of his friends. Although both deaths originally seemed accidental, his boasts that he had caused the deaths reopened investigation into them.

{¶ 5} The first death occurred on August 5, 2001. That morning, Ducic informed Marie Miller, his ex-wife, over the telephone that he and his current girlfriend, Barbara Davis, had spent the night at Donald Ehrke’s house and that he had awoken to find Davis not breathing but foaming at the mouth. Miller responded frantically; she ordered Ducic to call 911. Ducic indicated he would. Nearly an hour later, Ducic made the call, but by that time, Davis was beyond medical aid; she was pronounced dead at the hospital.

*724 {¶ 6} The subsequent autopsy indicated that Davis had died from a drug overdose, since she had ingested alcohol, Valium, hydrocodone (found in Vicodin), and lethal amounts of oxycodone (found in OxyContin), and cocaine. David Borez, the Euclid police detective assigned to investigate Davis’s death, thought some circumstances surrounding it seemed suspicious. First, Ducic did not appear to be upset by his girlfriend’s death.

{¶ 7} Indeed, Miller and another female friend arrived on the scene just after Davis’s body had been transported and found Ducic unaffected. He even confided to them he wanted a prostitute. Ehrke, in contrast, seemed panicked while he sought to clean his house of drug paraphernalia.

{¶ 8} Since the circle of friends in which Ducic, Davis, and Ehrke moved was highly involved in drug use, Davis’s death by overdose was not out of the realm of possibility. Ducic, in particular, seemed to enjoy insisting that his friends indulge in various drugs. Nevertheless, Davis’s friends did not know her to use OxyContin, which was one of the drugs found in a lethal amount in her system.

{¶ 9} Ducic, on the other hand, used OxyContin often. Thus, Davis’s brother was not alerted when Ducic called him on August 4, 2001, seeking to purchase a highly potent form of the drug. Ducic made the purchase just before he and Davis left for Ehrke’s house that night.

{¶ 10} Second, Borez knew that Ducic had waited for some time after discovering Davis’s condition before summoning emergency services. Upon speaking with several acquaintances of the couple, Borez found that their relationship was not only violent, but strained.

{¶ 11} For instance, during a recent fight, Ducic struck Davis with a car, injuring her legs. Miller knew that Davis was tired of Ducic’s taking her money and letting her take the blame for his drug activities. Moreover, the night before Davis’s death, as friends gave them a ride to Ehrke’s house, Davis and Ducic argued in the back seat of the car.

{¶ 12} Without any particular evidence of foul play, however, the county coroner ruled Davis’s death accidental, and Borez closed the investigation.

{¶ 13} The second death occurred on December 17, 2002. It occurred in the same home as the first; Donald Ehrke was discovered sitting dead in an easy chair in his living room with a remote control in his hand, facing a blank television screen.

{¶ 14} This death also looked suspicious for several reasons. Although Ehrke was obsessive about locking his doors, they were open that morning. His gun collection was missing. Moreover, although Ehrke’s medical history indicated that he took several prescription medications and he died from a drug overdose, his stomach contained no tablets, and his system did not contain his prescription *725 medications. Instead, Ehrke’s blood contained significant amounts of codeine, the antidepressant mirtazapine, the muscle relaxant cyclobenzaprine, cocaine, and Vicodin.

{¶ 15} Only one person, Kenny Watson, admitted visiting Ehrke the previous night; Watson noticed that Ehrke was not acting like himself. However, Ducic told his drug supplier, Kenny Frost, before the body was discovered that Ehrke was dead.

{¶ 16} Prescription cough medicine is composed largely of codeine. A few days prior to Ehrke’s death, Ducic telephoned Miller to ask her to fill her prescription for Hydromet cough syrup because Ehrke was ill. Miller complied and took the bottle to Ehrke’s house. When Ducic later returned the bottle, it was empty. Ducic told her Ehrke drank it, but Miller noticed that Ehrke did not appear to have done so. The autopsy of Ehrke’s body indicated that his lungs were infected with pneumonia at the time of his death.

{¶ 17} Significantly, Ehrke was the only other person present in his house besides Ducic when Davis died. Also significantly, approximately a month before Ehrke’s death, Ducic learned that an indictment had been issued against him.

{¶ 18} Ducic initially did not know the exact offense with which he was charged; he told his current girlfriend that he assumed Ehrke had “betrayed” him. However, the charge actually was one of stalking his girlfriend. Ducic was arrested for this offense and was released on bond on December 5, 2002. Soon thereafter, Ehrke began to argue with him over a $500 debt. Within days, Ehrke died.

{¶ 19} Ehrke’s death raised no immediate investigation; therefore, the county coroner ruled it accidental. Ducic went on with his life at his mother’s home, partying with friends and supplying drugs to them.

{¶ 20} One of the friends who reconnected with Ducic in late 2002 was Brad Weiss. Weiss knew Ducic from a previous time in prison together. At the time Weiss rekindled his acquaintance, he worked as a confidential reliable informant to the Cleveland Police Department. Weiss helped law enforcement personnel obtain evidence against some well-respected businessmen who engaged in drug trafficking. Weiss felt no obligation to inform on his friends.

{¶ 21} His situation, however, changed in the spring of 2003. By that time, Weiss had committed several traffic offenses and had unwittingly become involved in a theft of jewelry. These events placed his parole status in jeopardy. Seeking to forestall a return to prison, Weiss told Cleveland Police Detective Greg Whitney, along with Ohio State Pharmacy Board agent Lynn Mudra, that he had heard Ducic bragging about killing two people. Ducic had indicated that no one knew that the murders had been committed.

*726 {¶ 22} Whitney and Mudra checked into Weiss’s information. After reviewing the circumstances surrounding the deaths of Davis and Ehrke, they implemented a plan with Weiss.

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834 N.E.2d 880, 162 Ohio App. 3d 721, 2005 Ohio 4291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ducic-ohioctapp-2005.