State v. Free, Unpublished Decision (2-13-1998)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 13, 1998
DocketC.A. Case No. 15901. T.C. Case No. 95-CR-1723.
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Free, Unpublished Decision (2-13-1998) (State v. Free, Unpublished Decision (2-13-1998)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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State v. Free, Unpublished Decision (2-13-1998), (Ohio Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

Defendant-appellant, Wanda Free, appeals from her conviction and sentence upon two counts of Felonious Assault. She contends that the trial court erred by allowing the introduction of evidence depicting one victim's injuries, and excluding evidence regarding the other victim's prior violent acts. She further claims that the trial court erred by charging the jury with confusing and inaccurate instructions. Finally, she contends that she was prejudiced by numerous acts of prosecutorial misconduct.

We conclude that the trial court did not err in making its evidentiary rulings or in instructing the jury. We further conclude that the prosecutor did not act improperly. Accordingly, the judgment of the trial court is Affirmed.

I
On May 25, 1995, Wanda Free, was driving her mother's van when she struck two pedestrians. The first pedestrian was Free's ex-boyfriend, Derrick Smith, who suffered a broken arm as a result of the collision. The second pedestrian was six-year old, Nicole Gibson. The force of the collision caused Gibson's leg to be pinned between a transformer pole and the fender of the van.

Earlier in the day, Free's mother, Dorothy Lee, asked her and a family friend, Aaron Dungey, to go to a local store to play the lottery. Free did not have a driver's license, so Dungey was asked to drive Lee's van to the store. Free's two daughters and her nephew accompanied her and Dungey. On the way to the store, Free asked Dungey to stop by her apartment on Ravenwood Avenue. Dungey parked the van in front of the apartment. Free was going up the steps to the apartment when Smith appeared. The couple entered the apartment.

According to Free, the door to the apartment had been broken into and damaged. She also testified that the apartment appeared ransacked. Free and Smith began arguing over some "love letters" of Free's, which indicated that she had recently miscarried during a pregnancy involving another man. Free left the apartment with a knife and returned to the van.

Free left one daughter with Smith while she, Dungey and the other children went to the store. Afterward, when they went back to the apartment to pick up the child, Free and Smith began arguing again. Free, Dungey and the children drove off in the van. According to Free, Dungey suggested that they go back to close up the apartment, at which time Free threatened him with a knife and demanded that he let her drive. Dungey pulled into an alley where they turned the van around in a parking lot. Free began to drive back down the same alley when she saw Smith and stopped. Smith walked over to the front of the van. According to Dungey, Smith was yelling and cussing at him for allowing Free to drive the vehicle. According to Free, Smith said, "draw your last breath bitch". At that point, Free hit the accelerator and struck Smith. The van traveled across Ravenwood Avenue with Smith on the windshield and struck Gibson.

According to the interviewing detective who recorded Free's statement at the scene, Free stated that she was afraid of Smith, and that she hit him because she was "pissed off". Free denied stating that she was "pissed off."

Free was indicted upon one count of Felonious Assault against Smith, and upon one count of aggravated Vehicular Assault, with a cause harm specification, against Nicole Gibson. The indictment was later amended to charge Free with two counts of Felonious Assault, in violation of R.C. 2903.11(A)(2).

At trial, Free presented a defense of self-defense, based upon evidence that she suffered from Battered Woman Syndrome. The evidence indicated that Free's relationship with Smith, who is the father of one of her daughters, was violent. There was also evidence that Smith physically abused Free, and that she was required to seek medical treatment for injuries on at least three occasions. Free also presented the testimony of a clinical psychologist, who testified that she did suffer from Battered Woman Syndrome and that she perceived Smith to be a serious threat to her on the day of the incident.

During trial, the defense requested that the jury be permitted to view the crime scene. While at the crime scene, defense counsel and the prosecutor noticed that Gibson was within viewing distance of the jury, on the front porch of her grandmother's house. The child was wearing shorts or a short skirt that exposed her injured legs. The prosecutor and defense attorney also noticed that two television news crews were present at the scene and were attempting to interview Gibson and her grandmother. In light of the trial court's order that the victims not speak to the media during trial, the prosecutor approached the grandmother to remind her that she could not speak to the media.

Afterward, Free moved the trial court to declare a mistrial. The court denied the motion. Free then asked the court to conduct a voir dire examination of the jury to determine whether any of them had observed Gibson during the jury view. The jurors indicated that they had noticed the news crews trying to interview some people in the area of the crime scene. When asked if the incident would have any effect on their ability to sit as fair and impartial jurors, the panel indicated that it would not influence them. Further, the trial court instructed the jurors that the incident was not to be used as evidence in the case. The record does not reveal whether any of the jurors actually observed Gibson on the porch.

The jury found Free guilty as charged in the indictment, and the trial court sentenced her accordingly. From her conviction and sentence, Free appeals.

II
Free's First Assignment of Error is as follows:

THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY ADMITTING INTO EVIDENCE TESTIMONY AND GRUESOME PHOTOGRAPHS OF GRAVE AND DISFIGURING INJURIES SUFFERED BY A CHILD VICTIM, TOGETHER WITH EXHIBITION OF THE CHILD'S INJURIES TO THE JURY, BOTH UPON JURY VIEW AND DURING THE TRIAL, AND SUCH ERROR DENIED TO APPELLANT A FAIR TRIAL AS THE PROBATIVE [SIC] OF SUCH TESTIMONY, PHOTOGRAPHS AND EXHIBITIONS WAS GREATLY OUTWEIGHED BY THE DANGER OF UNFAIR PREJUDICE ESPECIALLY IN LIGHT OF APPELLANT'S OFFER TO STIPULATE THAT SUCH INJURIES CONSTITUTED SERIOUS PHYSICAL HARM AND THE STATE'S EXPLANATION OF WHY SUCH TESTIMONY, PHOTOGRAPHS AND EXHIBITIONS WERE PROBATIVE OF ANY ISSUE UNDER THE FACTS.

Free contends that the trial court erred by allowing, over objection, the introduction of two photographs of the crime scene. She also claims that the court erred by allowing the jury to view the child's injuries during trial, and by allowing testimony regarding the injury. Finally, she contends that the trial court erred when it failed to grant her motion for a mistrial after it was established that the child was present near the crime scene while the jury was viewing the area.

We first address the two contested photographs. As noted above, when Free collided with Nicole Gibson, the child was pinned between the van driven by Free and a transformer pole. One photograph depicts the resulting damage to the transformer pole while the other depicts the damage to the van. In both photographs, pieces of Nicole's flesh are readily visible on the portion of the pole and the vehicle bumper where her leg was pinned.

Free argues that the two contested photographs are gruesome, and that their introduction was more prejudicial than probative. She also argues that the State had other, "non-gruesome" photographs that it could have used to show the condition of the pole and the van.

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Free, Unpublished Decision (2-13-1998), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-free-unpublished-decision-2-13-1998-ohioctapp-1998.