State v. Knuff

2024 Ohio 902, 239 N.E.3d 259, 175 Ohio St. 3d 82
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 14, 2024
Docket2019-1323
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 2024 Ohio 902 (State v. Knuff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Knuff, 2024 Ohio 902, 239 N.E.3d 259, 175 Ohio St. 3d 82 (Ohio 2024).

Opinion

[This opinion has been published in Ohio Official Reports at 175 Ohio St.3d 82.]

THE STATE OF OHIO, APPELLEE, v. KNUFF, APPELLANT. [Cite as State v. Knuff, 2024-Ohio-902.] Criminal law—Aggravated murders—Convictions and death sentences affirmed. (No. 2019-1323—Submitted May 2, 2023—Decided March 14, 2024.) APPEAL from the Court of Common Pleas of Cuyahoga County, No. CR-17-618285-A. __________________ DETERS, J. {¶ 1} This is an appeal of right in a capital case. Thomas E. Knuff Jr. was convicted on two counts of aggravated murder with death specifications for killing John Mann and Regina Capobianco. We affirm his convictions and the imposition of the death sentences. I. BACKGROUND A. The Murders {¶ 2} Knuff was scheduled to be released from prison on April 11, 2017, after serving a sentence of 15 and a half years. See State v. Knuff, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 80971, 2002-Ohio-6049. A few days before April 11, Alicia Stoner, a former prison employee with whom Knuff had had a relationship while he was incarcerated, offered to pick him up upon his release. Knuff declined her offer, saying he had already arranged for a ride with “John and his old lady.” {¶ 3} Shortly after his release, Knuff began staying at Village Motel in Strongsville in a room paid for by Stoner. On May 10, Knuff told his parole officer, Marc Fisher, that he would sometimes visit Stoner at her house but that he was living at the motel. When Fisher went to the motel, however, he learned that the manager had not seen Knuff since May 5. When Fisher confronted Knuff about being dishonest regarding his living arrangements, Knuff told Fisher that he was SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

living with John Mann at 6209 Nelwood Road in Parma Heights. Fisher told Knuff to report to him the next day. {¶ 4} That same day, May 10, Fisher spoke with Mann on the telephone. Mann told Fisher that he lived alone, was not under court-ordered supervision, and had no weapons or dangerous animals in his house, and he agreed to unannounced home visits and warrantless searches. So Fisher granted Knuff permission to stay with Mann, pending a home visit. Knuff reported to Fisher on May 11 as he had been instructed and received a sanction for being dishonest about his living arrangements. {¶ 5} Contrary to Mann’s statements to Fisher, Mann was not living alone when he allowed Knuff to move into his residence; Regina Capobianco also had been living at 6209 Nelwood Road, since 2016. The relationship between Knuff and Capobianco was a complicated one that predated Knuff’s 2017 release from prison. In 2005, Capobianco began a lengthy pen-pal relationship with Knuff. Their relationship, which had developed into a romantic one, ended during Knuff’s imprisonment because Capobianco had begun using his money to purchase drugs for herself. When Knuff moved into the house at 6209 Nelwood Road, Capobianco was still abusing drugs. She was also engaging in prostitution—sometimes at Mann’s house. Residing with someone engaged in crimes such as drug use or prostitution could have resulted in progressive sanctions against Knuff. So, a conflict arose between Knuff and Capobianco, which came to a head on May 11. {¶ 6} That night, around 8:00 p.m., Knuff sent a text message to Stoner requesting money for a room for that night, saying, “[W]e have to get Regina out [of the house] now.” Stoner sent Knuff $80 through Western Union. From 8:19 p.m. on May 11 until the afternoon of May 12, Stoner repeatedly called and sent text messages to Knuff but received no response. She also called and sent text messages to Mann between 12:27 a.m. and 10:22 a.m. on May 12 but could not reach him.

2 January Term, 2024

{¶ 7} In the early afternoon of May 12, Knuff finally called Stoner, sounding panicky and upset. He told her that he needed her to come to him but that he couldn’t explain why at the time. Stoner picked Knuff up at a bar. {¶ 8} Once Knuff was in her car, Stoner saw that one of his fingers was bandaged. Knuff told her that drug dealers had come to Mann’s house because Capobianco owed them money. He said the dealers beat Mann and took Mann’s car. He explained that afterwards, a conversation between Mann and Capobianco escalated and that Capobianco stabbed Mann. Then, Knuff told Stoner, the situation between himself and Capobianco escalated and he stabbed Capobianco. Knuff claimed that his finger had been injured when he put up a hand to block Capobianco from stabbing him. He told Stoner that he remembered stabbing Capobianco and then blacking out; when he came to, he grabbed Mann’s cellphone and bus pass and left the house. When Stoner urged Knuff to call an ambulance for Mann and Capobianco, Knuff responded, “No, they’re dead.” {¶ 9} In addition to the story he told Stoner, Knuff gave a variety of explanations to different people regarding how he had injured his finger. He told one person that he had been involved in a car chase while driving his son’s truck and had hurt his finger on the vehicle. To others, he explained that a group of men had jumped him in Cleveland and tried to stab him; he claimed to have been cut in the process of disarming these attackers. Other explanations included that he had been bitten by a dog, that he had cut his finger while trimming hedges, and that he had been injured in a fight with some men who had supposedly attacked Mann inside the Nelwood Road house. {¶ 10} The latter story was one that he told his son Tommy. On the morning of May 13, Knuff called Tommy and asked to be picked up. Tommy picked him up from 6209 Nelwood Road. When Knuff got into the vehicle, Tommy asked him about the bandage on his hand. Knuff then told Tommy that there were two dead

3 SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

people back at the house. When Tommy asked Knuff whether he was responsible for those deaths, Knuff answered that he was. {¶ 11} Knuff told Tommy that he had been cleaning the basement at 6209 Nelwood Road and when he went upstairs, he found two men stabbing Mann. Knuff told Tommy that he had stepped into the fray and killed both of the men who had been attacking Mann. Knuff told Tommy that he wanted to chop off the men’s fingers and throw them into a sewer and then chop the bodies up to get rid of them. {¶ 12} Two days later, on May 15, Tommy drove Knuff to a store where Knuff bought super-strength glue for his injured finger and a box of large, plastic trash bags known as “contractor bags.” {¶ 13} The next day, Stoner gave Knuff a ride to another store where he bought two hacksaws and two blades and shoplifted an X-Acto knife. Knuff told Stoner that he was going to use the hacksaws to dismember the bodies. {¶ 14} On May 17, Knuff took his son’s white SUV without permission. That night, he broke into two Parma Heights businesses—Classic Hair Studio and Spa & Nails. He took a cash register from Classic Hair Studio and cash from Spa & Nails. Surveillance video from Classic Hair Studio showed him entering the business and driving away in a white SUV. {¶ 15} On May 18, Ohio State Highway Patrol Sergeant Alan Dunbar responded to an alert about a man on a highway holding a gun to his head. Sergeant Dunbar found Knuff walking back and forth along the highway and heard him say, “Just kill me, I don’t want to live anymore.” Knuff did not have a gun, however. Sergeant Dunbar took him into custody without any issues. Knuff told Sergeant Dunbar that undercover police officers had been chasing him while he was driving his son’s SUV and that he had crashed the SUV and abandoned it. Sergeant Dunbar observed that one of Knuff’s index fingers was severely injured, and he called for an emergency medical transport. Knuff was taken to Medina General Hospital

4 January Term, 2024

where Sergeant Dunbar requested a psychiatric hold because Knuff had threatened self-harm. {¶ 16} At the hospital, Knuff was seen by Dr. Michelle Beskid, an emergency-medicine physician. He told Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2024 Ohio 902, 239 N.E.3d 259, 175 Ohio St. 3d 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-knuff-ohio-2024.