Tyrone Noling Ohio Death Row

tyrone noling

Tyrone Noling was sentenced to death by the State of Ohio for the murders of an elderly couple. According to court documents Tyrone Noling and three accomplices would murder Bearnhardt and Cora Hartig during a robbery. Tyrone Noling would be arrested (3 years later), convicted and sentenced to death.

Ohio Death Row Inmate List

Tyrone Noling 2021 Information

Number A222599

DOB 03/22/1972

Gender Male Race White

Admission Date 07/05/1990

Institution Chillicothe Correctional Institution

Status INCARCERATED

Tyrone Noling More News

In a decision issued today, the Ohio Supreme Court ruled that death row inmate Tyrone Noling can have access to only part of the powerful DNA evidence his legal team says could point to another killer.

Last June, Noling’s attorney, Brian Howe of the Ohio Innocence Project, asked that the court permit Noling to test shell casings and ring boxes collected at the scene of a 1990 double murder in Atwater, Ohio for touch DNA. (Skin cells left behind on objects that have been touched or handled.)

The second request: That Noling be allowed to compare any DNA pulled from those casings and ring boxes to an existing DNA profile, one taken from a cigarette butt found in the driveway of the ranch home of Bearnhardt and Cora Hartig 27 years ago.

While the high court judges said Noling could have the full DNA profile lifted from the discarded cigarette butt — something lower courts have denied him — to run through criminal data bases in search of a match, they rejected his request to test additional evidence. The ruling is a blow to Noling’s attempts to use the power of DNA to prove someone else murdered the longtime married couple.

To date, that other evidence — shell casings from a .25-caliber handgun that the killer would have touched while loading the weapon and ransacked jewelry boxes that were also likely handled by the killer — has not been tested.

Though the Hartigs were killed in April of 1990, Noling wasn’t tried for the murders until 1993. At the time, the state’s official crime lab, the Bureau of Criminal Investigation, known as BCI, didn’t have sophisticated enough technology to test samples for touch DNA without destroying them.

After a visual inspection of the ring boxes and shell casings, BCI determined that too many people had handled the evidence during its collection and storage, and concluded the samples were contaminated and untestable. The trial court accepted BCI’s assessment.

In his oral arguments before the Ohio Supreme Court last summer, Howe contended that simply looking at the evidence isn’t enough, and asked that Cellmark, a private lab with more state-of-the-art technology at its disposal, be allowed to test the evidence for usable DNA.

He reasoned that if DNA could be harvested from the casings and the boxes, it could be tested against the existing DNA profile pulled from the cigarette butt, possibly revealing the identity of the person who fired five bullets into Cora and three into her husband Bearnhardt. With today’s ruling, such a comparison can never be made.

In the opinion, the Supreme Court justices upheld the trial judge’s decision not to conduct additional tests on the casings and boxes.

“If ever a case cried out for the most extensive and reliable DNA testing available, it would be that of Tyrone Noling,” Howe said in a statement released in response to the ruling

“Mr. Noling is an innocent man who has spent two decades on Ohio’s death row, despite zero physical evidence against him, despite compelling alternate suspects, and despite the recantation of every one of the state’s key witnesses.

“Other parts of today’s ruling have troubling and far-reaching implications for the innocent men and women still incarcerated and on death row,” Howe continued. “The ruling denies Mr. Noling access to key DNA evidence, including scientifically appropriate testing that could conclusively identify the perpetrator of the crime.”

Though no physical evidence has ever linked Noling to the crime – no fingerprints, no hair, no gun – he sits on Ohio’s death row, sentenced as the triggerman who executed the seniors based solely on the testimony of three alleged accomplices. Every member of that trio has recanted his testimony. All say they lied after being coached and threatened by a prosecutor’s investigator.

Police have never found the murder weapon and blood tests have determined that neither Noling nor the three men prosecutors say were with him when he committed the crime smoked the cigarette recovered at the Hartig’s place. Neither of the Hartigs smoked.

Sentenced to death for the murders he says he did not commit when he was 23, Noling, now 45, has been fighting for access to DNA testing for nearly a decade.

In his statement, Howe took aim at BCI,saying that in Noling’s case, instead of using science to determine the suitability of evidence for testing, “BCI used guess work and assumptions.”

Portage County Prosecutor Victor Vigluicci defended the lab, saying BCI is “the premiere lab in the state of Ohio that tests evidence from every case that we present and . . . is always found to be accurate and reliable.” Questioning its practices and results would open a Pandora’s Box, he argued.

That Pandora’s Box is worth opening Howe said in today’s statement.

“Although [BCI’s] same assumptions have been proven wrong time and time again, in Ohio and across the country, today’s decision fails to hold BCI and other labs to any minimum methodological standards. That means Mr. Noling may never receive DNA testing on shell casings and ring boxes touched by the actual perpetrator.”

The court determined that it was up to testing authorities to decide whether samples were too contaminated, and that a lab could make that decision any way it wanted — even if that meant only eyeballing the samples.

“Thus,” the court wrote, “it was sufficient for BCI to use a visual examination to determine that the shell casings and ring boxes were contaminated and not suitable for further DNA testing.”

That’s a slippery slope, says Howe. “The determination has to have some kind of grounding in science – otherwise, you open the door to all kinds of absurdity.”

https://www.cleveland.com/metro/2018/03/tyrone_noling_case_ohio_suprem.html

Matthew Nicholson Ohio Death Row

matthew nicholson

Matthew Nicholson was sentenced to death by the State of Ohio for the murders of two teenagers. According to court documents Matthew Nicholson was involved in an argument with the teens mother when he shot and killed 19-year-old Giselle Lopez and her 17-year-old brother, Manuel Lopez. Matthew Nicholson would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Ohio Death Row Inmate List

Matthew Nicholson 2021 Information

Number A770499

DOB 05/14/1989

Gender Male Race Black

Admission Date 11/26/2019

Institution Chillicothe Correctional Institution

Status INCARCERATED

Matthew Nicholson More News

A man convicted of killing two teenagers in Garfield Heights last year was sentenced to death today.

Matthew Nicholson killed Manuel and Giselle Lopez last year and today Judge Timothy McCormick called him an extreme coward with no remorse. McCormick said the death penalty was an easy decision to make.

Prosecutors say Nicholson shot the teenagers in the back, when he suspected their mother of cheating on him.

A man convicted of killing two teenagers in Garfield Heights last year was sentenced to death today.

Matthew Nicholson killed Manuel and Giselle Lopez last year and today Judge Timothy McCormick called him an extreme coward with no remorse. McCormick said the death penalty was an easy decision to make.

Prosecutors say Nicholson shot the teenagers in the back, when he suspected their mother of cheating on him.

https://wtam.iheart.com/content/2019-11-13-matthew-nicholson-has-a-date-with-death-row/

Calvin Neyland Ohio Death Row

calvin neyland

Calvin Neyland was sentenced to death by the State of Ohio for a double murder. According to court documents Calvin Neyland would murder his boss and the companies safety officer after being fired from his job. Calvin Neyland would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Ohio Death Row Inmate List

Calvin Neyland 2021 Information

Number A595111

DOB 01/30/1964

Gender Male Race Black

Admission Date 11/19/2008

Institution Chillicothe Correctional Institution

Status INCARCERATED

Calvin Neyland More News

Evidence introduced at trial showed that Neyland began working as a truck driver for Liberty Transportation Company in Perrysburg, Ohio, in July 2006.

{¶ 3} Beginning in March 2007, Neyland was cited several times for falsifying his driver’s logs and for committing other driving violations. On July 24, 2007, Liberty notified Neyland in writing of these infractions and informed him that any further violations for completing a false document would result in his termination from the company.

{¶ 4} Doug Smith was the branch manager for Liberty Transportation in Perrysburg. During the spring of 2007, Smith noticed a change in Neyland’s attitude and performance. Smith was receiving complaints from Liberty’s customers about Neyland, and some of them did not want Neyland to return to their businesses. Neyland and Smith had a meeting about one of the complaints. The meeting resulted in a bizarre ending with Neyland seated in a lawn chair outside Smith’s office, repeatedly phoning him, while Smith remained in his office with the doors locked.

{¶ 5} During late July or early August 2007, Anthony Arent, the shipping manager at nearby Great Lakes Windows, overheard Neyland on the phone with Smith. Arent testified that Neyland was “very uncooperative” during the conversation and that he resorted to profanity, calling Smith “a bitch.” William Lynch Jr., a truck driver for Liberty, talked to Neyland about a week before the murders. Neyland, who was upset with Smith, warned, “If they mess with me, I’ll just shoot them.”

{¶ 6} On August 1, 2007, Neyland was involved in a vehicle accident and was determined to be at fault. Following this incident, officials at Liberty decided to terminate Neyland’s employment.

{¶ 7} Smith scheduled a meeting with Neyland at Smith’s office at 8:00 a.m. on August 8, 2007, to terminate Neyland’s employment. Thomas Lazar, the safety director for Liberty, planned to attend this meeting because Smith did not want to be alone with Neyland when he terminated him. Lazar also planned to remove the Department of Transportation (“DOT”) sticker that was attached to the door of Neyland’s tractor-trailer.

{¶ 8} On August 8, Neyland delayed the meeting three times before he finally agreed to meet with Smith and Lazar at 3:00 p.m. During one conversation to reschedule the meeting, Neyland told Smith that if Smith was going to have somebody at the meeting, then he was going to bring somebody, too.

{¶ 9} At approximately 3:00 p.m., Neyland arrived outside Liberty’s warehouse in his tractor. Neyland was wearing a dark Hawaiian shirt. It is unclear whether Neyland met with either Lazar or Smith when he first arrived. In any event, Neyland shot Lazar four times in the back and once in the arm in the yard outside the building. Neyland then entered Liberty’s warehouse with a gun in his hand and walked up the stairway to Smith’s office.

{¶ 10} Smith called 9–1–1 and reported that he heard shots being fired. He told the 9–1–1 operator that he needed to get downstairs to see what was going on. On the recording of the call, two gunshots can be heard and a voice says, “crawl bitch.” There is then the sound of a struggle, and Smith repeatedly calls for help. A final shot was then fired. Neyland had killed Smith in his office with a single gunshot to the head.

{¶ 11} Afterwards, Neyland left the warehouse with the gun in his hand. He walked to his tractor and drove away.

{¶ 12} Police officers arriving at the scene found Lazar lying on the lawn in front of Liberty’s warehouse. He died at the scene shortly thereafter. Officers also went upstairs and found Smith’s dead body lying on the floor near his desk. A description of Neyland’s tractor, along with a partial license-plate number, was broadcast to law-enforcement agencies.

{¶ 13} Investigators collected shell casings outside the warehouse and around Smith’s office. They found one bullet hole that went through Smith’s chair and into the wall and another bullet hole in the wall behind the chair. Investigators also found paperwork about Neyland’s performance, including a driver’s vehicle-inspection report, in the middle of the desk.

{¶ 14} After the shooting, Neyland drove to the Silver Blue Motel in Monroe County, Michigan, where he was staying. During the late afternoon of August 8, 2007, police officers spotted Neyland’s tractor parked outside the motel. Officers watched the tractor until the Monroe County Special Weapons and Tactics (“SWAT”) team arrived.

{¶ 15} Around 6:00 p.m., Neyland came out of his motel room, got into the tractor, and drove the short distance to the motel office. The SWAT team then approached the vehicle and arrested Neyland. As he was being placed on the ground, Neyland said, “I was going to turn myself in.” Neyland also said, “I want the letter. There’s a letter in my truck. It’s to my brother. It’s my last will.” When asked if he had any weapons before being handcuffed, Neyland said, “No, the gun is in the truck by the door.”

{¶ 16} Neyland was placed in a police cruiser following his arrest. Sgt. Keith Williamson of the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Identification and Investigation (“BCI & I”) Crime Scene Unit, obtained a gunshot-residue sample from Neyland’s hands.

{¶ 17} After obtaining a search warrant, the police seized evidence from Neyland’s tractor. A Ruger 9 mm handgun and magazine inside a holster, another weapon magazine, and a dark Hawaiian shirt were found between the driver’s and the passenger’s seats. Sgt. Williamson also obtained a gunshot-residue sample from the steering wheel.

{¶ 18} During the search of the tractor, the police collected an envelope addressed to Phyllis Gregory with Neyland’s return address. Inside the envelope were three default-payment notices that had been sent to Neyland for four storage units. On each of the notices, Neyland had handwritten some variation of the following statement: “This may be my last will and testament. You may have these items. I will no longer be able to pay; these are paid til 8/1/07.” Two of the statements were signed by Neyland. On the reverse side of one notice, Neyland wrote that additional items were located at the Silver Blue Motel. Beneath this last statement, Neyland wrote an address next to his brother’s name.

{¶ 19} Dr. Cynthia Beisser, M.D., deputy coroner for Lucas County, conducted the autopsies on Smith and Lazar. Dr. Beisser testified that Smith died from one gunshot wound to the head. The gunshot entered Smith’s right cheek and exited just above his left ear.

{¶ 20} Dr. Beisser testified that Lazar was shot four times in the back and once in the right arm. Three of the shots in the back were in close proximity and displayed a triangular pattern. Gunpowder stippling around one of the gunshot wounds in the back indicated “an intermediate range of fire.” Dr. Beisser concluded that Lazar’s death resulted from multiple gunshot wounds.

{¶ 21} After obtaining a search warrant, the police searched Neyland’s storage units. In one of the units, the police found two spotting scopes set up in the middle of the unit with pieces of paper underneath. The top piece of paper stated, “If your big dumb retard ass wasn’t in here!!! You wouldn’t be reading this would you?” A paper underneath that one stated, “OOOO, I’m so scared. Three Round Shot Group.” On the same paper, three pennies were arranged in a triangular pattern with circles drawn around them. Below the pennies, there was the statement, “You think I’m playing[.] You’re gonna come up missing!!!” Numerous firearms and ammunition were also found in the storage unit.

{¶ 22} Daniel Davison, a forensic scientist at BCI & I, performed a gunshot-residue analysis on samples from Neyland’s hands and from the steering wheel of the tractor. Davison testified that test results were “highly indicative of gunshot residue” on one of the samples from Neyland’s hands and on a sample from the steering wheel.

{¶ 23} Todd Wharton, a forensic scientist at BCI & I, compared Neyland’s fingerprints with a fingerprint lifted from a weapons magazine found in Neyland’s tractor. Wharton testified that his comparison identified the print of Neyland’s left little finger on the magazine.

{¶ 24} Wharton also examined the Ruger 9 mm semiautomatic pistol found in Neyland’s tractor. Testing established that the empty cartridge cases collected at the murder scene were fired from this firearm. Testing also confirmed that bullets recovered from the scene and from the Lazar autopsy had been fired by this firearm.

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/oh-supreme-court/1666176.html

Martice Fuller Teen Killer Murders Ex Girlfriend

Martice Fuller

Martice Fuller was convicted in the murder of his ex girlfriend Kaylie Juga in Wisconsin. According to court documents Kaylie Juga had ended her relationship with Martice Fuller after he became physically abusive towards her. Martice Fuller would force his way into her home and shoot the fifteen year old teen and her mother. The mother would survive the shooting and identify Martice Fuller to police. This teen killer was sentenced to life in prison without parole

Martice Fuller 2023 Information

Status:  INCARCERATED
Sub-Status: 
Institution:  Green Bay Correctional Institution

Martice Fuller More News

A Kenosha County jury found Martice Fuller, 17, guilty of killing his ex-girlfriend, Kaylie Juga, in 2019.

“Kaylie Juga was controlled, was hurt, was stalked, was murdered by this defendant,” Kenosha County District Attorney Michael Graveley said in his closing argument.

Prosecutors said the football player had earlier physically abused Juga, leading to their breakup.

Prosecutors said Fuller broke into her family’s home and shot Juga and her mother.

Juga’s mother survived and later identified Fuller as the killer.

“She will never forget. There are some memories that are burned into your brain forever. She sees his face. She hears his voice. She sees the gun being leveled at her chest every day,” Kenosha County Deputy District Attorney Angelina Gabriele said.

In closing arguments, Fuller’s attorney argued that because Kaylie’s mom was so traumatized at seeing her daughter killed and being shot herself, she wasn’t a reliable witness.

“She was going through terrible things that day. I cannot even imagine. But I also know when I’m going through unimaginable things, and scared and frantic and panicked, that I’m not at my best,” attorney Carl Johnson said.

Juga, then 15, was a Bradford High School cheerleader and honor student.

Fuller was charged with and convicted of first-degree intentional homicide, attempted first-degree intentional homicide and burglary with a dangerous weapon.

A judge paused Fuller’s trial last year amid accusations Fuller tried to tamper with the jury.

Fuller sobbed after the verdict was read.

He faces a mandatory life term when he’s sentenced May 21.

It is not yet known whether he’ll ever have a chance at parole.

Kaylie Juga’s parents were joined by dozens of relatives and friends at the trial but declined to comment afterward.

https://www.wisn.com/article/frontline-worker-walks-for-first-time-over-a-year-after-contracting-covid-19/35958647

Martice Fuller Videos

Martice Fuller Other News

Saying the calculated killing of 15-year-old Kaylie Juga showed he was a “dangerous and damaged human being,” a judge Friday sentenced Martice Fuller to spend the rest of his life in prison without the possibility of parole.

“These crimes were not the impulsive acts of a child,” Kenosha County Circuit Court Judge Mary K. Wagner told Fuller, who was convicted by a jury of shooting and killing his former girlfriend Kaylie at her west-side home and of shooting and injuring her mother, Stephanie Juga, when she came to her daughter’s aid. “I hope that you can right yourself in your life, in your daily life, but it won’t be among the community.”

Despite evidence presented at trial that Fuller carefully planned the shootings — and the testimony at trial of Stephanie Juga who had pleaded with Fuller, who she knew well, before he shot her — Fuller continued to maintain that he is innocent.

In a statement read to the court by one of his attorneys, Fuller said “I have to continue to stand innocent because I am.”

Fuller, now 18, was 15 when he was charged with the May 9, 2019 shootings.

During his March trial, prosecutors used testimony to show that what began as a high school romance when both Fuller and Juga were freshmen at Bradford High School — he a football player, she a cheerleader — morphed into something uglier, with Fuller becoming increasingly controlling and violent.

Fuller, now 18, was convicted by a jury in March, the jury finding him guilty of first-degree intentional homicide for Kaylie Juga’s death and attempted first-degree intentional homicide for shooting her mother.

During the trial, prosecutors showed that Fuller — who had been an honor student and a varsity athlete with no juvenile criminal history — had become increasingly angry and frustrated, with his behavior following the breakup with Juga leading to his expulsion from school and to his leaving his family home to stay with a series of friends. He had been stalking Juga before the shooting, showing up outside her home and repeatedly contacting her at work until worries about her safety led her to quit her job.

On the day of the shooting, Stephanie Juga had picked her daughter up from school. They were home — Kaylie Juga in her bedroom listening to music, Stephanie Juga in her room — when Fuller walked into the house armed with a handgun and shot Kaylie Juga to death in her room, then shooting Stephanie when she came to her daughter’s aid.

Fuller fled on foot, then on a bicycle he had stashed in a nearby park, and was later picked up by a friend. He was arrested the following day at a relative’s home in Racine.

Before Wagner pronounced her sentence, Stephanie Juga spoke to the court, asking that Fuller never be allowed out of prison. She spoke about the pain the crime has caused her family, the emotional toll it has taken on her husband and sons, and the physical pain she lives with as the result of her injuries, which left her wrist so damaged it has limited her career as a photographer and made it difficult to hold her new grandson.

Juga said the family lives daily with the loss of Kaylie, who would have graduated from high school this year.

“Martice Fuller didn’t only take our daughter away, he ruined me,” she told the court. “My best friend is gone. We did everything together. She was always by my side and she was my biggest cheerleader. Now I’m lost, I just feel so lost without her.”

Kenosha County District Attorney Michael Graveley said the shootings were as carefully planned “as a professional hit” with Fuller spending weeks getting ready and manipulating friends and family into unwittingly helping him by providing a gun, rides and places to stay.

Defense attorneys asked that Fuller be given the opportunity for release from prison after 25 to 30 years, noting that he was a child at the time of the shootings and that the U.S. Supreme Court has written that juveniles have more of a capacity for change than adults. In Wisconsin, conviction for first-degree intentional homicide carries a mandatory life sentence, but a portion of that sentence can be spent out of prison on parole.

Wagner rejected that, saying Fuller’s calculated planning of the crime and lack of remorse made him a danger to the community, She sentenced Martice Fuller to life without the possibility of parole for the first-degree intentional homicide conviction, followed by another 15 years for the attempted homicide and armed burglary convictions.

Friday was Fuller’s second sentencing of the week. On Thursday, Kenosha County Circuit Court Judge Bruce Schroeder sentenced him to 18 months in prison for a jury tampering case that had derailed the state’s first attempt to hold a trial. In that case, the court learned before the trial began that Martice Fuller had asked relatives to contact members of the jury on his behalf. Those relatives never did contact the jury members, but the trial was called off, and an entirely new jury was picked when the case came to trial in March.

https://www.kenoshanews.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/martice-fuller-sentenced-to-life-in-prison-without-parole-in-murder-of-kaylie-juga/article_07f468c6-d1a0-5416-b91c-36dc6d6e97f5.html

David Myers Ohio Death Row

david myers

David Myers was sentenced to death by the State of Ohio for a robbery murder. According to court documents David Myers would sexually assault, rob and murder the victim Amanda Jo Maher with a rail road spike. David Myers would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death.

Ohio Death Row Inmate List

David Myers 2021 Information

Number A327020

DOB 01/19/1965

Gender Male Race White

Admission Date 03/01/1996

Institution Chillicothe Correctional Institution

Status INCARCERATED

David Myers More News

During the early morning hours of August 4, 1988, Amanda Maher was found barely alive near the railroad tracks on the south side of Xenia.   Maher died shortly thereafter while being flown to the hospital.   Defendant-appellant, David L. Myers, who had been seen walking with Maher in the direction of the railroad tracks shortly before her body was discovered there, was indicted for the murder of Maher.   The case was declared nolle prosequi in February 1991.   Two years later, Myers was reindicted for the murder of Maher and was subsequently found guilty of aggravated murder and sentenced to death.

{¶ 2} On August 3, 1988, Amanda Maher, and her boyfriend, Glenn Smith, went to the Five Points Tavern, a.k.a. Leahy’s, in Xenia following an afternoon of house-hunting for themselves and their daughter, Sarah.   The couple had a few drinks and left Five Points at around 7:30 p.m. to attend the Greene County Fair. They arrived back at Five Points around 9:30 to 10:00 p.m., and Smith resumed drinking while shooting pool with Lee Weimer, the bartender on duty.

{¶ 3} Between 10:30 and 11:00 p.m. that night, David Myers arrived at Five Points and played pool and drank with Smith.   Smith recognized Myers as an occasional customer of the tavern from Smith’s work there as a weekend bartender.   During this time, Myers remarked to Smith about the Mickey Mouse shirt Maher was wearing, to the effect that he wanted to play with Mickey’s ears or nose because he liked where they were positioned on the shirt.   Smith admonished Myers that he did not appreciate the remark.   Smith left the bar for about fifteen minutes to get fresh air, then came back and resumed drinking and shooting pool with Myers.

{¶ 4} Sometime after midnight, Smith and Maher left to go to the nearby Round Table bar.   Myers asked to come along, and the three drove over to the Round Table in Smith’s car.   After arriving at the bar, Maher went inside, but Smith “had a few more words” with Myers before they went in.   Smith was upset with Myers about sexual remarks he was making about Maher.   After Myers and Smith went inside, Smith got “kind of rowdy” while drinking whiskey slammers  with Myers.   Teresa Mellotte, the bartender on duty that night at the Round Table, warned Smith to quit or she would ask him to leave.   Smith threw his glass to the floor, and when he refused to leave, Mellotte phoned the police.

{¶ 5} Smith became belligerent with two Xenia police officers, Patrolmen Daniel Savage and Richard E. Rinehart, who arrived on the scene at approximately 1:15 a.m. The officers escorted Smith outside, where Savage handcuffed him and placed him under arrest.   He then explained to Maher what was going to happen with Smith.   Maher asked whether she could have Smith’s wallet, and Smith allowed Savage to retrieve it from his back pocket to give to Maher.   Smith also allowed Savage to retrieve what Smith thought were his car keys.   Maher discovered shortly thereafter that none of the keys she received fit Smith’s car.   At that point, Myers approached Savage and told him, “I will make sure she gets home.   I will take care of her.”   Myers also told Smith in the back of the patrol car, “I will take care of her, Glenn.”

{¶ 6} Savage took Smith to the county jail while Rinehart followed in his patrol car.   Rinehart left the jail at 1:23 a.m. and resumed his patrol duties.   Meanwhile, Maher and Myers reentered the Round Table looking for Smith’s car keys.   Maher borrowed a flashlight from Mellotte in order to look for the keys in the parking lot.   Charles Van Hoose, a bar patron at the Round Table, noticed that Myers had his arm around Maher, reassuring her that he would take care of everything.   When Van Hoose looked out the tavern door while buying another beer, he saw Myers and Maher walk across the tavern parking lot toward Home Avenue.

{¶ 7} Also at this time, Officer Rinehart was in his police car on patrol and saw Myers and Maher walking northwest on the sidewalk along Home Avenue toward South Detroit Street.   He testified that he saw Maher approximately three hundred yards from the spot where she was eventually discovered, barely alive.

{¶ 8} At 2:10 a.m., Lee Weimer looked out the door of the Five Points Tavern and saw Myers, alone, getting into his car and driving away.   Around 2:15 a.m., Myers entered the Round Table, ordered a drink from Mellotte, and went straight to the restroom for several minutes.   Don Hilderbrand was one of the few patrons left in the bar.   Earlier, he had seen Smith break the glass and get arrested.   He also had seen Myers and Maher leave the bar together approximately twenty minutes after Smith’s arrest.   When Myers came out of the restroom, Hilderbrand asked Myers “if he got any [sex]” from Maher.   Myers responded that “he tried, but she wasn’t willing and he just dropped her off.”

{¶ 9} At approximately 3:00 a.m., Jennifer Berry was walking home with a friend when she came upon “a girl laying [sic] on the tracks” gasping for air.   Berry and the friend ran to her house, talked the situation over, and called the  police.   Officer John Waldren was first on the scene after receiving a dispatch for “a female down in the area” of Railroad Street.   The officer called out to her but could only hear moans and groans.   The woman, later identified as Maher, had a shirt pulled up around her neck with no other clothing on.   Officer Savage, who was in the area nearby investigating a burglary, also heard the police dispatch and ran down to the railroad tracks.   Savage did not recognize Maher from his earlier encounter with her at the Round Table bar.   He noticed what he thought was a cinder on the right side of Maher’s face.   He suddenly realized that a railroad spike had been driven into her head.   He also noticed that little blood was coming out of that wound.

{¶ 10} Maher was rushed to Greene Memorial Hospital but died shortly after 6:00 a.m. while being life-flighted to Miami Valley Hospital.   Robert D. Setzer, an agent of the BCI Crime Scene Search Unit, went to the Greene Memorial Hospital, where Maher’s body had been returned, and performed tape lifts on Maher’s hands and pubic area for evidence.

{¶ 11} Dr. Justin G. Krause, the Greene County Coroner, observed most of the autopsy performed by a Dr. Mannarino.   Dr. Krause testified that Maher had sustained two fractures to her jaw as the result of a blunt force injury and noted that some knitted material wrapped tightly around her throat caused an abrasion on her neck.   He further opined that Maher’s forehead wounds were caused by an attempt to drive a railroad spike into her forehead.   The spike driven into Maher’s right temple acted as a plug that permitted only minimal bleeding.   Fingernail mark patterns on Maher’s neck indicated that the perpetrator had sustained an injury to his right ring finger.   Myers suffered such an injury in a motorcycle accident one month prior to the murder.

{¶ 12} During the autopsy, three stones were removed from Maher’s vaginal canal through her abdominal cavity.   The three stones were approximately the same size and measured roughly seven centimeters by four centimeters, and 1/2 centimeter around.   Dr. Krause opined that it was likely that the stones were inserted in Maher’s vaginal canal after she was unconscious.   Maher died of severe head trauma, produced by a penetrating railroad spike through her right temple and attempted strangulation.

{¶ 13} Xenia police apprehended Myers later on the afternoon of August 4, but he denied killing Maher.   Myers claimed that he had last seen Maher on her hands and knees looking for car keys in the Round Table parking lot.   A search of Myers’s Ford Mustang pursuant to a warrant resulted in the discovery of wallets belonging to Maher and Smith, stuffed inside a glove under the front passenger seat.   While Myers was being booked at the county jail, he remarked to Deputy Sheriff Thomas A. Adkins, “Tom, man, cocaine will make you do anything.   It will make you do anything to get it.”

 {¶ 14} On August 8, 1988, the grand jury indicted Myers on one count of aggravated murder.   A death penalty specification alleged that Myers had committed the aggravated murder during a robbery.   On February 1, 1991, the prosecuting attorney entered a nolle prosequi on the murder indictment against Myers.   Around one month later, Myers was arraigned on eleven counts of forgery.   On April 22, 1991, he pled guilty to the forgery charges and was sentenced to three years in prison.

{¶ 15} After the nolle prosequi, Greene County authorities continued investigating the Maher murder case.   On February 12, 1993, Myers was arraigned upon reindictment in the Maher murder on a charge identical to that declared nolle prosequi in February 1991.   Over the next few years, Myers’s case was continued repeatedly at his request.   The trial court overruled several defense motions to dismiss the case on speedy trial grounds.

{¶ 16} Finally, on January 9, 1996, a jury trial began, which lasted nearly a month.   At trial, Mark Timmons, a fellow inmate of Myers in 1989, testified that he had overheard Myers discussing his case with another inmate at the county jail.   In two conversations, Myers had talked of being with Maher around the railroad tracks.

{¶ 17} David Tincher was incarcerated in the same county jail cellblock as Myers during August 1988.   Myers said to Tincher out of the blue, “They couldn’t get me on a rape.”   Myers also asked Tincher whether he had ever “put three rocks in a girl.”   Tincher responded that he had not, and Myers stated that he had.   Tincher knew nothing of Maher’s murder, except that it involved a railroad spike.   A few days later, Tincher asked Myers, “Why a railroad spike?”   Myers replied, “Because it was handy.”   After that, Myers told Tincher, “Don’t ever try to drive nothing through nobody’s forehead.  * * * He said it won’t go, but he said it went through the temple.”

{¶ 18} Also during trial, three expert witnesses testified on behalf of the state regarding the foreign hair found on Maher.   BCI forensic scientist Michelle Yezzo opined that she was 100 percent certain that the hair was a human pubic hair from a Caucasian.   Yezzo found similarities and differences in her comparison of pubic hair samples provided by Myers.   However, she could neither confirm nor eliminate Myers as the donor of the pubic hair and suggested that the prosecutor’s office submit the pubic hair to another lab for further analysis.

{¶ 19} Forensic scientist Larry M. Dehus analyzed the foreign pubic hair and found that the microscopic characteristics “were identical to the microscopic characteristics found in the known hair sample” from Myers.   Forensic scientist Richard Bisbing also analyzed the foreign pubic hair and found it “indistinguishable microscopically” from the pubic hair sample provided by Myers.

 {¶ 20} Dr. Edward Blake, a forensic serologist, subjected the foreign pubic hair to DNA analysis.   Using the PCR (polymerase chain reaction) method, Dr. Blake concluded that the foreign pubic hair bore the same “DQ Alpha genotype” as the known sample from Myers.   He further testified that such a genotype is found in approximately two percent of the Caucasian population of North America.

{¶ 21} During the state’s case in chief, Myers’s civil deposition was read into the record.   This deposition had been taken in 1992 by attorneys for the Greene County Prosecuting Attorney in connection with a federal lawsuit filed by Myers after the murder charges against him were dismissed in February 1991.

{¶ 22} Deborah Reagin was the final witness to testify for the state.   Reagin asserted that Myers had offered her a ride home after she had had a fight with her boyfriend in a Xenia bar in February 1986.   Reagin testified that Myers had raped her in a cemetery before dropping her off at her dorm in Yellow Springs.   Myers later entered an Alford plea to sexual battery, was found guilty, and was sentenced to six months in jail and five years’ probation.

{¶ 23} The defense called 19 witnesses, and the state countered with 4 rebuttal witnesses.   After deliberation, the jury found Myers guilty as charged.

https://caselaw.findlaw.com/oh-supreme-court/1066020.html