State v. Poole

688 N.E.2d 591, 116 Ohio App. 3d 513
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 24, 1996
DocketNo. 94 C.A. 205.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 688 N.E.2d 591 (State v. Poole) 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. Poole, 688 N.E.2d 591, 116 Ohio App. 3d 513 (Ohio Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

Gene Donofrio, Judge.

Defendant-appellant, Marcus Poole, appeals his conviction on two counts of aggravated murder, with firearm specifications.

In the early morning hours of March 24, 1994, two women, Ladorsa (“Jay”) Backus and Melelia (“Buttons”) Howell, were shot and killed in the living room of the house where they lived with Jay’s daughter, Kimyasa (“Kim”) Backus (age fourteen) and Buttons’s children, Sharlinda (age six) and Anthony (age three). Appellant was later arrested and indicted for the murders.

Prior to the start of trial, appellant moved to suppress the testimony of appellee state of Ohio’s key witness, Kim Backus, on the basis that Kim’s voice identification of appellant was not reliable. The trial court, after hearing, overruled the motion to suppress, finding that since the identification had not been obtained illegally, the motion to suppress was not the proper vehicle for testing the admissibility of the testimony.

Jury selection began on October 19, 1994. During the voir dire, appellant’s counsel objected to appellee’s exercise of a peremptory challenge to a juror, Jonette Edmonds, the only black juror on the panel at that time. Appellant’s counsel objected on the basis that the peremptory was racially based.

In response, the prosecutor stated that his reasons for excusing Edmonds were nonracial in nature. The prosecutor stated:

“First, the incident involving her brother — he had been charged with what appears, in talking to her, to be [a] fairly serious charge. It sounded like felonious sexual penetration, which would be a nonprobationable aggravated felony; however, the case had been resolved in his favor to — he pled no contest and was found guilty and apparently received the conviction on a misdemeanor and received some type of probation. And that contact with the criminal justice system bothered me.
*518 “The second thing that I was concerned about was because of her employment at the north side office of the National City Bank: She indicated she was familiar with people in that area. And it may well be that some of the people who testify in this case may be from that area, and she may know of those people when they get on the stand or she may remember certain things because of her familiarity with the folks in that area.
“My third concern was because she does work with a bank she deals with mathematical standard of proof. And with my experience as a prosecutor for over the last two decades has been the people who deal with mathematical standards of proof tend to expect a higher standard of proof to prove beyond a reasonable doubt even though they indicate that they can follow the law. I’ve run into that in a number of cases, but that does bother me. And for all of those reasons I exercised my peremptory challenge.”

The trial court subsequently sustained appellee’s peremptory challenge.

After the jury was seated, evidence was presented. Kim Backus testified, over the objection of appellant, that on the night of the incident, she had gone to bed in her mother’s bedroom, located in the upstairs rear of the house at 132 Tod Lane, Youngstown, Ohio. In the middle of the night, she was awakened by a knock downstairs at the rear door of the home. She testified that she heard Buttons call, “Who is it?” from the bedroom located across the hall in the front of the house, where Buttons was sleeping with her children. Kim testified that she heard the person at the door say “Marcus” and that Buttons then asked again who it was. The person replied “Marcus.” Kim testified that when Buttons asked again who it was, the person said “Tony.” Kim testified that Buttons then came into the room where she and her mother were sleeping, looked out the rear window and again asked who it was. The person replied “Marcus” this time.

Kim further testified that her mother was awake by this time and told Buttons not to answer the door. Kim testified that Buttons nonetheless went downstairs and that she heard Buttons and the person talking for about twenty minutes. Kim testified that Marcus then called to her mother to go downstairs and that Buttons also called to her. Kim testified that Jay went down and that she heard Marcus ask Jay if Buttons was messing around. Kim then heard the three move into the living room, where they were talking and laughing. Kim testified that she then heard three gunshots, a scream and then three more gunshots. Kim testified that she then went into Buttons’s bedroom, where Buttons’s children were sleeping and that, after about five minutes, she heard the person leave. Kim testified that the digital clock in Buttons’s room read 5:08 at this time.

Kim testified that she then woke up the children and took them out the back door of the house and across the street to the house of her friend, Charlene *519 Waller. Charlene’s father took her to a phone booth and then to Kim’s grandmother’s house, where she called the police.

Kim further testified that when the police came, she gave them a statement, telling the police that the perpetrator was “Marcus.” She testified that she did not know appellant’s last name at that time.

Kim testified on direct examination that she had known appellant prior to the incident because he had been coming over to the house for two or three months to see Buttons. She testified that the first time she met him she was having a party at the house and appellant had come to see Buttons. Kim also testified that, aside from seeing him at the house, she saw appellant on Benita Avenue and on New York Avenue and that she heard him talk to people out on the street.

Kim further testified on direct that she would sometimes answer the phone when appellant would call and that she would recognize his voice. Kim also testified that when appellant came to the house and knocked on the door, he would sometimes give a different name when asked who it was. Kim testified that she recognized his voice on these occasions.

Kim further testified on direct that, for about one month, appellant didn’t come to the house at all but then he had come to see Buttons the day before the killings. Kim further testified that Buttons had an old boyfriend named Tony and that the voice of the person at the door that evening did not sound like Tony’s. She also testified that the voice did not sound like that of Buttons’s fiance, Kevin Brown, or like Jay’s friend. Kim testified that appellant’s voice was distinctively loud and deep.

On cross-examination, Kim acknowledged that Buttons had been in jail during some part of January and February 1994. Based on this, she acknowledged that she could only have known appellant for about six weeks. She also acknowledged that, during this time, she never spoke to appellant face-to-face but that she only overheard him speaking at times. Kim further acknowledged that their phone was disconnected at the time of the incident and had been disconnected for about one month, so that there wouldn’t have been much of an opportunity for her to talk on the phone with appellant.

Officer Zaida Miranda of the Youngstown Police Department also testified. Officer Miranda testified that she and Officer Coleman were on patrol at approximately 5:20 a.m. on March 24,1994 when they were dispatched to 132 Tod Lane.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
688 N.E.2d 591, 116 Ohio App. 3d 513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-poole-ohioctapp-1996.