State v. Hirsch

717 N.E.2d 789, 129 Ohio App. 3d 294
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 7, 1998
DocketNo. C-970315.
StatusPublished
Cited by70 cases

This text of 717 N.E.2d 789 (State v. Hirsch) 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. Hirsch, 717 N.E.2d 789, 129 Ohio App. 3d 294 (Ohio Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

Doan, Judge.

Following a jury trial, defendant-appellant, Jonathan Hirsch, was convicted of the aggravated murder of his mother-in-law, Caroline Jones, pursuant to R.C. 2903.01(A). He now appeals that conviction, asserting twelve assignments of error. While we find some errors in the proceedings below, we ultimately hold that given the quantum of evidence against Hirsch, any errors were harmless or do not amount to plain error. Consequently, we affirm his conviction.

On October 27, 1994, at approximately 7:00 a.m., Donald Blum left his apartment and found his neighbor, Caroline Jones, lying near the apartment building’s detached garage covered with blood. He immediately summoned her son, Jason Jones, who thought at first that his mother had fallen. But, when they tried to revive her, they discovered that she had been viciously attacked and was already dead, causing Jason to become hysterical.

Police officers arrived at the scene a short time later. They discovered large quantities of blood and took blood samples from various places in and around the garage. Later analysis showed that all the blood samples came from the victim, who had bled profusely. Blum and Jason Jones were both excluded as sources for the blood. Police officers also discovered a baseball hat covered in blood at the scene. The officers retrieved several hairs from the hat, as well as from the *303 victim’s coat. Later analysis showed that one hair on the hat was an animal hair. The remaining hairs were human but did not correspond to hair samples taken from Blum, Jason Jones, or the victim.

The police ran out of leads and the case remained unsolved for approximately a year and a half. Subsequently, they received a call from the Orlando, Florida, police, who had been contacted by a private investigator from Florida inquiring about a similar murder. This contact led Cincinnati police detectives to interview Stephen Cantwell and Hans Cone, both former business partners of Hirsch. Both Cantwell and Cone, who did not know each other, described how Hirsch had bragged about murdering his mother-in-law. Though their stories varied slightly, they both knew details that only the killer would know, as the police had released little information about the case to the media.

Hirsch had married Janel, Caroline Jones’s daughter and Jason Jones’s twin sister, in 1993. She was in the navy and lived during the week in Jacksonville, Florida, at the base where she was stationed. On the weekends, she commuted to the home she shared with Hirsch in Geneva, Florida, approximately two hours away. At the time of the marriage, Caroline Jones had a life insurance policy listing Janel as the first beneficiary and Jason as the secondary beneficiary. Caroline Jones developed a dislike of Hirsch, and she subsequently changed the policy, naming Jason as her sole beneficiary. Jason testified that he did not know of this change until after his mother’s death when her estate was opened. Upon learning he was the sole beneficiary, he told Janel that he would use some of the money to put her through school, but that he would not let Hirsch have access to it. Subsequently, he received a phone call from Hirsch that he perceived as threatening. Janel testified at trial that her mother had told her of the change of beneficiary, but she had earlier told police that she did not know about it until after her mother’s death.

According to Cone and Cantwell, Hirsch drove to Ohio in a car belonging to a friend, telling Cone that he would be on vacation and telling Janel that he would be in south Florida on business. He asked Cone to go to his house on the night before the murder and feed his dogs. Hirsch left Cone a note asking Cone to make two long-distance phone calls from Hirsch’s home. Cone made these calls, which later appeared on Hirsch’s phone bill, at approximately 10:30 p.m. that evening.

Hirsch arrived in Cincinnati in the early morning hours of October 27, 1994, and hid in the yard of a residence behind Caroline Jones’s apartment building. He watched through the windows of her apartment as she got ready for work. While he was waiting, a dog in the yard in which he was 'concealed began to bark. Afraid that the barking would draw attention, Hirsch petted the dog and gave it some candy to quiet it down.

*304 Caroline Jones left her apartment at approximately 6:35 a.m. and went to the detached garage where her car was parked. Hirsch then confronted her with a knife. Hirsch fancied himself a trained killer, due to his military training. He reasoned that a trained killer would kill someone cleanly, so he decided to make the killing messy, as if an amateur had done it. Consequently, he inflicted numerous brutal injuries on the victim, including slashing her jugular vein, which was the injury that ultimately resulted in her death.

During the struggle, Jones gouged Hirsch’s arm with her keys. Cone reported seeing Hirsch’s arm bandaged shortly after the killing, and Cantwell observed scars on Hirsch’s arm sometime later. After the attack, Hirsch fled and lost his baseball hat. He stated that did not feel that leaving his hat at the scene was a problem because he had a crew cut and therefore he would not leave any hairs for hair samples. According to Cone, Hirsch said he immediately left the area. According to Cantwell, Hirsch stated that he hid and watched while Blum and Jason Jones tried to revive the victim. He saw Jason become hysterical, which he liked. Then he left for Florida.

Hirsch also told Cantwell that he regretted telling Cone about the murder. Hirsch and Cone had been involved in a fraudulent check scheme. Hirsch felt that because of this fraudulent activity, Cone was at risk of being arrested and that he might inform on Hirsch to make things easier for himself. Consequently, Hirsch formulated a plan to kill Cone and to dump his body in a lime pit on Hirsch’s property. According to that plan, Hirsch and an accomplice surprised Cone, beat him, shot him with stun guns, and finally hit. him in the head with a carbon-dioxide canister. Someone witnessed the assault and called the police. An officer arrived to find Cone barely conscious, stripped to his underwear and covered in blood. Hirsch was later convicted of attempted murder in Florida. He received probation as part of a deal in which he was to pay restitution for Cone’s medical bills that resulted from the extensive injuries Hirsch had inflicted on him.

After hearing Hirsch brag about the murder of his mother-in-law and the attempted murder of Cone, Cantwell began to fear for his own safety. Consequently, he hired a private detective to see if he could confirm Hirsch’s story about the murder. He began to worry even more when Hirsch suggested that they take out insurance policies naming each other as the beneficiary. After the private investigator confirmed Hirsch’s story, Cantwell became so alarmed that he sold his share of the business to Hirsch for a pittance, abandoned everything, and moved his family to Alaska.

After speaking with Cantwell and Cone, Cincinnati police officers arrested Hirsch in Florida. They also interviewed Janel Hirsch at length. They took hair *305 and blood samples from Hirsch. Lab tests ultimately showed that one hair from the victim’s coat was consistent with Hirsch’s hair.

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Bluebook (online)
717 N.E.2d 789, 129 Ohio App. 3d 294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hirsch-ohioctapp-1998.