State v. McCrackin, Unpublished Decision (6-24-2002)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 24, 2002
DocketCase No. CA2001-04-096.
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. McCrackin, Unpublished Decision (6-24-2002) (State v. McCrackin, Unpublished Decision (6-24-2002)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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State v. McCrackin, Unpublished Decision (6-24-2002), (Ohio Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION
Defendant-appellant, Rex McCrackin, appeals from his conviction and sentence for rape in the Butler County Common Pleas Court. The trial court's judgment is affirmed.

Yvonne Ziels is a licensed practical nurse who worked for a temporary agency that posted her at various nursing care facilities in the area. McCrackin was employed by another agency as a nursing assistant. Ziels first met McCrackin in May or June of 1999. At times, McCrackin worked under Ziels' immediate supervision.

In August 1999, McCrackin began selling Ziels "diet" pills or "speed" to help her through the long shifts she had to work. He sold diet pills to her on about five occasions from August 1999 to December 1999. McCrackin visited Ziels' home approximately four times, selling her diet pills on several of these occasions, even when Ziels' husband and children were present.

On the morning of April 13, 2000, Ziels was returning home after dropping her son off at school when she saw McCrackin in his automobile at the stop sign on her street. She had not seen him for two months and had been trying to stay way from him because she had begun to feel uncomfortable around him. After McCrackin and Ziels exchanged pleasantries, he asked her to lend him some money. Ziels, who had loaned money to McCrackin in the past, agreed to do so. They drove to an automated teller machine, where Ziels withdrew $100, giving $80 of it to McCrackin. They did not discuss when McCrackin had to repay the money. The two then went their separate ways.

Ziels returned home, intending to lie down before going to work. However, at about 11:00 a.m., she heard someone beating on the door, on the bedroom window, and at the back of the house. When Ziels opened the door, McCrackin was there. He pushed his way into Ziels' house, grabbed hold of her arms, and pushed her into the foyer. After trying unsuccessfully to push her towards a bedroom, he pulled her into the living room and threw her on the couch. In spite of Ziels' plea, "don't do this," McCrackin removed her shorts and panties, and pulled down his sweatpants and underwear. He got on top of Ziels and engaged in vaginal intercourse with her.

When McCrackin stood up, Ziels grabbed her shorts and panties, ran into a bathroom and locked the door. Ziels heard McCrackin walking around and the toilet flush in the master bedroom. When she was sure he had left, Ziels made several telephone calls for help, including one to 911.

When Fairfield Township police officers arrived at her home, Ziels told them McCrackin had raped her. Ziels was taken to the hospital where she was examined by Amy Abner, a sexual assault nurse examiner, who specializes in treating victims of sexual assault. Abner observed red marks on both of Ziels' arms, and areas of redness and petechial bruising on Ziels' vaginal opening and cervix.

McCrackin was arrested later that same day. During an inventory search of his automobile, police discovered a debit card with Ziels' name on it. When interviewed by Detective Captain Alan Laney, McCrackin explained that Ziels had given him the debit card so that he could collect money she owed him for some diet pills he had sold her. McCrackin also told Laney about several photographs of Ziels and her husband in sexually compromising positions, which he had secreted under the floor mat on the passenger side of his automobile. McCrackin claimed Ziels had given him the photographs as a symbol of their friendship.

When Laney made it clear to McCrackin that he was being investigated for rape, McCrackin asked for an attorney. Laney then asked McCrackin for his consent to retrieve the photographs of Ziels and her husband from his automobile. McCrackin granted Laney permission to retrieve the photographs, signing a handwritten "consent to search" form. In one of the photographs, a picture of Ziels' head had been cut off.

McCrackin was indicted for rape pursuant to R.C. 2907.02(A)(2). McCrackin moved to suppress the statements he made to police and the items seized from his automobile on the grounds that they were illegally obtained. The motion was denied following a hearing.

At McCrackin's trial, the state presented the testimony of Ziels, Abner and Laney, among others, who testified to the facts set forth above. Ziels also testified that the debit card found in McCrackin's car had been on a table in her living room, and that the photographs recovered from McCrackin's automobile had been in a box in her master bedroom's closet. Ziels testified that she did not give either the debit card or photographs to McCrackin.

McCrackin testified on his own behalf. His version of events was as follows: He had been to Ziels' house at least ten times, and had met with Ziels at various places, including the nursing homes where they both worked, and at the YMCA. He sold Ziels "diet drugs" on three occasions. His relationship with Ziels' progressed to the point where Ziels would allow him to kiss her, and they would fondle each other's genitals. According to McCrackin, Ziels had given him the pictures of her and her husband engaging in sex as a "symbol" of their friendship, and because she and McCrackin had never actually engaged in sexual intercourse with each other.

McCrackin testified that he contacted Ziels two days prior to the date of the alleged rape to remind her she owed him $100 for 20 Diatrex pills (speed) he had sold her. Ziels gave him her debit card so that he could get the money she owed him. After discovering he could not obtain money from the debit card, he called Ziels, who told him that she would have the money on April 13.

McCrackin testified that on April 13, 2000 he traveled to Ziels' home, and then the two of them traveled separately to an ATM. Once there, he got into Ziels' automobile. Ziels withdrew the money she allegedly owed McCrackin, and gave it to him. The two then went their separate ways.

McCrackin testified that after he had left Ziels, he noticed that a bottle of Diatrex pills worth about $200, which he had been carrying in his coat pocket, was missing. After concluding the pills must have fallen out of his pocket when he was in Ziels' automobile, McCrackin called her twice. When she did not answer, he left a "nasty message" on her answering machine, threatening to show her husband the photographs she allegedly had given him unless she returned the pills to him. According to McCrackin, Ziels called him back immediately and agreed to leave his bottle of Diatrex "outside of her door, under her floor mat."

McCrackin testified that he traveled to Ziels' home and retrieved his pills from under the floor mat. According to McCrackin, Ziels came to the door wearing only a T-shirt and panties. McCrackin apologized to Ziels for leaving the "nasty" message. Then, according to McCrackin, the two began kissing, went inside the house, and had consensual sex on the living room couch. McCrackin testified that this was the first time he and Ziels engaged in vaginal intercourse. McCrackin said the two did not say anything to each other after he entered the house, and that he left her a "line" of powdered cocaine worth about two or three dollars before leaving.

On rebuttal, Ziels testified that she and McCrackin had never had any form of sexual contact prior to the date of the alleged rape, and she reiterated that McCrackin had raped her.

The jury convicted McCrackin of rape. The trial court sentenced him to a three-year prison term and fined him $4,000.

McCrackin appeals, raising two assignments of error.

Assignment of Error No. 1:

"THE TRIAL COURT ERRED TO THE PREJUDICE OF DEFENDANT-APPELLANT WHEN IT OVERRULED HIS MOTION TO SUPPRESS."

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
State v. McCrackin, Unpublished Decision (6-24-2002), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mccrackin-unpublished-decision-6-24-2002-ohioctapp-2002.