State v. Jones, Unpublished Decision (10-12-2001)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 12, 2001
DocketAppeal No. C-000419, C-000420, Trial No. B-9008407, B-9808311.
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Jones, Unpublished Decision (10-12-2001) (State v. Jones, Unpublished Decision (10-12-2001)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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State v. Jones, Unpublished Decision (10-12-2001), (Ohio Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

DECISION.
The defendant-appellant, Richard Jones, Jr., brings these appeals from his conviction, after a trial by jury, on a single count of voluntary manslaughter and two counts of felonious assault. He was sentenced to serve a term of ten to twenty-five years for the voluntary manslaughter, to run consecutively to concurrent terms of six to fifteen years for the two counts of felonious assault. Through counsel appointed to represent him on appeal, Jones has given us eight assignments of error.

The factual origins of the cases began in October 1990. At that time, Jones and Mona Mills were involved in a relationship that had produced two children. Mills was pregnant with her third child by Jones, when, on the evening of October 12, 1990, Jones came to Mills's apartment and inquired about where she had been earlier. Mills answered that she had been "out drinking." Jones, angered by Mills's response, went to the kitchen, boiled a pan of water, and poured it on Mills's arm. Then he bludgeoned her in the head with a forty-ounce bottle of beer and fled. The police were summoned and took Mills to a hospital, where her burns were treated and the lacerations to her scalp were closed with surgical clamps. These events provided the basis for Jones's indictment on the two counts of felonious assault.1

Mills and Jones had no further contact until the early evening hours of October 20, 1990. In the interim, Mills had persuaded her friend, Rochelle Hardy, to move into her apartment, ostensibly because she feared that Jones would return to retaliate for the criminal charges stemming from the assaults.

On the evening of October 20, at about 7:00 p.m., Mills was in her apartment in the company of Lloyd Martin, drinking beer and watching the World Series on television, when Jones entered. Jones gave Martin money and sent him from the apartment to purchase more beer. Shortly after Martin had gone, Hardy arrived at the apartment. An argument then ensued between Jones and Mills, during which Jones seized Mills's scalded arm, causing her to scream in pain. Jones and Hardy then began to argue at close range, with each shouting into the face of the other and with Jones, at some point in the course of the argument, displaying a pocketknife. Hardy told Jones to leave, and as he did so, Hardy exclaimed that she was going to call for police assistance because Jones had stabbed her. Mills testified at trial that, as Jones left the apartment, she had seen blood dripping from Hardy's body, but she denied that she had seen Jones stab Hardy.

At that point, Martin reappeared at the doorway, only to have Hardy collapse into his arms. Martin testified at trial that Hardy had stated to him as she died that Jones had stabbed her. When the police arrived, they saw Martin in a shaken condition, cradling Hardy's lifeless body in his arms. Martin repeated to them Hardy's accusation that Jones had stabbed her.

The postmortem examination of Hardy revealed a wound near the center of her back, consistent with one inflicted by a knife, that had penetrated to the right lower lung and a major blood vessel, resulting in death by exsanguination.

A state's witness, Calvin Reddick, with whom Jones had lived intermittently, testified that, late at night on October 20, 1990, Jones had appeared outside a window of his home asking for a change of clothing. Jones's shirt had appeared to Reddick to be blood-stained and his lip looked swollen.

When Jones was interviewed by police in 1998, he stated that Hardy had hit him in the mouth with a hammer. The prosecution stipulated that a fragment of a tooth found at the scene of the homicide was Jones's.

Warrants had been previously issued for the October 12 assaults, and one for the offense of murder was issued immediately after the events of October 20. After their investigation had convinced them that Jones had killed Hardy, the police attempted to locate Jones by broadcasting his description and circulating printed material bearing his photograph. Ultimately, the warrants were sent to the National Crime Information Center, a facility that advises law enforcement agencies that an individual is wanted. A warrant for unlawful flight and avoiding prosecution was issued as well. Members of Jones's family in Kentucky were contacted by the police, and arrangements were made for Jones to surrender to the authorities on either October 21 or 22 at the automobile repair station at which Jones had worked. Jones failed to appear. On December 19, 1990, he was indicted for Hardy's murder

In March 1998, police in Riverside, California, had Jones in custody on unrelated charges and became aware of the charges against Jones in Ohio. Cincinnati police officers interviewed Jones in California and upon his return to Cincinnati.

After being given Miranda warnings, Jones denied stabbing Hardy. He instead claimed that a man, heavier than he, driving a black Buick automobile and in the company of another man, had killed Hardy. He said that he had gone to Mills's apartment to give her money for the children, and that, when no one answered his knock, he had opened the door, had proceeded into the dark apartment, and had been rendered unconscious. When he recovered his senses, he was lying prone on the threshold of the apartment, and the door was closed. He denied any contact that evening with Mills, Hardy or Martin.

Jones stated that he had thereafter returned to the street to find that the automobile he had driven to the apartment was missing. He proceeded on foot to the house of his friend "Jack," whose last name or address he would not divulge, and then to the home of another friend, who told him that "he was in big trouble for running somebody over in his car," an assertion that Jones said was "bullcrap."

Jones maintained that he had continued to reside and work in the area until 1993. After being shown a photograph of Hardy, he denied that he had known her. The interview ended when, according to the police, Jones invoked his right to an attorney, "got up off the chair and walked out."

On November 24, 1998, Jones was indicted for the assaults on Mills, and the assault and the 1990 murder charges were joined for trial. At his trial, Jones neither testified on his own behalf nor adduced any other evidence. His defense, in part, consisted of attacks on the credibility of the state's witnesses, based upon their consumption of alcohol and drugs and their admitted records of convictions for criminal activity.2

The first assignment of error is that the court's failure to sua sponte dismiss the indictment for the felonious assaults on Mills constituted plain error, because the state's failure to obtain the indictment before the statute of limitations for those offenses had expired denied Jones due process of law. Jones's basic contention is that the delay of some eight years between the date Mills was assaulted and the date Jones was indicted was unjustifiable under the holding in State v. Luck (1984),15 Ohio St.3d 150, 472 N.E.2d 1097.

We note, first, that this issue was never raised below. Theoretically, we could hold that it was thereby waived, obviating the necessity for this court to rule upon it. We prefer to address the question since it involves the fundamental right to due process.

Clearly, the rule in Luck, supra, upon which Jones relies, viz., that an unjustifiable delay between the commission of the offenses and the indictment prejudiced him, requires us to examine the reasons for the hiatus.

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Jones, Unpublished Decision (10-12-2001), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-jones-unpublished-decision-10-12-2001-ohioctapp-2001.