State v. McKinney

2014 Ohio 5591
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 19, 2014
DocketE-13-008
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
State v. McKinney, 2014 Ohio 5591 (Ohio Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. McKinney, 2014-Ohio-5591.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT ERIE COUNTY

State of Ohio Court of Appeals No. E-13-008

Appellee Trial Court No. 2012-CR-195

v.

Robert W. McKinney DECISION AND JUDGMENT

Appellant Decided: December 19, 2014

*****

Kevin J. Baxter, Erie County Prosecuting Attorney, and Mary Ann Barylski and Frank Romeo Zeleznikar, Assistant Prosecuting Attorneys, for appellee.

Edward J. Stechschulte, for appellant.

OSOWIK, J.

{¶ 1} This is an appeal from a judgment of the Erie County Court of Common

Pleas that found appellant guilty of one count of assault in violation of R.C. 2903.13(A), a first degree misdemeanor. For the reasons that follow, the judgment of the trial court is

affirmed.

{¶ 2} The undisputed facts relevant to the issues raised on appeal are as follows.

On June 13, 2012, appellant was indicted on one count of felonious assault in violation of

R.C. 2903.11(A)(2) in connection with an assault upon Dwayne Jarrell on March 24,

2012, at the Vermillion County Club (“the club”). Appellant entered a plea of not guilty

to the charge and on January 15, 2013, trial to a jury commenced.

{¶ 3} The state presented the testimony of eight witnesses. First to testify was Sgt.

Daniel McGlothlin, with the Erie County Sheriff’s Office, who responded to a call on

March 24, 2012, reporting a fight at the Vermillion Country Club. When McGlothlin

arrived, the suspect had left and several deputies were talking to Dwayne Jarrell, the

victim. McGlothlin attempted to gather information from two witnesses at the bar who

he was told had been sitting with appellant, but found them to be “uncooperative.” The

sergeant did not speak directly with the victim but observed that he had a cut on his scalp.

McGlothlin also observed broken glass on the floor of the men’s room.

{¶ 4} Carolyn Springer, who was tending bar at the club at the time of the assault,

testified that toward the end of the evening she heard yelling “back and forth” but did not

observe any physical confrontation.

{¶ 5} Deputy Alexis Harvey testified that she responded to the call and

interviewed Jarrell, who told her that while using the restroom he was attacked and hit on

the back of the head with a glass mug. Jarrell also reported that he was choked and

2. thrown across the room into a stack of folding chairs. Jarrell stated that the assailant said

Jarrell had “done [appellant’s] nephew wrong.” Deputy Harvey took photos of broken

glass on the floor in the rest room stall and of swelling on the back of Jarrell’s head.

Harvey also spoke to Jarrell’s companion and some of his friends, who did not provide

any additional information. No independent witnesses came forward to report seeing a

fight in the men’s room. When Harvey arrived at the scene, the assailant was gone.

Jarrell gave the deputy appellant’s name and she followed up the following day, but “did

not learn too much from him.” Harvey further testified that she did not take the broken

glass into evidence.

{¶ 6} Timothy McKinney, appellant’s brother, testified that in 2010 he removed

his son, Ian, from a baseball team coached by Jarrell because the two adults did not see

eye-to-eye. McKinney stated that Jarrell told him his son was not welcome at the end-of-

season party and that McKinney would be arrested for trespassing and causing a scene if

he attended. McKinney believed Jarrell did not like the way McKinney allegedly

conducted himself at the games. McKinney also believed his brother, appellant, felt

Jarrell’s actions as a coach were inappropriate, as did McKinney. McKinney read to the

court an undated letter he wrote to appellant’s attorney after the assault in which he

detailed the reasons he believed Jarrell was a terrible coach. In the letter, McKinney

admitted that when he ran into the victim’s wife after the assault he “flipped her off and

told her to F-off.”

3. {¶ 7} The victim’s wife testified that after the assault she observed a lump on the

back of Jarrell’s head and some scratches on his throat. She stated that they did not go to

the hospital until the following morning because of a concern as to their insurance

coverage. Her husband did not require stitches but has experienced headaches and

intermittent blurry vision since the assault.

{¶ 8} Deputy Jared Oliver testified he was assigned to the detective bureau on the

night of the assault. A few days after the attack, Jarrell called Oliver and said he believed

the person who hit him was Robert McKinney. Oliver prepared a photo array and

showed it to Jarrell a few days after the incident. Jarrell identified appellant from the

array as the individual who assaulted him and said he was “one hundred percent positive”

of the identification. Jarrell stated that appellant threatened to kill him while he was

choking him. Jarrell also told Oliver that he was diagnosed with a concussion, a sprained

back and a strained neck. After speaking to Jarrell, Oliver attempted unsuccessfully to

contact appellant at his residence. Oliver then consulted with another detective and the

prosecutor and the decision was made to charge appellant with felonious assault. Oliver

explained that the level of the offense charged in this case did not warrant calling in the

Ohio Bureau of Criminal Identification and Investigation (“BCI”) to examine the pieces

of broken glass for DNA or fingerprints. Oliver acknowledged that, while Jarrell told the

officer appellant said he would kill him, there was no mention in Deputy Harvey’s

incident report that Jarrell reported the threat.

4. {¶ 9} The state next called Jonathan Smith, who was at the Vermillion County

Club with his wife and Jarrell for a birthday party on the night of the assault. Smith

testified that at one point during the evening Jarrell walked up to him and said he had just

been jumped in the men’s room and hit on the head with a beer mug. When Smith asked

Jarrell who hit him, Jarrell pointed out a man sitting at the bar. Smith and Jarrell

approached the individual, who was later identified as appellant, and Smith asked why he

hit Jarrell. Appellant responded that Jarrell had ostracized his nephew and cut him from

Jarrell’s baseball team. When Smith questioned why appellant had to hit Jarrell,

appellant asked Smith if he wanted to get hit with a mug. Smith backed away and his

wife, who was standing nearby, called the police. At that time, appellant left the club and

Jarrell took Smith to the men’s room, where Smith saw broken glass on the floor. Smith

saw some bumps on the back of Jarrell’s head and noticed that Jarrell’s eyes were glassy.

{¶ 10} Dwayne Jarrell testified that in 2009 he coached appellant’s nephew, Ian,

on a local baseball team. At the end of the season, he determined that he would not

permit Ian to play with the team the following year because his father, Timothy

McKinney, was loud and confrontational with the umpires. When Ian’s father called

Jarrell and asked why his son had not been chosen to return to the team, Jarrell told

McKinney he considered him “a cancer in the stands.” The assault in this case occurred

approximately three years after that conversation. Jarrell testified that on the night of the

assault, he and some friends went to the Vermillion Country Club. When he walked to

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2014 Ohio 5591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mckinney-ohioctapp-2014.