State v. Sanders

2018 Ohio 4603
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 15, 2018
Docket106744
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2018 Ohio 4603 (State v. Sanders) 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. Sanders, 2018 Ohio 4603 (Ohio Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Sanders, 2018-Ohio-4603.]

Court of Appeals of Ohio EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION No. 106744

STATE OF OHIO

PLAINTIFF-APPELLEE

vs.

NAVI L. SANDERS

DEFENDANT-APPELLANT

JUDGMENT: AFFIRMED

Criminal Appeal from the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas Case No. CR-17-617652-B

BEFORE: Stewart, J., Kilbane, P.J., and McCormack, J.

RELEASED AND JOURNALIZED: November 15, 2018 ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT

Rick L. Ferrara Rick L. Ferrara, Esq. 2077 East 4th Street, Second Floor Cleveland, OH 44114

ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE

Michael C. O’Malley Cuyahoga County Prosecutor

Maxwell Martin Assistant County Prosecutor Justice Center, 9th Floor 1200 Ontario Street Cleveland, OH 44113 MELODY J. STEWART, J.:

{¶1} A jury found defendant-appellant Navi Sanders guilty of felonious assault,

discharging a firearm near a prohibited premises, improper handling of a firearm in a motor

vehicle, and intimidation of a crime witness. The charges stemmed from the death of a

14-year-old child who was stabbed while sleeping in the same house where Sanders and her

boyfriend, Jacque Renode, were staying. Just days after the stabbing, Sanders and Renode were

seen in the back seat of a car moving down the same street where the stabbing occurred. Renode

fired several shots from the car in the direction of a teenage victim, who had been present in the

house where the stabbing occurred, and later heard Sanders and Renode make incriminating

statements about the stabbing. The state theorized that Renode murdered the child, and that

Sanders was complicit in intimidating the victim from assisting the police investigation.

Sanders raises a number of assignments of error relating to evidence supporting the firearm

specifications, the weight of evidence, the jury instructions on intimidation, prosecutorial

misconduct, the assistance of trial counsel, and whether certain sentences should have merged. I. Intimidation of a Witness

{¶2} The intimidation count charged Sanders with intimidating a witness to a murder.

Sanders maintains that the state did not prove that the child’s death was the result of murder, nor

did it prove who committed the murder. She argues that because Renode had been charged with

the child’s murder, but had yet to be tried, the court allowed the jury to assume that Renode

murdered the child. She maintains that this assumption was a failure of proof on the

intimidation count and otherwise tainted her ability to receive a fair trial.

A. Sufficiency of the Evidence

{¶3} Count 5 of the indictment charged Sanders with intimidation in violation of R.C.

2921.04(B)(2). That section states that no person, knowingly and by force or threat of harm,

“shall attempt to influence, intimidate, or hinder * * * [a] witness to a criminal or delinquent act

by reason of the person being a witness to that act[.]” In this context, a “witness” means “any

person who has or claims to have knowledge concerning a fact or facts concerning a criminal or

delinquent act, whether or not criminal or delinquent child charges are actually filed.” R.C.

2921.04(E).

{¶4} The intimidation charge did not require the state to prove beyond a reasonable doubt

that a murder occurred, much less who committed the murder. Had that been the legislature’s

intent, it could easily have used the words “criminal conviction” or “delinquent adjudication”

rather than “criminal or delinquent act.” The state only had to prove that the victim had

knowledge about a fact or facts concerning the child’s death and that Sanders knowingly and by

force or threat of harm intimidated the victim because of the victim’s knowledge of facts

concerning the matter. As charged in the indictment, the to-wit clause referencing murder applied merely to describe the circumstances of the criminal act; the precise nature of the

criminal act was not a separate element of proof for the offense of intimidation.

{¶5} The evidence showed that the victim of the intimidation count, who was 13 years of

age at the time, slept at the house where the stabbing occurred. He testified that after family

members found the child, he personally saw the child on a bedroom floor, wrapped in a quilt and

bleeding (the child had been stabbed in the neck). The child’s mother told the victim to go to a

local grocery store and locate her fiancé. The victim found the fiancé with Sanders and Renode.

After the victim said that the child “was bleeding” and might be dead, the fiancé and Renode

started running to the house, but Sanders only walked, telling the victim that the child was “not

dead, he’s okay.” When they returned to the house, Renode went to the bedroom, but Sanders

remained outside. The child testified that Renode then came out of the bedroom “really quick

and said I have to get out of here * * *.”

{¶6} Trial testimony established that Sanders and Renode had previously stayed at the

mother’s house, but were told to move out after “a bunch of altercations” with her children. As

she was moving out, Sanders told the mother that “I’ll be back and I’m going to kill you and your

kids.” Sanders and Renode returned to the house a few weeks later, claiming that they were

homeless and needed a place to stay. The mother took them in as an act of charity. Two days

later, the mother became upset after discovering that Renode had given an alcoholic drink to the

child. After sending the child to bed, the mother, her fiancé, Sanders, and Renode watched a

movie. The mother checked on the child and found him sleeping on the floor, so she told

Sanders and Renode that they could sleep in the child’s bed. When the mother checked on the

child two hours later, she found the child wrapped in a quilt and bleeding from a stab wound to

the neck. Sanders and Renode were no longer in the house. The day after the child’s death, the mother’s fiancé found a pair of blood-soaked pants belonging to Renode in a clothes pile in one

of the bedrooms.

{¶7} The child’s mother testified that in the days following the stabbing, Renode’s name

was mentioned most frequently in speculation about who killed her son, given that bloody pants

belonging to Renode were found in the house. Four days after the stabbing, the victim and his

girlfriend were walking down the street where the stabbing occurred. They saw a car driving

slowly down the street, with Renode and Sanders in the back seat. Renode, sitting behind the

driver, extended a gun out the car window and fired about six times. Two bullets struck a

vehicle next to where the victim was standing. The car then sped away.

{¶8} The state offered no expert testimony on the cause of the child’s death, nor did it

offer any evidence in the form of police testimony regarding an investigation into the child’s

death. Nevertheless, the jury could reasonably infer that the child, having been stabbed in the

neck and wrapped in a quilt, died as result of foul play that rose to the level of a criminal act.

Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 319, 99 S.Ct. 2781, 61 L.Ed.2d 560 (1979) (it is “the

responsibility of the trier of fact fairly to resolve conflicts in the testimony, to weigh the

evidence, and to draw reasonable inferences from basic facts to ultimate facts”).

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Related

State v. Renode
2020 Ohio 5430 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2020)
State v. Evans
2020 Ohio 3968 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2020)
State v. Sanders
2019 Ohio 2566 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2019)
State v. Wingfield
2019 Ohio 1644 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2019)
State v. Shivers
2018 Ohio 5174 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2018)

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2018 Ohio 4603, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-sanders-ohioctapp-2018.