State v. Turner, Unpublished Decision (6-16-2000)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 16, 2000
DocketAppeal No. C-990388, Trial No. B-9901179.
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Turner, Unpublished Decision (6-16-2000) (State v. Turner, Unpublished Decision (6-16-2000)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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State v. Turner, Unpublished Decision (6-16-2000), (Ohio Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

OPINION.
The defendant-appellant, Darryl Turner, appeals his conviction, following a jury trial, for aggravated robbery, robbery, felonious assault, and kidnapping. In six assignments of error, Turner argues that (1) the trial court erred in failing to grant his motion to suppress evidence, (2) the admission of hearsay evidence violated his Sixth Amendment right to confront witnesses, (3) his conviction was based upon insufficient evidence and contrary to the weight of the evidence, and (4) he was denied effective assistance of counsel. We find no merit in any of the assignments and thus affirm.

FACTS
Thomas Norton, a University of Cincinnati student, began drinking with friends at three o'clock in the afternoon on February 10, 1999. By his own estimation, he proceeded to consume about twenty beers as he continued to drink throughout the day. At approximately 2:30 a.m. the next morning, in a state of extreme intoxication, he left his friends outside a restaurant near the university, turning down an offer of a ride, and began walking back to his apartment. He testified that he had a twenty-dollar bill in his money clip, which he carried in a backpack slung over his shoulders.

According to Norton, Turner approached him on the sidewalk, commented on his drunkenness, and offered to help him along his way. Norton, aware of his own state of inebriation, accepted Turner's offer. Norton testified that Turner kept talking to him as they walked until Norton, in a moment of lucidity, realized that he was in an unfamiliar area. He testified that he became worried, and a little scared, when suddenly he experienced a bright flash and lost consciousness. Norton refuted the notion that he could have simply fallen, stating, "No, I don't recall falling. If I had fallen, it had to be with somebody's help. I know that I didn't just fall."

Cincinnati Police Officer Donald Meece testified that he was patrolling in the area with his partner, Officer Jeff McKinney, in the early morning hours of February 11, 1999, when their unit was dispatched to a domestic-violence complaint. As they were investigating the complaint, Officer Meece and his partner spotted a white male, obviously drunk, and an African-American male walking arm-in-arm on the opposite side of the street. At trial, Officer Meece identified the two men as Norton and Turner.

Several minutes later, after transporting a suspect in the domestic-violence case, the officers were approached by two African-American females who advised them that there was a person, "possibly dead," who had been beaten by another person in front of 3402 Harvey Avenue, approximately two blocks away. The officers responded to the location. According to Officer Meece, they drove around the location until he got out of the cruiser and began to inspect the bushes near an abandoned house known to him for being frequented by drug dealers and prostitutes.

Officer Meece testified that he heard movement in the house while inspecting the bushes. Upon shining his light into the building, he heard someone starting to run inside. He then moved outside the building in the direction of the noise and saw Turner coming out of a window. Officer Meece testified that he ordered Turner to stop, but that Turner retreated back into the house.

According to Officer Meece, Turner was next spotted trying to exit from a second-story window, but he again darted back in the house. Within the next few minutes, however, Turner came out of the house with his hands up. Officer Meece testified that he was operating at this point upon a report that someone was possibly dying — maybe dead — and that he was concerned about Turner having a weapon. Turner was therefore ordered to the ground at gunpoint and handcuffed. While Turner was on the ground, and before he was read his Miranda rights, Officer Meece asked Turner, "Where is the white guy that was with you?' He testified that Turner responded, "Oh, he left me. He got mad and took the bus."

At this point, Officer McKinney read Turner his Miranda rights. Officer Meece then asked Turner repeatedly about the whereabouts of the person who was with him and if that person was in the house. According to Officer Meece, Turner repeatedly told him that there was nobody in the house. Turner was then placed in a police vehicle and a search was made of the house with other officers who had arrived on the scene. Norton was found in one of the rooms, lying face down, unconscious, partly in a closet and partly on a pile of blankets, his face cut and bloodied. Officer Meece testified that when Officer McKinney checked for a pulse, Norton stirred and sat up. Officer Meece then asked Norton what had happened to him, to which Norton responded that "he was with this guy and the guy beat him up and took his money."

Officer Meece testified that Norton's backpack, still on his back, was unzipped. An ambulance was called and Norton was transported to the hospital. Turner was interviewed in the patrol car again, and again he stated that there had been no one in the house and that the person he had been with had left him and taken the bus. According to Officer Meece, Turner also said that Norton had fallen outside the house near some garbage cans, and that he had bled on the sidewalk. When both officers investigated the area around the garbage cans, however, neither saw blood. Officer Meece testified that Turner also alleged that he had first observed Norton at the corner of Harvey and Erkenbrecher. He stated that when he advised Turner that he had personally observed the two walking arm-in-arm two blocks farther south, Turner "pretty much clammed up."

No money was found on Turner, nor was Norton's twenty-dollar bill ever found on the premises. Although the police searched for a blunt instrument with blood on it inside the house, none was found.

Antonio Whitehead, a defense witness, testified that on the morning of February 11, 1999, he was sitting in his home on Harvey Avenue, watching television, when he heard "some arguing or some loud talk" outside of his window. He testified that, looking out the window, he saw two males, one white, one African-American, standing in his driveway. He described the African-American male as "trying to help" the white male, who was obviously intoxicated. He testified that he could hear the white male saying "leave me alone" and "get away from me." Whitehead stated that he then observed the white male "sprint out" and stumble all the way down the street until he "fell straight on his face."

According to Whitehead, the African-American male left the scene after the white male "kept saying, no, no." Sometime later, Whitehead testified, he witnessed two African-American females approach the white male's prone body and then begin to scream for help. Whitehead stated that when the two females then crossed the street to ask others to help, the African-American male came "back around the corner," picked Norton up, and then started walking down the street toward the abandoned house until they disappeared from his view. After that, he testified, the police began circulating in the area.

White testified that he did not know Turner and had had no previous contact with him.

ANALYSIS
1. Motion to Suppress

In his first assignment of error, Turner argues that the trial court erred by denying his motion to suppress. The motion was directed to the statement that Turner made right after he left the abandoned house, while he was on the ground and being handcuffed, but before he was read his Miranda rights.

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Turner, Unpublished Decision (6-16-2000), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-turner-unpublished-decision-6-16-2000-ohioctapp-2000.