State v. Lakes, Unpublished Decision (1-26-2007)

2007 Ohio 325
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 26, 2007
DocketNo. 21490.
StatusUnpublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 2007 Ohio 325 (State v. Lakes, Unpublished Decision (1-26-2007)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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State v. Lakes, Unpublished Decision (1-26-2007), 2007 Ohio 325 (Ohio Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION
{¶ 1} Antonio Lakes appeals from his conviction of aggravated murder, aggravated robbery, and discharging a firearm near prohibited premises. Lakes' conviction followed a jury trial on all counts. The State's principal witness was the defendant's half-brother, Juan Carpenter, who testified on direct examination as follows.

{¶ 2} In the late evening of February 22, 2005, Carpenter drove over to lower Dayton View to visit a friend on Five Oaks Avenue. In the vehicle with him was the defendant. When Carpenter turned onto Bellevue Avenue, Antonio Lakes asked Carpenter to stop his car and let him out to talk to a man later determined to be Jawan Jefferson. Carpenter then pulled his vehicle up the street, parked and waited for Lakes. After about five minutes, Carpenter testified he heard five or six shots ring out. He thought it sounded like two guns had been fired. Carpenter said as he began to pull his car away, Lakes jumped in the front seat of his car. Carpenter said Lakes told him he tried to rob the man and shot at him but he didn't know if he actually hit him. (T. 256). Carpenter said he drove a short distance and then told Lakes to get out of his car. Carpenter said he then went to his girlfriend, Diamond Poole's, house and told her and her sister, Daria, what happened.

{¶ 3} The next morning Carpenter testified he received a call from Antonio Lakes who told him the robbery victim was dead. Later that day Carpenter said Lakes told him more details about the shooting. Carpenter said Lakes told him that when he tried to take money from Jefferson, the victim pulled out a gun and they started shooting at each other. (T. 266). Carpenter said he later told his older brother and his mother about the shooting of Jefferson. After learning that the police were looking for Juan's car, they contacted the police and Carpenter gave the police a statement about the shooting.

{¶ 4} Carpenter said he did not call the police because he did not want to get the defendant in trouble. Carpenter testified he told his big brother, Eric, what happened. He said he told Eric that the defendant tried to rob the victim before he shot him. (T. 267).

{¶ 5} On cross-examination, Carpenter denied telling Daria Poole that the defendant tried to rob the man or "vice versa." (T. 280). He also denied telling Daria that he heard gunshots and that the defendant was probably trying to rob the man. He admitted he knew the police were looking for his car before he went to the police and gave them a statement. He admitted that he initially did not tell the police that the defendant told him he tried to rob Jawan Jefferson. (T. 290).

{¶ 6} Allen Lakes, the brother of Juan Carpenter and the defendant, testified he saw Juan and the defendant leave together on the night of the shooting. Lakes said he got a call from the defendant in the early morning hours and the defendant told him that he got into an argument with a man and they both started shooting at each other. He admitted, however, telling the police in a videotaped interview that the defendant told him he was trying to rob the victim. (T. 311 ).

{¶ 7} Officer Robert Orndorff was dispatched to 824 Neal Avenue just after midnight on February 23 on a report of a shooting. When Orndorff arrived, a large crowd had gathered and Orndorff found Jefferson lying in the front yard having apparently been shot. Orndorff called for medical assistance. He discovered no weapon on Jefferson or nearby him. Jacob Blatzofthe Dayton Fire Department was dispatched to the scene also. He discovered that Jefferson had been shot in the chest and he removed Jefferson to the Good Samaritan Hospital where he died of his injury. He also saw no weapon on Jefferson or about him. Officer David Matthews responded to the scene also and he observed several small caliber spent shell casings, and one grouping of the casings appeared to be of two different sizes. (T. 163). Officer Anthony Sawmiller also responded and he determined some of the shell casings clustered together near Neal and Bellevue were nine-millimeter casings and some were.380 casings. Sawmiller said the casings appeared to be relatively new.

{¶ 8} The defendant testified in his own behalf that Juan Carpenter gave him a ride over to Dayton View to see a female friend. He said he carried a gun for his own protection. He said he knew Juan was selling his car and wheel rims, and when he saw Jawan Jefferson standing at the corner of Bellevue and Neal, he asked Carpenter to stop the car. The defendant said he got out of the car and told Jefferson about Carpenter's car and offered to let him check it out. The defendant said when he turned around Jefferson pulled a gun on him and said, "You know what it is." (T. 474). The defendant said he stepped back and went into his pocket for his gun when Jefferson shot at him and he shot back at Jefferson. The defendant said he didn't know how many times he fired his gun at Jefferson because he was running away from him at the time. The defendant said he caught up with Carpenter, got into his car, and told him what happened. He said he told Carpenter that Jefferson tried to rob him. (T. 481). He said he didn't call the police because he was scared because he was not supposed to have a gun and he didn't know he had killed Jefferson. (T. 482). The defendant said he got rid of the gun the next day. He said sometime later he was arrested by the police and he told them just what he was now telling the jury. He said the gun he was carrying was a .380 with a full clip.

{¶ 9} Daria Poole testified in the defense case that in her conversation with Juan Carpenter on the night of the shooting it was unclear from what Juan was saying to her

{¶ 10} who robbed whom. (T. 460).

{¶ 11} In rebuttal, Juan Carpenter testified he never had a conversation with the defendant about selling his car (T. 523, 524). He denied ever telling the defendant that if he helped him sell his car he would give him part of the money. (T. 524). He denied talking to the defendant about selling special car rims.

{¶ 12} Detective Doyle Burke testified in rebuttal that the defendant initially denied any knowledge of the shooting but changed his story when told that they had interviewed Carpenter. Burke said the defendant told him Jefferson was the one who inquired about buying Carpenter's car. Burke said the defendant never mentioned car rims or earning a commission for selling Carpenter's car. Burke said the defendant told him he sold the .380 handgun the next day to someone in the street.

{¶ 13} Lakes contends that his convictions were against the manifest weight of the evidence and were also based on insufficient evidence as a matter of law.

{¶ 14} Lakes notes that he testified that Jawan Jefferson tried to rob him and he did not shoot at Jefferson until after Jefferson fired a gun at him first. Lakes notes he testified that he was scared when Jefferson pulled a gun on him and when he shot back at Jefferson he had his head turned and did not know if he shot Jefferson or not. He also notes that the police recovered two different-caliber casings consistent with both he and the victim firing guns. The Appellant also notes that he told both Juan Carpenter and Allen Lakes that it was Jefferson who pulled a gun and fired it first. The Appellant notes that Allen Lakes was not credible because when he was first interviewed by the police he did not implicate him in a robbery attempt upon Jefferson. He also notes he was working

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2007 Ohio 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lakes-unpublished-decision-1-26-2007-ohioctapp-2007.