State v. Goe

2025 Ohio 4866
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 23, 2025
Docket2024CA00209
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Ohio 4866 (State v. Goe) 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. Goe, 2025 Ohio 4866 (Ohio Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Goe, 2025-Ohio-4866.]

COURT OF APPEALS STARK COUNTY, OHIO FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

STATE OF OHIO Case No. 2024CA00209

Plaintiff - Appellee Opinion and Judgment Entry

-vs- Appeal from the Stark County Court of Common Pleas, Case No. 2024CR1510 SEAN GOE Judgment: Affirmed Defendant – Appellant Date of Judgment Entry: October 23, 2025

BEFORE: Craig R. Baldwin, William B. Hoffman, Robert G. Montgomery, Appellate Judges

APPEARANCES: Kyle L. Stone, Stark County Prosecuting Attorney, Lisa A. Nemes, Assistant Prosecuting Attorney, for Plaintiff-Appellee; D. Coleman Bond, for Defendant- Appellant OPINION

Hoffman, J.

{¶1} Defendant-appellant Sean Goe appeals the judgment entered by the Stark

County Common Pleas Court convicting him following jury trial of two counts of murder

(R.C. 2903.02(A)(B)) with repeat violent offender specifications (R.C. 2941.149(A)),

felonious assault (R.C. 2903.11(A)(1)) with a repeat violent offender specification (R.C.

2941.149(A)), tampering with evidence (R.C. 2921.12(A)(1)), and gross abuse of a corpse

(R.C. 2927.01(B)), and sentencing him to an aggregate term of twenty-nine years to life

in prison. Plaintiff-appellee is the State of Ohio.

STATEMENT OF THE FACTS AND CASE

{¶2} In June of 2024, the victim was twenty-four years old. Appellant was her

boyfriend, and the pair had been living together for about two years in a relationship

friends and family described as volatile.

{¶3} On June 29, 2024, the victim worked a shift at Hardee’s restaurant. After

leaving work, Stacy, a coworker of the victim, texted the victim, asking about the victim’s

plans for the night. The victim responded she was “going to get bopped,” which she

explained to Stacy meant she was going to get drunk. Tr. (I) 176-77.

{¶4} Later that evening, the victim and Appellant hung out with their neighbors,

David and Kara, in the back yard of their apartment building. After going inside for the

night, David realized he had misplaced his keys. Around 11:00 p.m., he and Kara

knocked on the door of the victim’s apartment. The victim answered the door and gave

them the keys. Although he did not see Appellant, David heard Appellant’s voice inside

the apartment. {¶5} On July 1, 2024, Appellant knocked on Kara’s door in the afternoon or early

evening. He was sweaty, and both Kara and David noticed he did not seem like himself.

Appellant asked for snacks and a drink. Appellant was wearing a white Nike shirt.

{¶6} When Stacy arrived for work on July 1, her boss, Adam, asked when she

had last spoken to the victim. Adam told Stacy the victim did not show up for work on

June 30, and did not call to report she would not be coming in, which was unusual for the

victim. Stacy had texted the victim on June 30, and received no response, and she

became concerned about the victim’s wellbeing after she heard the victim did not come

to work. Around 2:30 p.m., Stacy drove to the victim’s apartment. She did not see the

victim’s car in the parking lot.

{¶7} On July 1, Appellant went to the home of an acquaintance named Justice.

Justice’s mother had a Ring camera, which showed Appellant was driving the victim’s

vehicle. Appellant met Justice and another person at McDonald’s to purchase marijuana

using a cash app around 8:00 p.m. Video footage from McDonald’s showed Appellant

was driving the victim’s vehicle.

{¶8} The victim’s mother contacted the Stark County Sheriff’s Department on

July 2 because she had not heard from the victim for several days. Deputy Richard

Gurlea and Deputy Cheyenne Urbach went to the victim’s apartment to investigate. The

deputies knocked on the apartment door and received no response. They found the door

was unlocked and entered the apartment. The apartment was unkempt with clothes piled

everywhere and food and unwashed dishes laying around. Deputy Urbach noted a terrible

odor, as if something had died in the apartment. Clothing was piled behind the door, and

there was a trash bag in the bedroom with a pillow on top of it. The television on the bedroom wall was shattered and there were holes in the walls. The window was cracked

open and covered with a blanket.

{¶9} While Deputy Gurlea remained behind finishing paperwork, Deputy Urbach

left the scene. Shortly after leaving the apartment, she saw Appellant driving the victim’s

vehicle in the area. The deputy regularly patrolled this area, and was familiar with the

victim and with Appellant. She knew Appellant did not have a driver’s license and usually

traveled by bicycle or walked. Deputy Urbach initiated a traffic stop of the vehicle.

{¶10} Deputy Urbach patted Appellant down and explained the reason for the

stop. She asked Appellant where his girlfriend was, and he responded he had not seen

her. The deputy told Appellant the victim was missing, and Appellant responded, “Well,

she drinks[.]” Tr. (1) 229. Appellant then fled on foot. During an inventory search of the

vehicle, Deputy Urbach saw a shovel covered with blankets in the back seat. She paused

the inventory search to obtain a warrant for the vehicle.

{¶11} Meanwhile, officers obtained a search warrant for the apartment. Sergeant

Derek Little participated in the search. He noted the apartment was very dirty and chaotic.

He detected a distinct odor of decomposition, which he associated with the smell of a

dead body. In the bedroom he noted a blood stain on the bed, and cleaning supplies in

the bedroom, with droplets of blood on the wall. Inside a garbage bag he found blood-

soaked paper towels and rubber gloves. After pulling the bed out from the wall, officers

found blood on the carpet. Using a chemical agent called BLUESTAR, officers found an

area on the floor where blood had been cleaned up and was no longer visible to the naked

eye. Officers found a bucket and a sponge in the bathroom. BLUESTAR confirmed the

presence of blood on the bucket and the sink. {¶12} Officers then conducted a search of the victim’s vehicle. They found a blue

I-phone tucked between the center console and the driver’s seat, and found the victim’s

wallet in the passenger area. In addition to the dirty shovel, the backseat contained a

guitar, blankets, clothing, and the spare tire. The cargo area of the vehicle was empty

except for a pen. An imprint on the carpet of the cargo area led officers to believe

something was recently moved from the area. BLUESTAR confirmed the presence of

blood in the cargo area.

{¶13} Officers placed an emergency request with cell phone service to “ping” the

victim’s phone and Appellant’s phone to locate the victim. They received the records the

evening of July 2. The victim’s phone had been active, but Appellant’s phone was not

active.

{¶14} On July 3, Appellant appeared at the Refuge of Hope, a homeless shelter

for men. Appellant asked for assistance to obtain a bus ticket to Zanesville, claiming he

was going to reunite with his mother. Appellant gave the shelter his actual first name, but

a fictitious last name. An employee recognized Appellant as a person of interest in the

victim’s disappearance, and called the police. Appellant was taken into custody.

{¶15} Meanwhile, employees of the City of Canton Parks Department emptied the

trash in the Mother Goose Land park, and found a body in a trash can. The body was

wrapped in a fitted sheet. The face of the body was battered beyond recognition, but the

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Bluebook (online)
2025 Ohio 4866, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-goe-ohioctapp-2025.