State v. Prescott

2019 Ohio 5114
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 12, 2019
Docket107789 & 107789
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2019 Ohio 5114 (State v. Prescott) 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. Prescott, 2019 Ohio 5114 (Ohio Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Prescott, 2019-Ohio-5114.]

COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO

EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA

STATE OF OHIO, :

Plaintiff-Appellee, : Nos. 107784 and 107789 v. :

TYJOHN PRESCOTT, :

Defendant-Appellant. :

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION

JUDGMENT: AFFIRMED RELEASED AND JOURNALIZED: December 12, 2019

Criminal Appeal from the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas Case Nos. CR-17-620732-B and CR-17-622725-B

Appearances:

Michael C. O’Malley, Cuyahoga County Prosecuting Attorney, and Brian Lynch and Eleina Thomas, Assistant Prosecuting Attorneys, for appellee.

Charles Ruiz-Bueno Co., L.P.A., and J. Charles Ruiz- Bueno, for appellant.

LARRY A. JONES, SR., P.J.:

Defendant-appellant, Tyjohn Prescott (“Prescott”), appeals his

multiple convictions stemming from his participation in eight separate robberies.

Finding no merit to the appeal, we affirm. The state alleged that during July and August 2017, Prescott, who was

19 years old and approximately six feet tall, used his girlfriend’s distinctive car to

commit eight aggravated robberies in the cities of Cleveland and Solon. Prescott was

charged in Cuyahoga C.P. No. CR-17-620732-B with one count each of aggravated

robbery, robbery, and kidnapping. All counts contained one- and three-year firearm

specifications. He was also charged in Cuyahoga C.P. No. CR-17-622725-B with 13

counts of aggravated robbery and 13 counts of kidnapping, both with one- and three-

year firearm specifications; three counts of receiving stolen property; one count of

failure to comply; two counts of felonious assault; one count of grand theft with one-

and three-year firearm specifications; and six counts of having weapons while under

disability.

Prior to trial, the state dismissed the having weapons while under

disability counts. The matter proceeded to a single jury trial on both cases, at which

the following pertinent evidence was presented. All events took place in the city of

Cleveland, unless otherwise noted.

Robbery 1

On July 2, 2017, at 10:20 p.m., Nidal Rashid (“Nidal”) was walking

from Edison’s Pizza to his friend’s house in Tremont. Nidal testified that three black

males approached him in a car. Two of the males got out of the car and pointed guns

at his face. One of the males stood in front of him, and the other stood behind him.

The males told Nidal to “stay cool, and nothing is gunna happen,” but Nidal resisted,

telling the men to shoot him because they were not going to rob him. One of the males grabbed Nidal by his shirt and ripped it. The men then returned to their

vehicle and left.

Nidal described the male who stood in front of him as a bit taller than

5’11”, 18 or 19 years old, a black male with a well-trimmed beard holding a silver

plated gun. Nidal described the second gunman as much taller and thinner and

testified that this male had his face partially covered with a bandana. The second

man’s gun was dark colored and bigger. Nidal described the gunmen’s car as a black

or dark car that looked like a Chevy Cavalier. Prescott’s girlfriend, Cee Asia Emphrey

(“Emphrey”), testified that she loaned her car to Prescott on July 2. Prescott had

two friends with him. Emphrey testified that she owned a blue Pontiac with a white

passenger door and that Prescott is the only other person who drives her car.

As part of their investigation, police used cell phone tracking

technology. Todd Wiles (“Wiles”), a crime analyst with the Cleveland police,

testified how investigators are able to pinpoint the general area of a cell phone, and

thus its user, by utilizing call records and cell phone tower information. When the

user makes a phone call, Wiles explained, the cell phone pings to a certain tower in

the user’s given area, meaning that at the time of the call, the caller was in the area

of that tower’s geographical location.

Wiles compiled the information received from the cell towers and

Prescott’s cell phone records to map out the specific calls made in the area of the cell

phone towers during the time frame of the eight robberies. Phone records from Robbery 1 show that Prescott’s cell phone pinged a cell phone tower just east of

Tremont at 10:13 p.m., about seven minutes before the robbery occurred.

Robbery 2

The same evening, around 11:30 p.m., two teenage brothers were

walking home from a relative’s house. The brothers were walking by their high

school, near West 57th Street and Bridge Avenue, when three men got out of a car

and pointed guns at their heads. The men ordered the brothers on the ground,

demanded their money, and said not to look at them. The men said they would shoot

the brothers if they did not comply.

Once they were on the ground, the men ordered the brothers to take

off their shoes and empty their pockets. One of the gunmen pressed his gun to the

older brother’s head and took his cell phone.

The brothers described the gunmen as African American males in

their teens or twewnties. The older brother testified that one of the gunmen wore a

black Adidas hooded jacket with three white stripes down the arm. The police later

found a jacket matching that description in Prescott’s house. During trial, the older

brother identified that jacket as the jacket one of the gunmen was wearing during

the robbery.

After the robbery, the men got back into their car and sped away. The

older brother described the car as a dark color Mitsubishi with a white passenger

door. During trial, he identified Emphrey’s car as the car the gunmen were driving. He made his identification from still shots recovered from a security camera at the

high school. The younger brother described the car as a “little” black or blue car with

a white passenger door.

Cell phone records showed that Prescott’s cell phone pinged the tower

at 1795 West 25th Street at 11:23 p.m., seven minutes before, and near where the

brothers were robbed. The state alleged that Prescott and his friends left Tremont

after the unsuccessful robbery of Nidal and traveled west toward the area where they

encountered the brothers. Prescott’s cell phone was inactive during Robbery 2.

Robbery 3

On July 9, 2017, around 10:00 p.m., three friends ─ Brandon, Angela,

and Alexandria ─ were walking in the area of West 80th Street and Lake Avenue

when three males approached them and told them that they were being robbed. One

of the gunmen stuck his gun in Brandon’s face. Brandon said “no,” and another

gunman punched him in the face. Alexandria screamed, and the men fled.

During the robbery, the men took Alexandria’s and Angela’s purses,

which contained their iPhones, credit cards, and identification. The men also tried

to steal Brandon’s camera, but were unsuccessful.

The victims described their attackers as young black males who wore

hoodies pulled down and scrunched around their faces. They described one male as

tall and skinny and said that he was the one who pointed a gun in their faces.

Brandon described the car the males were driving as a Chrysler with an “off color

door,” and said that it was “similar to like a Mercury Sable or Dodge Neon kind of shape, which is the same as that Chrysler boxy bend end with a swoop nose.” Angela

said the car was a bluish-green color sedan with a white door. Alexandria said the

car was dark, “maybe teal,” and it had a white door.

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Related

State v. Glover
2023 Ohio 1153 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2023)

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2019 Ohio 5114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-prescott-ohioctapp-2019.