State v. Teasley, Unpublished Decision (4-30-1999)
State v. Teasley, Unpublished Decision (4-30-1999)
Opinion of the Court
DECISION. Defendant-appellant Nairobi Teasley was charged in a single-count indictment with aggravated murder in connection with the shooting death of Angelic Hayden. The charge carried two firearm specifications. A jury trial concluded in a verdict of guilty. The trial court sentenced the appellant as appears of record and entered judgment accordingly.
From that judgment, the appellant has taken the instant appeal, in which he advances three assignments of error. Finding no merit to any of these challenges, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
The
We find nothing in the record of the proceedings below that might be construed as an express or implicit request by the appellant to represent himself at trial. To the contrary, the record shows that the appellant affirmatively waived his right of self-representation, when, in response to the trial court's direct inquiry, he emphatically and unequivocally disavowed a desire to proceed pro se. See State v. Keenan (1998),
The court below cannot, upon this record, be said to have deprived the appellant of his constitutionally-secured right of self-representation. We, therefore, overrule the second assignment of error.
The appellant contends that the assistant prosecutor improperly alluded to matters not in evidence, when he cross-examined the appellant and his mother regarding an acquaintance's out-of-court statements that the appellant dealt cocaine and that he had attempted to purchase from the acquaintance a handgun. The trial court sustained defense counsel's objections to this line of inquiry. On the record before us, we are unable to conclude that these alleged instances of prosecutorial misconduct, either separately or together, deprived the appellant of a fair trial.
The appellant also cites, without the requisite specificity or elaboration,1 a number of remarks by the assistant prosecutor in his closing argument that, the appellant claims, improperly alluded to matters not of record, mischaracterized the evidence adduced at trial, and vouched for the credibility of the state's witnesses. Defense counsel offered no objection to these remarks. The appellant is thus precluded from predicating error on these alleged improprieties, unless they rise to the level of plain error. See Crim.R. 52(B); State v. Slagle (1992),
The Ohio Supreme Court in State v. Lytle (1976),
First, there must be a determination as to whether there has been a substantial violation of any of defense counsel's essential duties to his client. Next, and analytically separate from the question of whether the defendant's
Sixth Amendment rights were violated, there must be a determination as to whether the defense was prejudiced by counsel's ineffectiveness.
Id. at 396-397,
The Due Process Clause may require the exclusion at trial of identification testimony obtained through an unnecessarily suggestive identification procedure. An accused who seeks to preclude such testimony bears the burden of demonstrating that the identification procedure employed was both suggestive and unnecessary and that the testimony will be unreliable under the totality of the circumstances. Manson v. Braithwaite
(1977),
Several prosecution witnesses, both before and at trial, identified the appellant as the man depicted in a security-camera photograph, descending the stairs leading from the victim's apartment moments after the victim was shot. Defense counsel sought, but failed, to elicit on cross-examination of each witness testimony to establish the suggestive nature of the procedure employed by law enforcement officials to secure the witness's identification. In the absence of such testimony, the record before us provides no basis upon which we might conclude that the suppression of any witness's identification testimony would have been warranted. Therefore, the appellant has failed to sustain his burden of proving that defense counsel violated an essential duty by failing to file a motion to suppress. See State v. Mills
(1992),
We have examined and found baseless the instances of alleged incompetence cited by the appellant on appeal, and our review of the record discloses no other such act or omission. Therefore, we cannot say that the appellant was denied the effective assistance of counsel by defense counsel's failure to withdraw from representing him at trial.
Accordingly, we overrule the first assignment of error.
Finding no error prejudicial to the appellant in the proceedings below, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Judgment affirmed. Hildebrandt, P.J., Painter and Shannon, JJ.
Raymond E. Shannon, retired, from the First Appellate District, sitting by assignment.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.