State v. Greer

530 N.E.2d 382, 39 Ohio St. 3d 236, 1988 Ohio LEXIS 364
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 9, 1988
DocketNo. 87-684
StatusPublished
Cited by217 cases

This text of 530 N.E.2d 382 (State v. Greer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Greer, 530 N.E.2d 382, 39 Ohio St. 3d 236, 1988 Ohio LEXIS 364 (Ohio 1988).

Opinion

Holmes, J.

I

Appellant, by his twelfth proposition of law, challenges his conviction as being against the weight of the evidence and, because the verdict was based solely upon circumstantial evidence, that the evidence was not “consistent only with the theory of guilt and irreconcilable with any reasonable theory of innocence.” State v. Kulig (1974), 37 Ohio St. 2d 157, 160, 66 O.O. 2d 351, 352, 309 N.E. 2d 897, 899. Admittedly, the evidence before the jury was circumstantial; however, a review of such evidence reveals that appellant was fully implicated as the sole person who could have committed this crime.

It was shown at trial that appellant had spoken to the victim several times on the day of the murder. Appellant knew that the victim would be home later that night and knew that the door could not be effectively locked due to a broken glass door pane. At trial, the coroner testified that there were [238]*238physical indicia placing the victim’s time of death at approximately between 11:00 p.m. Sunday and 1:00 a.m. ■ Monday. An acquaintance of the victim spoke with him by phone at 9:00 p.m. that evening but, when she called the victim again at 11:00 or 11:15 p.m., the phone went unanswered. Appellant admitted on the witness stand that he had indeed met with the victim at the victim’s home on the night of the murder, but he then claimed that this was not later than 9:00 p.m. However, there was testimony from the victim’s next-door neighbor that appellant had arrived at her home at approximately 10:00 p.m. that evening seeking the victim and had then left her home apparently intending to go to the victim’s nearby residence.

The victim was killed as he sat in his kitchen. There were no signs of a struggle. However, blood spots were found by police investigators throughout the entire home. Moreover, the blood spots were incidental to a thorough search of the victim’s home, i.e., the drawers which had been pulled out had blood stains on them, and an overturned mattress had blood stains on it as did the linens, and other areas of the home. As will be more fully explained, the Bureau of Criminal Investigation’s (“BCI’s”) analysis of these blood smears and accompanying fingerprints indicated that both the smears and fingerprints were those of appellant. Eventually, appellant confessed to having entered the premises on the morning following the murder and to then searching the premises for valuables. He explained that those valuables belonging to the victim which were discovered in appellant’s home were stolen at that time. The blood spots he admitted came from cuts on his fingers which he claimed to have received on the prior evening while taking out his trash. All the above evidence must be viewed and interpreted in context with additional evidence which is more directly inculpatory.

Police discovered two shoeprints at the crime scene. These shoeprints were composed of the victim’s blood which was found only around the victim. They were not smear prints but had resulted from someone first stepping in the victim’s wet blood and then making the print. It was the coroner’s testimony that all the victim’s blood would have dried within five to six minutes of being exposed to the air. Thus, as the coroner testified, the print had to have been made within five to six minutes of the murder. Also, one of the shoeprints was obscured by and partly covered by the victim’s fallen body. This shoeprint had to have been made between the time the victim first bled and the time his body came to rest on the floor. Both of the shoe-prints were of a left tennis shoe bearing the distinctive pattern found only on Converse All-Star tennis shoes.

Appellant’s Converse All-Star tennis shoes were confiscated from him at the police station. When appellant had been asked at his home to accompany police, it was observed that he put on the dark green Converse tennis shoes and this despite the fact that he was going outdoors during mid-winter when there was a relatively deep accumulation of snow on the ground. When questioned about this, appellant replied that the Converse All-Star tennis shoes were the only shoes he owned.

Having observed that the pattern of appellant’s shoes looked similar to the shoeprint found at the crime scene, police sent the shoes to the BCI lab for comparative analysis. At trial, the BCI’s expert testified that he had made such tests and that, although the bloody shoeprints did not have a sufficient amount of detail for him to posi[239]*239tively identify them as belonging to appellant, nevertheless it was observed that appellant's shoe possessed the same characteristics as the shoeprint found at the crime scene. (This would include the same brand, pattern, shoe size and width.)

Appellant’s jacket was also examined and found to contain bloodstains in both pockets. These bloodstains could only originally have been made by blood in a liquid form. The BCI’s expert analyzed both the victim’s and appellant’s blood, these being the only two types found in the victim’s home. The victim had ABO type “0” blood while appellant possesses ABO type “A” blood. Both blood samples contained the relatively uncommon enzyme esterase D (“ESD”). However, the victim’s blood had enzyme ESD-type 1 while appellant’s blood contains enzyme ESD-type 2. No ABO grouping could be deduced from the blood stains in the jacket pockets. However, the blood in both pockets contained the enzyme ESD. The blood in the righthand pocket contained enzyme ESD-type 2 and was easily explained as having come from appellant’s cut fingers. The blood in the lefthand pocket was clearly enzyme ESD-type 1, the enzyme peculiar to the blood of the victim. It was inferable that appellant’s left hand had come into contact with the victim’s blood before such blood had dried. Since the evidence, with near certainty, placed appellant within inches of the victim at the very instant of time when the killing occurred, the prosecution needed to show little more. There was, however, considerable additional evidence. Appellant’s right hand exhibited deep lacerations upon the two middle fingers at the time of his arrest, which cuts were photographed and examined. Appellant claimed that he had received such cuts while taking out the trash on the night of the murder, and that a piece of glass or some other sharp object had cut him as he pressed down on the trash bags.

Examination of the cut fingers indicated that the ring finger was cut nearly to the bone. The middle finger was also deeply cut but not nearly as deeply as the ring finger. Both of these cuts had sharp margins, which margins aligned as the hand was closed. The coroner testified that the twenty-two wounds upon the victim’s body were made by a hiltless knife consistent with the kitchen knife found in the ■victim’s sink. The coroner explained that a hiltless knife allows the hand to slide down over the blade. Thus, when, in the course of stabbing, the knife point struck resistance and the stabbing motion was made with considerable energy, the hand holding the knife would slide down over the handle and onto the knife blade. In such event, the finger closest to the blade would be cut more deeply, as was appellant’s ring finger in the case here. It was the coroner’s testimony that appellant’s cuts were caused by gripping a knife blade and that such cuts were entirely consistent with the above motions. Moreover, he stated that such cuts would tend to bleed profusely for at least five to ten minutes even if immediately bandaged. This would provide an alternative explanation for the presence of appellant’s blood throughout the victim’s home.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
530 N.E.2d 382, 39 Ohio St. 3d 236, 1988 Ohio LEXIS 364, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-greer-ohio-1988.