State v. Wilks (Slip Opinion)

2018 Ohio 1562, 114 N.E.3d 1092, 154 Ohio St. 3d 359
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 2018
Docket2014-1035
StatusPublished
Cited by119 cases

This text of 2018 Ohio 1562 (State v. Wilks (Slip Opinion)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Wilks (Slip Opinion), 2018 Ohio 1562, 114 N.E.3d 1092, 154 Ohio St. 3d 359 (Ohio 2018).

Opinion

[Until this opinion appears in the Ohio Official Reports advance sheets, it may be cited as State v. Wilks, Slip Opinion No. 2018-Ohio-1562.]

NOTICE This slip opinion is subject to formal revision before it is published in an advance sheet of the Ohio Official Reports. Readers are requested to promptly notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of Ohio, 65 South Front Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215, of any typographical or other formal errors in the opinion, in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is published.

SLIP OPINION NO. 2018-OHIO-1562 THE STATE OF OHIO, APPELLEE, v. WILKS, APPELLANT. [Until this opinion appears in the Ohio Official Reports advance sheets, it may be cited as State v. Wilks, Slip Opinion No. 2018-Ohio-1562.] Criminal law—Aggravated murder—Convictions and death sentence affirmed. (No. 2014-1035—Submitted January 24, 2018—Decided April 24, 2018.) APPEAL from the Court of Common Pleas of Mahoning County, No. 13 CR 540. ___________________ FRENCH, J. {¶ 1} Appellant, Willie Wilks Jr., was convicted of the aggravated murder of Ororo Wilkins and the attempted murders of Alexander Morales Jr. and William Wilkins Jr. A jury recommended, and the trial court imposed, a sentence of death. In this appeal as of right, we affirm appellant’s convictions and death sentence. I. TRIAL EVIDENCE A. Argument at appellant’s home {¶ 2} Evidence introduced at trial showed that around noon on May 21, 2013, Morales and William Wilkins (nicknamed “Mister”) drove to the Youngstown home of Mary Aragon, Mister’s mother, to borrow money from her. SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

But appellant, who was Aragon’s boyfriend, had both of her bank cards, so the three of them went to appellant’s nearby home to get the cards. {¶ 3} Aragon knocked on the door and asked appellant for the cards; he agreed to give them to her but did not bring them outside. Mister then knocked on the door and asked appellant for the cards. Appellant told Mister that he would get them and asked Mister to come to the corner of the house. {¶ 4} Appellant soon came outside and gave Mister one card but not the other. Appellant then asked Mister to walk to the back of the house with him. Mister observed appellant “fidgeting in his pants” as if he had a weapon. Mister became angry, they exchanged words, and Mister tried to start a fight. {¶ 5} Appellant entered his house. He returned with a 9 mm handgun, chased Mister down the street, and pointed the gun at him. Mister did not believe that appellant would shoot him because people were around. Mister taunted appellant and called him names. When appellant saw Morales, appellant put the gun in his pocket. Morales introduced himself, and appellant said, “You better get your boy.” Morales replied that they had come just to get the bank cards and did not want any trouble. Appellant handed the second bank card to Morales, and Morales, Mister, and Aragon left. B. Mister’s phone call with appellant {¶ 6} Later that afternoon, Mister, Morales, and two other individuals played basketball at a nearby playground. About 45 minutes after they started playing, Mister placed a phone call to Aragon. Mister asked his mother, “Why would you let [appellant] do that in front of [you]? Why would you be on his side?” {¶ 7} Appellant got on the phone with Mister, and they had a heated discussion. Appellant told Mister that he was going to kill him. Appellant asked Mister where he was, but Mister refused to tell him. Mister called appellant a name and hung up.

2 January Term, 2018

C. Murder of Ororo and attempted murders of Morales and Mister {¶ 8} Later in the afternoon that same day, Mister and Morales drove to Mister’s home, which was a short distance from Aragon’s home. Mister was living with his girlfriend, Renea Jenkins, their three children, and Renea’s mother. {¶ 9} Upon arriving, Morales and Mister joined a gathering on the front porch. Soon thereafter, Mister went inside the house to his upstairs bedroom and Renea, her sister and brother, Shantwone and Antwone Jenkins, and Renea’s two older children also went inside. Ororo Wilkins, Mister’s sister, remained seated on the porch with Morales, who was holding Renea’s five-month-old daughter. {¶ 10} “[N]o more than ten minutes” after he and Mister arrived, Morales saw a “dark-color blue/purplish * * * Dodge Intrepid” near the house. Appellant exited the car, walked toward the porch, raised an “AK” rifle, and asked where Mister was. Morales turned with the baby to go inside the house. Appellant shot him in the back, and Morales dropped the baby and fell just inside the house. Appellant then shot Ororo in the head when she went to pick up the baby. Morales ran to the back of the house and collapsed in the kitchen. {¶ 11} Mister witnessed the events from his upstairs bedroom. After hearing a car “skidding,” he looked out the window and saw a car “like a purple Intrepid” parked in front of the house. Two people were in the front seats, and appellant was in the back. Appellant was wearing a hooded shirt with the hood up. Mister saw appellant walk toward the front porch carrying “some kind of rifle” and then saw appellant shooting toward the porch. {¶ 12} Mister screamed, and appellant looked up and fired at him. Appellant’s hood came off, and Mister made eye contact with him. Mister was not hit by the gunfire and went downstairs. But the car was gone when Mister got to the porch. {¶ 13} Renea called 9-1-1. On the recording of the 9-1-1 call, Mister can be heard repeatedly yelling, “He killed my sister” and “I watched him kill my

3 SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

sister.” When police officers arrived at the scene, they found Mister holding Ororo’s body in his arms, and Officer Jessica Shields heard him scream, “Willie did this. I don’t know why Willie did this.” Officer Melvin Johnson found Morales lying in the kitchen doorway. Morales told the officer that appellant did the shooting. {¶ 14} Mister told Officer Shields that a black Dodge Stratus had squealed to a halt outside the house, causing him to look out the window. He told her that he then saw appellant jump out of the back seat with a big gun, which he thought was an AK-47. {¶ 15} Investigators found a single 7.62 x 39 mm shell casing on the front porch. There was also a bullet strike near the front-door window and a bullet strike on the upper-story siding. {¶ 16} Police broadcast a BOLO (be-on-the-lookout) request for appellant and for a dark-colored Intrepid and/or a silver minivan registered to his mother. They later learned that appellant purchased a 2004 purple Dodge Stratus four days before the shooting. D. Appellant’s arrest {¶ 17} On May 22, 2013—the day after the shooting—the police received a tip that appellant was driving a silver minivan. The minivan was spotted in Youngstown that afternoon. Appellant was driving the minivan and was the only person in the vehicle. The police followed appellant into a residential area, where he abandoned the vehicle and fled. He was apprehended after a short chase on foot. {¶ 18} When the police searched appellant, they found a little over $2,000 in cash and one of Aragon’s bank cards. They found a fully loaded 9 mm handgun in the van, and they recovered a 9 mm magazine near the van. Appellant’s hands were swabbed for gunshot residue (“GSR”) at the police station.

4 January Term, 2018

{¶ 19} Police never recovered appellant’s purple Dodge Stratus. And although Mister later identified the other two occupants of the car in a police photo array, the police were unable to find them. E. Autopsy results {¶ 20} Dr. Joseph Ohr, the Mahoning County medical examiner, conducted Ororo’s autopsy. He testified that Ororo died from a gunshot wound to the head. The bullet entered the side of her head between her eye and ear and exited at the back of her head. The exit wound was “five, six centimeters” by “two and a half centimeters” in size. Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
2018 Ohio 1562, 114 N.E.3d 1092, 154 Ohio St. 3d 359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-wilks-slip-opinion-ohio-2018.