597 N.E.2d 1178 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1992
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *548
Following a bench trial in the Coshocton County Court of Common Pleas, appellant Sandra Maxwell Griffin was convicted of complicity (R.C.
Griffin was sentenced to life imprisonment with parole eligibility in thirty years for the aggravated murder, and three years' actual incarceration on the firearm specification to be served consecutively. She was sentenced to ten to twenty-five years' for the aggravated robbery, to be served concurrently. She was sentenced to three years for the firearm specification on the aggravated robbery, to be served only if the firearm specification on the aggravated murder was negated.
James Steurer, Sr., the victim, grew marijuana on his farm in Coshocton County. In 1987, he met Griffin.
Griffin, who was from Cleveland, Tennessee, was sexually involved with Carl Steven Lewis (see State v. Lewis [Feb. 13, 1991], Coshocton App. No. 90-CA-3, unreported, 1991 WL 21491). Lewis and Griffin both used marijuana. In addition, Griffin took cocaine, Xanax and Valium.
In 1988, Griffin also became sexually involved with James Steurer, Sr. ("James, Sr."). Griffin would come to Coshocton or James, Sr. would travel to Cleveland. James, Sr. gave Griffin money and marijuana. She referred to him as her "sugar daddy." *549
During this time, Griffin was still involved with Lewis. In Tennessee, Lewis sold marijuana grown on the Coshocton farm.
In June 1988, James Steurer, II, moved to the Coshocton farm to live with his father, James, Sr. He became involved in the marijuana operation, keeping machinery operating. James, II, hated his father. While staying at the farm, James, II, met Griffin. He became friends with Griffin and Lewis, eventually moving to Tennessee to live with them.
Griffin's relationship with James, Sr. soured in 1988. James, Sr. was angry with Griffin over her drug use, and hit her several times. Griffin stated that she would kill James, Sr. for hitting her. In November and December 1988, Griffin, James, II, and Lewis began plotting to kill James, Sr. and also to steal his collection of firearms.
On January 3, 1989, the threesome began their drive from Cleveland to Coshocton, further planning the murder along the way. They arrived at the Steurer farm in the early morning hours of January 4. They went to sleep after they arrived: James, II, on the couch, Lewis in a bedroom and Griffin in James, Sr.'s bed.
The next morning, while James, Sr. was in the barn feeding his animals, Lewis and James, II, prepared to kill him. They went to the barn, where James, II, spoke to his father. When James, Sr. began to walk to the house, James, II, and Lewis followed behind. Lewis shot James, Sr. in the head, killing him.
Lewis and James, II, returned to the house. Griffin was standing in the kitchen. Griffin asked if it was done, to which Lewis replied, "yes." Lewis handed the gun to Griffin.
James, II, went upstairs, where Griffin had already started packing. Pistols were lying on the bed. Griffin said that she had taken all the money from James, Sr.'s wallet, except for $3. They went through James, Sr.'s desk and took approximately $500 and more guns.
James, II, and Lewis went outside. They placed James, Sr.'s body on a tractor, obtained diesel fuel and gunpowder and then took James, Sr.'s body into the woods. Lewis put kindling on top of the body and then lit a fire. After James, II, and Lewis had burned James, Sr.'s body, they placed hay on top of it and returned to the house.
The two men helped Griffin load weapons into the car. They all drove back to Tennessee. They buried some of the weapons and sold others. Griffin called back to the farm and left a message on the answering machine for James, Sr. *550
The day after the killing, several hunters came upon the burned area in the woods. They saw a rib cage which was still smoldering. The hunters assumed the rib cage was from a pig. Later in January, the Coshocton County Sheriff was notified of the disappearance of James, Sr. At the burn site, the sheriff's department recovered James, Sr.'s skull, which showed signs of injury by a blunt instrument. The sheriff's department also found a vertebrae, part of James, Sr.'s left arm and left leg, teeth and buttons. Steel toes from a pair of shoes were found pointed up, as if a body had been lying at the site. James, Sr.'s body was identified through dental records.
Griffin appeals the judgment of the court, assigning five errors:
At the June 28, 1990 hearing on appellant's motion for a new trial, James, II, revealed that he had listened in on appellant's phone conversations while both were incarcerated at the Coshocton County Jail. By pressing zero on the phone, inmates could listen in on other inmates' conversations.
Appellant had the opportunity at the June 28 hearing to extensively question James, II, concerning what he had heard and to whom he had reported such conversations. The trial court asked appellant to submit a memorandum if she wished to request a second hearing.
On October 26, 1990, appellant filed pleadings concerning the conversations. On December 19, 1990, the court responded, stating that if appellant desired a further hearing she should file a memorandum stating what could be accomplished by such a hearing. On January 8, 1991, appellant indicated that at a further hearing, she would call as witnesses all of the deputies who worked at the jail from February through December 1989.
The memorandum did not indicate that appellant intended to further question James, II, or that she wanted to question the prosecutor as to whether any information was passed on and used against her. The court did not abuse its discretion in determining that the type of hearing requested by appellant would be nothing more than a "fishing expedition."
Based on the testimony at the new trial hearing, the court did not err in determining that no constitutional violation occurred when James, II, overheard appellant's conversations. James, II, testified that he did not hear Griffin's conversations with her defense team, and she did not talk about anything important.
The first assignment of error is overruled.
At the August 21, 1989 motion hearing, James, II, refused to answer questions on the advice of counsel. Lieutenant Mosier of the Coshocton County Sheriff's Department had taken statements from James, II, and testified that James, II, could tell the truth when he chose to.
The trial court is in the best position to determine the competency of a witness to testify, and is given wide discretion in determining competency. State v. Bradley (1989),
The second assignment of error is overruled.
Appellant argues that James, II, had waived his attorney-client privilege by disclosing information of child abuse to law enforcement officials and by moving for neurological testing in the state's case against him.
The fact that he requested testing in his own case does not waive the attorney-client privilege as to the underlying bases for that motion. Appellant was given the opportunity to question Lieutenant Mosier as to what James, II, told him regarding child abuse. The trial court informed appellant that if James, II, took the stand at trial, she could inquire further regarding competency. This she chose not to do. The court did not err in allowing James, II, to claim privilege at the initial hearing.
The fourth assignment of error is overruled.
At the sentencing hearing, the court allowed each of the victim's two daughters to make a statement.
Marilyn Steurer concurred with appellant's psychologist's testimony that twenty-three years of incarceration was an appropriate sentence.
Janice Taylor spoke about the effect losing her father had on her family. She stated that after twenty-three years of incarceration, appellant would be of no more benefit to society than she had been in her first twenty-six years of life. She stated that appellant had been under psychiatric care in the past to no avail, and that twenty-three years of incarceration at the taxpayers' expense would not be of any additional benefit. She stated that appellant had shown no remorse for what she had done, and the maximum penalty allowable by law would be a fair and just punishment.
Before pronouncing sentence, the judge stated that he had considered the statements of the victim's daughters. He then first sentenced appellant as to aggravated robbery.
Without further comment, he sentenced her to aggravated murder.
We overrule each branch of the assigned error for several reasons.
First, although this is a "capital offense," it is no longer a case within the ambit of the sentencing provisions of R.C.
Second, while the judge in the case sub judice states that he considered the evidence, he does not state that he considered it as to the sentence for aggravated murder. Appellant was also sentenced for aggravated robbery, for which the judge wasrequired to allow the victim's family members to make a statement if they so desired. R.C.
Third, although R.C.
Finally, Evid.R. 404 does not apply to sentencing hearings. Evid.R. 101(C)(3), Staff Note.
The fifth assignment of error is overruled, and the judgment of the Coshocton County Common Pleas Court is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
PUTMAN, P.J., and SMART, J., concur.