State v. Flaherty

605 N.E.2d 1295, 78 Ohio App. 3d 718, 1992 Ohio App. LEXIS 1278
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 17, 1992
DocketNo. 91AP-659.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 605 N.E.2d 1295 (State v. Flaherty) 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. Flaherty, 605 N.E.2d 1295, 78 Ohio App. 3d 718, 1992 Ohio App. LEXIS 1278 (Ohio Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

Tyack, Judge.

On May 6, 1988, Nancy Flaherty returned home from work in the early morning hours to find her garage door open, the door from the garage into the house open, and her husband’s tool box lying in the middle of the garage floor. She went to a neighbor’s house to get someone to accompany her as she entered the house. When she and the neighbor went inside the residence, they found some household items in disarray. Nancy was nervous and kept saying that something was wrong. When Nancy and the neighbor observed a pool of blood, Nancy started screaming. The neighbor then found Nancy’s husband, Patrick, murdered.

A police investigation initially implicated brothers Joe and Mark Lawwell in the homicide. In November 1989, charges were filed in juvenile court against Nancy’s daughter, Wendy Reed, who had been a girlfriend of Joe Lawwell. Ultimately, Wendy admitted to being a delinquent minor in that she had committed the offense of involuntary manslaughter with respect to the death of her stepfather. In return for her admission to the juvenile charges and a promise to testify, an attempt to bind Wendy over to be treated as an adult was abandoned. The practical result was that Wendy avoided the possibility of facing aggravated murder charges with a life sentence and no parole eligibility for twenty or thirty years at a minimum.

On November 9, 1989, Nancy Flaherty was charged by way of indictment with aggravated murder with death penalty specifications, aggravated robbery, theft and attempted theft. The essential theory of the case was that Nancy had, with prior calculation and design, solicited Joe Lawwell to kill her husband during the course of stealing items from the Flaherty house. The theft charges involved the receipt of the proceeds from Patrick Flaherty’s life insurance and an attempt to obtain funds from the Victims of Crime Compensation Fund of the state of Ohio as a result of Patrick Flaherty’s death.

A jury trial was ultimately commenced in March 1991. Joe and Mark Lawwell did not testify. Wendy Reed was a witness against her mother.

From the beginning of the trial on, the assistant prosecutors assigned to the case sought to elicit information from witnesses which cast Nancy Flaherty in a bad light while illuminating little or in some cases no information relevant to *722 the charges. Thus, the very first witness to testify was Kevin Flaherty, who acknowledged seeing very little of his late brother Patrick in recent years. Still, he was permitted to testify that his deceased brother had a speech impediment. He described Nancy as “pretty dominant” and testified that she physically “picked him [Patrick] up like hardly anything.” Over strenuous defense objections, Kevin Flaherty was permitted to testify about a conversation he claimed he had had with Nancy as early as 1981, in which Nancy was recalled as having said that she had no doubt in her mind that she was going to hell.

The second witness at trial was Kimberly Strandwitz, who had been a nail technician who provided Nancy manicures for less than a year prior to Patrick’s death. Kimberly was called to testify that Nancy had brought a boyfriend of Wendy Reed’s other than Joe Lawwell into the hair salon to have him “de-geeked” before a date with Wendy. Again over defense objection, Kimberly was permitted to testify about a conversation on some unknown date in which Nancy Flaherty indicated that she (Nancy) was mad at the hair salon owner’s daughter because the daughter had supposedly gotten Wendy thrown out of a local high school for drug involvement.

The fourth witness was Craig Frazier, the neighbor who accompanied Nancy into the house on the morning that Patrick Flaherty’s body was’ found. Frazier was permitted to testify, over defense objection, that he thought it was “a little bit strange” that Nancy came to his house to ask him to accompany her into her house under the circumstances. Later in the trial, the defense attempted unsuccessfully to introduce evidence that at least some police officers did not think it the least bit strange for a woman who came home alone and found her garage door open, her husband’s car gone, the door into the house open, and her husband’s tools out of place, to ask a next-door neighbor to accompany her into the house. During cross-examination of the neighbor, a question was asked to ascertain the neighbor’s knowledge of whether or not Nancy’s desire for assistance was related to a seminar regarding rape Nancy had supposedly attended the previous week. A prosecution objection which did not identify the basis for objection to the question was sustained.

As evidentiary rulings such as set forth in the paragraphs above mounted, the attorneys for Nancy Flaherty began objecting less.

Ultimately, Nancy was convicted of aggravated murder with death penalty specifications, theft and attempted theft. She was acquitted of the aggravated robbery charge. After a sentencing hearing, she was sentenced to life in prison with no parole eligibility until she had served twenty full years of imprisonment. She also was sentenced on the theft-related charges.

*723 A timely appealed has been pursued on Nancy Flaherty’s behalf. Five assigned errors are submitted for our consideration:

“I. The defendant was deprived of her constitutional right to a fair trial and due process of law when the state introduced evidence of other acts of the defendant that were prejudicial in nature and by the presentation of other evidence that was improperly admitted.

“II. The defendant was deprived of her right to the effective assistance of counsel, in violation of her constitutional rights, due to the acts and omissions of counsel.

“III. The trial court erred when it entered a judgment of conviction against the defendant for aggravated murder when the conviction was not supported by sufficient evidence and was against the manifest weight of the evidence.

“IV. The trial court erred when it entered a judgment of conviction against the defendant on the two counts of theft when the convictions were not supported by sufficient credible evidence and were against the manifest weight of the evidence.

“V. The trial court erred by imposing felony sentences upon the defendant for the theft convictions when the jury failed to return findings of value in its verdict as required by R.C. 2913.61(A).”

The first assignment of error is in many ways the most critical. At trial, the prosecution was allowed to supplement the evidence relevant to the question of whether Nancy Flaherty (hereinafter “appellant”) was in some way criminally liable for the death of her husband with a series of vignettes about appellant which gave all the appearances of having been offered in support of a theory “she’s a bad person — find her guilty.” Indeed, the appellate staff of the Franklin County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office, to its credit, does not attempt to justify at least some of the vignettes. For instance, appellant’s supposed comment about expecting an unpleasant afterlife is not argued to have been even marginally relevant to any issue before the trial court.

On many occasions over the last ten years, this court has reversed convictions where irrelevant and prejudicial evidence has been presented to the jury.

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Related

State v. Jones, Unpublished Decision (3-29-2007)
2007 Ohio 1443 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2007)
State v. Renner
708 N.E.2d 765 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1998)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
605 N.E.2d 1295, 78 Ohio App. 3d 718, 1992 Ohio App. LEXIS 1278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-flaherty-ohioctapp-1992.