State v. Sheppard, Unpublished Decision (10-12-2001)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 12, 2001
DocketAppeal No. C-000553, Trial No. B-0002066.
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Sheppard, Unpublished Decision (10-12-2001) (State v. Sheppard, Unpublished Decision (10-12-2001)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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State v. Sheppard, Unpublished Decision (10-12-2001), (Ohio Ct. App. 2001).

Opinions

DECISION.
Defendant-appellant, Darryl Sheppard, was charged with one count of felonious assault in violation of R.C. 2903.11(A)(1), one count of felonious assault in violation of R.C. 2903.11(A)(2), and one count of aggravated robbery in violation of R.C. 2911.01(B) with a firearm specification. Following a jury trial, Sheppard was convicted on all three counts. The trial court imposed a ten-year sentence for each felonious assault, to be served concurrently, and a ten-year sentence for the aggravated robbery, to be served consecutively with the other sentences. On appeal, Sheppard raises seven assignments of error, none of which we find to be well taken.

I. FACTS

Cincinnati police officer Kathy Newsom was working on routine patrol on March 12, 2000, when she found Sheppard asleep on the skywalk near the top of an escalator at 524 Race Street. Officer Newsom testified at trial that when she found Sheppard, she radioed police headquarters to report her location and a man sleeping on the skywalk. After Newsom radioed in, she testified, Sheppard woke up, stood with his hands in his pockets, and stared at her.

After asking Sheppard to remove his hands from his pockets several times, Officer Newsom pulled a can of Mace from her service belt. At that time, Sheppard removed his hands from his pockets, and Officer Newsom returned the Mace to her belt. Sheppard then began moving towards Officer Newsom, who told him to stay where he was. When Sheppard continued to advance, Officer Newsom put out her hands and told Sheppard to stop. Officer Newsom then radioed for another police car in the area and asked Sheppard for identification.

At that point, Officer Newsom testified, Sheppard put his left hand behind his back as if reaching for something and simultaneously hit her with his right fist across the side of her face. Sheppard then began pummeling her with a continuous stream of punches to her face and head, which she tried to ward off with her hands. At some point, Sheppard knocked her to the ground. He straddled her and continued to punch her with such force that Officer Newsom thought she would lose consciousness. During the assault, Sheppard told Newsom that he was going to kill her. He then grabbed for her gun and tried to pull it out of its holster. They struggled over the gun, which Officer Newsom was able to keep in her holster. During the struggle, Officer Newsom yelled at Sheppard to stop. She testified that he told her he was going to take the gun and kill her.

Officer Newsom was able to disengage the magazine from her gun and slide it across the skywalk. She then told Sheppard that she had radioed for help and that other police officers would be arriving. Newsom testified that just as she was beginning to lose consciousness, Sheppard jumped off of her and ran down the escalator, away from the skywalk. She then stood up and saw a knife underneath where they had struggled. Officer Newsom reloaded her gun with another magazine and radioed for help. She then ran after Sheppard.

Sheppard was later apprehended by other police officers and brought to Newsom's location for identification. After identifying Sheppard as her assailant, Newsom was treated at University Hospital for a concussion. At trial, the state introduced pictures of Newsom detailing welts on her face and head, as well as blood spots in her eyes. Newsom also testified that she had cuts on the inside of her mouth, knots on her head, and a laceration on her right index finger, and that, as a result of her injuries, she missed four days of work.

Although Sheppard did not testify at trial, the state played a taped statement that Sheppard had voluntarily given to police after he was given his Miranda rights. In the statement, Sheppard admitted to sleeping on the skywalk and being involved in a confrontation with Officer Newsom, but otherwise described a different sequence of events. Sheppard stated that a female police officer wearing a uniform and a badge woke him up and asked him in a harsh voice for his name and some identification. When he moved toward the officer to show her his identification, she told him to stop. The police officer then walked up to him, pushed him against the wall with "tremendous force," and then reached for her gun.

Sheppard stated that he was afraid of being shot, so he grabbed the officer by the arms, they struggled, and he laid her on the ground. Once on the ground, he straddled the officer's body. He put his hands on her arms and his left knee over her gun. He told the officer that he was tired of being bothered by people. When the officer reached for her gun, he put his hand over her hand on the gun. After she pulled the clip out of her gun and slid it across the walkway, he got up and ran down the escalator. He hid in a walkway in an alley.

Sheppard stated that when he was brought to Officer Newsom for identification, he apologized to her. He further stated that he often carried a kitchen knife in his pocket for protection because he had been robbed before. He denied having the knife on him that evening. He also denied hitting Officer Newsom. He stated that she might have "raised up" and bumped into his fist when they were struggling on the ground, but that he did not hit her.

II. ANALYSIS

In his first assignment of error, Sheppard argues that the trial court erred by failing to grant his motion to suppress the statement he had made immediately after his arrest. Sheppard claims that he was subjected to custodial interrogation without the benefit of Miranda warnings when Officer Newsom hinted that she wanted an apology. The trial court found that both Officer Newsom's statement and Sheppard's response were spontaneous. It further found that Officer Newsom did not intend to elicit any type of incriminating response or confession from Sheppard. We agree with the trial court.

Miranda v. Arizona1 mandates that all individuals who are taken into police custody must be advised of certain constitutional rights. Those rights can be waived prior to interrogation, provided the waiver is voluntary, intelligent, and knowing.2 The duty to advise a suspect of his Miranda rights does not arise until there is a "custodial interrogation."3

Custodial interrogation in the context of Miranda rights "refers not only to express questioning, but also to any words or actions on the part of the police (other than those normally attendant to arrest and custody) that the police should know are reasonably likely to elicit an incriminating response from the subject."4 In determining whether a suspect has been "interrogated," the court should focus on whether the suspect has been compelled to speak because of police coercion.5

At the suppression hearing, Officer Michael Bell testified that, after he handcuffed Sheppard, he placed him in the rear passenger seat of his police cruiser and transported him to Officer Newsom's location for identification. Upon arriving, Officer Newsom exited from her police cruiser and positively identified Sheppard. Officer Newsom then turned and started walking away. While walking away, she said under her breath, "Aren't you at least going to apologize?" Sheppard then responded by saying, "I'm sorry."

At trial, Officer Newsom testified that "at one point I told someone else.

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State v. Sheppard, Unpublished Decision (10-12-2001), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-sheppard-unpublished-decision-10-12-2001-ohioctapp-2001.