State v. Patterson

2013 Ohio 1647
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 22, 2013
Docket2012CA00098
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 2013 Ohio 1647 (State v. Patterson) 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. Patterson, 2013 Ohio 1647 (Ohio Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Patterson, 2013-Ohio-1647.]

COURT OF APPEALS STARK COUNTY, OHIO FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

STATE OF OHIO JUDGES:

Hon. W. Scott Gwin, P.J. Plaintiff-Appellee Hon. Patricia A. Delaney, J. Hon. Craig R. Baldwin, J. -vs- Case No. 2012CA00098 JONATHAN T. PATTERSON

Defendant-Appellant OPINION

CHARACTER OF PROCEEDING: Appeal from the Stark County Court of Common Pleas, Case No. 2011CR1240A

JUDGMENT: Affirmed

DATE OF JUDGMENT ENTRY: April 22, 2013

APPEARANCES:

For Defendant-Appellant: For Plaintiff-Appellee:

GEORGE URBAN JOHN D. FERRERO 116 Cleveland Ave., NW, Suite 808 Prosecuting Attorney Canton, OH 44702 KATHLEEN TATARSKY 116 Cleveland Ave. NW, Suite 808 Assistant Prosecuting Attorney Canton, OH 44702 110 Central Plaza South – Suite 510 Canton, OH 44702-1413 Baldwin, J.

{¶1} Appellant Jonathan T. Patterson appeals a judgment of the Stark County

Common Pleas Court convicting him of aggravated murder (R.C. 2903.01(B)) with a

death penalty specification (R.C. 2929.04(A)(7)) and a firearm specification (R.C.

2941.145), and aggravated burglary (R.C. 2911.11(A)(1),(2)) with a firearm

specification. He was sentenced to life in prison without possibility of parole.

Appellee is the State of Ohio.

{¶2} On August 14, 2011, seventeen-year-old Chris Reid woke up at his

home on 10th Street N.W. in Canton, Ohio, when his friends D’Von Saunders and

appellant, who Reid knew by the street name of “J Pat,” came into his bedroom.

Appellant was eighteen years old at the time. He and Saunders were driving a blue

Chrysler Sebring convertible they got the night before at a party. They asked Reid

where they could “get to lick on some weed.” Reid understood this to mean they

wanted to rob someone for marijuana. When Reid could not help them, they left.

{¶3} Myron Roberson called appellant looking for a ride. After picking up

Roberson, they parked the car and began to walk around the neighborhood near 9th

and 10th Streets with Ronnie Lawson and Jentry Ross. Ross was looking for a ride to

the Chips Apartments because his “baby mom” and daughter were on their way from

Columbus. The group discussed robbing someone for marijuana and for gas money

to get to Chips.

{¶4} The five boys ended up at the home of Melvin Hope on 11th Street. They

knocked on the door and when Hope answered, they asked for Hope’s two sons,

Melvin and Jeremy. He replied that the boys were not home. Saunders smelled weed when Hope opened the door. Saunders also told the group that there were “bands in

the house,” meaning a stack of bills of over $5,000.

{¶5} The group walked to Westbrook Park frustrated because some of them

wanted to rob someone for money and drugs, and some did not want to rob anyone.

Appellant wanted to rob someone and said, “I’m going to get some money.” Saunders

gave appellant a .22 caliber Heritage Rough Rider revolver with an obliterated serial

number.

{¶6} Appellant and Roberson went to Hope’s house and rushed the door.

Roberson saw the handle of the revolver on appellant’s hip and saw appellant

wrestling with Hope. He heard a “pop,” followed by two more “pops.” Roberson was

heading up the stairs at the time, but ran away after hearing the pops. He heard Hope

screaming for help, saying, “I ain’t got no money. I ain’t got nothing.”

{¶7} Appellant eventually caught up with Roberson on the street. Appellant

was carrying a jewelry box and a penny jar. They rejoined Saunders, Ross and

Lawson.

{¶8} The group headed to the Chips Apartments in the blue convertible.

Saunders could tell something had happened. Saunders took the gun which appellant

had placed under the car seat, wiped it off, wrapped it in his black t-shirt and put it

under the driver’s seat. In the car, Roberson said, “this shit crazy.” When Lawson

asked what was crazy, appellant told him to shut up. While the group was at Chips,

Roberson burned the “beater,” or tank top, appellant was wearing.

{¶9} Appellant, Saunders, Roberson and DeMarco Wright went to the home

of Wright’s girlfriend, Davian Jackson, to see Wright’s baby, who was six or seven months old. Davian was excited to see Wright as he usually doesn’t come by to visit

in the summer. Saunders handed her the jewelry box taken from Hope’s home and

told her to keep it in her room. Several of the boys went in the kitchen where Davian’s

mother was making dinner, but appellant stayed in the living room. The boys

eventually left for Chips, taking the baby with them. The boys returned the baby to

Davian’s house shortly thereafter.

{¶10} In the car, appellant stated in reference to Hope that he “bodied him,”

meaning that he killed him. He told Wright that he and Roberson went into a house

intending to rob the man who lived there and the “dude end up getting shot.” He

admitted to Wright that he shot Hope. He also told Wright that he left the gun under

the couch in Davian’s house.

{¶11} Meanwhile, Chris Reid was playing video games at his house with

Jeremy and Melvin Collins, who were Hope’s sons. Reid told Melvin to get another

game controller from his house. Melvin left and then texted Jeremy from his house,

“dad hurt.”

{¶12} Canton City Patrolman Scott Fout was dispatched to the Hope home in

response to a report of a shooting. He noted a sofa table with items knocked off and

found Hope lying in a pool of blood in an archway between the dining room and living

room. Hope was conscious, but suffering from gunshot wounds to his chest and leg.

Fout searched the home and found a blood trail going to the basement and a large

puddle of blood at the bottom of the basement steps. He found no shell casings,

leading him to conclude that the gun used was a revolver. He found no signs of forced entry. The master bedroom of Hope’s home had been ransacked and

something square appeared to be missing from a cluttered dresser top.

{¶13} Hope was transported to Mercy Medical Center where he died. The

coroner found multiple close range gunshot wounds to Hope’s body. One was found

on the left upper chest and was partially surrounded by soot and by blackening and

searing of the skin, indicating that the barrel of the gun was placed close to the skin.

This shot went through his lungs, filling the lung cavity with blood so he could not

breathe. Hope’s body was accompanied to the coroner’s office by three containers of

blood which were pumped from his body in an effort to save him. Another wound was

found in his back, also bearing signs that it was fired at close range. A third gunshot

wound was found on his thigh, which broke his right thigh bone. Hope had several

injuries to his face, possibly caused by a bullet or by impact from falling down a flight

of steps.

{¶14} Chris Reid’s mother gave police a description of the car Saunders and

appellant were driving when they came to her home on the day of the murder. The

police were able to obtain a license plate number because the car had been reported

stolen. Canton police officer Victoria Sellers spotted the car at 8:46 p.m. by the

entrance to Maggiore’s Drive Thru, across the street from a Huntington Bank branch.

Appellant was in Maggiore’s wearing a white shirt and red shorts. A store clerk told

Sellers that appellant had arrived in the Sebring. Appellant walked across the street to

the bank. Appellant and Wright were arrested.

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Bluebook (online)
2013 Ohio 1647, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-patterson-ohioctapp-2013.