State v. Gau, Unpublished Decision (12-11-1998)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 11, 1998
DocketCase No. 97-L-197.
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Gau, Unpublished Decision (12-11-1998) (State v. Gau, Unpublished Decision (12-11-1998)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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State v. Gau, Unpublished Decision (12-11-1998), (Ohio Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

OPINION
The following is an appeal from a judgment of the Lake County Court of Common Pleas denying, without a hearing, the postconviction relief petition of appellant, Raymond Gau. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the judgment of the trial court in part, reverse in part and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

On November 29, 1988, appellant was indicted by the Lake County Grand Jury on one count of rape, in violation of R.C.2907.02, and one count of kidnapping, in violation of R.C.2905.01. On December 12, 1988, appellant was arraigned and entered a plea of not guilty on all charges. A jury trial commenced on November 13, 1989.

The following evidence was presented at appellant's trial. On February 26, 1988, the alleged victim, Krista Parisi, and two of her friends, Dana DeBernardi and Colleen Vidmar, went to the Cosmopolitan, a nightclub located in Willoughby, Ohio. After spending a few hours there, the women left the Cosmopolitan and went to the Honky Tonk Saloon in Grand River, Ohio so that Colleen could meet with her mother, Kathleen Vidmar. At the Honky Tonk Saloon, the victim saw her sister's former fiancee, William W. Hood, who introduced her to appellant.

At approximately 1:00 the morning of February 27, 1988, the victim wanted to leave the bar and go home. Unable to convince her friends to leave at that time, Ms. Parisi accepted a ride from appellant. Ms. Parisi testified that she left the Honky Tonk Saloon, without incident, with appellant and two of his friends. Appellant drove to the Argonne Arms Apartments in Painesville, Ohio where he dropped off his friends. While still in the parking lot of the Argonne Arms Apartments, a heavyset boy approached the passenger side of the automobile. The victim attempted to leave appellant's vehicle, but the heavyset boy reportedly hit her on the head with a beer bottle and pushed her back into the car. The heavyset boy then climbed into the driver's seat and appellant sat in the passenger's seat with Ms. Parisi between the two of them.

Ms. Parisi testified that the three of them drove to a church parking lot near her home. Appellant then pulled her out of the car and she attempted to run away. She fell down when her shoe became stuck in some mud. Once on the ground, the heavyset boy held Ms. Parisi's hands while appellant had forcible sexual intercourse with her. Before leaving Ms. Parisi in the church parking lot, appellant allegedly threatened to harm her little brother if she told anybody what happened.

Ms. Parisi ran home. Upon arriving home, she put her clothes in the washing machine, took a shower, and went to bed. At first, she told no one about the incident out of fear that appellant would harm her family. The incident was reported to the police approximately three weeks after it occurred.

In addition to the victim's testimony, Ms. Parisi's friends testified at trial as to their activities the night of the incident and their attempts to check on her whereabouts after she left the Honky Tonk Saloon with appellant. Her family described the extensive bruises the victim sustained on her face and legs as a result of this alleged incident. The victim's family members and an officer from the Grand River Police Department also testified to the events leading to Ms. Parisi's report of the incident.

On cross examination of the state's witnesses, appellant established several inconsistencies in the prosecution's case such as different statements made by Ms. Parisi to the police as to how she came to receive a ride home from appellant1 and confusion in the testimony given by her friends as to their whereabouts after they left the Honky Tonk Saloon and began to look for Ms. Parisi. Appellant, who took the stand in his own defense, denied that he molested or harmed Ms. Parisi in any way. According to appellant, he drove Ms. Parisi straight home and then returned to his own home where he went to bed.

Following the conclusion of the evidence presented at trial, on November 17, 1989, appellant was found guilty on both counts. On December 11, 1989, appellant was sentenced to serve an indefinite term of incarceration of ten to twenty-five years on the charge of rape, and an indefinite term of incarceration of five to twenty-five years on the charge of kidnapping, to be served consecutively. Appellant's conviction was subsequently affirmed by this court in State v. Gau (Mar. 29, 1991), Lake App. No. 89-L-14-172, unreported. Appellant sought leave to appeal his conviction in the Supreme Court of Ohio. The court overruled and dismissed appellant's motion on October 7, 1991, because no substantial constitutional question existed. State v. Gau (1991),62 Ohio St.3d 1405.

On August 8, 1996, appellant filed an extensive petition for postconviction relief pursuant to R.C. 2953.21. The impetus for appellant's petition was a purported affidavit that appellant received from the victim's former boyfriend, Carl Heath, who provided information concerning the victim's alleged rape. In addition to the opinion from a former boyfriend that Ms. Parisi was a "nympho" who could not have been raped, Mr. Heath also apparently informed appellant that Ms. Parisi was involved in a serious car accident three weeks before the purported rape by appellant. The extent of her injuries from this accident were so severe, Mr. Heath averred, that Ms. Parisi was hospitalized for a two week period, and, when he saw her sometime on the nineteenth or twentieth of February 1988, her face was "badly bruised and swollen."

On the basis of Mr. Heath's affidavit, appellant and his family began to investigate his allegations. Attached to his petition for postconviction relief, in addition to Mr. Heath's affidavit, appellant submitted copies of an accident report dated February 1, 1988, involving Ms. Parisi. A witness to the accident reported that Ms. Parisi was thrown forward in her vehicle after a three-car pileup, was slumping against the driver's side door, and appeared to have hit her head. The accident report stated that Ms. Parisi was unconscious and transported to Lake West Hospital. She was subsequently cited for assured clear distance and no seat belt. Appellant submitted clippings from a local newspaper reporting that Ms. Parisi was admitted into the hospital on February 1, 1988, and discharged on February 13, 1988.

In addition to presenting evidence of the injuries Ms. Parisi sustained as a result of a car accident on February 1, 1988, appellant submitted other materials with his petition. Appellant asserts that the sum of the information he presented in his petition, and summarized below, warrants a hearing on the actions of his trial counsel, the trial court judge, the police, and the prosecutors that handled his case.

As to his claims against his trial counsel and the trial court judge, appellant submitted a letter from his attorney, dated November 6, 1995, wherein she acknowledged that both she and her co-counsel had been appointed as special Lake County Prosecutors sometime between 1988 and 1989. Appellant alleged that the record clearly establishes that the trial court was aware of a potential conflict of interest and attached four hearing notices that were sent to "Lake County Prosecutor, [appellant's trial attorney.]" Appellant argued that because the trial court was aware of a potential conflict, the court should have conducted a hearing to establish if a conflict existed.

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Gau, Unpublished Decision (12-11-1998), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gau-unpublished-decision-12-11-1998-ohioctapp-1998.