State v. Gunther

708 N.E.2d 242, 125 Ohio App. 3d 226
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 2, 1998
DocketNo. 96-T-5605.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 708 N.E.2d 242 (State v. Gunther) 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. Gunther, 708 N.E.2d 242, 125 Ohio App. 3d 226 (Ohio Ct. App. 1998).

Opinions

William M. O’Neill, Judge.

Appellant, William K. Gunther, appeals from the judgment and imposition of sentence rendered by the Trumbull County Court of Common Pleas after a jury found him guilty of felonious assault with a firearm specification. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the judgment of the trial court in part, and reverse in part and remand with instructions that the indictment brought down against appellant in violation of the statutory procedures as set forth in R.C. Chapter 2313 be dismissed.

On August 8, 1995, appellant was indicted by the Trumbull County Grand Jury on one count of felonious assault in violation of R.C. 2903.11(A)(2) with a firearm specification pursuant to R.C. 2941.141. The indictment related to an assault that occurred against Alexandria “Var” Bowers on April 1, 1995, in Warren, Ohio. To the above charge, appellant entered a plea of not guilty, and the matter proceeded to a jury trial on July 22,1996.

On July 19, 1996, three days prior to the commencement of trial, appellant sought to quash the indictment when he discovered irregularities in the grand jury selection process. Specifically, appellant established that the public officials entrusted to sign the certification of the venire failed to sign the certification as required by R.C. 2313.21. On the date of trial, July 22, 1996, the prosecution moved to dismiss appellant’s motion as untimely under Crim.R. 12(C). After the start of trial, on July 23, 1996, the trial court granted the state’s motion to dismiss, and appellant’s trial continued.

At trial, Bowers testified that she first became acquainted with appellant when she was thirteen years old and her family lived on Roosevelt Street in Warren, Ohio. Appellant, aged seventeen at the time, had been to Bowers’s home on a couple of occasions to visit her older brother. Bowers’s family moved from Roosevelt Street when she was fourteen years old and, prior to March 31, 1995, she had no contact with appellant except, perhaps, in passing.

*230 On March 31, 1995, Bowers saw appellant as she was entering her car, a late model grey Cadillac, after returning from the license bureau on Elm Road. Appellant, who was entering a liquor store located next to the license bureau, recognized Bowers and they exchanged greetings.

Later that same day, Bowers and a friend, Tammy Anderson, went out for the evening. In the early morning hours of April 1, 1995, sometime after 2:00 a.m., Bowers dropped her friend off at home. While outside Anderson’s house, in the same late model Cadillac she was driving earlier in the day, Bowers again encountered' appellant. Apparently recognizing Bowers’s car, appellant pulled up beside her, and the two began to talk about their chance meeting earlier in the day. Bowers ended her conversation with appellant and began to drive home. Anderson confirmed that before she saw Bowers leave her driveway, she saw an individual in a second car pull up next to Bowers’s vehicle.

When Bowers returned home, appellant, who apparently followed her home in his car, pulled into her driveway and asked if he could park his car there in order to visit his uncle who, he said, lived behind her. Shortly thereafter, as Bowers was preparing to go to bed, appellant knocked on her door and asked whether he could use the telephone. After appellant finished using the phone, he began to walk through Bowers’s home.

Bowers eventually became uneasy with appellant’s presence in her home and she asked him to leave. As appellant walked to the front door, he turned around and pointed a gun at Bowers’s head. Appellant told her that he was not leaving “without getting some,” and he told her to “[t]ake that shit off now” and get on her knees. Bowers, pleading with appellant, unbuttoned her skirt, which then fell to the ground. Before she went to her knees, she managed to jump toward appellant and push the gun away from her.

A struggle ensued and appellant fired a round at Bowers, just missing her leg. Bowers heard appellant repeatedly try to fire the gun again, “clicking” the trigger, but the gun would not fire. Bowers tried to scratch and bite appellant as their struggle spilled into other rooms of her home. Eventually, she managed to escapé through the front door. In cold temperatures, wearing only a blouse and underclothes, Bowers jumped over a fence and hid from her attacker for twenty or thirty minutes while appellant called for her and circled in his car around the neighborhood. When she felt safe, she ran a few blocks to her brother’s house. Bowers’s brother, Andre Bowers, testified that his sister was crying and frantic, wearing only a blouse and underclothes, and that she identified appellant as her attacker. She was immediately taken to the hospital for treatment.

While at the hospital, Bowers gaye a statement to Sergeant Catherine Giovannone of the Warren City Police Department, again identifying appellant as her attacker. In the early morning of April 1, 1995, at approximately 6:30 a.m., Sgt. *231 Giovannone escorted Bowers, who was planning to stay with her mother, to her home so that. she could get a few items of clothing. At that time, Sgt. Giovannone saw the damaged condition of the home caused by the alleged struggle with appellant, including a bullet hole in the wall. Sgt. Giovannone also found a 9-mm shell casing on the floor.

As part of their investigation, Warren Police obtained blood samples from appellant to compare with blood stains taken from the victim’s shirt and stains from a door frame within the victim’s home. These samples were sent to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”) in Washington, D.C., for DNA analysis. The result of the DNA analysis revealed that the blood on Bowers’s shirt could have been the same as the sample submitted from appellant. A forensic scientist from the DNA Unit of the FBI laboratory in Washington, D.C. labeled appellant as a “potential contributor” of the blood found on Bowers’s shirt, and calculated that the likelihood of selecting another individual at random as a contributor was one in one hundred thousand in the black population, one in twenty-seven million in the Caucasian population, one in twenty-six million in the southeastern Hispanic population, and one in seventy-five million in the southwestern Hispanic population.

Appellant, who took the stand in his own defense, acknowledged that he had met Bowers several years ago when they were children and that he ran into her while going to the liquor store the afternoon of March 31, 1995. However, appellant denied that he was the person responsible for the attack on Bowers and testified that he was at home in bed at the time of the alleged incident.

Appellant testified that on the day prior to the alleged incident, he took a vacation day from his job at Packard Electric, since his second daughter, born two days earlier, was coming home from the hospital that day. Later that same evening, two of his co-workers took him to the Palladium in Youngstown, Ohio, to celebrate. Appellant admitted that he had quite a bit to drink that evening. On the early morning of April 1, 1995, at approximately 1:00 a.m., appellant and his two co-workers left the Palladium and traveled to the Top Hatter’s Club in downtown Warren, Ohio. Appellant stated that due to his level of intoxication, he waited outside next to the car as his co-workers entered the club.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Hall
2025 Ohio 1708 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2025)
State v. Perez, 91227 (3-5-2009)
2009 Ohio 959 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2009)
State v. Fayne, 90045 (6-19-2008)
2008 Ohio 3036 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2008)
State v. Smith, 07ca15 (4-29-2008)
2008 Ohio 2061 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2008)
State v. Davis, 07ca0028-M (3-10-2008)
2008 Ohio 999 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2008)
State v. Dunning, Unpublished Decision (12-28-2007)
2007 Ohio 7039 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2007)
State v. Kemp, Unpublished Decision (4-29-2005)
2005 Ohio 2115 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2005)
State v. Totarella, Unpublished Decision (2-13-2004)
2004 Ohio 1175 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2004)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
708 N.E.2d 242, 125 Ohio App. 3d 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gunther-ohioctapp-1998.