State v. Franklin

6 Ohio App. Unrep. 3
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 15, 1990
DocketCase No. C-890028
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Ohio App. Unrep. 3 (State v. Franklin) 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. Franklin, 6 Ohio App. Unrep. 3 (Ohio Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

This cause came on to be heard upon the appeal, the transcript of the docket, journal entries and original papers from the Hamilton County Court of Common Pleas, the transcript of the proceedings, the assignments of error, the briefs and arguments of counsel.

On August 26,1988, a grand jury in Hamilton County returned an indictment in which the defendant-appellant, George T. Franklin, was charged with three offenses:

(1) Aggravated murder, for the purposeful killing of one Gerald R. Strauss, with the specification that Franklin committed the murder while committing an aggravated burglary on August 7, 1988; (2) aggravated burglary of the permanent habitation of Gerald R. Strauss on August 7, 1988; and (3) aggravated burglary of the permanent habitation of one Rasha Winston on July 28,1988.

After entering a plea of not guilty, Franklin moved to sever the counts, which motion was overruled.

On November 28,1988, trial to a jury commenced, and three days later Franklin was found guilty as charged in all counts and in the specification.

The penalty phase of the proceedings commenced on December 12, 1988, and the judge imposed the death penalty for the aggravated murder, on the basis of the recommendation given by the jury after it concluded that the aggravating circumstance out-weighed the mitigating factors beyond a reasonable doubt. With respect to the aggravated burglaries, Franklin was sentenced to consecutive terms of imprisonment of ten to twenty-five years with ten years' actual incarceration.

In the review of a death-penalty case, R.C. 2929.05 requires us to complete three tasks. After addressing each assignment of error presented by the appellant, we must independently determine whether the specified aggravating circumstances of the homicide in question outweigh the factors presented in mitigation of punishment, and then determine whether the sentence of death is appropriate^ after considering whether it is excessive or disproportionate to the penalty imposed in similar cases.

Having studied the death-penalty cases in this jurisdiction as the law requires, and having reviewed the record certified to us by the trial court, we find no prejudicial error in this appeal and overrule all six of the assignments of error before us. We are further persuaded that the [4]*4aggravated circumstance of the homicide of Gerald R. Strauss outweighs the mitigating factors present in this record, and that the sentence of death imposed below is appropriate

I.

On July 21, 1988, Rasha Winston left the apartment in which she lived at 2632 Eden Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio, at about 1:00 p.m. When she returned some three hours later, she discovered that a screen upon a rear window had been cut and removed. Miss Winston found that her television set was missing and certain items, including a framed photograph, were disarranged. She summoned Cincinnati police, whose investigation revealed that the window through which they believed entry to the apartment had been gained was at a considerable height above ground level. The earth immediately beneath the window bore a circular imprint similar, to their eyes, to that which would have been made by a metal garbage can placed there to stand upon by one who intended to enter through the window above.

An investigating officer observed that the only metal garbage cans in the vicinity were located in the rear of a building immediately adjacent to the scene of the burglary. Ultimately, that location was determined to be the residence of Franklin's grandfather. One of those cans bore traces of mud on its rim even though, when first seen, it rested upon a concrete surface. Rasha Winston had had a passing acquaintance with Franklin and had witnessed him watching her on repeated occasions through a window in his grandfather's house while Franklin was living there. Consequently, Winston voiced to the police her suspicion that he was the burglar.

When police located Franklin, he appeared to them to be nervous and he made numerous inquiries about the nature of the evidence police had gathered with respect to the burglary. At that time, Franklin gave his name as George Fichtel.

On the following day, police again contacted Winston, learned that a framed photograph had been moved from where it had been when she left the apartment on July 21, and recovered from the frame a fingerprint which was determined eventually to belong to Franklin. When he was fingerprinted to provide a standard of comparison, he identified himself as George Franklin.

On or about July 23, 1988, Gerald R. Strauss, the victim of the murder, and his fiancee, Karen Strain, moved into a unit in a condominium, which they intended to be their home, located in the immediate neighborhood of Rasha Winston's apartment. One of the items placed in the new home was a bottle which had contained the champagne which they had consumed together on what Strain described as a particularly romantic evening during their courtship For want of a better place, Strain put the bottle on the sill of a window on the first floor of their home.

On the morning of August 7, 1988, Strain left the home to attend to business in another city. During that day, a Sunday, Strauss entertained friends, and after they had departed he was seen by a neighbor cleaning up his home at about 10:00 p.m.

Sometime between 11:00 and 11:30 p.m. the same night, a woman was walking with her dog along a path that carried her by Strauss's condominium. At trial, she testified that as she got to the building she heard "a horrible scream and it was a scream of no." (T.p. 910.) She said she was "transfixed" and stood there looking to see "if something was wrong." (T.p. 911.)

When Strauss failed to appear at his place of employment on Monday, August 8, a fellow employee attempted to reach him by telephone. When repeated calls produced only a busy signal, that caller contacted a telephone operator who advised that no one was using the line. The fellow employee, Mitch Walker, then went to Strauss's home. Walker testified that, when he arrived at about 10:00 a.m., the front door was slightly ajar, propped open by a piece of carpeting. When no one answered his calls, Walker decided to seek assistance and found a police officer in a shopping area nearby. Only the officer entered the apartment. He found the battered body of Gerald Strauss in a second-floor bedroom.

The officer secured the scene after calling for assistance from other police. He then began an investigation of the premises and saw a window on the side of the house from which the screen had been cut and partially removed.

The postmortem examination of Strauss's body revealed "defensive wounds" on the right hand and also showed that Strauss's face and skull had been beaten and crushed to the extent that the left eye was destroyed and fragments of the skull driven into the brain. Because of the extensive injuries, the coroner was unable to determine how many blows had been struck, but he was certain that death had resulted from the multiple injuries. Ultimately, a police officer and his search dog recovered, among other items identified as having come from Strauss's home, a [5]*5hammer within underbrush in a wooded area not far from the murder scene. That hammer, wiped clean of any fingerprints but bloodstained, was determined to be the murder weapon.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Ohio App. Unrep. 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-franklin-ohioctapp-1990.