455 N.E.2d 531 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1982
Appellant, Paul J. Shrum, was indicted for, and convicted of (1) the rape of Holly Teal, an adult, purposely compelling her to submit by force or threat of force, in violation of R.C.
The evidence was that Ms. Teal was picked up bodily by appellant's co-defendant and "thrown" into an automobile driven by appellant. She was propelled into the car on the driver's side and had to pass over appellant to a middle position on the front seat. This occurred after Ms. Teal's male companion had been chased away by the co-defendant who threatened to beat him with a motorcycle chain. The chain was also used to threaten Ms. Teal as she sat between appellant and the co-defendant. Appellant drove the automobile from its location on Westwood-Northern Boulevard in Hamilton County towards downtown Cincinnati, and without stopping drove south on I-75 across the Ohio River and into the Commonwealth of Kentucky. Throughout this drive, Ms. Teal struggled with the co-defendant, pushing him away to keep him from manhandling her. Appellant stopped the automobile in the parking lot of a Kentucky apartment complex. Ms. Teal escaped from the car momentarily but was recaptured and then raped first by appellant and then by the co-defendant. It is undisputed that sexual penetration was consummated only in Kentucky. As stated, appellant was convicted by a jury of both abduction and rape.
Contrary to the state's argument, appellant can raise the question of territorial jurisdiction. He raised it before the trial court by a motion made at the close of all the evidence, albeit in a manner that left it unclear whether he based the motion on lack of venue or lack of territorial jurisdiction. Nevertheless, the question of territorial jurisdiction is so basic that it can be raised at any stage before the trial court or any appellate court, or even collaterally in subsequent and separate proceedings.2
Ohio's statute on criminal jurisdiction, R.C.
"(A) A person is subject to criminal prosecution and punishment in this state if any of the following occur:
"(1) He commits an offense under the laws of this state, any element of which takes place in this state;"
In the instant case, one of the *246 elements of rape occurred in Ohio: appellant actively participated in Hamilton County in the use of force4 and threat of force against the victim.
The employment of force and threat of force began in Ohio and persisted in a continuous, unbroken sequence until the culmination of the rapes in Kentucky. In a case remarkably similar, we held that the act of "harboring" began in Ohio, in violation of R.C.
Appellant advances the argument that in this case, the act of abduction was consummated in Ohio before the rape was carried through in Kentucky and that the two offenses were sufficiently removed in time and space so as to be committed separately under R.C.
We affirm.
Judgment affirmed.
SHANNON, P.J., and KEEFE, J., concur.
"(A) `Force' means any violence, compulsion, or constraint physically exerted by any means upon or against a person or thing."