State v. Whisenant

711 N.E.2d 1016, 127 Ohio App. 3d 75
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 27, 1998
DocketNo. 95-P-0112.
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 711 N.E.2d 1016 (State v. Whisenant) 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. Whisenant, 711 N.E.2d 1016, 127 Ohio App. 3d 75 (Ohio Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

Nader, Judge.

Appellant, Jemmie Lee Whisenant, Jr., appeals Ms conviction on two counts of aggravated murder with kidnapping specifications in the Portage County Court of Common Pleas for his purposeful killing of Nevada Lynn Davis on January 11, 1995. The events surrounding the murder were revealed in a jury trial.

On the evening of January 11, 1995, appellant, age fifteen, was in his family’s moMle home with his sister, Keonna Whisenant, age seventeen, and her child. His father, James Whisenant, Sr. was working. Whisenant, Sr.’s live-in girlfriend, Nevada Lynn Davis, was out shopping. At approximately 8:00 to 8:30 p.m., appellant was alone in his sister’s bedroom, at the front of the mobile home, listening to music, when he saw car headlights coming in the driveway, which he believed were those of Davis’s car. At the moment he saw the reflection of the headlights, appellant decided he was “going to kill the bitch.” Appellant and Davis had a history of interpersonal difficulties to the extent that he did not want to continue living with his father and Davis.

Appellant left his sister’s bedroom, went down the hall past Ms bedroom and a bathroom and through the living room, and went into the kitchen. He selected a knife from one of the kitchen drawers and left the mobile home from a side door located in a utility room. 1

Appellant traveled almost the entire length of the mobile home, rounded the front, and crept up behind Davis, who was climbing the stairs with her arms full of groceries. He grabbed Davis from behind and cut her throat with the knife he had selected from the kitchen. Davis did not die from this wound. In fact, she attempted to escape from appellant, but he slammed her into the ground, climbed on her back, and stabbed her in the neck. Davis, weakened but alive and conscious, pleaded with appellant to call an ambulance, but he refused her request. Instead, appellant forced her inside the mobile home, into the bathroom, and ordered her to lean over the bathtub so her blood could wash down the drain.

*79 Over the next two hours, Davis pleaded for her life while appellant repeatedly cut her with the knife.' When she did not die from the knife wounds, appellant attempted to suffocate her, but was unsuccessful. Finally, after torturing Davis for two hours despite her pleas, appellant got two shoestrings, tied them together and strangled Davis to death. During this two-hour-period in which he tortured Davis, appellant made several phone calls to friends from the bathroom “just to talk.”

After Davis died, appellant cleaned the bathroom, washing most of the blood down the bathtub drain. He gathered the knife, the shoestrings, and some clots of blood and placed them in a plastic bag. He then dragged the body outside and laid it on the sidewalk leading to the mobile home. 2 He took items from her purse and scattered the groceries on the sidewalk in an attempt to set a scene of a theft-murder. Appellant then disposed of the plastic bag containing the murder weapons and clotted blood by stashing it in a sapling in a nearby stand of trees. Neither appellant nor his sister, who was home during the entire incident, reported the dead body to the police. The record does not contain any evidence that Whisenant, Sr., was home during the attack.

The next morning at approximately 7:00 a.m., a neighbor, Nicole Giertz, discovered.the body lying facedown at the base of the stairs to the Whisenant mobile home. She went inside the Whisenant home and reported what she saw to appellant and his sister, who called the police; Giertz did not indicate whether Whisenant, Sr., was in the mobile home when she discovered the body. When the sheriff and the coroner arrived, the body was turned over to reveal the knife wounds, leaving no doubt that Davis’s death was not an accident. 3 Also viewed on Davis’s body were defensive wounds and strands of hair on her hands. One of the detectives discovered what appeared to be droplets of blood on the threshold of the doorway.

After it became clear that he was dealing with a homicide, Portage County Sheriff Duane Kaley began questioning the family members. He entered the mobile home where Whisenant, Sr., Keonna Whisenant, Nicole Giertz, and appellant were waiting. Sheriff Kaley initially spoke briefly with Whisenant, Sr., and asked him if he could speak with appellant in the master bedroom, at the other end of the mobile home. Sheriff Kaley wanted to speak with appellant *80 .because he had been home the previous night and his bedroom was located adjacent to the location where Davis’s body had been found.

Only Sheriff Kaley, Whisenant, Sr., and appellant were present in the master bedroom. It is not clear whether the door to the room was closed, but, if so, it was not locked. Sheriff Kaley told both Whisenants that Davis did not die as a result of an accident, but was murdered. He also told appellant that he was not under arrest and was free to leave at any time. Sheriff Kaley then asked appellant, “What happened?” To this question appellant responded, “I’ve had enough and I killed her.” Sheriff Kaley ceased all communications at this point so that he could obtain a Miranda form. Upon receiving the form, Sheriff Kaley read it to appellant and his father. After each right was read, he inquired of both Whisenants whether they understood, to which each responded affirmatively.

Sheriff Kaley obtained an audiotaped statement from appellant regarding the events of the previous night, including his disposal of the murder weapons. Upon the sheriffs request, appellant led him, Whisenant, Sr., and other deputies to the tree in which he had hidden the evidence and then led them back to the mobile home by the route he had taken the night before. Appellant also showed the sheriff the drawer from which he had taken the knife he used to stab Davis and the clothes he was wearing during the murder. Appellant was then placed under arrest and taken into custody.

A complaint was filed in the juvenile division on January 12, 1995, alleging that appellant was a delinquent child as a result of his violation of R.C. 2903.01(A), the purposeful killing of another with prior calculation and design, an act which would constitute a felony if committed by an adult. On the same date, the court appointed an attorney to represent appellant and ordered appellant to be detained. The state also filed a motion for the juvenile court to relinquish jurisdiction on January 12, 1995. At his arraignment on January 13, 1995, appellant entered a plea of not true, and the court scheduled a Juv.R. 30(A) probable cause hearing.

On January 17, 1995, appellant filed multiple preadjudication motions. These included a motion for appointment of a psychological expert and an investigator, a motion to dismiss the complaint, and a motion to suppress the statements he had made to the police and any evidence arising therefrom. A search warrant was issued for the Whisenant mobile home to permit the state to obtain blood, hair fibers, illicit drugs, and fruits or instruments of the crime. On January 19, 1995, appellant filed two motions to dismiss the state’s motion to relinquish jurisdiction, based on different theories, and requested the appointment of a guardian ad litem.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
711 N.E.2d 1016, 127 Ohio App. 3d 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-whisenant-ohioctapp-1998.