State v. Hall, Unpublished Decision (11-10-2004)

2004 Ohio 5963
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 10, 2004
DocketCase No. 83361.
StatusUnpublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2004 Ohio 5963 (State v. Hall, Unpublished Decision (11-10-2004)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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State v. Hall, Unpublished Decision (11-10-2004), 2004 Ohio 5963 (Ohio Ct. App. 2004).

Opinions

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION
{¶ 1} Thomas Hall appeals from a judgment of conviction entered after Judge Stuart A. Friedman found him guilty of two counts of aggravated burglary,1 two counts of aggravated robbery,2 one count of attempted murder,3 two counts of felonious assault,4 three counts of kidnapping,5 all with one- and three-year firearm specifications,6 and one count of having a weapon while under a disability.7 Hall claims he was prejudiced by the State's failure to disclose exculpatory evidence, and that the judge's verdicts were against the manifest weight of the evidence. We affirm the judgment in part, but vacate the sentence and remand for resentencing.

{¶ 2} Shortly after midnight on the morning of April 15, 2001, two men entered Gayle Pratt's home in the 3000 block of West 103rd Street in Cleveland. The men, who wore ski masks, held Pratt, her three children, her then twelve-year-old nephew, her adult girlfriend, and her girlfriend's infant son at gunpoint while they searched the house for money. The men took $80 in cash and Pratt's handgun, that she had bought for protection after a prior robbery.

{¶ 3} The men believed that Pratt had more money, and one of them threatened to harm her or her girlfriend if she did not give them more. While being held at gunpoint in an upstairs bedroom, Pratt threw a clock radio out a closed window and yelled for help, and one of the men shot her. She dove out the window onto the roof of her front porch as the man shot her twice more. Once on the porch roof, she managed to lower herself to the ground, where a neighbor assisted her and called 911. She was taken to the hospital and treated for gunshot wounds in her chest, arm, and leg.

The bullet that entered her chest struck her in the right breast, grazed her heart, and struck her left lung before exiting on the left side of her chest.

{¶ 4} On May 10, 2001, then nineteen-year-old Hall was stopped for a traffic violation and a 9mm Ruger handgun was found in his car. Although the serial number was partially filed off, the legible portion corresponded with the serial number of Pratt's Ruger.

{¶ 5} Police investigation identified Hall and Terry Anderson as suspects in the robbery, and Pratt was shown a single photo array that included pictures of both men. She identified the Anderson photo as one of her assailants, but she did not identify Hall's. On April 16, 2003, Hall and Anderson were jointly indicted, they each waived jury trial, and a joint bench trial was held. The State did not disclose to Hall that his picture had been in the photo array shown to Pratt, and that she had failed to identify him.

{¶ 6} At trial, Pratt testified that she could identify both men because the ski masks they wore had unusually large eye and mouth openings, and exposed large portions of each man's face. She also testified that she viewed two separate photo arrays, one for each defendant, and that she had identified both Hall and Anderson from their photos.

{¶ 7} Pratt stated that both intruders were African-American, and she described one man as shorter, younger, and lighter-skinned, and the other as taller, slimmer, older, and darker-skinned. She testified that the younger man was the primary offender, and that he was the one who had taken her gun from under the mattress, threatened her, and eventually shot her when she yelled for help and then escaped through the window. She stated that the men referred to each other as "T" while communicating during the crime, and she further stated that Anderson, the older man, was recognizable because of acne scars around his eyes.

{¶ 8} Pratt's nephew, Demetrius Williams, also testified that one of the men was shorter and lighter-skinned, and that the other was taller and darker-skinned. Unlike Pratt, however, he did not state that the ski masks had unusually large holes, and he did not specifically identify Anderson or Hall as his assailants. He did testify, however, that the intruders' complexions matched those of the defendants.

{¶ 9} Cleveland Police Patrolman Luke Hartman testified that he recovered the 9mm Ruger from Hall's car during a traffic stop on May 10, 2001, and Detective Thomas Lucey testified that forensic tests established that a bullet imbedded in the window frame at Pratt's home had been fired from the Ruger.8 Det. John Riedthaler testified that he investigated the crime scene and removed the bullet from the window frame, and that the partial serial number recovered from the Ruger matched the number given to him by Pratt.

He also testified that he questioned Hall about his possession of the gun, and that Hall had told him he received it from a crack addict in a drug transaction.

{¶ 10} Det. Riedthaler also testified that he showed Pratt only one photo array, which contained photos of both Anderson and Hall, and that she identified only Anderson's photo. Hall then moved for a mistrial because of the State's failure to disclose exculpatory evidence. The judge denied the motion, but stated that he would strike that portion of Pratt's testimony in which she claimed to have identified Hall from a pretrial photo array, as well as her testimony identifying him at trial.

{¶ 11} The State next presented Charmaine Fleetwood, who testified that she had been Hall's girlfriend between October 2000 and April 2001. She testified that, although she and Hall broke up in April because he assaulted her, she met him on the street sometime in late April, and he admitted to her that he had shot a woman who lived on the west side, and that she had escaped by jumping out a window. Fleetwood admitted that she and Hall had broken up by the time of this encounter, but stated that he continued to contact her in an effort to reunite. She also admitted that her relationship with Hall ended with another violent encounter, which resulted in a felony conviction against him, and that she was unhappy with the sentence he received as a result of that offense. She also admitted that she had spoken with Pratt on the phone prior to the trial.

{¶ 12} The judge found Hall guilty on all counts and specifications, and he emphasized that he found the evidence supported the conviction independent of Pratt's flawed and stricken identification testimony. He stressed the fact that Hall was found in possession of the Ruger, and found Hall's story concerning his possession of the gun "uncorroborated and * * * self-serving, and ultimately not convincing." Although the judge expressed concern about Fleetwood's motive for testifying, he found it unlikely that Pratt would participate in a scheme to wrongfully convict Hall. Therefore, he concluded that Fleetwood's knowledge of the details of the offense had come from Hall's admission, and found her testimony credible.

{¶ 13} Hall was sentenced to prison terms of eight years each for the counts of attempted murder, aggravated burglary, aggravated robbery, and kidnapping, concurrent with six-year prison terms for the counts of felonious assault and having a weapon under a disability.9

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Bluebook (online)
2004 Ohio 5963, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hall-unpublished-decision-11-10-2004-ohioctapp-2004.