State v. Logan, Unpublished Decision (9-30-1999)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 30, 1999
DocketNo. 74629.
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Logan, Unpublished Decision (9-30-1999) (State v. Logan, Unpublished Decision (9-30-1999)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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State v. Logan, Unpublished Decision (9-30-1999), (Ohio Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION
Defendant-appellant Durrond Logan appeals from his convictions on two counts of aggravated murder and one count of aggravated robbery, all with firearm specifications.

Appellant contends his trial counsel were ineffective both for their failure to challenge the police stop of him that led to his arrest and for their failure to request a limiting instruction to the jury concerning the admission into evidence of certain statements made by a witness. Appellant further contends the admission of the statements and the lack of a limiting instruction also constituted error on the trial court's part. Finally, appellant asserts his convictions rested upon insufficient evidence.

This court has reviewed the record and finds appellant's contentions are unsupported; therefore, his convictions are affirmed.

Appellant's convictions stem from an incident that occurred at approximately 2:00 a.m. on January 22, 1998. The victim, Ronnie Jackson, had stopped an hour earlier at a restaurant located at East 69th Street and Superior Avenue to order some food. The owner of the restaurant, George Boyd, recognized Jackson because he was a customer who would "come into the store three, four times a week."1 Boyd knew Jackson drove a Mercedes automobile and "always, had money on him," which he carried as a "bundle" in his pocket rather than in his wallet. Jackson placed the order, left for "maybe 20, 30 minutes," then returned to finish his wait for the food.

Upon Jackson's return, Boyd noticed that a woman followed him into the store. As Jackson sat down, the woman approached him, and the two began to converse. Boyd paid little attention to most of what the two said to each other, but after Jackson had paid for his order and was preparing to leave, Boyd heard the woman say "something like, are you going to do it or not?" Boyd then observed the two leave together.

As these events were occurring, Herman Thomas, who lived in the first floor apartment of a house located at 2192 East 101st Street, was walking to his home after purchasing cigarettes at a nearby gasoline station when he observed a man "pacing in front of the house, back and forth." Thomas remained across the street and called out to the man, "who was he looking for?"

The man was wearing a long, black trench coat over dark clothing. He mentioned someone named "Janice." Thomas was aware no one by that name lived in any of the apartments; therefore, his suspicions were aroused. Thomas answered the man's queries while he waited for the man to leave. After approximately five minutes, the man began to walk away. Thomas observed a car proceeding in the opposite direction on the street, which stopped for a moment by the man, then continued. The man saw Thomas still was watching, so he called out that he was waiting for "[his] ride to come back and pick [him] up."

Thomas crossed the street to his house after the man resumed walking. Thomas went indoors, woke his second-floor neighbor, Adrian Holmes, in order to warn him of the suspicious man, then returned to his porch to further monitor the man's movements. At that point, another car stopped in front of the house.

The car contained a male driver and a female passenger. The woman in the car demanded to know what Thomas was "doing standing on her porch?" Thomas, who was already tense and did not recognize the woman as a resident of the house, began arguing with her. The woman soon turned to her companion and stated something; the car thereupon continued a short distance on the street before turning around and parking on the northbound side of the street. Thomas, at that point, re-entered his apartment.

Holmes, although he had noticed the "black male in a dark long coat" Thomas had pointed out to him, also saw the male had "walked away," so he did not remain outdoors. Thomas's subsequent argument with the woman, whom Holmes recognized as Natasha Dyer, a friend of Neeka Penn, his third-floor neighbor, only briefly drew him back to his porch. Approximately five minutes later, however, Holmes heard the car that had been parked on the opposite side of the street "revving."

The noise aroused Holmes' curiosity. He looked out his apartment window to the street and saw the car suddenly "speed off full speed." As he watched, the car went "straight down the street" toward Cedar Road. The car did not slow down as it crossed Cedar Road and headed for the Cleveland Clinic's property. By the time Holmes ran outside to his porch, the car had crashed into the building that stood on the property.

The female passenger in the car, Natasha Dyer, struck her head on the windshield upon the car's impact with the building. She was dazed as she exited it, reaching for her purse and then "staggering" toward her friend's house.

Dyer's friend, Neeka Penn, lived on the third floor of the house with her uncle, Lucky Penn, and her children. Penn was returning from escorting another friend to a nearby bus stop when she saw Dyer approach the house. Penn saw that Dyer "had blood all over her." In response to Penn's anxious inquiries about what had happened, Dyer told her, "A man just got his head blew off."

Penn helped Dyer into the house, whereupon Dyer asked for a telephone. Holmes produced his portable telephone for Dyer's use; she entered a number but received no response. Penn then took the telephone and called the emergency number.

At the Cleveland Clinic, a security officer, Hach Q. Pham, had heard the car crash through the security fence that encircled the perimeter of the property and then strike the building. He could see the vehicle from his vantage point in the guard outpost. Pham saw a "shadow" move from the car toward the opening in the fence. By the time he responded to the scene, only the driver remained in the car. Both the front and the rear doors on the passenger side of the car were slightly open.

Pham looked inside the car as he heard several zone cars of the Cleveland Police Department arrive at the scene. Pham saw the driver, later identified as Ronnie Jackson, lying on the steering wheel, his left arm "dropped down" and his skull "completely open like a watermelon." The subsequent autopsy examination revealed Jackson had died as a result of a twelve-gauge shotgun discharge to the head at close range. Jackson had a corresponding hand wound, which indicated he had been attempting to seize the weapon from his assailant when it discharged. The gun's blast removed seventy-five percent of Jackson's brain from his head and deposited that portion in various areas inside the car. Although Jackson's wallet remained in his pocket, he had only fifty-nine cents on his person.

Since the driver obviously was dead, Pham circled the car for investigatory purposes. He found on the ground two items: near the rear passenger door, he observed a piece of matter later identified as a portion of the victim's brain and behind the car, he found an activated pager. Since the pager was not the type issued to Cleveland Clinic employees and the police officers also denied ownership, Pham replaced it on the ground for the police investigators. He noticed as he did so a functional "indicator"; thus, the unit still received calls.

Although initially responding to the scene of the crash, Cleveland Police Officer Richard Ubienski soon was notified the car's female passenger was nearby; therefore, he drove approximately three hundred feet from the scene to the house at 2192 East 101st Street. Although at that time EMS technicians were treating Dyer, Ubienski spoke briefly with her. Dyer indicated an unknown assailant had entered the car, apparently in an attempt to rob them; she could provide neither a description nor a name for the assailant. The technicians then transported Dyer to Mt.

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Logan, Unpublished Decision (9-30-1999), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-logan-unpublished-decision-9-30-1999-ohioctapp-1999.