State v. Tayse, 23978 (3-18-2009)

2009 Ohio 1209
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 18, 2009
DocketNo. 23978.
StatusUnpublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 2009 Ohio 1209 (State v. Tayse, 23978 (3-18-2009)) 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. Tayse, 23978 (3-18-2009), 2009 Ohio 1209 (Ohio Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

DECISION AND JOURNAL ENTRY
INTRODUCTION
{¶ 1} In a busy grocery store parking lot in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, James Tayse crawled into the backseat of a Jeep Grand Cherokee while the Jeep's owner was entering the driver's seat. Mr. Tayse put a knife to the throat of the baby girl sitting in the carseat beside him and ordered her mother to drive. So began a five-hour ordeal that ended that afternoon in Cleveland, Ohio. Mr. Tayse was convicted of committing fourteen crimes along the way, including felonious assault and multiple counts of kidnapping, rape, and aggravated robbery with sexually violent predator and repeat violent offender specifications. He was also convicted of grand theft, disrupting public services, and failure to comply with a signal or order of a police officer.

{¶ 2} Mr. Tayse has appealed, arguing that four of his five convictions for aggravated robbery and his convictions for the sexually violent predator specifications in each rape count, *Page 2 along with his convictions for felonious assault and disrupting public services, are against the manifest weight of the evidence. His second assignment of error is that the trial court incorrectly denied his motion to dismiss the repeat violent offender specifications in the indictment because he does not meet the statutory criteria. His final assignment of error is that the trial court incorrectly overruled his motion for acquittal on the charge of failure to comply with a signal or order of a police officer because according to him, the State did not present sufficient evidence to establish venue.

{¶ 3} This Court affirms Mr. Tayse's convictions for aggravated robbery, felonious assault, and the sexually violent predator specifications because the jury did not lose its way and create a manifest miscarriage of justice in finding he was guilty of each offense. This Court reverses Mr. Tayse's conviction for disrupting public services, however, because it was not based on sufficient evidence. This Court affirms Mr. Tayse's conviction on the repeat violent offender specifications because the Pennsylvania statute under which Mr. Tayse was previously convicted is substantially equivalent to an Ohio offense of violence that is classified as a first-degree felony. This Court affirms Mr. Tayse's conviction for failure to comply with a signal or order of a police officer because the evidence presented was sufficient to find that he committed the offense as part of a course of criminal conduct.

BACKGROUND
{¶ 4} Amanda C. went grocery shopping with her sixteen-month-old daughter, Sophie, the day before Easter 2007 at a Giant Eagle store near her home in a suburb of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. At close to 10:30 a.m., after she loaded her baby and her groceries into her Jeep Grand Cherokee, Amanda locked the doors and walked to the nearby cart-return. As she headed back to her Jeep, she noticed a man approaching, but assumed he was intending to enter a *Page 3 neighboring car. Just as Amanda unlocked the doors and sat down in the driver's seat, James Tayse slipped into the seat directly behind her. He leaned over and put a small kitchen knife up to the side of Sophie's neck and ordered Amanda to "[d]rive, or I'll cut her." He told Amanda that he needed to get out of town because he was going away for life. Mr. Tayse kept the knife to Sophie's neck until the Jeep reached the main road, then he crawled up into the front passenger's seat and held the knife on his lap.

{¶ 5} Amanda told Mr. Tayse that she did not have cash for the toll road, and he told her to stop at an ATM. Amanda withdrew $200 from her bank account using a drive-up ATM at a bank in Harmarville, PA. She handed the money directly to Mr. Tayse. They got on the Pennsylvania Turnpike, and Mr. Tayse warned her "not to speed and not to do anything stupid to get [them] caught." Amanda testified that, when she was approaching the toll booth operator at the end of the Pennsylvania Turnpike, Mr. Tayse again warned her not to do anything stupid. At that time, she glanced over at Mr. Tayse and found that, for the first time, the knife was not visible.

{¶ 6} They followed Interstate 76 until Mr. Tayse told her to take an exit. He told her that she was to pay for a room at the America's Best Value Inn at Route 43 in Brimfield Township, Ohio. Mr. Tayse insisted on carrying Sophie into the motel lobby. According to Amanda, Mr. Tayse "said he did have the knife under Sophie's jacket and not to do anything stupid." Amanda testified that she complied and did not attempt to alert the sole worker at the desk because "[Mr. Tayse] had a knife to [her] child." Once inside the motel room, Mr. Tayse emptied his pockets, including the knife, onto the nightstand and lay down on the bed watching television while Amanda tried to get Sophie to drink some milk. *Page 4

{¶ 7} Soon Mr. Tayse approached Amanda and said, "[p]ut [Sophie] down and take off all your clothes." Although Amanda begged him not to make her, Mr. Tayse insisted that she perform oral sex on him. After that, he raped her vaginally. After ordering her to clean him up and take a shower, he demanded oral sex again.

{¶ 8} After that, Mr. Tayse started going through Amanda's purse looking for more money and credit cards. He ordered her to remove her jewelry, and he turned off her cellular telephone. They returned to the Jeep where Mr. Tayse again ordered her to drive. He told her to stop at a BP gas station on Grant Street in Akron. Amanda testified that Mr. Tayse carried Sophie and stood behind her while she used an ATM to withdraw money from her account. She was unable to withdraw more than $100 at that time. She gave the money to Mr. Tayse. When they returned to the Jeep, he told her they had to find a way to get more money. They stopped at a check cashing store in Cuyahoga Falls, but the teller refused to cash Amanda's $1500 check. The woman suggested they try the bank inside the local Giant Eagle.

{¶ 9} At Giant Eagle, Mr. Tayse again carried Sophie into the store. They tried unsuccessfully to cash the check at the service desk and then at the bank counter. In an attempt to stall inside the store, Amanda claimed she needed diapers. While they were waiting in line, Mr. Tayse told her to buy five $100 American Express gift cards. She gave the cards to him. They returned to the Jeep, and Amanda drove toward Cleveland until Mr. Tayse told her to take an exit. They drove deep into a residential neighborhood before Mr. Tayse ordered her to stop the car and get out. He allowed her to get Sophie from the backseat before he drove the Jeep out of sight.

{¶ 10} The next day, while driving in Cleveland, a woman who had heard about the incident on television spotted Amanda's Jeep Grand Cherokee and called the police. Cleveland *Page 5 police officers in two separate vehicles pursued the Jeep, using lights and sirens, through deep snow on icy roads. The two police cars attempted at one point to trap the Jeep, but Mr. Tayse accelerated and turned a corner. The police officers and witnesses testified that the Jeep fishtailed around a corner onto a residential street, bouncing off the curbs on either side, before slamming into a parked car and rebounding to strike another car parked on the opposite side of the street. Both of the parked cars were heavily damaged, and an occupant of one of them was injured. Mr.

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2009 Ohio 1209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-tayse-23978-3-18-2009-ohioctapp-2009.