State v. Keeley

2012 Ohio 3564
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 2, 2012
Docket11CA5
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 2012 Ohio 3564 (State v. Keeley) 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. Keeley, 2012 Ohio 3564 (Ohio Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Keeley, 2012-Ohio-3564.] IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT WASHINGTON COUNTY

STATE OF OHIO, :

Plaintiff-Appellee, : Case No. 11CA5

vs. :

DAVID P. KEELEY, : DECISION AND JUDGMENT ENTRY

Defendant-Appellant. :

_________________________________________________________________

APPEARANCES:

COUNSEL FOR APPELLANT: John A. Bay, Bay Law Office L.L.C., P.O. Box 29682, Columbus, Ohio 432291

COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE: James E. Schneider, Washington County Prosecuting Attorney, and Alison L. Cauthorn, Washington County Assistant Prosecuting Attorney, 205 Putnam Street, Marietta, Ohio 45750 _______________________________________________________________ CRIMINAL APPEAL FROM COMMON PLEAS COURT DATE JOURNALIZED: 8-2-2012

ABELE, P.J.

{¶ 1} This is an appeal from a Washington County Common Pleas Court judgment of

conviction and sentence. A jury found David P. Keeley, defendant below and appellant herein,

guilty of (1) two counts of rape in violation of R.C. 2902.02(A)(1)(c)&(B); and (2) three counts

of Gross Sexual Imposition (GSI) in violation of R.C. 2907.05(A)(5)&(B).

1 Different counsel represented appellant during the trial court proceedings. WASHINGTON, 11CA5 2

{¶ 2} Appellant assigns the following errors for review:

FIRST ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR:

“THE TRIAL COURT VIOLATED DAVID P. KEELEY’S RIGHTS TO DUE PROCESS AND A FAIR TRIAL WHEN IT ENTERED A JUDGMENT OF CONVICTION FOR THEFT [sic] AGAINST THE MANIFEST WEIGHT OF THE EVIDENCE.”

SECOND ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR:

“THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN ADMITTING LAY WITNESS OPINION TESTIMONY THAT WAS UNRELATED TO THAT WITNESS’S PERCEPTIONS AND CALLED FOR SPECIALIZED KNOWLEDGE.”

THIRD ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR:

“THE STATE’S MISCONDUCT, DURING ITS CLOSING ARGUMENT, DENIED MR. KEELEY THE RIGHT TO A FAIR TRIAL AND DUE PROCESS OF LAW, IN VIOLATION OF THE FIFTH AND FOURTEENTH AMENDMENTS TO THE UNITED STATES CONSTITUTION AND SECTION 16, ARTICLE I OF THE OHIO CONSTITUTION.”

FOURTH ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR:

“TRIAL COUNSEL PROVIDED INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL BY FAILING TO OBJECT TO THE STATE’S IMPROPER STATEMENTS DURING ITS CLOSING ARGUMENT.”

{¶ 3} Appellant and his family moved from England to the United States when his

employer transferred him to a position.2 He, his wife and daughters eventually settled in

Marietta in 1996. They became close friends with the Davis family, whose backyard adjoins

their own. R.D., the youngest child of the Davis family, was approximately ten or eleven years

2 Appellant testified that his wife and children have become U.S. citizens. It appears from the sentencing hearing transcript, however, and the discussion of possible deportation once appellant is released from prison, that he has not been WASHINGTON, 11CA5 3

old when appellant moved to the area. Although an adult at the time of the events that resulted

in the offenses, R.D. suffers from mental retardation and functions at the cognitive level of a

minor.3

{¶ 4} Around mid-April 2010, R.D. visited appellant’s home to help paint. Afterward,

appellant and R.D. engaged in some degree of sexual contact. Several weeks later, appellant

contacted R.D. to see if she would help him work on his motorcycles.4 R.D. went to appellant’s

home and, once again when the work was completed, the two engaged in sexual contact.5

{¶ 5} After R.D. returned home that particular evening, she was unusually quiet. When

R.D.'s mother asked if anything was wrong, she admitted that she and appellant had engaged in

sexual activity. Jane Davis, R.D.'s mother, and her husband took her to the hospital and medical

personnel used a “rape kit” to collect genetic material on, and inside, her body.

{¶ 6} The following morning, authorities prompted Davis to engage in a “controlled”

cell-phone call with appellant. Appellant initially denied any sexual contact with R.D., but after

further questioning, admitted to Davis that he had “tried to have sex with [R.D.] but couldn’t

actually do the job” because of certain medical problems he was experiencing. Appellant also

naturalized. 3 The precise age level at which R.D. functions was an issue at trial. Prosecution witnesses testified that her age level is less than ten years old, whereas defense witnesses testified that she behaved like someone sixteen to eighteen years of age. 4 Appellant races motorcycles in addition to his regular job. The uncontroverted evidence is that appellant often offered R.D. spending money to come to his house to help with chores. 5 No allegation was made, nor evidence introduced, to indicate that the encounters involved the use of force. WASHINGTON, 11CA5 4

intimated to Davis that her daughter had a “crush” on him and that she initiated the sexual

contact. Appellant also stated to Davis that he “touched her [daughter] once before” when R.D.

came over to help him paint. Appellant promised Davis that he would contact her again to

discuss the matter after he returned home.6

{¶ 7} After appellant returned home, and before he could contact Davis, several

Washington County Sheriff’s Deputies interviewed him. Again, appellant admitted that he

engaged in sexual activity with R.D., although he suggested that R.D. initiated the sexual

conduct. At the conclusion of the interview the authorities arrested appellant.

{¶ 8} Subsequently, the Washington County Grand Jury returned an indictment that

charged appellant with two counts of rape and three counts of GSI. Appellant pled not guilty

and the matter proceeded to a jury trial.

{¶ 9} At trial, no question existed that sexual contact had, in fact, occurred. Appellant

acknowledged that some degree of contact had occurred. R.D. also described some of the acts,

and she admitted that she did not tell appellant to stop. The trial focused primarily on two

issues. The first was whether vaginal penetration occurred. R.D. answered “yes” when asked if

appellant had “put his fingers in [her] front bottom[.]” Likewise, she responded affirmatively

when asked if appellant put “his penis inside [her] front bottom[.]” Washington County

Sheriff’s Department Detective Mark Johnson also produced a tape recording of his interview

with appellant. In that recording, appellant did not admit that he digitally penetrated R.D., but

6 This cell phone call occurred the morning after Davis had spent all night at the hospital with her daughter. Appellant was apparently enroute to a motorcycle race. WASHINGTON, 11CA5 5

he conceded that it may have occurred. Appellant, however, emphatically denied penile

penetration and testified that because he suffered from erectile dysfunction, he was incapable of

doing so. To confirm his claim, the defense offered corroborating testimony from appellant's

physician.

{¶ 10} Lauren Dutton, a Marietta Memorial Hospital nurse, testified that she examined

R.D. the night of the second incident and found a “white milky fluid” in the area of her cervix.

Sarah Glass, a forensic scientist at the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation (BCI), testified that

the swabs from the rape kit tested positive for semen. Emily Draper, also a BCI scientist,

testified that after she tested the genetic material from R.D.’s swabs and compared it to the

genetic material on “buccal swabs” taken from appellant’s mouth, appellant could not be

“excluded as the source of the semen on the vaginal swabs.”7

{¶ 11} The second major issue at trial was R.D.’s mental and emotional age, and whether

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2012 Ohio 3564, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-keeley-ohioctapp-2012.