State v. Phelps

600 N.E.2d 329, 75 Ohio App. 3d 573, 1991 Ohio App. LEXIS 3834
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 14, 1991
DocketNo. C-900462.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 600 N.E.2d 329 (State v. Phelps) 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. Phelps, 600 N.E.2d 329, 75 Ohio App. 3d 573, 1991 Ohio App. LEXIS 3834 (Ohio Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

Defendant-appellant Benny Phelps has taken the instant appeal from his conviction on two counts of aggravated arson. On appeal, he advances two assignments of error in which he challenges the legal sufficiency and weight of the evidence adduced at trial and the jurisdiction of the trial court to sentence him.

On March 4, 1986, at approximately 6:00 a.m., the Cincinnati Fire Department responded to a dispatch regarding a fire on the eighteenth floor of the Clarion Hotel in downtown Cincinnati. The fire was extinguished within ten minutes of the firefighters’ arrival, and, shortly thereafter, John Heltman, a specialist with the Fire Investigative Unit, arrived. In the lobby of the hotel, Heltman encountered firefighter Dan Mitsch. As they conversed, Mitsch observed the defendant descending to the hotel lobby on the escalator and pointed him out to Heltman as the individual who had approached him at the fire station the night before to discuss firefighting. Heltman followed the defendant out of the hotel, and, as he approached him, he observed that the defendant was carrying a police- and fire-dispatch scanner. In response to Heltman’s request that he explain his presence in the hotel, the defendant *575 stated that he was there to help. Heltman instructed the defendant not to interfere with the firefighters and returned to the hotel.

Shortly thereafter, as Heltman was returning to his car to retrieve his investigation equipment, the defendant approached Heltman and asked if he was a suspect in the fire, if he would appear on television, or if his name or picture would be used in the newspaper. Heltman responded in the negative and resumed his investigation, which, by then, included a second fire on the fifth floor of the Clarion.

At approximately 7:00 a.m., Heltman responded to a dispatch regarding a fire at the Hyatt Regency Hotel, one block away from the Clarion. The fire alarm had been activated on the fourth floor of the Hyatt, and Heltman was directed to the men’s restroom, where he found the extinguished remains of a fire ignited in two boxes of facial tissues on the marble surface of the restroom vanity. Heltman spoke with the building’s engineer, who indicated that he had already spoken with a man who represented himself as a fire investigator. From the engineer’s description, Heltman determined that the “fire investigator” to whom the engineer had spoken was the defendant and ordered that the defendant be apprehended. The defendant was discovered near the Clarion and was returned to the Hyatt, and, upon the engineer’s identification, he was arrested for impersonating a fire investigator. In the course of his postarrest interrogation, the defendant initially denied involvement in the Clarion or the Hyatt fires, but he eventually confessed in a taped statement to setting the Hyatt fire.

The next day, Heltman spoke with a taxi driver, who stated that on the morning of the fires he arrived at the Hyatt’s taxi stand at 4:30 a.m., and that at approximately 5:00 a.m. he observed an individual, whom he subsequently identified as the defendant, emerge from the Clarion, walk to the front of the Hyatt and stand watching the upper stories of the Clarion until shortly before 7:00 a.m. On March 7, the defendant was picked up for questioning by officers with the Cincinnati Police Department’s Homicide-Rape Squad, who had been assigned to investigate the Clarion fires due to the possibility that injuries sustained in the eighteenth-floor fire might prove fatal. During questioning, the defendant initially denied setting the Clarion fires, but he eventually confessed to setting fires on both the fifth and the “fifteenth” floors of the Clarion and agreed to give a taped statement to that effect.

On March 13, 1986, a Hamilton County Grand Jury returned a four-count indictment charging the defendant, in counts one and two, with aggravated arson in connection with the Clarion fires and, in counts three and four, with aggravated arson in connection with the Hyatt fire. The charges were tried *576 to a jury in July 1986, and the jury found the defendant not guilty on counts one and two, but guilty on counts three and four.

The trial court ordered a presentence investigation and set the case for sentencing on August 14,1986. In the interim, the defendant began to exhibit symptoms of mental illness, and the trial court ordered a psychological examination. On September 17, 1986, after reviewing the examiner’s report, the trial court found that the defendant was not competent to be sentenced, but that there was a substantial probability that he would be restored to competency within one year. The court thus ordered, pursuant to R.C. 2945.38(D), the defendant’s commitment to Rollman’s Psychiatric Center for a period not to exceed fifteen months.

In November 1986, a second psychological evaluation was conducted, and, by entry dated December 2, 1986, the trial court again entered a finding of incompetency and committed the defendant to the Pauline Warfield Lewis Center (“Lewis Center”). Subsequent findings of incompetency were entered on June 30, 1987, December 17, 1987, and March 10, 1989, and, in each instance, the court ordered that the defendant’s commitment to the Lewis Center be continued “until the defendant is restored to competency.”

Finally, on May 25, 1990, following a hearing conducted pursuant to either “O.R.C. 2945.40 and 5122.15” or “O.R.C. 2945.37 et seq.,” 1 the trial court found that the defendant had been restored to competency and imposed upon the findings of guilty on counts three and four of the indictment concurrent sentences of confinement of six to twenty-five years.

In his first assignment of error, the defendant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence adduced at trial and the balance struck by the jury in weighing the evidence before it. Neither challenge has merit.

Upon review of the evidence presented below, we hold that reasonable minds could have reached different conclusions as to whether each element of the crimes charged had been proven beyond a reasonable doubt. See State v. Thomas (1982), 70 Ohio St.2d 79, 24 O.O.3d 150, 434 N.E.2d 1356. With respect to the defendant’s challenge to the weight of the evidence, we find nothing in the record of the proceedings below to suggest that the jury, in resolving the conflicts in the evidence, lost its way or created such a manifest *577 miscarriage of justice as to warrant the reversal of the defendant’s convictions. See Tibbs v. Florida (1982), 457 U.S. 31, 102 S.Ct. 2211, 72 L.Ed.2d 652; State v. Martin (1983), 20 Ohio App.3d 172, 20 OBR 215, 485 N.E.2d 717. We, therefore, overrule the defendant’s first assignment of error.

The defendant, in his second assignment of error, challenges the trial court’s jurisdiction to sentence him.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Stanley
700 N.E.2d 881 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1997)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
600 N.E.2d 329, 75 Ohio App. 3d 573, 1991 Ohio App. LEXIS 3834, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-phelps-ohioctapp-1991.