State v. Reeder

2016 Ohio 212
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 21, 2016
Docket15AP-203 & 15AP-218
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 2016 Ohio 212 (State v. Reeder) 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. Reeder, 2016 Ohio 212 (Ohio Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Reeder, 2016-Ohio-212.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO

TENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

In the Matter of: : No. 15AP-203 Joseph Q. Reeder, : (C.P.C. No. 13JU-1723) An Alleged Delinquent Child, : (REGULAR CALENDAR) [Appellant]. : State of Ohio, : Plaintiff-Appellee, No. 15AP-218 : (C.P.C. No. 14CR-394) v. : (REGULAR CALENDAR) Joseph Q. Reeder, : Defendant-Appellant. :

D E C I S I O N

Rendered on January 21, 2016

Yeura R. Venters, Public Defender, and David L. Strait, for appellant.

Ron O'Brien, Prosecuting Attorney, and Barbara A. Farnbacher, for appellee.

APPEAL from the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas, Division of Domestic Relations, Juvenile Branch APPEAL from the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas

BRUNNER, J. {¶ 1} Defendant-appellant, Joseph Q. Reeder, appeals from judgments of the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas, Division of Domestic Relations, Juvenile Branch ("juvenile court") and the General Division binding him over from the juvenile division to the general division and sentencing him to a 17-year term of imprisonment Nos. 15AP-203 and 15AP-218 2

following an Alford plea1 to aggravated robbery, involuntary manslaughter with a firearm specification, and tampering with evidence. Specifically, Reeder challenges the bindover decision on grounds that it was an abuse of discretion on the facts of his case and that the juvenile court's stated reasons for the bindover were insufficient. Based on the following, we affirm. I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY {¶ 2} On February 4, 2013, Reeder shot and killed Anthony Hines in Reeder's home on the east side of Columbus, Ohio. Following investigation, a detective of the Columbus Division of Police filed a complaint against Reeder on February 5, 2013, alleging that Reeder had committed the crimes of murder, aggravated robbery, and tampering with evidence. In a hearing held the same day, the juvenile court determined there was probable cause to proceed and ordered Reeder held in custody. {¶ 3} A psychiatric evaluation of Reeder followed, along with stipulations by counsel as to service, Reeder's age at the time of the offenses (14 years old), and the fact that probable cause existed as to each count. On October 10, 2013, the juvenile court found probable cause for bindover and set a hearing on the matter. The hearing commenced January 13, 2014 and took place for four days. {¶ 4} The investigating detective, Ronda Siniff, testified first. She stated that, around 6 p.m. on February 4, 2013, she was notified of the incident between Reeder and Hines. Soon thereafter, Reeder and his grandparents flagged down a police car, and Reeder surrendered himself into police custody. Siniff then interviewed Reeder in a videotaped interview. According to Reeder (as relayed by Siniff and as observable in the videotape) he was at home alone with his younger brother when Hines came to the house seeking to purchase marijuana. Reeder's mother's boyfriend sold drugs out of the home, but he was not there to make the sale to Hines. Reeder told Hines to leave and Hines telephoned and spoke to Reeder's mother's boyfriend who also told Hines to leave. However, Hines did not leave. Instead he sat down on the couch. When Reeder again refused to sell Hines marijuana Hines punched him in the face. Reeder fled upstairs and retrieved a handgun. Downstairs again, Reeder attempted to shoot Hines who, according to Reeder, was still irate. The gun did not fire because the safety was on. Seeing that

1 North Carolina v. Alford, 400 U.S. 25 (1970). Nos. 15AP-203 and 15AP-218 3

Reeder had tried to shoot him, Hines became angrier and chased Reeder downstairs into the basement. Reeder turned around as Hines reached the bottom of the stairs and, having disengaged the safety, shot Hines in the face. {¶ 5} According to Siniff and the videotape, Reeder admitted that after shooting Hines, Reeder went through Hines' wallet and threw its contents in the air as he left the house. He also took Hines' car using Hines' keys. Reeder denied having gone through Hines' pockets, however Hines' pockets were pulled out, and the investigation later turned up Reeder's DNA inside Hines' pockets. Reeder threw the gun out the window as he drove Hines' car and, after attempting to give Hines' car to some "crack heads," he abandoned it and walked to his grandparents' house. (Jan. 13, 2014 Tr. 47.) {¶ 6} Siniff also testified about an interview she conducted with Reeder's grandmother, and a recording of the interview was introduced. In the interview Reeder's grandmother told Siniff that Reeder called stating he had shot someone. He came to her house at her request and told her what had happened. According to Reeder's grandmother, Reeder said someone (whom Reeder did not identify but whom we now know to be Hines) came to his house looking to buy drugs and refused to leave, and, instead, sat on the couch. So Reeder eventually said, "Okay, I gotcha (sic), come on." (Jan. 14, 2014 Tr. 105.) He walked downstairs and Hines followed him. Once Reeder turned the corner downstairs he shot Hines. The audio recording of the interview confirms Siniff's account of the interview with Reeder's grandmother. The recording also contains other details. According to Reeder's grandmother, Reeder initially told his grandmother that he had burned Hines' car, but later told her where it was. Reeder did not mention having done anything with Hines' wallet. In addition, Reeder's grandmother made clear that Reeder did not change clothes while at her house. {¶ 7} When Reeder's clothing was tested, none of Hines' blood was found on it. But the investigation did find some of Reeder's own blood on his clothing which, Siniff admitted, may have come from being hit in the face. In addition, Reeder consistently rubbed his jaw during the video interview including at times when he was alone in the room.2

2 Reeder also talked to himself and seemed embarrassed when the detective entered the room while he was talking to himself. Nos. 15AP-203 and 15AP-218 4

{¶ 8} Photographs of the scene that were introduced as exhibits during the hearing show that the basement was a single room with an open flight of wooden stairs dividing the room in the center. From the vantage point of descending the stairs, Reeder's bed was directly to the left of the terminus of the stairs with only a few feet between the end of the stairs and the foot of the bed. According to a crime scene investigator from the Bureau of Criminal Identification and Investigation of the Ohio Attorney General's office who testified on the second day of the hearing, Hines was found with his feet facing the bed and his head extended toward the stairs. There was, however, some evidence that the body had been disturbed either by the shooter or by medical personnel. Hines' body showed gunpowder stippling on his face indicating that he was shot at short range. The bullet passed through his face and out the back of his head and was recovered near the head of the bed. Considerable blood was present on the bed and stairs, and numerous small white porous fragments believed to be bone were found on and near the bed. Other than that, Hines was determined to be near the bed and not on the stairs when he was shot; the crime scene expert was unable to testify as to Hines' and Reeder's relative positioning or whether and how each was moving at the time Hines was shot. {¶ 9} A grandnephew of Hines also testified. He confirmed that Hines smoked marijuana. He testified that Hines had difficulty remembering relatives' names and lived in a senior home.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2016 Ohio 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-reeder-ohioctapp-2016.