State v. Watson, Unpublished Decision (4-12-2001)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 12, 2001
DocketNo. 77494.
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Watson, Unpublished Decision (4-12-2001) (State v. Watson, Unpublished Decision (4-12-2001)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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State v. Watson, Unpublished Decision (4-12-2001), (Ohio Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

JOURNAL ENTRY and OPINION
Defendant-appellant Howard Joseph Watson appeals from his conviction after a jury trial for murder with an aggravated felony specification.

In his fourteen assignments of error, appellant challenges his conviction on numerous grounds. Appellant asserts his rights to a fair trial and due process of law were compromised by not only the trial court's actions in denying his motion to suppress evidence, admitting certain evidence at trial, instructing the jury, and sentencing him but also by the prosecutor's decision to include the specification in the indictment, improper questions of witnesses at trial, and improper comments during closing argument. Appellant also asserts his conviction is based upon insufficient evidence.

This court has considered all of appellant's assertions in light of the record and finds none has merit. Therefore, appellant's conviction is affirmed.

Appellant's conviction results from an incident that occurred in the early morning hours of September 21, 1995. The testimony adduced at trial established the following sequence of events.

Appellant, who was twenty-nine years old at the time, had been drinking throughout the evening of September 20, 1995 with some friends at "a bar called The Last Call."1 This establishment was near the home of one of appellant's girlfriends, seventeen-year-old Kelly Thacker. At approximately 10:00 p.m., appellant telephoned Thacker to request she meet him at "1:40 [a.m.], maybe two o'clock." He told her he would park his vehicle on her street, wait for a time, then attempt to telephone her once more if she did not appear.

Appellant thereafter followed this plan. He left "The Last Call" to drive to Thacker's house, located at 15511 Saranac Avenue in Cleveland, Ohio. Appellant was driving a "black [1986] Lincoln Town Car, full size"; he was "in the process" of purchasing this vehicle from a friend, Anthony Velotta.

Upon his arrival, appellant parked his vehicle in a "No Parking zone on the opposite side of the street from Thacker's residence. Appellant thus parked in front of the parking lot that served the patrons of Walland's Saloon and the Pullman Lounge.

At approximately 1:20 a.m., Thomas Majer was awakened by the sound of a loud crash. Majer lived on East 155th Street; his second-floor bedroom window overlooked Saranac Avenue and the Pullman Lounge and Walland's Saloon. Majer arose and went to one of his windows to discover the source of the noise. Majer's brother, Mark, who also had heard the crashing sound, entered the bedroom as well.

The two brothers looked out to see a blue van "backing up" from the parking lot across Saranac Avenue onto the tree lawn. It bumped into a tree, then pulled forward onto Saranac Avenue, where it stopped. The Majer brothers faced the driver's side of the van from their vantage point.

As they watched, a man, later identified as appellant, exited his vehicle parked on Saranac. Appellant ran toward the van; he appeared "upset." When he reached the van driver's door, he shouted into the open window, "Let's go. Let's f***ing go."

Neither of the Majer brothers heard the van driver reply to appellant's challenge, but Thomas observed the van suddenly pull away and turn left onto East 155th Street. Appellant ran back to the Lincoln, entered it, and drove in pursuit of the van. Thomas Majer, believing he had witnessed a traffic accident, reported the incident to emergency services.

Some minutes later, at approximately 1:30 a.m., the residents of the apartment building located at 15505 Kipling Avenue also were awakened by the noise of a crash. A blue van traveling at a high rate of speed had collided with some parked vehicles on the street, sending a few of the vehicles onto the tree lawn. The area residents who went outdoors to investigate observed the driver of the van, later identified as Daniel Montesanto, appeared to be seriously injured. He had facial lacerations, was unconscious, and was bleeding copiously. Emergency medical personnel quickly responded to the scene; they transported Montesanto to a nearby hospital, where he was pronounced dead upon his arrival.

Cuyahoga County Assistant Coroner Dr. Heather Raaf performed an autopsy on Montesanto at approximately 8:30 a.m. that same morning. During the procedure, she noticed Montesanto had suffered extensive contusions and abrasions of his head and face. Moreover, his body bore two "paired stab wounds" located on each side of his lower back. The stab wound on the right side demonstrated the instrument had entered through the victim's ribs to pierce both his diaphragm and his kidney. Dr. Raaf determined these wounds probably were caused by a double-bladed knife. She also determined they were the cause of Montesanto's death. She reported her findings to the Cleveland Police Department; thus, the police investigation of a motor vehicle accident became, instead, the investigation of a homicide.

At approximately 5:30 a.m. on the morning of the incident, police officers still were seeking information about the victim by contacting his roommate, friends, and neighbors. In this way, Montesanto's activities of September 20, 1995 into the early morning hours of that day were chronicled. Montesanto was reported to have been drinking with friends immediately prior to the motor vehicle accident. Soon after the victim's van struck appellant's vehicle, the victim's friends had been involved in an altercation at Walland's Saloon with some of appellant's friends, including Anthony Velotta.

Subsequently, the case was assigned to homicide detectives Jack Bornfield and Michael O'Malley. They soon learned of the collision outside of the tavern between Montesanto's van and an older model black Lincoln Town Car. They also learned of the subsequent altercation indoors. Montesanto's roommate described an incident that might have made appellant angry toward the victim. One of appellant's acquaintances contacted the police to describe an oddly-shaped knife he had seen recently in appellant's possession. Moreover, a few of the witnesses interviewed in connection with Montesanto's death knew the Lincoln Town Car involved in the first accident; the witnesses informed the police officers the owner of the vehicle, Anthony Velotta, lived at 805 East 156th Street.

O'Malley proceeded to that location on September 23, 1995. He observed the vehicle parked in the garage. The vehicle had "extensive damage to [its] rear" and, adhering to some of the dented metal, chips of blue paint that later were determined to be consistent with the paint of the victim's van.

As O'Malley was speaking to Velotta about the vehicle, appellant appeared on the premises. Appellant produced the keys to the vehicle, volunteered the information that he was in the process of purchasing the vehicle and that "the ignition was tricky and how to start it." After O'Malley placed Velotta and appellant under arrest, appellant explained the reason the Lincoln showed damage was because on September 21, 1995, he had been involved in an accident on Saranac in the area of East 155th Street.

Subsequently, appellant gave the detectives additional oral statements. Early in the evening of September 26, 1995, appellant acknowledged he had been acquainted with the victim after observing his photograph in the police file. Appellant spoke about an earlier homicide he had been arrested for;2 although he had been charged with murder, the case should have been a negligent homicide, which was why he had been acquitted.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
State v. Watson, Unpublished Decision (4-12-2001), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-watson-unpublished-decision-4-12-2001-ohioctapp-2001.