State v. Neeley

758 N.E.2d 745, 143 Ohio App. 3d 606
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 25, 2001
DocketAppeal No. C-000023, Trial No. B-9705067.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 758 N.E.2d 745 (State v. Neeley) 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. Neeley, 758 N.E.2d 745, 143 Ohio App. 3d 606 (Ohio Ct. App. 2001).

Opinions

Sundermann, Judge.

Following a jury trial in November 1999, appellant David L. Neeley was found guilty of the aggravated murder of Judy Smith, in violation of R.C. 2903.01(A), and sentenced to life imprisonment, to be served consecutively with another sentence unrelated to this appeal. In this appeal, Neeley raises thirteen assignments of error, none of which we find to be well taken.

Factual Background

On May 28, 1994, the victim, Judy Smith, was reported missing in Clermont County, by her sister, Julie Watkins, after Smith had failed to pick up her daughter from school. Around midnight, Smith’s car, a white Chevrolet Lumina, was recovered from Millcrest Park. Millcrest Park is a Hamilton County park located in Norwood, Ohio. A body of a woman believed to be Judy Smith was discovered on June 1 at Millcrest Park. The body, which had been buried under some leaves in a wooded area of the lower portion of the park, was partially decomposed and filled with maggots. Its back was against the ground, with the head above the feet, and the legs spread apart.

*615 Detective Alderucci, who aided in the recovery of the body at Millcrest Park, testified that, although no one had moved the body from the location where it was found, the body had been moved to that location. It appeared to Alderucci that, based on the position of the body when it was found, lividity was not properly distributed. Further, Alderucci noted that there was no evidence of a fight or struggle and that very little blood was discovered. Finally, Alderucci noticed that the body was covered with mud, which was not otherwise present at the site.

A search of the park was subsequently conducted, but it did not reveal where the victim had been killed. During the search, however, a temporary order issued against appellant Neeley for Smith’s protection, and Smith’s purse was recovered from the middle portion of the park. A fingerprint lifted from the purse did not belong to Smith or to Neeley.

Dr. Gerber performed an autopsy. He testified that the body was that of a woman weighing about one hundred thirty pounds and measuring five feet six inches in height. The woman had blonde hair and had been wearing a white jumpsuit. Dr. Gerber testified that the woman, whom he identified as Judy Smith, had been stabbed to death and had suffered over forty stab wounds to her body. She also had defensive wounds on her upper and lower extremities. Dr. Gerber did not identify any semen on Smith.

While the coroner could not establish which stab wound had ultimately caused Smith’s death, he identified several fatal injuries to the heart and lung. In Dr. Gerber’s opinion, the heart and lung injuries would have caused “spurting blood coming from some of these wounds at the time of the act, so that it would be impossible to conceive that somebody would not have some blood on them * * Although Dr. Gerber was unable to establish the exact date and time that Smith had been murdered, he estimated, based on the body’s decomposition, that she had died on May 28 sometime in the afternoon. Given the extent of the injuries, Dr. Gerber opined that a strong person had attacked Smith and that it was likely that she had died within an hour of being attacked. Finally, Dr. Gerber testified, based on the lividity and the lack of blood where the body was found, that Smith had originally been lying face down with her buttocks above her face, and that her body had probably been moved after her death.

Lieutenant Steven Crowe and Detective John Patrick were the lead investigators assigned to Smith’s murder. According to Detective Patrick, Neeley quickly became a suspect because Neeley was Smith’s former boyfriend and because Neeley had a prior conviction in Kentucky for first-degree assault and had been sentenced to serve ten years in prison, which had been suspended due to an appeal bond.

Smith and Neeley had dated for about seven years and had previously lived together with Smith’s daughter from a previous marriage. Their home was *616 located on Ivanhoe Avenue in Norwood, which is about six-tenths of a mile from Millcrest Park. Smith had moved out in April 1994 after she had broken up with Neeley. At the time of her disappearance, Smith had been living with Julie Watkins and her husband, Steven, at their trailer home in Greenbrier Estates, which is located in Clermont County.

Neeley’s home was searched on June 2. During the first search, a pair of jeans and two knives were recovered. Testing of the knives established that they did not contain any trace of human blood. A second search of Neeley’s house was conducted on July 22, and some torn-up photographs of Smith and her family were found in the wastebasket. On June 2 and 3, a trained police dog conducted a search of Millcrest Park. Using the jeans found at Neeley’s home, the dog was able to track a scent from the jeans to a site near the wooded area of the park. The dog was also able to track the scent found on the underwear found in Smith’s car to a site near the wooded area. But the dog was unable to track the scent of Smith’s purse.

The officers spoke with Neeley several times about his relationship with Smith. On June 1, Neeley told Lieutenant Crowe that he had last spoken with Smith on May 27, when he had informed Smith that he could not meet her on May 28 “because he was leaving earlier than expected for Kentucky.” On June 4, both Detective Patrick and Lieutenant Crowe spoke with Neeley at his parent’s home in Kentucky. During that conversation, Neeley informed.the officers that he had stopped at a United Dairy Farmer’s store (“UDF”) in Norwood on the morning of May 28 before going with his sister to stay at his family’s home in Kentucky. Neeley also informed the officers that he had last spoken with Smith by phone at 5:00 a.m. on May 28. On July 9, Detective Patrick spoke with Neeley about his alibi. Detective Patrick told Neeley that he could not have been at the UDF on May 28 because Patrick had reviewed the store’s surveillance tapes and had found that Neeley was not portrayed in them. Confronted with the reasons supporting Detective Patrick’s belief, Neeley denied being at the UDF on May 28. The police spoke with Neeley for the final time on July 18, and Neeley indicated that the last time he had seen Smith was on May 26.

In the months preceding Smith’s disappearance, she had had several unfortunate encounters with Neeley. On May 1, Officer Matthew Wurtz had arrested Neeley for the reckless operation of his pickup truck at Greenbrier Estates and for the aggravated menacing of Smith. In speaking with Officer Wurtz, Smith had indicated that she was afraid that Neeley would “kill her.”

On May 2, Neeley had attempted to drive Smith off the road after meeting her at a UDF in Newtown, Ohio. A UDF employee had called the police. Neeley was charged with domestic violence and was arrested on May 3. A temporary protection order was issued against him for Smith’s protection. At a preliminary *617

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
758 N.E.2d 745, 143 Ohio App. 3d 606, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-neeley-ohioctapp-2001.