State v. Williams, Unpublished Decision (4-1-1999)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 1, 1999
DocketNo. 72659
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Williams, Unpublished Decision (4-1-1999) (State v. Williams, Unpublished Decision (4-1-1999)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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State v. Williams, Unpublished Decision (4-1-1999), (Ohio Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION
Appellant Thomas Williams appeals from the decision of the trial court convicting him of attempted murder, having a weapon under disability, and resisting arrest and sentencing him accordingly. Williams assigns the following four errors for our review:

I. THE TRIAL COURT ABUSED ITS DISCRETION BY DENYING APPELLANTS MOTION FOR ACQUITTAL PURSUANT TO RULE 29 OF THE OHIO RULES OF CRIMINAL PROCEDURE BECAUSE THE EVIDENCE WHEN VIEWED IN A LIGHT MOST FAVORABLE TO THE STATE OF OHIO WAS INSUFFICIENT TO SUPPORT A CONVICTION ON COUNT FOUR OF THE INDICTMENT.

II. APPELLANT'S CONVICTION ON COUNT FOUR WAS AGAINST THE MANIFEST WEIGHT OF THE EVIDENCE.

III. THE TRIAL COURT COMMITTED PLAIN ERROR IN FINDING APPELLANT GUILTY ON COUNT SIX FOR HAVING A WEAPON WHILE UNDER DISABILITY BECAUSE THERE WAS NO EVIDENCE THAT SUCH WEAPON WAS OPERABLE.

IV. THE TRIAL COURT COMMITTED PLAIN ERROR BY FAILING TO PROPERLY INSTRUCT THE JURY AS TO COUNT FOUR OF THE INDICTMENT THAT THE STATE OF OHIO HAD THE BURDEN OF PROVING BEYOND A REASONABLE DOUBT THAT APPELLANT [sic] ACTED WITH THE SPECIFIC INTENT TO KILL DAVID JONES IN VIOLATION OF OHIO REVISED CODE SECTION 2903.02.

Having reviewed the record and the legal arguments of the parties, we affirm the decision of the trial court. The apposite facts follow.

On June 29, 1996, Thomas Williams appeared at David Jones' grandparents home yelling obscenities and demanding that Cynthia Love come outside. Love had appeared at the house to use the phone. Tammy Bailey, David Jones' mother, asked Williams to stop using such language at her parents' home. Williams refused and began to argue with Bailey, continuing to use profane language. David Jones then intervened by telling Williams not to talk to his mother in such fashion. Angered by David Jones' interference, Williams brandished a gun and pointed it at Jones' head. Williams pulled the trigger, but the gun did not fire. David Jones then ran into the next door neighbor's home for safety. Immediately thereafter, Williams pointed the gun at Bailey while she had her back turned to re-enter the house. Again, the gun did not fire when Williams pulled the trigger.

The police arrived, and Williams ran to his car and sped away across neighboring lawns. The police chased him, but lost him at a railroad crossing. Later the police received a tip that Williams was seen at Love's home. When the police arrived, Williams ran on foot. Again, the police chased him. This time the police captured him and arrested him. A gun was found seventy feet from where he was arrested.

The state indicted Williams on the following counts: failure to comply with an order or signal of a peace officer with two violence specifications; felonious assault with two violence specifications and a firearm specification for each count; attempted murder with a firearm, aggravated firearm, and violence specification for each count; and having a weapon while under disability with a violence, firearm, and aggravated firearm specification. Trial began on April 22, 1997.

Before trial commenced, defense counsel moved to sever the having a weapon while under disability count. He reasoned that "the inherent prejudice in the State being required to prove the element of [a] prior rape conviction would be patently harmful to Mr. Williams." (Tr. 45.) The trial court granted his motion. Thereafter, Williams signed a jury waiver, permitting the court to determine his guilt on count six.

At trial, Bailey testified she had never before seen Williams. She said that when Love first came in, she said someone was bothering her, and asked to use the telephone. When Williams pointed the gun at Jones, Bailey begged him not to shoot her son and to please leave. Bailey also testified that when David Jones ran away she turned to go back inside the house. She said she heard a click and turned around. When she turned around, Williams was standing directly behind her. On cross-examination, it was revealed that Bailey told the police she did not hear a click. The police report states that someone told her the gun clicked.

David Jones testified that he was outside washing his car when he noticed a male in a white car following Love as she walked down the street. Jones later identified the man as Williams. Jones said Love was yelling at the man to leave her alone. When Love entered the house to use the phone, Williams parked the car and began yelling for Love to come out of the house. Jones asked Williams several times to stop yelling and using profanity. When Jones told him to leave, Williams got really mad and pulled out a gun and pointed it at Jones. Jones said the gun clicked three times but did not fire, then he ran away to a neighbors house. Jones further testified that he saw Williams point the gun at the back of his mothers head. Jones also stated he had never before seen Williams.

Larry Szczepanski of the Garfield Heights Police Department testified that he received a dispatch call of a man with a gun on Alvin. He was only two blocks away at the time. Another officer, Grendzynski, also responded in the opposite direction. Officer Szczepanski saw Williams get into his car and drive toward him at a high rate of speed. Officer Szczepanski tried to block Williams path with his marked patrol car. At the last second, Williams veered off the road and drove across adjacent lawns. Officers Szczepanski and Grendzynski gave chase. Szczepanski testified that Williams drove recklessly during the chase. Williams lost the officers at a railroad crossing by driving around the lowered gate.

The police apprehended Williams later that day after receiving a tip as to his whereabouts. This time the officers chased Williams on foot. Officer Szczepanski was among those who arrested Williams. He testified he was also present when another officer located the gun Williams tossed during the chase. He said that upon finding the gun, he removed the bullets from the gun pursuant to safety procedures of the police department.

Capt. Thomas Kaiser is the range master for the Garfield Heights Police Department. Capt. Kaiser testified that he tested the firearm found at Williams' arrest. When he received the gun it was unloaded but it was accompanied by six live rounds. He described the gun as a .22 caliber revolver and the bullets were .22 caliber short.

Capt. Kaiser began the test using short bullets. He fired the gun six times. The gun misfired once. Capt. Kaiser reloaded the gun using long bullets. This time the gun fired all six times. Kaiser reloaded with four more long bullets and, again, the gun fired successfully each time.

Capt. Kaiser also testified he examined the bullets that accompanied the gun. He said none of them fired. They were all still whole. He further stated "five of them had actual marks on the primer from the firing pin." (Tr. 294). Finally, Capt. Kaiser testified that in his opinion the bullets failed to fire as a result of imperfect bullets rather than a malfunctioning weapon. On cross-examination, he stated he did not perform a tool mark test or a microscopic analysis. He also said he did not really know why the bullets did not fire.

Thereafter, the trial court instructed the jury. Neither side objected to the instructions. The jury found Williams not guilty on counts three and five, but guilty on counts one, two, and four. The court found him guilty on count six. The court rendered the following sentence:

In Count1 [sic] you are sentenced to three to five years at the Lorain Correctional Institution.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
State v. Williams, Unpublished Decision (4-1-1999), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-williams-unpublished-decision-4-1-1999-ohioctapp-1999.