State v. Noling

781 N.E.2d 88, 98 Ohio St. 3d 44
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 20, 2002
DocketNo. 1999-1524
StatusPublished
Cited by417 cases

This text of 781 N.E.2d 88 (State v. Noling) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Noling, 781 N.E.2d 88, 98 Ohio St. 3d 44 (Ohio 2002).

Opinion

Cook, J.

[45]*45{¶ 1} Defendant-appellant, Tyrone Lee Noling, appeals from an 11th Appellate District judgment upholding his convictions of two counts of aggravated murder, two counts of aggravated robbery, and one count of aggravated burglary. For the following reasons, we affirm Noling’s convictions and death sentence.

I. Facts

{¶ 2} On April 5, 1990, in the course of a burglary and robbery, defendant-appellant, Tyrone Noling, shot and killed Bearnhardt and Cora Hartig in Portage County, Ohio. After a 1992 dismissal of charges against Noling, a grand jury reindicted him in August 1995 for the Hartig murders. The state proved the offenses charged through the testimony of police officers and others, including accomplices Butch Wolcott and Joseph Dalesandro.

{¶ 3} The testimony adduced at trial revealed that in early April 1990, Noling, Gary St. Clair, Dalesandro, and Wolcott stayed at the house of a teenage friend, Johnny Trandifer, in Alliance, Ohio. To obtain money, the group “went car shopping * * * opened up car doors that were unlocked and stole the change * * * radios, phones, whatever.”

{¶ 4} Noling then suggested “the idea that old people were getting their * * * Social Security checks early in the month and * * * would be the best target to rob.” Noling planned to gain entry into the homes by knocking on the door and pretending to need to use their telephone to call about his disabled car. At that point, the group was armed with a shotgun and a BB gun.

{¶ 5} Noling and St. Clair implemented just such a plan in robbing a Mr. and Mrs. Hughes, in their Alliance home, approximately a quarter of a mile from Trandifer’s house. Noling told Wolcott that he had knocked on the door, asked to use the phone because his car was broken down, and when he and St. Clair got in, they held the Hugheses up. According to St. Clair, Noling got inside, “kicked the door shut, pulled the sawed off shotgun out,” and told Mr. Hughes, “Don’t move.” They used a pillowcase to carry away a VCR, jewelry, and a .25 caliber pistol.

{¶ 6} Around noon the next day, Noling used this stolen .25 caliber pistol to rob the Murphy family in Alliance. Noling acted alone and said that he had had to fire the weapon while inside the house. Noling stole a VCR, rings, and money from the Murphy residence.

{¶ 7} Around 3:30 to 4:00 p.m. that same day, Dalesandro drove Noling, St. Clair, and Wolcott from Alliance into Portage County. They stopped at the Hartigs’ ranch home in Atwater Township. The Hartigs were both 81 years old. When Dalesandro stopped and Noling and St. Clair got out, Bearnhardt Hartig was mowing the grass.

[46]*46{¶ 8} Noling knocked on the front door, and when Cora Hartig answered, Noling “pushed his way in” and St. Clair followed him. St. Clair had the shotgun, and Noling had a .25 caliber semiautomatic, with one clip in the gun and another clip in his pocket.

{¶ 9} After dropping Noling and St. Clair off, Dalesandro and Wolcott drove around for a while, returned, and parked in the Hartigs’ driveway. About 20 to 30 minutes after Noling and St. Clair had entered the Hartigs’ home, Wolcott “heard some gunshots, * * * heard a lady scream and then * * * a couple of more gunshots * * * and then a few seconds later [Noling and St. Clair] came running out” and got in the car.

{¶ 10} Noling looked “flabbergasted,” and things were hysterical. He told Dalesandro, who was driving, to “[g]et out of here * * * I just killed two old people.” Noling said that “he had to do it, just didn’t have a choice” because “the old man wouldn’t stop, that he kept coming at him.” Noling also claimed that the lady “could tell the police who they were.” Noling put the .25 caliber pistol in the glove compartment, and Dalesandro drove back to Alliance.

{¶ 11} Once back, Noling was concerned about getting rid of his blood-stained clothes. Noling also told Dalesandro that if Dalesandro said anything about what had occurred, Noling would kill him. That night, Noling also put a gun to Wolcott’s head and said that “if [Wolcott] talked he would blow [his] head off.”

{¶ 12} On April 7, 1990, James Davis, the son of neighbors of the Hartigs, noticed that the Hartigs’ garage door was open and that the lawn tractor had been sitting in the yard for two days. He checked on the Hartigs and found them lying on their kitchen floor. Davis called the police.

{¶ 13} The police found the bodies fully clothed in the kitchen and noticed a strong smell, apparently from decaying flesh. Detectives found ten Winchester .25 caliber shell casings near the bodies, and recovered eight .25 caliber bullets from the crime scene and autopsies. Nancy Bulger, a firearms expert, concluded that a single .25 caliber semiautomatic pistol had ejected all of the shells found and that a single weapon had fired all eight bullets recovered. Bulger testified that the ammunition clip for most .25 caliber semiautomatics carries six or seven rounds, but extended magazines for .25 caliber firearms, although not common, do exist.

{¶ 14} In the Hartigs’ master bedroom, detectives found open dresser drawers as well as seven empty ring boxes. In the living room, police found a metal box with a lock and key.

{¶ 15} Dr. Elizabeth Balraj, the Cuyahoga County Coroner, supervised and observed the autopsies. She testified that Cora Hartig had been shot five times and had died “as a result of * * * gunshot wounds to her chest with internal [47]*47injuries.” Bearnhardt Hartig, shot three times, died from “gunshot wounds to [his] right chest with multiple visceral injuries.” Dr. Balraj found no evidence of stippling or gunpowder residue; therefore, Dr. Balraj concluded, the shots had been fired from a distance greater than one and one half to three feet.

{¶ 16} On the day that police discovered the Hartigs’ bodies, Noling and his cohorts had a party at Trandifer’s house. At the party, Noling was acting drunk and bragging about the Alliance robberies, but not about the Atwater Township murders. After a police cruiser drove by, Noling grabbed Wolcott, started screaming, and said that “he was going to kill him, he better not have told.” Noling also asked Robyn Elliot if she “had heard anything on the police scanner about two old people getting shot in Atwater.” When she said no, Noling was “just laughing and acting like a big shot.” In fact, the first television news reports about the Hartig murders did not air until the evening of the next day.

{¶ 17} Two days after the discovery of the Hartigs’ bodies, Alliance police arrested Noling and his accomplices in connection with the Alliance robberies. While in police custody with Noling, St. Clair asked Alliance police officers the identity of two out-of-town detectives who wanted to interview them. After being told their names, St. Clair asked, “Is it about the two old people who were lolled in Atwater?” Noling immediately told St. Clair, “Keep your mouth shut about that, don’t say another word, keep quiet.”

{¶ 18} Noling admitted his involvement in the Hartig murders to two fellow jail inmates. He told inmate Paul Garner that he “didn’t mean to do it. Just happened. The lady said: I know who you are.” St. Clair had “said his name, and so they had to kill both of them.” Noling also described the murders to jail inmate Ronnie Gantz. Noling told Gantz that St. Clair was the shooter, but then subsequently recanted, claiming instead that he was the shooter because St.

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Bluebook (online)
781 N.E.2d 88, 98 Ohio St. 3d 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-noling-ohio-2002.