State v. Soke

663 N.E.2d 986, 105 Ohio App. 3d 226
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 17, 1995
DocketNo. 65120.
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 663 N.E.2d 986 (State v. Soke) 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. Soke, 663 N.E.2d 986, 105 Ohio App. 3d 226 (Ohio Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

Patton, Chief Justice.

A jury found defendant Theodore Soke guilty of two counts of aggravated murder with specifications in violation of R.C. 2903.01 and one count of aggravated burglary in violation of R.C. 2911.11. Following the penalty phase of the trial, the jury concluded that the aggravating circumstances outweighed the mitigating factors beyond a reasonable doubt and recommended that the court impose a sentence of death on the aggravated murder counts. The court accepted the jury’s recommendation and sentenced defendant to death on the two counts of aggravated murder and to a term of ten to twenty-five years on the aggravated burglary count. Defendant appeals.

On May 19, 1985, family members found the bodies of Dorothy and Phillip Porter at their home in Shaker Heights. Eighty-four-year-old Phillip Porter had been stabbed twice in the back. He lay face down in his upstairs bedroom, straddling his bed. Seventy-eight-year-old Dorothy Porter lay face down on the basement floor. She had been stabbed, beaten, and strangled with the cord of an electric iron.

The coroner estimated that the Porters had been dead for at least thirty-six hours when he examined the bodies on May 20, 1985, although he could not pinpoint the exact time of death with certainty. A Porter family friend testified that she had visited the Porters between five and seven o’clock on the evening of May 17, 1985. Dorothy Porter’s daughter testified that she tried to call her mother between seven and eight o’clock on the seventeenth, but received a busy signal. Both the family friend and the daughter unsuccessfully tried to call the Porters throughout the weekend. On Sunday, May 19, the daughter asked her son to check on the Porters. The son saw a newspaper in the driveway and noticed that the house lights were off. When the Porters did not come to the door, he obtained a key to the locked house and, with the help of a neighbor, entered the house and found the bodies.

The police determined that the assailants had entered the house by poking holes through a kitchen window screen.' They apparently left through the same window, since all the doors to the house were locked from the inside.

Consistent with the Porters’ nightly routine, the police found a thermos, glass and plate of uneaten crackers on the nightstand in Phillip Porter’s room, and Dorothy Porter’s unfinished milk and brandy in the kitchen. These discoveries led the police to believe that the Porters had been surprised by their assailants. *234 Although the telephone had been removed from the hook, the Porter house had not been “tossed” in a manner consistent with a burglary. The police found a closed and apparently untampered-with wallet on a kitchen counter.

The police began an intensive investigation but were unable to identify the murderers. They failed to uncover any incriminating physical evidence at the crime scene. Dried blood stains suggested that Dorothy Porter had been stabbed on the first floor, dragged across a hallway and down a flight of stairs leading to the basement. Her fingers bore cuts indicating she had tried to defend herself from her assailants. Other dried blood droplets found on the stairs most likely fell off a knife as it was carried back up the stairs. A lack of matching blood enzymes indicated that the Porters had been stabbed with different knives. The assailants left no fingerprints or semen, and fingernail scrapings proved inconclusive.

In 1989, Lake County officials began investigating Donald Soke, defendant’s son, for the murder of Karen LaSpina in Eastlake. During the course of that investigation, the police began to suspect that defendant, his son, and a man named Daniel Crawford may have been involved in the Porter murders after they learned that all three men had told fellow prison inmates about their complicity in the Porter murders.

The Cuyahoga County Grand Jury indicted all three on aggravated murder charges for the Porter killings. Defendant submitted to trial before a three-judge panel. Donald entered a guilty plea to two counts of aggravated murder and testified against his father. Crawford entered a guilty plea to one count of aggravated burglary and also testified against. defendant. The panel found defendant guilty and sentenced him to two consecutive life terms.

After sentencing, defendant filed a motion for a new trial. Asserted as grounds for the motion were, among other things, that defendant’s son Donald Soke fabricated testimony against him, that the state reneged on a promise to Donald Soke in which it agreed not to seek the death penalty against defendant in exchange for Donald’s testimony, and that Donald fabricated his testimony with the aid of a written police report he saw prior to making a formal written statement.

The panel unanimously granted the motion for a new trial. In an oral ruling, the panel stated:

“The fact that Donald Soke had in his possession an initial crime scene investigation is nothing short of astounding. * * * [N]ot one member of this distinguished panel * * * can ever recall a report of this nature being produced at trial, let alone given into the possession of a witness. The reason is obvious, and it is to prevent a situation just as the one we have here now. One of the few *235 credible things about" the testimony of Donald Soke was his knowledge of information that, quote, only the murderer could know. And that is now given a new dimension. He, Donald, had the ability and the opportunity to plot with Dan Crawford, who got the most incredible plea bargain of anyone in this ease. For whatever reason, they, Danny and Donny, have been constantly kept together during the pendency of this matter.”

Before the second trial began, Donald Soke recanted his testimony implicating defendant. 1 Neither side called him as a witness during the guilt phase of the second trial, although he did testify in defendant’s behalf during the penalty phase.

Daniel Crawford testified that he and Donald Soke were friends. They met on the morning of May 17, 1985 and drove Crawford’s car around trying to find money for marijuana. They were unsuccessful, so they rode in Crawford’s car to the city of Fairport Harbor, where Soke’s grandmother lived. While at her house, they met up with defendant. The three began drinking and decided to drive to Mayfield, where Donald collected some money that a friend owed him. The three men and Donald’s friend drove to a bar in Euclid and spent the day drinking and shooting pool. When the money ran out, defendant suggested that they drive to Cleveland and burglarize a house.

Crawford testified that he and Donald had burglarized many houses according to a general plan. They waited until dusk and looked for a house with no lights on inside. They would knock on the door, and if someone answered they would make up a name and ask if that person was home. If the house was empty, they would break into it.

They dropped off Donald’s friend and began looking for a house to burglarize. Around dusk, Crawford picked out a house which he later identified to the police, who confirmed it as the Porter residence. They did not have gloves to wear so they put band-aids on their fingers. Crawford stated that defendant carried a sheathed knife, but could not identify a knife shown him at trial.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
663 N.E.2d 986, 105 Ohio App. 3d 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-soke-ohioctapp-1995.