State v. Kozlosky

2011 Ohio 4814, 959 N.E.2d 1097, 195 Ohio App. 3d 343
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 22, 2011
Docket95861
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 2011 Ohio 4814 (State v. Kozlosky) 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. Kozlosky, 2011 Ohio 4814, 959 N.E.2d 1097, 195 Ohio App. 3d 343 (Ohio Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Patricia Ann Blackmon, Presiding Judge.

{¶ 1} Appellant, Carl Kozlosky, appeals his convictions and assigns ten errors for our review. 1 Having reviewed the record and pertinent law, we reverse the convictions and remand for a new trial. The apposite facts follow.

{¶ 2} Carl Kozlosky admitted shooting Andre Coleman in self-defense. The first trial was scheduled in March 2010. At the close of the state’s questioning of its primary witness, Valerie McNaughton, the prosecutor asked her, “[D]id Carl ever express a willingness or desire to kill Andre prior to killing him?” Immediately, the defense objected; but before the judge could respond to the objection, Valerie responded, “Yeah.” The court offered a curative instruction and dismissed the jury. The court then asked the defense whether it was moving for a mistrial. The defense responded in the affirmative, and the judge declared a mistrial.

{¶ 3} The defense later moved to dismiss the case because of double jeopardy, arguing that this case was obviously weak and that the prosecutor had goaded the defense into seeking a mistrial. The trial court denied the motion, and a second trial commenced in August 2010. The state again pursued its premise “that *345 Kozlosky killed Andre Coleman without justification” and called several witnesses to substantiate that fact. However, the evidence showed otherwise.

Jury Trial

{¶ 4} McNaughton testified again and described her eight-year on-and-off tumultuous relationship with Coleman, which was fraught with physical abuse. About two months prior to the shooting, she began renting the upstairs of Kozlosky’s home, and about a week later, she asked Kozlosky to allow Coleman to move into the house, and Kozlosky consented. However, because of the constant fights between her and Coleman, Kozlosky ultimately evicted Coleman.

{¶ 5} McNaughton testified that around 4 a.m., on September 20, 2009, Nicki, a woman she casually knew, Doug Kapel, and Coleman arrived in a red truck. Nicki invited McNaughton to party with them, and she accepted. They stopped to buy crack cocaine and proceeded to a motel, where they remained for several hours abusing drugs.

{¶ 6} McNaughton testified that after consuming all the crack cocaine they had purchased, they bought more, returned to the motel, and consumed more crack cocaine. McNaughton stated that once they had consumed all of the crack cocaine, Coleman encouraged her to make sexual advances towards Kapel in an effort to influence Kapel to buy more drugs. McNaughton refused, and Coleman became angry. As a ruse to leave the motel, McNaughton told Coleman that she needed to meet someone who had agreed to advance her drugs.

{¶ 7} McNaughton testified that the foursome drove to the parking lot of a Save-A-Lot supermarket located near Kozlosky’s home. McNaughton exited the truck while the others remained inside; she then surreptiously slipped away and made her way back home. Once home, McNaughton told Kozlosky that she had left Coleman a few streets away, that he was very upset, and that he would be there shortly looking for her.

{¶ 8} A short time later, McNaughton observed Coleman exiting the red truck driven by Kapel, via a computer-operated security camera that monitors Kozlosky’s driveway. McNaughton hysterically began yelling that Coleman had arrived and that they should lock the doors. Coleman immediately began banging on the locked back door; he kicked out the bottom panel and entered the house.

{¶ 9} McNaughton stated that Kozlosky told Coleman he was not allowed on the property, but Coleman pushed past him and came towards her in the living room. McNaughton yelled that the police had been called and that Kapel was pulling out of the driveway, which prompted Coleman to retreat and exit Kozlosky’s house.

*346 {¶ 10} McNaughton hid in the garage until Coleman left; she stayed for about 10 minutes, and reentered the house when she thought it was safe. When she entered the house, McNaughton found Coleman standing in the kitchen. Coleman immediately started yelling at McNaughton to give him money, followed her into the living room, grabbed her by the hair, threw her to the ground, and began hitting her. McNaughton testified that as Coleman was beating her, Kozlosky fired two shots, hitting Coleman, who spun around and fell to the ground. McNaughton testified that Kozlosky proceeded to shoot Coleman several times as he lay on the floor.

{¶ 11} At trial, 54-year-old Kozlosky, a laid-off engineer and part-time community college professor, as well as a United States Air Force veteran, took the stand in his own defense. Kozlosky testified that in June 2009, after being laid off from his job with Sprint in 2008, he rented the upstairs unit of his house to Carolyn Walker. McNaughton occasionally visited Walker and later sought Kozlosky’s permission to share the unit with Walker. Kozlosky consented, and McNaughton moved in July 2009.

{¶ 12} Walker moved out of the house at the end of July 2009, and McNaughton sought permission from Kozlosky for Coleman to move in, which he granted. From the very beginning, Coleman and McNaughton argued and fought constantly, with Coleman violently beating McNaughton, especially when he was coming down from a crack-cocaine high. Kozlosky testified that by the end of August 2009, the fighting between Coleman and McNaughton had become so frequent and disruptive to himself and his neighbors that he had ordered him to leave his house. Kozlosky escorted Coleman off his property and told him not to return. But Coleman was uncooperative. A loud argument ensued, and neighbors summoned the police. Coleman eventually left, and Kozlosky was cited for disorderly conduct. Kozlosky wore a leather pocket holster with a gun. He had a concealed carry permit; however, the police took the weapon and told him he could pick it up the next week.

{¶ 18} After Coleman’s departure, McNaughton warned him about Coleman’s violent past. McNaughton showed Kozlosky information on Cuyahoga County’s website regarding Coleman’s 1990 conviction for shooting a man to death, a conviction for carrying a concealed weapon, and numerous drug-related offenses.

{¶ 14} Kozlosky testified that on September 20, 2009, Coleman, despite protests, entered his house three separate times. First, Coleman began banging on the locked door shortly after McNaughton had arrived home. Kozlosky and McNaughton shouted that Coleman was not allowed inside, but he ignored them, kicked out the bottom panel of the door, and crawled through into the kitchen. Coleman finally left when McNaughton told him that the police had been called.

*347 {¶ 15} While Kozlosky was repairing the door that Coleman had kicked in, Coleman returned. Kozlosky demanded that he leave, but Coleman brushed passed him, asked if Kozlosky wanted to “shoot it out,” and proceeded to search for McNaughton. While Kozlosky was in the house, Coleman held one hand behind his back signaling that he had a gun. Coleman left after his attempts to locate McNaughton proved unsuccessful.

{¶ 16} Coleman returned a third time while Kozlosky was still repairing the broken door. Again, Kozlosky demanded that Coleman leave, at which time McNaughton entered the house.

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Bluebook (online)
2011 Ohio 4814, 959 N.E.2d 1097, 195 Ohio App. 3d 343, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-kozlosky-ohioctapp-2011.