State v. Hare

2018 Ohio 765, 108 N.E.3d 172
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 2, 2018
Docket2017-CA-4
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 2018 Ohio 765 (State v. Hare) 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. Hare, 2018 Ohio 765, 108 N.E.3d 172 (Ohio Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

HALL, J.

{¶ 1} Prentiss Hare appeals his convictions for aggravated robbery and felony murder. Finding no error, we affirm.

I. Background

{¶ 2} Hare was indicted on four counts following the death of Dashun Lumford: purposeful murder, felony-murder with a predicate offense of aggravated robbery, felony-murder with a predicate offense of felonious assault, and aggravated robbery. The case was tried to a jury, which heard the following evidence.

The death

{¶ 3} Donald Walton lived in a duplex at 12 South Light Street in Springfield, Ohio. On the morning of December 4, 2015, a Friday, Walton was at home with two friends, Sylvester Howard and Hare. Walton went to a pharmacy for some medicine and returned a couple hours later to find, in addition to Howard and Hare, two other people in his duplex, Ashley Cromlish and Dashun Lumford. Cromlish, an admitted drug addict, was there to buy drugs. She bought crack cocaine from Lumford and smoked it in the house. According to Howard, Lumford also gave some crack to Hare "on credit." When Hare wanted more, Lumford told him that he would have to pay. So, said Howard, Hare went out and sold some food stamps and came back with $70. Hare then bought crack from Lumford until the $70 was gone. Howard testified that everyone was smoking crack and that Cromlish used some heroin that Lumford had given her. Howard also mentioned that Hare was angry because, on a previous occasion, Lumford had sold him bad crack.

{¶ 4} Later, Howard and Walton were sitting in the living room-a smallish rectangular room with a couch and a love seat on opposite walls and a bed on the floor between them. Cromlish testified that Hare and Walton had told her to "go to the bathroom and stay there." (Tr. 351). But Howard testified that Cromlish had gone to the kitchen to shoot up the heroin that she had gotten from Lumford. Lumford walked into the living room. Suddenly, Hare entered the living room behind Lumford, grabbed him around the throat from behind, and lifted Lumford into the air. The two men fell onto the bed, with Hare landing on top. Hare continued to strangle Lumford from behind with his hands, according *176 to Howard; Walton testified that Hare strangled Lumford using both arms. Lumford barely resisted.

{¶ 5} Howard testified that he grabbed Hare, trying to stop him, but Walton grabbed him. Howard then fled the house. As he was leaving, he heard Hare tell him or Walton to get the money from Lumford. According to Walton, Hare continued to strangle Lumford for five to ten minutes.

{¶ 6} Cromlish testified that while she was in the bathroom, she heard a "thump." She hesitantly opened the bathroom door and saw Hare and Walton carrying Lumford's body through the kitchen and out the back door. Cromlish asked if Lumford would be okay, and one of them replied that he would. Cromlish testified that they threatened her, saying that if she said anything, they would hurt her. She then ran out of the house. Cromlish said that later she was with Hare and some others when she heard Hare say to one of them, "I did it again, I did it again." ( Id. at 353).

{¶ 7} Walton testified that he and Hare left the house and stopped for a beer, for which Hare paid cash. Then they went to a church to have dinner. While there, someone said that a body had been found behind Walton's house.

{¶ 8} According to Howard, sometime later he sold Hare crack. He said that Hare threatened him, saying, "What happened to him [Lumford] can happen to you if you don't keep your mouth shut." (Tr. 384).

The discovery of the body

{¶ 9} Just a few feet from Walton's duplex is a convenience store called the Main Stop. A little before 3 p.m. that Friday, a Vectren Gas employee found Lumford's body behind the store. He noticed that Lumford's pants and shoes had been removed, with the shoes beside the body and a pair of blue jeans on or near Lumford's head. After getting no response from Lumford, the Vectren employee went into the Main Stop and called 911. When he returned to the body a few minutes later, the pants were gone. The employee noticed what appeared to be drag marks leading away from the body. His impression was that Lumford had been robbed.

{¶ 10} Springfield police officer Jerry Bowen and Detective James McCutcheon responded to the scene. Both men noticed a small abrasion on Lumford's neck. Based on the abrasion, Lumford's missing pants, and the lack of other physical indicia of overdose, neither Bowen nor McCutcheon believed that Lumford had died from a drug overdose. Officer Bowen photographed the scene, including what appeared to be drag marks from the body leading to the rear of Walton's duplex. Police officers found no one inside the duplex.

The investigation

{¶ 11} The following Monday, Howard voluntarily went to the police and told them what he knew about Lumford's death. Howard identified Hare from a photo lineup. That same day, based on Howard's information, Detective McCutcheon sought out Walton and Cromlish and spoke with them both. He obtained Walton's consent to search the duplex.

{¶ 12} Kisha Wheeler watched from the street as Walton got into the detective's car. She then entered the duplex, where she had been earlier in the day, and found Hare inside alone. She had heard that a body had been found outside and asked Hare about it. Wheeler testified that Hare then confessed that he had killed Lumford, saying that he killed him by "affixiation." (Tr. 657). She said that he told her that he had killed Lumford for "fleecing" him, for selling him bad cocaine. Hare told Wheeler that he and another person had taken Lumford's body outside. They had been *177 talking for only about ten minutes when Detective McCutcheon arrived to search the premises. Hare was taken into custody.

{¶ 13} During the search of the duplex, police found a pair of blue jeans under the kitchen sink. Walton told police that the blue jeans may be Lumford's, and a DNA analysis of the jeans confirmed this. Police also recovered a cell phone that belonged to Hare on which they found a text message sent on December 4, 2015, that said, "Lol oops I did it again...." ( Id. at 730; State's Exhibit 13). Hare denied any involvement in Lumford's death.

The cause of death

{¶ 14} Deputy Montgomery County Coroner Dr. Robert Schott autopsied Lumford's body on December 5, 2015. Dr. Schott found that Lumford's lungs were "heavy" from an accumulation of "extra blood and frothy-like watery fluid." (Tr. 457). This is a common finding in overdose cases, said Schott, but there are other causes. Dr. Schott collected samples of various fluids and sent them to the toxicology lab for analysis. His initial findings were "pulmonary congestion and edema, suspected drug overdose based on history and heavy lungs, [and] small abrasions of the neck and forehead." ( Id. at 460).

{¶ 15} After speaking with Howard, Walton, and Cromlish, Detective McCutcheon contacted Dr. Schott and told him that witnesses had said that Lumford was strangled. So Dr. Schott re-examined Lumford's body. Other than the abrasion on the neck, Dr. Schott found no other unusual neck injuries.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2018 Ohio 765, 108 N.E.3d 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hare-ohioctapp-2018.