{¶ 1} Defendant-appellant, Darryl Love, appeals from the 43-year sentence of imprisonment imposed by the trial court at an August 2010 resentencing. Love and a co-defendant had shot, robbed, and tried to stuff Antoinne Morrison into the trunk of their car. Love now asserts that at the resentencing, the trial court erred in failing to merge his convictions for aggravated robbery and kidnapping and in imposing maximum, consecutive sentences of imprisonment. Because the trial court was bound by the law of the case holding that Love had committed these two offenses with a separate animus, and because it did not err in imposing a maximum, consecutive sentence for attempted murder, we affirm.
{¶ 2} Following a 2007 jury trial, Love had appealed his conviction and sentencing for attempted murder with a firearm specification, felonious assault, aggravated robbery, aggravated burglary, and kidnapping. In 2009, this court affirmed the trial court’s judgment.
{¶ 4} In his first assignment of error, Love contends that the trial court erred in imposing a sentence for both the aggravated-robbery and the kidnapping offenses. He asserts, as he did in his first appeal, that these offenses are allied offenses of similar import under R.C. 2941.25. In 2009, we rejected Love’s challenge upon our conclusion that Love had committed the two offenses with a separate animus and thus had been “properly convicted of both offenses.”
{¶ 5} Under the doctrine of the law of the case, a “decision of a reviewing court in a case remains the law of that case on the legal questions involved for all subsequent proceedings in the case at both the trial and reviewing levels.”
{¶ 6} We note that the law-of-the-case doctrine does not apply where there has been an intervening decision by the Supreme Court that is inconsistent with the law of the case.
{¶ 8} In his second assignment of error, Love argues that his 43-year prison term constitutes a cruel and unusual punishment proscribed by the Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Generally, a sentence such as this one that falls within the range provided by statute cannot amount to cruel and unusual punishment.
{¶ 9} In his two final assignments of error, Love argues that the trial court erred in imposing consecutive sentences without making the findings required by R.C. 2929.14(E), in failing to impose the minimum prison term available, and in imposing consecutive, maximum sentences of imprisonment without considering the purposes and principles of felony sentencing.
.{¶ 10} First, Love, repeating a consistently rejected argument, urges this court to disregard the Ohio Supreme Court’s ruling in State v. Foster, which held that “[t]rial courts have full discretion to impose a prison sentence within the statutory
{¶ 11} Love claims that the pre-Foster sentencing requirements were effectively reinstated by Oregon v. Ice, a subsequent United States Supreme Court decision.
{¶ 12} Love’s next contention, also consistently advanced and rejected, in which he argues that he was entitled to the minimum prison term available “under State v. Foster” also fails. Since the 2006 decision in Foster, this court has repeatedly held that under Ohio’s sentencing laws, a trial court has discretion to impose any sentence within the statutory range for the crime committed, including the discretion to impose more than the minimum sentence.
{¶ 13} Finally, we conduct a two-part review of the sentence imposed in 2010.
{¶ 15} Therefore, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
. State v. Love, 1st Dist. Nos. C-070782 and C-080078,
.
. State v. Love,
. See State v. Whitfield,
. State v. Love,
. Nolan v. Nolan (1984),
. See State v. Akemon,
. See Hopkins v. Dyer,
. State v. Love,
. See McDougle v. Maxwell (1964),
. State v. Weitbrecht (1999),
. See R.C. 2929.11 and 2929.12.
.
. (2009),
.
. See id., paragraph three of the syllabus; see also State v. Brown, 1st Dist. Nos. C-100309 and C-100310,
. See State v. Mathis,
. State v. Bruce,
. See State v. Kalish,
. See id. at ¶ 14.
. See id. at V 17.
. See R.C. 2929.14(A)(1); see also State v. Kalish at ¶ 11-12.
. See State v. Kalish. at ¶ 18, fn. 4.
. See State v. Adams (1980),
