State v. Leonard

2013 Ohio 1446
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 11, 2013
Docket98626
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

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Bluebook
State v. Leonard, 2013 Ohio 1446 (Ohio Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Leonard, 2013-Ohio-1446.]

Court of Appeals of Ohio EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION No. 98626

STATE OF OHIO

PLAINTIFF-APPELLEE

vs.

ANTHONY LEONARD DEFENDANT-APPELLANT

JUDGMENT: AFFIRMED

Criminal Appeal from the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas Case No. CR-554061

BEFORE: Jones, P.J., S. Gallagher, J., and E.A. Gallagher, J.

RELEASED AND JOURNALIZED: April 11, 2013 ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT

Robert L. Tobik Cuyahoga County Public Defender

BY: Cullen Sweeney John Martin Assistant Public Defenders 310 Lakeside Avenue Suite 200 Cleveland, Ohio 44113

ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE

Timothy J. McGinty Cuyahoga County Prosecutor

BY: Kevin R. Filiatraut Assistant County Prosecutor The Justice Center, 8th Floor 1200 Ontario Street Cleveland, Ohio 44113 LARRY A. JONES, SR., P.J.:

{¶1} Defendant-appellant, Anthony Leonard, appeals his convictions for rape,

attempted rape, and kidnapping. We affirm.

{¶2} In 2011, Leonard was charged in a five-count indictment with two counts of

rape, two counts of kidnapping, and one count of attempted rape; each count contained a

sexually violent predator specification. The state alleged that the incident occurred in

April 1998.

{¶3} In May 2012, the matter proceeded to a jury trial; Leonard waived his right to

a jury trial on the sexually violent predator specifications. The following pertinent facts

were adduced at trial.

{¶4} “R.M.”1 testified that when he was nine years old he lived with his mother in

the area of East 40th Street and Quincy Avenue in Cleveland. As R.M. remembers, on

the day in question he was walking from his friend’s house to his grandmother’s house.

When he discovered that his grandmother was not home, he began to cross East 40th

Street to walk back to the friend’s house. A white Cadillac pulled up and a man got out

and snatched R.M., forcing him into the back seat of the car. The man told R.M. not to

move. R.M. tried to get out of the car but he was unable to open the back door. The

man told R.M. that “if he wanted this to go cool he would keep quiet and keep his head

down.”

{¶5} The man drove around for approximately ten minutes before stopping at a

The victim in this case is identified by his initials in accordance with this court’s policy. 1 park. The man then got into the back seat, took off R.M.’s clothes, and “stuck his finger

in [R.M.’s] butt.” Then the man put his penis in R.M.’s buttocks and forced R.M. to

perform oral sex on him. R.M. gagged, and the man got mad. The man then “peed”2

on R.M. and forced R.M. to perform oral sex again. R.M. vomited, and the man pushed

R.M. out of his car. R.M. did not have any clothes on.

{¶6} R.M. testified that he did not get a good look at his attacker because the man

kept telling him to put his head down. He described his attacker as a dark-skinned black

man who was the same height as R.M. at the time of trial.

{¶7} R.M. testified that he remembered the car had a red- or burgundy-colored

interior and there was a water bottle on the floor. After the man pushed R.M. out of the

car, R.M. started screaming. An elderly woman assisted him, giving him a blanket while

they waited for the police to arrive.

{¶8} R.M.’s mother testified that on the day her son was attacked, she had told him

to take out the trash but when he did not return, she called the Cleveland Police and went

out looking for him. A couple of hours later, the police came to her apartment and

informed her they found R.M. a few blocks away, naked. R.M. was crying and initially

refused to talk about what had happened. Eventually, R.M. told his mother, “he peed on

me. He peed on me. He tried to make me kiss him. He tried to make me touch him.”

{¶9} Tracy Douglas, who worked as a nurse at the former Mount Sinai Medical

R.M. testified that he did not know what semen was at the time of the attack, and could not 2

remember if he had meant that the man had ejaculated on him. Center, testified that she examined R.M. on that day. The young boy was brought to the

hospital by the police. R.M. reported he had been raped by a stranger. Douglas

testified that, as part of her examination, she took swabs from inside R.M.’s mouth and

around the edge of his anus. After the examination, Douglas released the rape kit to law

enforcement. Detective Curtis Palmer testified that he collected the rape kit from Mt.

Sinai and entered it into the Cleveland Police Property room.

{¶10} Detective Karl Lessman was assigned to the case. He remembered that

R.M.’s mother did not want to pursue the case because her son was so distraught. Det.

Lessman was able to develop a vague description of the perpetrator and his car, but was

unable to find any suspects. The case then went cold.

{¶11} Christopher Smith, an analyst with the Ohio Bureau of Criminal

Investigation (“BCI”), testified that in March 2006 he analyzed the rape kit after

receiving it from the Cleveland Police Department. He located the presence of semen in

the oral swabs and trace amounts of semen in the anal swabs. At that time, neither the

police nor BCI had Leonard’s DNA.

{¶12} BCI then forwarded the rape kit to a lab in Virginia for further testing on the

samples to develop a DNA profile. In July 2006, the Virginia lab finished its testing,

forwarded its results to BCI, and entered the DNA profile into a national computer

database. In October 2006, a detective with the Cleveland Police was notified by BCI

that the database had matched Leonard’s DNA profile to the case.

{¶13} In August 2011, Detective Lessman was notified of the match. He was able to locate and interview Leonard. He asked Leonard if he had ever owned a white

Cadillac, and Leonard said his wife had owned such a car. Leonard was arrested.

Detective Lessman testified that when he told Leonard about the DNA match, Leonard

replied “DNA doesn’t lie and if it was [my] DNA in the rape kit, then [I] must have

done it.” Detective Lessman obtained Leonard’s consent, took a swab from inside his

mouth, and sent it to BCI for further DNA analysis.

{¶14} Kelly Ress, a DNA analyst for BCI, testified that she received a sample of

Leonard’s DNA from the Cleveland Police in September 2011, tested the sample, and

developed his DNA profile. BCI issued a new report finding that the August 2011 DNA

sample from Leonard matched the DNA in the rape kit. In 2012, BCI again tested the

samples and found that Leonard could not be excluded as the source of the semen found

from the oral swabs.

{¶15} Leonard’s wife, Elizabeth Leonard, testified she owned a white Cadillac in

1998 that her husband drove, but it was a two-door with white interior. Ashley Leonard,

Leonard’s stepdaughter, and Rasheem Ellis, a family friend, both testified that Leonard

had always behaved appropriately around them and that they trusted him around their

respective children.

{¶16} The jury convicted Leonard of three counts: Count 2, rape, in violation of

R.C. 2907.02(A)(1)(B) and furthermore found that he had purposely compelled the victim

to submit by force or threat of force; Count 3, attempted rape, in violation of R.C.

2907.02(A)(1)(B) and 2923.02; and Count 4, kidnapping with a sexual motivation specification, in violation of R.C. 2905.01(A)(4). The trial court held a hearing at which

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