State v. Kelley, 06ca008967 (3-31-2008)

2008 Ohio 1458
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 31, 2008
DocketNo. 06CA008967.
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2008 Ohio 1458 (State v. Kelley, 06ca008967 (3-31-2008)) 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. Kelley, 06ca008967 (3-31-2008), 2008 Ohio 1458 (Ohio Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

DECISION AND JOURNAL ENTRY
This cause was heard upon the record in the trial court. Each error assigned has been reviewed and the following disposition is made:

INTRODUCTION
{¶ 1} Tonya Linkous was strangled to death on New Year's Day, 2005. A jury found Shawn Kelley, who was in the same room in which Ms. Linkous died at the time of her death, guilty of feloniously assaulting and murdering her. It also found him guilty of felonious assault, attempted murder, and attempted aggravated murder in connection with each of two other people who were in the house at the time Ms. Linkous died. Mr. Kelley has denied that he strangled Ms. Linkous or attacked the other two people. He has suggested that another person, Ms. Linkous's boyfriend, came to the house and into the room where he and Ms. *Page 2 Linkous were sleeping and strangled her without awakening him. He has also asserted that, rather than he attacking the other two people, they attacked him.

{¶ 2} This Court affirms Mr. Kelley's convictions because: (1) they are supported by sufficient evidence and are not against the manifest weight of the evidence; (2) the trial court did not err by denying his motion for acquittal on the attempted aggravated murder charges on which he was convicted because there was sufficient evidence on those charges at the close of the State's case and, if it erred by not acquitting him of the other charges about which he has complained, that error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt because the jury found him not guilty on some of those charges and the trial court did not sentence him on the others; (3) the trial court did not err by denying his motion to sever the charges related to Ms. Linkous's death from the charges related to his alleged attacks on the other two people; (4) Mr. Kelley was not denied a fair trial because of alleged prosecutorial misconduct; (5) he was not unduly prejudiced by the admission of certain photographs; (6) he was not denied due process by this Court's briefing schedule; and (7) his constitutional rights were not violated by the sentences imposed on him.

FACTS
{¶ 3} On the afternoon of December 31, 2004, Tonya Linkous borrowed her mother's car and, at around 3:00 p.m., picked up her boyfriend after he was done working. He cashed his pay check, and they went to the Time Out, a bar in *Page 3 Lorain. At around 6:30 p.m., Tammy Lutz, who Ms. Linkous had previously known, showed up at the Time Out, and she, Ms. Linkous, Ms. Linkous's boyfriend, and another woman had a few drinks and talked. At some point, Ms. Linkous's boyfriend was ready to go home, but she was not. He gave her some cash and, despite the fact that his driver's license was suspended, drove her mother's car to the apartment he shared with her, her mother, and her six-year-old daughter.

{¶ 4} At around 10:00 p.m., Ms. Linkous and Ms. Lutz left the Time Out and visited a bar in Elyria. They returned to the Time Out around 1:00 a.m. on New Years Day and stayed there until closing time, 2:30 a.m. At some time during their second visit to the Time Out, they were joined by Charles Baker.

{¶ 5} As Ms. Linkous, Ms. Lutz, and Mr. Baker were leaving the Time Out, they ran into Shawn Kelley and Brandon Wilhelm in the parking lot. Messrs. Kelley and Wilhelm had come to the Time Out in Mr. Wilhelm's truck, but, as they were trying to leave, he was having trouble getting the truck started. Mr. Wilhelm and Ms. Lutz had previously met on one or two occasions, but, beyond that, the members of Ms. Linkous's group and the members of Mr. Kelley's group had not known each other before that morning. They struck up a conversation about the truck, and Mr. Baker tried to help determine why it would not start. Eventually, Mr. Wilhelm realized that he had somehow gotten Mr. Kelley's keys by mistake, and, when he attempted to start the truck using his own key, it started. *Page 4

{¶ 6} Once Mr. Wilhelm got his truck started, Ms. Linkous decided to leave with him and Mr. Kelley. Mr. Baker and Ms. Lutz went to Mr. Baker's house in Amherst, and Mr. Wilhelm, Mr. Kelley, and Ms. Linkous went to a house in Lorain, where Mr. Wilhelm and Mr. Kelley had bought and used cocaine earlier in the evening and where Mr. Kelley had left his car. After spending some time there, they also went to Mr. Baker's house, arriving sometime between 4:30 and 5:00 a.m. Ms. Linkous rode to Mr. Kelley's house with Mr. Wilhelm, and Mr. Kelley drove his car there.

{¶ 7} Once all five were at Mr. Baker's house, they spent some time talking, and some of them drank more alcohol. Ms. Linkous, Mr. Wilhelm, and Mr. Kelley twice went to the upstairs bathroom and "snort[ed]" cocaine. Mr. Wilhelm left Mr. Baker's house to go home between 5:30 and 5:45 a.m.

{¶ 8} At some point after Mr. Wilhelm left, first Ms. Lutz and then Mr. Baker went upstairs to sleep in Mr. Baker's bedroom, leaving Ms. Linkous and Mr. Kelley in the first-floor living room. According to Mr. Kelley, Ms. Linkous then started asking him about the chances of getting some more cocaine if they went back to the house where they had been before coming to Mr. Baker's. He claimed that he told her he was not going to do that, and she asked whether he would be able to get her some cocaine in the future. According to him, he initially resisted, but eventually accepted a blank, unsigned check from her, supposedly to be cashed by him and the proceeds used to purchase cocaine for her. He testified *Page 5 that she said she would give him the blank check, which he put in his wallet, and if, in the morning, he was willing to get the cocaine, she would fill it out and sign it.

{¶ 9} According to Mr. Kelley, while Ms. Linkous was getting the check from her purse, he moved next to her on the loveseat, where she had been sitting. He testified that she began flirting with him while they were talking about the check, and, once she had given it to him, they began kissing. He claimed that she unbuckled his pants and he unbuckled her pants and took her shirt off. He further claimed that he moved her bra to the side and kissed her breasts, that they both took their underpants off, and that they "started rubbing together." But then, according to him, she started "kind of pulling away" and told him she had a boyfriend. He said she then pulled up her underpants and put her shirt back on and he put his pants and shoes on; they talked a little more about him getting cocaine the next day; and he fell asleep on the couch in the living room.

{¶ 10} Mr. Kelley testified that he awoke once, went upstairs, and used the bathroom. He returned to the couch and went back to sleep. He said that he awoke again and went upstairs to ask if Ms. Lutz needed a ride home. According to him, he pushed the bedroom door open, and Mr. Baker looked at him, asked what he was doing in his room, jumped up, and came around the bed after him with a steak knife. He said they struggled, and he pushed Mr. Baker onto the waterbed on which Mr. Baker and Ms. Lutz had been sleeping: *Page 6

We were struggling at that point in time. And at that point I was able to take Mr. Baker and put him onto the bed. When he went on the bed, I went with him onto the waterbed. And we struggled.

He was — He had the knife in his hand. He had it in his right hand.

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Bluebook (online)
2008 Ohio 1458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-kelley-06ca008967-3-31-2008-ohioctapp-2008.