State v. Pizzillo, Unpublished Decision (1-17-2002)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 17, 2002
DocketCase No. 746.
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Pizzillo, Unpublished Decision (1-17-2002) (State v. Pizzillo, Unpublished Decision (1-17-2002)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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State v. Pizzillo, Unpublished Decision (1-17-2002), (Ohio Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION
This is a timely appeal from a jury verdict in the Court of Common Pleas, Carroll County, convicting Lee Pizzillo ("Appellant") of two counts of sexual battery in violation of R.C. § 2907.03(A)(5). The trial court thereafter imposed two consecutive five-year terms of imprisonment and designated Appellant a sexual predator in accordance with R.C. Chapter 2950.

This appeal raises five assignments of error. In light of this Court's decision to reverse and remand this case based on two of the issues Appellant has raised, however, it will not be necessary for this Court to address all of the issues in Appellant's brief.

As detailed in the discussion that follows, the record demonstrates that in deciding this matter, the jury was exposed to irrelevant, inadmissible and prejudicial evidence. First, a social worker was allowed to offer her opinion about the believability of the alleged victim on the ultimate issue to be decided. Second, another witness testified that Appellant had previously spent time in prison, even though the trial court had entered an order barring such testimony. Given that a review of the record in this matter reveals that the evidence of guilt in this case was not overwhelming, these errors cannot be characterized as harmless.

A grand jury charged Appellant with two counts of sexual battery in violation of R.C. § 2907.03(A)(5). The indictment alleged that on two occasions Appellant had committed acts of sexual battery on his then-minor stepdaughter ("the victim"). According to the state, the abuse first occurred sometime between July 4, 1997, and July 23, 1997, and continued until May 7, 2000. (Indictment, July 3, 2000; Tr. pp. 45-46).

The matter proceeded to jury trial on September 18, 2000.

The prosecution's case rested almost exclusively on the victim's account of the alleged sexual abuse. (Tr. p. 47). The victim testified that in April of 1997, Appellant moved into the Bowerston home she shared with her mother and the victim's two younger brothers. Eventually, Appellant's three young daughters also moved into the house. (Tr. p. 97). Early in July 1997, Appellant and the victim's mother were married. (Tr. pp. 78, 128).

The victim recounted that the abuse began that summer sometime before her sixteenth birthday. The first instance occurred on a night after July 4, 1997. (Tr. p. 81). That night, Appellant and the victim were alone in the living room after everyone else went to bed. The victim relayed that she had been lying on the love seat in her bathing suit when Appellant came over and removed the suit. The victim testified that she pretended to be asleep while Appellant put his fingers into her vagina and then attempted to force his penis into her mouth before she turned her face into the cushions. (Tr. p. 79).

The victim testified about a second incident that she said happened a few weeks later. By this time, she was living in a basement bedroom near the family laundry room. (Tr. pp. 80, 149). That night, she heard Appellant come down the stairs and walk toward the garage. She testified that she heard Appellant open and close the garage door and then enter her room. The victim testified that Appellant turned on the bathroom light, pulled the door to, and crawled into her bed. There, he removed her pajama bottoms and inserted first his fingers then his penis into her vagina. (Tr. p. 80).

The victim testified that she and Appellant had intercourse in her bedroom between two and four times a month over the next three years. (Tr. p. 82). The sexual encounters always happened in the dark. (Tr. p. 92). Typically, Appellant brought marijuana, which the two of them smoked beforehand. The victim recounted that the marijuana made her body numb, testifying: "I couldn't move, couldn't speak, couldn't do anything. My body was just, I couldn't move." (Tr. p. 82).

Although she could not provide specific dates on which these alleged instances of sexual abuse occurred, the victim did recall that the last time was May 7, 2000. (Tr. p. 83). The victim kept the abuse a secret until the end of May 2000, when she disclosed it to two of her friends. (Tr. p. 85).

Late in 1997, during an interview with child welfare workers, the victim denied that anything sexually inappropriate was going on at home and declared that she and her stepfather had a good relationship. (Tr. pp. 84, 96). At the time, she also denied that anyone in the household used drugs or alcohol. (Tr. p. 100).

On June 16, 2000, in an interview with the Department of Family and Job Services conducted at the high school that the victim attended, she again denied that any abuse had occurred. On June 22, 2000, however, she confided to her mother that Appellant had been sexually abusing her. (Tr. pp. 131-132). When her school principal and two social workers from the Department of Family and Job Services re-interviewed her a short time later, she recanted her previous denials and told them that Appellant had abused her. (Tr. pp. 177, 191). The record does not indicate what information precipitated this investigation or how the alleged abuse first came to the attention of the authorities.

Also testifying at trial on behalf of the prosecution was Rick Taff, an investigator from the Carroll County prosecutor's office. Investigator Taff recounted the victim's statements during his interviews with her on June 16, 2000, and June 22, 2000. (Tr. pp. 55-58). Taff also testified that during an interview on June 19, 2000, Appellant denied abusing his stepdaughter. (Tr. p. 57).

The prosecution's only other witness was the victim's mother, Jackie Pizzillo. Mrs. Pizzillo confirmed that on June 22, 2000, the victim informed her that Appellant had been sexually abusing her. At first, Mrs. Pizzillo believed the victim. (Tr. pp. 130-132). Based on the information the victim gave her, Mrs. Pizzillo reported the abuse to the authorities who then arrested Appellant for sexual battery. (Tr. p. 148). Mrs. Pizzillo testified that as time passed she began to harbor doubts about her daughter's story.

According to Mrs. Pizzillo, the victim's story did not add up. She claims that the victim's bedroom had been on the second floor until sometime after January of 1998, when Appellant obtained custody of his three young daughters. Only then, because the family needed the extra room, was the victim's room moved to the basement. Mrs. Pizzillo's recollection contradicted the victim's claim that the abuse, which ostensibly started in the summer of 1997, occurred in her basement bedroom. (Tr. pp. 149).

Mrs. Pizzillo also relayed a discussion she had with the victim involving a diary that the victim kept. After Appellant's arrest, Mrs. Pizzillo suggested that the victim give the diary to the prosecutor as additional proof of the abuse. Initially, the victim denied that she had ever referred to the abuse in the diary. (Tr. p. 155). But later, the victim told her mother that she had written about it but that Appellant had torn the pages that mentioned the abuse out of the journal. (Tr. p. 156).

Another reason for Mrs. Pizzillo's growing concern about the victim's allegations was the fact that she had never mentioned what Mrs. Pizzillo considered to be an obvious deformity in her husband's penis. According to Mrs. Pizzillo, Appellant's penis was hooked in such a manner that anyone on intimate terms with him to the extent that the victim claimed would have detected it. Yet, the victim had never spoken of such a deformity and when Mrs. Pizzillo questioned her about it, the victim told her she had not noticed a deformity. (Tr. p. 141).

Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Pizzillo, Unpublished Decision (1-17-2002), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-pizzillo-unpublished-decision-1-17-2002-ohioctapp-2002.