State v. Johnson

435 N.E.2d 429, 70 Ohio App. 2d 152, 24 Ohio Op. 3d 201, 1980 Ohio App. LEXIS 9725
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 23, 1980
Docket41961
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 435 N.E.2d 429 (State v. Johnson) 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. Johnson, 435 N.E.2d 429, 70 Ohio App. 2d 152, 24 Ohio Op. 3d 201, 1980 Ohio App. LEXIS 9725 (Ohio Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

Day, J.

This case is an appeal from a jury verdict in the Court of Common Pleas of Cuyahoga County.

Defendant-appellant, William Johnson (defendant), and three others were indicted on 12 counts each resulting from a robbery in North Royalton in January 1979. Defendant and one other codefendant, Charles Roberts, were tried together and were represented jointly by the same lawyer. After the trial court directed out one count of attempted rape against each man, a jury found both Johnson and Roberts guilty of the eleven remaining charges: one count of aggravated burglary, R. C. 2911.11; five counts of aggravated robbery, R. C. 2911.01; and five counts of kidnapping, R. C. 2905.01. Defendant was sentenced to serve from seven to twenty-five years on each count, sentences to nm concurrently.

*153 From his convictions defendant appeals. For reasons adduced below the judgment is reversed and the defendant discharged.

I.

The undisputed facts in the crime are that at least three men broke into the Ragone home in North Royalton in the early morning hours of January 9. John and Mary Ragone and their three daughters were asleep. After awakening the family, herding them into the parents’ bedroom and subsequently binding them with lamp and telephone cords cut in the home, the intruders ransacked the house looking for money. They escaped in the family car with some money, clothing, jewelry, television sets, and other goods.

One man, wearing a nylon stocking mask and armed with a gun, turned on the light in the master bedroom and roused Mr. and Mrs. Ragone. Before the couple was ordered to lie face down on the floor, Mr and Mrs. Ragone got a good look at the man. The bedroom clock said 2:20.

Another man herded two of the Ragones’ three daughters, Diane, then 17, and Joanne, 7, into their parents’ room. Toni, then 14, was grabbed by a third, smaller man. Before the events of the night were over, all five members of the family were lying face down on the floor with their ankles bound together and their wrists tied behind their backs with telephone and lamp cords. They were not permitted to look up and had no opportunity to recognize any of the other intruders.

The third intruder armed with a gun and a screwdriver grabbed 14-year-old Toni by her hair and dragged her downstairs to help him find more money. At one point this man dragged Toni into the basement and threatened to rape her if she did not find additional money. He kept pounding at her head with the screwdriver and punching her in the face bloodying her nose. Toni “kneed him” in his groin and ran screaming upstairs where she encountered another intruder. She told him about the attempted rape but this man, described as “a big man * * * over six foot, over 200 pounds”, told Toni not to worry because, “We are not here for sex; we are here for money”.

At one point Mrs. Ragone was struck on the arm with a black handgun causing a bruise. And when John Ragone tried *154 to look up at one intruder armed with a rifle, the robber used it to hit Ragone at the back of the head creating a painful bump. One of the men threatened to rape the seven-year-old.

A fourth man, Gary Shaniuk, was indicted along with Johnson, Roberts, and Jerry Bak. Shaniuk testified for the state pursuant to a plea bargain arrangement. Shaniuk claimed he remained on the first floor of the home looking for money and did not get beyond the top of the stairs to the second floor, although he heard Johnson tell Toni “he ain’t going to rape you, we just came here for money’ ’. He testified that he pulled a lamp cord which was to be used to bind the family members.

Although the intruders were looking for “thousands”, they found considerably less. They took $600 from a kitchen cabinet, an unspecified amount from a bedroom closet representing receipts from John and Mary Ragone’s restaurant from the previous evening, and silver coins hidden in a bedroom couch. In their search for money the intruders created a shambles in the home. Every room was torn apart; every drawer was emptied; pictures were removed from the wall; and clothing and other things were strewm around the house and on the stairs.

The intruders, who had arrived in a car stolen from a west side Cleveland used car lot with plates stolen from a car in a west side driveway, loaded the car with goods taken from the Ragone home including clothing, television and radio sets, a typewriter, silverware, a stereo and liquor. But the stolen car got stuck in a snowdrift in the driveway so the burglars took a smaller car belonging to the Ragone family. The small car could not hold all the loot so some of it was left on the ground outside the house.

After the family members got untied, John Ragone, wearing his wife’s coat because he could not find his clothes in the mess, called police from a neighbor’s home. Police came and took photographs (which were later lost and not introduced as evidence) and made fingerprint lifts at the home and in the abandoned car. When the Ragone car was recovered some ten days later, the police also took lifts from that car. No prints were found that belonged to any of the suspects.

Several months later Shaniuk was arrested on an unrelated charge. He was angry and “had lived for the honor of the *155 criminal code long enough to be betrayed, and it wasn’t working for me so I decided to make statements”. Shaniuk confessed to the Ragone burglary and implicated Jerry Bak, Roberts, and Johnson. Testimony showed, however, that Shaniuk, who faced approximately two dozen charges resulting from four incidents, had cut a deal with the prosecutor’s office. Under it he would face only two probationable charges. There was a variety in the cases to be dropped, including a drug charge. Thus, several felony counts against Shaniuk would not be prosecuted and he would plead to two probationary offenses, burglary and robbery.

On the basis of Shaniuk’s statement search warrants were issued for the homes of the three other defendants. Mrs. Ragone’s leather coat was recovered from Roberts’ home; weapons similar to those used in the robbery-kidnapping were recovered from Bak’s house. Nothing “of merit in this case” was found at Johnson’s home.

Mrs. Ragone identified Roberts as the intruder who held the family captive with the gun from a photo array presented at the North Royalton Police Station. She also identified Roberts in court. Although Mr. Ragone did not select Roberts’ picture from the photo array, he, too, identified Roberts at trial.

Neither Diane nor Toni, the two older daughters who testified, identified either Johnson or Roberts.

The various family members, however, did describe the second man upstairs as: “a tall * * * husky * * * guy” wearing light brown boots; “tall man with a rifle in his hand”; “about six foot * * * husky” with blonde hair; “over six foot tall, over 200 pounds, he had light brown hair * * * sticking out” 1 ; “a big guy, very big guy * * * big shoulders * * * big man”.

The only specific identification of Johnson as a participant in the incident was by codefendant Shaniuk.

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Bluebook (online)
435 N.E.2d 429, 70 Ohio App. 2d 152, 24 Ohio Op. 3d 201, 1980 Ohio App. LEXIS 9725, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-johnson-ohioctapp-1980.