State v. Plymale

2016 Ohio 3340
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 3, 2016
Docket15CA1
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 2016 Ohio 3340 (State v. Plymale) 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. Plymale, 2016 Ohio 3340 (Ohio Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Plymale, 2016-Ohio-3340.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT GALLIA COUNTY

STATE OF OHIO, : Case No. 15CA1 Plaintiff-Appellee, :

v. : DECISION AND JUDGMENT ENTRY JOSEPH D. PLYMALE, :

Defendant-Appellant. : RELEASED: 6/3/2016

APPEARANCES:

Timothy Young, Ohio State Public Defender, and Nikki Trautman Baszynski, Assistant State Public Defender, Columbus, Ohio, for appellant.

C. Jeffrey Adkins, Gallia County Prosecuting Attorney, Eric R. Mulford & Britt T. Wiseman, Gallia County Assistant Prosecuting Attorneys, Gallipolis, Ohio, for appellee.

Harsha, J. {¶1} After a jury convicted Joseph D. Plymale of seven crimes, he filed this

appeal. First, Plymale argues that the aggravated murder, aggravated robbery, and

related verdicts were against the manifest weight of the evidence because they were

primarily supported by the self-serving and unreliable testimony of one witness,

Christopher Bowman. But credibility generally is an issue for the trier of fact. Here the

state introduced testimony of investigators and co-workers, DNA evidence, and

surveillance video, all which corroborated Bowman’s testimony, as well as evidence

that Plymale lied to police. Based on this evidence the jury properly found the essential

elements of the crimes proven beyond a reasonable doubt. Because the jury did not

clearly lose its way or create a manifest miscarriage of justice, we reject Plymale’s first

assignment of error. Gallia App. No. 15CA1 2

{¶2} Plymale also contends that his trial counsel provided ineffective

assistance by failing to file a notice of alibi and by failing to object to the state’s

comments on his post-arrest silence. Plymale’s counsel told the trial court that he did

not file a notice of alibi because he did not believe that the witness’s testimony would

provide a clear alibi defense. In his explanation to the trial court Plymale’s counsel did

not state when he learned of the potential alibi witness or whether he could have filed a

timely notice of alibi, if he had determined it was appropriate to do so. Because the

record contains no evidence that Plymale’s counsel knew of the potential defense in

time to file a notice of alibi as required under Crim.R. 12.1, we reject this argument.

And the state was entitled to question him about prior inconsistent statements he made

to investigators after he waived his Miranda rights. Therefore, his trial counsel’s failure

to object on Fifth Amendment grounds would have been futile and was not deficient.

We overrule Plymale’s second assignment of error.

{¶3} Finally, Plymale asserts that the trial court erred when it sentenced him to

consecutive sentences because the trial court did not make the statutorily required

findings before imposing consecutive sentences. Because Plymale did not object to the

imposition of consecutive sentences at the sentencing hearing, he waived all but plain

error, which he has not established. He also contends that the trial court’s justifications

for imposing consecutive sentences are not supported by the record. However the

record is replete with evidence to support the trial court’s findings. Thus we overrule

Plymale’s third assignment of error.

{¶4} We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

I. FACTS Gallia App. No. 15CA1 3

{¶5} When a neighbor found John Sheets’s abandoned white pickup truck

along the side of a road and called 911, the Gallia County Sheriff’s Office responded to

the call. After speaking with the neighbor, a deputy sheriff went next door to Sheets’s

residence and found Sheets’s body inside. A grand jury ultimately indicted Plymale with

aggravated murder, murder, aggravated robbery, having weapons while under

disability, theft of firearms, theft of a motor vehicle, receiving stolen property, and

tampering with evidence.

{¶6} At trial the state presented the testimony of Sheets’s neighbor, Tammy

Korn, who said that she heard a gunshot on the afternoon of Monday, February 3,

2014 and later that day she saw Sheets’s garage door open and his white pickup truck

gone. Korn attempted unsuccessfully to contact Sheets by telephone over the next

several days. On Wednesday Korn and another neighbor, John Troyer, found Sheets’s

abandoned truck on Dan Jones Road. Korn returned home and called 911. Troyer

testified that he saw Sheets’s truck speeding away from Sheets’s house on the same

afternoon that Korn heard the gunshot, but he was unable to see the driver.

{¶7} Deputy Sheriff Brown responded to Korn’s 911 call and located Sheets’s

abandoned truck. Brown went to Sheets’s home and found Sheets’s body and

evidence of an altercation, but no evidence of a forced entry. The medical evidence

showed that Sheets suffered a fatal gunshot wound, which punctured his right lung

from the back and exited through his chest. They found an open gun safe that

appeared to be missing guns, blood splatter marks inside the home, a bloody boot print

on the carpet, and a pillowcase missing from a pillow in Sheets’s bedroom. Gallia App. No. 15CA1 4

{¶8} Video surveillance taken from a park on Dan Jones Road at 3:45 pm on

Monday, February 3, 2014 near Sheets’s abandoned truck showed his white pickup

truck pulled up next to a green Jeep, which was later determined to belong to Bowman.

That same day video surveillance from a convenience store showed that at about 4:30

pm, a green Jeep was at the intersection of State Routes 554 and 160, near Plymale’s

apartment complex. Neither of the two surveillance videos showed the drivers of the

vehicles.

{¶9} After investigators determined that the green Jeep belonged to

Christopher Bowman, they brought him in for questioning on Friday, February 7, 2014,

to determine what he might know about the identity of the driver of Sheets’s truck. The

jury reviewed the videotape of Bowman’s questioning. On that videotape Bowman

initially lied to the investigators but then, when the investigators told Bowman that his

green Jeep and a white pickup truck were seen together on surveillance video,

Bowman told investigators what had happened on Monday afternoon, February 3rd. He

was very reluctant to identify the driver of the white pickup truck, claiming that the

person was close to him and like a brother. Bowman finally identified the driver of the

pickup truck as his cousin Joseph Plymale. Bowman said that Plymale had asked him

to drive him out to his boss’s house because Plymale’s car was inoperable and he

needed to speak to his boss. Bowman agreed and drove as Plymale directed. Plymale

asked Bowman to drop him off down the road from his boss’s house because Plymale

said that he was afraid Bowman’s Jeep would get stuck in the snow. Plymale told

Bowman he would call him to get him when he was ready. Bowman drove around the

area, taking photos of frozen waterfalls, while waiting for Plymale. At some point, Gallia App. No. 15CA1 5

Bowman stopped and approached a county worker who Bowman believed was stuck in

the snow and asked him if he needed help.

{¶10} Bowman drove to a park and was waiting when a white pickup truck

approached with Plymale driving. Bowman stated that he was concerned when he saw

Plymale driving a truck that did not belong to him. The two briefly drove around, with

Plymale in the truck and Bowman in the Jeep, before stopping on Dan Jones Road.

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2016 Ohio 3340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-plymale-ohioctapp-2016.