State v. English

2020 Ohio 4682
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 30, 2020
DocketC-180697
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

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Bluebook
State v. English, 2020 Ohio 4682 (Ohio Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. English, 2020-Ohio-4682.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT OF OHIO HAMILTON COUNTY, OHIO

STATE OF OHIO, : APPEAL NO. C-180697 TRIAL NO. B-1804296 Plaintiff-Appellee, :

vs. : O P I N I O N.

KAHLIA ENGLISH, :

Defendant-Appellant. :

Criminal Appeal From: Hamilton County Court of Common Pleas

Judgment Appealed From Is: Affirmed

Date of Judgment Entry on Appeal: September 30, 2020

Joseph T. Deters, Hamilton County Prosecuting Attorney, and Judith Anton Lapp, Assistant Prosecuting Attorney, for Plaintiff-Appellee,

Michael K. Allen & Associates, Michael K. Allen and Bryan R. Perkins, for Defendant-Appellant. OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS

W INKLER , Judge.

{¶1} Kahlia English was convicted of murder and having weapons while

under a disability for fatally shooting Elijah Wheeler (“Elijah”), after Elijah became

the target of English’s anger toward Elijah’s uncle, Eric Wheeler (“Eric”). English

now appeals, arguing his convictions should be reversed due to the lack of credible

evidence, the admission and use of propensity evidence, the introduction of

unauthenticated Facebook evidence, the prosecutor’s misconduct, the jury’s

observation of him in handcuffs, the denial of his right to the effective assistance of

counsel, the trial court’s mishandling of the jury’s verdicts, a Batson violation during

voir dire, and the cumulative effect of error at trial. For the reasons that follow, we

affirm.

Background Facts and Procedure

{¶2} English was tried to a jury on charges related to the July 27, 2018,

shooting death of Elijah in the Cumminsville area of Cincinnati. Elijah was shot five

times and died shortly thereafter in front of a church on Weber Street at Borden

Street. The church was where members of the Wheeler and English families often

gathered with friends. The families are related by the marriage of Eric’s aunt to

English’s uncle. At the time of the shooting, there was a group of men gathered in

front of the church gambling and smoking marijuana. To prove that English

murdered Elijah, the state relied primarily on the testimony of Eric and two

eyewitnesses, Brandon Crawford—Eric’s first cousin but also a relative of English—

and Angela Hardin—a distant relative on English’s side of the family.

{¶3} Eric testified that he and English, known as “Kaleek,” shared a close,

“brother-like” bond, evinced by a hand tattoo on each of the other’s birthdate. That

close bond ended and became hostile in 2016 or 2017, when English was injured in a

2 OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS

shooting. Eric would not elaborate about the demise of the close relationship. He

implied it involved his refusal to become involved when English was shot, explaining

that he likes to “stay in [his] own lane.” He further indicated that English, who he

knew to sometimes carry a firearm, “just be outgrowing people.”

{¶4} According to Eric, on the day of the shooting, he and English were in

front of the church in the late afternoon playing dice with others, including Elijah

and Crawford. At one point, Eric became so angry at English that he grabbed the

dice off the ground and threw them before leaving. Eric further testified that he

received a call from Crawford about 15 minutes later telling him that Elijah had been

shot.

{¶5} Crawford testified that he had known English as “Kaleek” for many

years and considered him a “friend.” Like Eric, Crawford said that on the day of the

shooting he was “chilling” in front of the church with English and others. Around

5:30 p.m., Eric became upset during a dice game, “threw the dice,” and then left.

Upon Eric’s dramatic departure, English also departed.

{¶6} According to Crawford, English returned to the church a short time

later in a car. After exiting from the car, English “called everybody together” to the

“church steps.” As Crawford walked toward the steps, he heard English give “a little

speech” to Elijah and the seven or so others who had assembled.

{¶7} Crawford recalled that during the speech English reminded the crowd

“that he had been shot before.” English then focused on Eric’s disrespectful actions.

English said that he “loved everybody” and did not know why Eric had thrown the

dice and he wished “it wasn’t like that.” English then taunted: “if anybody got a

problem with me,” “[y]ou-all going to have to kill me.” After a silent period, Elijah

spoke up and had words with English. Crawford could not remember details except

3 OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS

that the argument involved something in the past and an accusation of a “set up.”

When Elijah defended his family, Crawford saw English pull out a gun and fire at

Elijah while threatening “to kill” everyone around him. He described English’s gun

as “kind of big,” and an “automatic,” not like a revolver.

{¶8} Crawford saw no other guns before he ran away from the scene while

English was shooting. He did not look back, but returned minutes later to find Elijah

lying on the sidewalk in front of the church steps taking his last breaths. English was

not there and the police soon responded.

{¶9} Crawford further testified that he called Eric and told him what he

had seen, and gave a statement to the police identifying “Kaleek” as the shooter.

{¶10} Hardin testified she was returning to her home on Weber Street in her

truck with the windows down just before the shooting. She heard “a lot of hollering”

from a “bunch of boys” in front of the church as she approached the intersection of

Weber and Borden Streets. As she turned the corner to Weber Street, she heard a

“gun shot.” When she looked out her side window opening, she saw a black male

with black hair “standing in the crowd” “on the sidewalk,” in front of the church with

an “arm out shooting the gun.” Then the crowd “r[an]” in different directions while

“screaming.” As she continued to her home on the dead-end street, she heard “four

or five shots” but did not look back at the crowd. She described the gun as “gray or

silver,” and further testified that she had not seen any other weapons, but had seen a

black, mid-sized sedan on the street.

{¶11} When asked by the prosecutor if the body type of the shooter matched

that of English, Hardin said that she did not know English by sight. She was

subsequently impeached on the former statement by the detective investigating the

4 OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS

murder, who testified that Hardin had told the police that the shooter’s body type

matched that of English.

{¶12} The evidence collected by the police, who had arrived at the scene

about eight minutes after the shooting, corroborated Crawford’s and Hardin’s

eyewitness accounts. Although the police did not recover a weapon, the ballistic

evidence and location of the six “Hornady .40 caliber S&W” spent casings suggested

there was just one shooter, who had shot a larger-sized, semiautomatic handgun

from the sidewalk.

{¶13} Additionally, a surveillance video captured from a property down the

street from the church showed a black sedan traveling up Borden Street toward the

scene shortly before the shooting. Subsequently, three males are seen running away

from scene, followed less than a minute later by the same sedan.

{¶14} The state’s evidence also showed that English was arrested several

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2020 Ohio 4682, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-english-ohioctapp-2020.