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David M. BREWER
Rape
February 21,
Inmate: Brewer, David M.
DOB: 4/22/59
County of Conviction: Greene
Date of Murder: 3/21/85
Received at DOC: 10/17/85 - MANSFIELD
CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTION
After his indictment by a grand
jury, Brewer waived his right to a jury and elected
to be tried by a three-judge panel. He was found
guilty on September 19, 1985 and sentenced to death
in October 1985. His subsequent appeals at the state
and federal levels were unsuccessful, as was his
request for executive clemency.
At 10 a.m. on April 29, 2003,
Brewer was lead into the execution chamber at the
state prison in Lucasville, Ohio. He was declared
dead at 10:20 a.m.
Wikipedia.org
Joe Byrne, whose wife, Sherry, was abducted,
raped and killed on March 21, 1985, said he believes the state
should execute people faster. "It's a joke,'' Byrne said. "There
should be due process, but at some point, the line needs to be drawn.
We've gone way past that.''
His wife's killer, David Brewer, has
been on Death Row since admitting to and being convicted of her
murder. Now remarried and an executive with a New Jersey
manufacturing company, Byrne monitors the court battle to execute
Brewer. If Brewer is put to death -- and Byrne doubts it will happen
-- he said he wants to watch. "People say I should get away from the
case, but I just can't do it,'' he said. "For two years, I did not
want to live.''
The Byrnes had been married just eight months and
were living in the Cincinnati suburb of Springdale when Brewer, a
family friend, lured Sherry Byrne to a hotel. There he raped her,
threw her into the trunk of his car and drove around southwest Ohio
most of the day.
In an isolated area near Beavercreek, Brewer
stabbed Sherry Byrne, slit her throat and hanged her using his
necktie. He was arrested five days later. Police found her body in a
rented storage unit in Franklin. "She had no chance,'' Byrne said. "She
tried so hard to save her life.'' Now Byrne wants Brewer to die --
as much to defeat his public defender attorneys as to avenge his
wife's death. "The lawyers have to be stopped,'' he said. "That's my
revenge.''
UPDATE: The Ohio Supreme Court on Friday set an
April 29 execution date for David Brewer, the former Washington Twp.
man who almost exactly 18 years ago raped and killed his college
fraternity brother’s bride, Vandalia Butler High School graduate
Sherry Byrne.
The 21-year-old victim, kidnapped and trapped in the
trunk of Brewer’s car, wrote “Help me please” in lipstick on a piece
of paper and shoved it outside the trunk, where it was read by other
motorists as Brewer drove through Beavercreek. No help came, and
Brewer killed her on a secluded lane off Factory Road on March 21,
1985.
Brewer, who will turn 44 a week before his
execution date, has exhausted all appeals. His attorney, assistant
Ohio public defender Joseph Wilhelm, said no last-minute appeals
will be filed, but Brewer will ask Gov. Bob Taft to commute his
death sentence to life imprisonment. A clemency hearing before the
Ohio Parole Board has not yet been scheduled.
Even though Taft has
yet to grant clemency to a condemned prisoner, Wilhelm said, “we
would hope he would give it serious consideration. I think there’s a
human being there worth saving. David’s pretty unique among people
who are facing the death penalty, in that he led a pretty clean life
before he committed one terrible act,” adding Brewer has been an
exemplary inmate since his 1985 conviction by a three-judge panel.
“Mercy weighs in his favor.”
Joe Byrne, Sherry’s widower, disagrees. Asked for
his reaction to the Supreme Court's action, he said, “Well, it’s
about time. This should’ve happened, in my opinion, eight or 10
years ago,” Byrne said. “But thanks to our wonderful system, lawyers
can delay it for years and years with bogus arguments and whatever
their imagination can come up with.”
Byrne, who lives in central New
Jersey, said he plans to be a witness at his one-time friend’s
lethal injection at the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility at
Lucasville. Brewer is on Death Row at Mansfield Correctional
Institution. “I’m going to go because I feel like I have to, to
represent Sherry,” Byrne said, “because through the whole process
she’s been cast aside as sort of a faceless victim.”
Joe Byrne and Brewer were fraternity brothers who
socialized, along with their wives, occasionally after college. The
Byrnes then lived in the Cincinnati area. Brewer lured Sherry Byrne
to a Sharonville motel on the pretense that she would meet Brewer
and his wife there to buy stereo speakers.
Brewer came to the motel
without his wife, kidnapped Sherry Byrne and raped her at the motel,
then forced her into his trunk. After he stabbed and strangled her,
Brewer put her body in a storage locker in Franklin.
Brewer would be the seventh convicted murderer to
be put to death in Ohio since 1999, when executions resumed after a
36-year hiatus. Most recently, Richard Fox was executed Feb. 12 for
the murder of a Bowling Green woman.
There are 205 men on Ohio’s
Death Row. Joe Byrne said he doesn’t know how he’ll feel as he
watches his former friend Brewer die. “I don’t know how I’m going to
react when I get there,” he said. “The word ‘closure’ is way
overrated. But he inflicted a lot of pain on a lot of people beyond
myself. I don’t view it as a sad event.”
UPDATE: In March 1985, Sherry and Joe Byrne were
planning their future. Sherry, 21, and Joe, 25, had married a few
months earlier. She was working as a part-time cosmetics saleswoman,
and Joe had a job with a prominent financial company. They bought a
house in Springdale.
They were trying to have a baby. Then in a
brutal and gruesome act, Joe's friend and fraternity brother, David
Brewer, lured Sherry from her home on a ruse, then abducted, raped
and killed her. "As time goes on, it's less about how much I miss
her," says Joe Byrne, now 43 and living in Bridgewater, N.J. Now, "I'm
sad that she was robbed of her life, and can't enjoy the fruits of
my work." Brewer was convicted of Sherry Byrne's kidnapping and
murder. The state of Ohio will execute him on Tuesday; Gov. Bob Taft
on Friday declined to grant clemency.
There's never been any question that Brewer
killed Sherry on March 21, 1985. But his attorneys say death is not
the right punishment for a 43-year-old man who led an upstanding
life before and after the crime. "Our argument is that his whole
life should be taken into account," says Ohio Assistant Public
Defender Joseph Wilhelm. "That should outweigh the worst thing he
ever did." Sherry's family says death is exactly the right
punishment.
David Brewer didn't just take Sherry's life when he
strangled her with a necktie, stabbed her 15 times and slit her
throat. He ruined the lives of everyone close to her. Her mother,
Myrtle Kaylor, had to be hospitalized. Grief overwhelming all other
emotions, she and Sherry's stepfather, Lylburn Kaylor, soon divorced.
Joe, too, said he was in and out of psychiatric care after his
wife's death. Now, "An unexplainable ease has come over me," Joe
Byrne says. "I think he needs to die, mostly because I don't think
he and his attorneys should be rewarded for all the lies they have
perpetuated over the years. "Dave has never accepted responsibility
for what he did," he says.
That March day, Brewer, an appliance store
manager who lived in suburban Dayton, Ohio, called Sherry Byrne and
invited her to come meet him and his wife at a Sharonville hotel.
But when she arrived with her puppy, Beau, she found Brewer alone
there. After assaulting her, he forced her into the trunk of his car,
then drove her around for hours before killing her that evening on a
secluded road in Greene County. The puppy was let loose. Four days
later, Brewer confessed and led officers to her body. He was
convicted that fall and sentenced to death.
Joe Byrne describes his wife as a beautiful
person who was always smiling. He theorizes that Brewer
misinterpreted her friendly nature. Then, when he found out she
didn't have the same feelings, he got mad and attacked her. On the
day he was sentenced for Sherry's murder, Greene County Prosecutor
William Schenck told Sherry's family the appeals would take more
than 15 years.
Countless appeals in state and federal court have led
to Tuesday. Schenck has presided over four death penalty cases -
Brewer would be the first defendant to die. Byrne asked him to
witness the execution with him, and Schenck agreed. He debunks the
argument that Brewer should be spared because he is good person. "Some
crimes are so horrid nothing else matters," Schenck says. "What he
did more than justifies the death penalty. He had more than a dozen
opportunities to let her go and he chose the dark side." Schenck
says he's tense about watching a man die, but stands by his decision.
"I asked for the death penalty, and I have to have enough backbone
to see it through," he says.
It's never been easy, but the first year was the
hardest, Joe Byrne says. Twice that year he checked into the
psychiatric unit of The Christ Hospital. "I wanted to die," Byrne
says. He never went back to the home he shared with Sherry.
Instead,
he moved into his parents' Middletown home. He couldn't even go back
to his job. When his boss pleaded with him to return, Byrne tried,
but burst into tears on his way downtown. He turned around and went
home. Beau the puppy was found and returned to Byrne. For months
after the murder, if a woman screamed on television, Beau would go
crazy. Slowly, Byrne found his drive again.
He sold the Springdale
home, keeping only a few mementos. In particular, he clung to a
basketball jersey his wife often slept in. He filed civil lawsuits,
winning a half million dollars in a wrongful death suit against
Brewer - not that Brewer has any money. It was more about making
sure Brewer never sold the rights to his story for a book or movie,
Byrne says.
Byrne remarried in late 1987. When a job offer
came from New Jersey in 1988, he took it. Too many sad memories in
Cincinnati, he thought. He and his second wife, Cristine, have three
children. Now the most difficult times are anniversary dates. The
day Joe and Sherry got married, her birthday.
The day she died. In
1990 during a trip home to visit his parents, Byrne went to the
deserted farm lane where his wife drew her last breath. "I just sat
there are cried," he says. Byrne has stayed close with the Kaylors
over the years. That's helped, Myrtle Kaylor says. "There's a void
in my life as if it's never really complete," says Kaylor, who lives
in Dayton. She's never been able to forge close relationships like
she had with her daughter. "I never remarried, never gave of myself
like that," she says. "I'm so afraid that I'll be hurt again." She's
hoping Brewer's death will bring a sense a relief. "It's not going
to be a celebration," Kaylor says. "I don't celebrate somebody
else's downfall, but at the same time it means I don't have to deal
with more hearings and more appeals and read about it in the paper."
Kaylor says by attending the execution she'll "walk the last mile
with her daughter."
UPDATE: Details of Sherry Byrne's killing - At
first authorities didn't divulge the most gruesome details of 21-year-old
Sherry Byrne's death. But over the years the horror she experienced
during those last hours with her killer, David Brewer, unraveled
during hearings and death sentence appeals. MARCH 21, 1985: David
Brewer called Sherry Byrne at her Springdale home and asked her to
meet him and his wife, Kathy, at the Red Carpet Inn in Sharonville,
where they were celebrating his wife's pregnancy.
Also, he said, he
had stereo speakers for her that they had previously talked about.
Sherry called her husband, Joe Byrne, at work with the news, and
then rushed out of the house with their 4-month-old puppy, Beau, a
Christmas present from Byrne to his wife. Nobody knows for sure
exactly what happened at the hotel, but prosecutors say Brewer, who
was more than twice Sherry's size, raped and beat her, tied her up
and tossed her in the trunk of his Mercury Topaz. He drove around
for Hamilton, Warren and Greene counties for several hours, stopping
several times to beat her up. She was bound and gagged. She managed
to write a sign in lipstick saying, "Help me please," which she
shoved out the trunk's crack.
Passing motorists saw the sign, jotted
the license plate number and reported it to the Beavercreek Police
Department outside Dayton, Ohio. They traced the plate to Brewer and
called him at work at an appliance store, only he wasn't there. He
had taken Sherry to a small, secluded farm lane in Greene County.
Passing cars scared him off and he left.
When Brewer stopped in at work at about 7 p.m.,
Sherry alive in his trunk, co-workers mentioned police were looking
for him. He returned the police officers' call, but played it off as
a prank he pulled with a hitchhiker. Still officers insisted on
checking out his car in person. Brewer conceded, and said he'd be at
the station in about an hour. Brewer took that time to drive back to
the farm lane, where he killed Sherry and dumped her body in a ditch,
prosecutors said.
Before talking to the officer, Brewer slipped into
the police station's bathroom and wiped any trace of blood on his
hands and feet. Beavercreek police believed Brewer's hitchhiker
story, cited him with inducing panic, and sent him home. Brewer left,
collected Sherry's body and then went to his Dayton area home to bed,
leaving her in his trunk.
Byrne spent those same evening hours in a
panic. He knew when Sherry didn't come home that something had
happened. The story began to unravel when he called the Brewers and
Cathy Brewer said she wasn't pregnant and hadn't seen Sherry that
day. Her husband had not yet come home. Because Sherry had not been
missing 24 hours, Byrne could only make an unofficial missing
persons complaint with the Springdale Police Department.
FRIDAY, MARCH 22, 1985: Byrne made an official
missing person's report and a group organized to pass out fliers
with Sherry and Beau's picture. Brewer called and expressed concern.
He admitted he talked to Sherry that morning, but said she didn't
seem like herself. Byrne never considered that Brewer might have
done something - even when Brewer asked if he was a suspect.
SATURDAY, MARCH 23, 1985: Brewer hid Sherry in a
storage locker then visited her husband. He hugged his friend and
Sherry Byrne's mother. It would be the last time the two men saw
each other until the trial. Later that day, Joe Byrne found a card
Sherry had left for him tucked inside their Bible. "I miss you more
today than yesterday," it said.
SUNDAY, MARCH 24, 1985: Byrne went to church. "I
talked to God like I have never done before, begging Him for a
miracle, to help Sherry to be alive," he said. By this time police
began to theorize that maybe Sherry had been cheating on him,
something Joe insisted wasn't true.
MONDAY, MARCH 25, 1985: Springdale police
interviewed Joe, then turned their attention to David Brewer. In 30
minutes they caught Brewer in three lies, each version more absurd
than the last. When they left Brewer alone with his wife, he
confessed. He led police to the Franklin storage unit where Sherry's
body was and took police to the place where he killed her. The knife
was still there.
TUESDAY, MARCH 26, 1985: Two officers,
accompanied by a priest, went to the Byrne's house. They didn't have
to say anything. "I fell to me knees crying as I knew that Sherry
was dead," he said. "My world was crushed." A Greene County grand
jury indicted Brewer on charges of kidnapping and aggravated murder
with death penalty specifications. Later that year Brewer's case
went trial. Brewer testified that he never meant to harm Sherry and
planned to let her go eventually. But when he released her from the
trunk she screamed and ran away. "I just lost control," he said
during the trial. "It's even hard for me to remember what happened.
I was just trying to her quiet. I just lost control."
AP April 29, 2003
LUCASVILLE - David Brewer, who brutally attacked
and murdered a young Springdale bride in 1985, was put to death by
lethal injection this morning at the Southern Ohio Correctional
Facility. The time of death was 10:20 a.m.,prison officials said.
Brewer, 44, killed Sherry Byrne after she
apparently rejected his amorous advances. Just months before, Byrne
had married a fraternity brother of Brewer's and settled in
Springdale, where they planned to raise a family. Brewer, also
married, lived in Centerville, Ohio, and managed a rental appliance
company.
He had lured the 21-year-old Byrne to a Sharonville motel
on a ruse, then beat her, sexually assaulted her, abducted her and,
eventually, stabbed her 15 times on a rural Greene County road. He
later led police to her body at a storage locker and confessed. He
pleaded innocent by reason of insanity and was convicted of
aggravated murder and kidnapping.
Brewer's execution was the seventh in Ohio since
1999, the year the state resumed executing inmates after reinstating
the death penalty in 1981. The U.S. Supreme Court had declared the
death penalty unconstitutional in 1972, saying it was applied too
arbitrarily.
Monday night, Brewer dined on fried chicken, macaroni
and cheese, apple pie and root beer, said Andrea Dean, spokeswoman
for the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Corrections. He
visited with his family members, then had a restful night, she said.
He was awakened at 6 a.m., and had Rice Krispies and water for
breakfast, Dean said.
Outside the Lucasville prison, the Rev. Neil
Kookoothe, associate pastor of St. Clarence Roman Catholic Church in
North Olmsted, Ohio, arrived early today to set up poster boards
that protesters have brought to every execution since Ohio resumed
the death penalty in 1999. The posters had laminated lists of every
inmate on Ohio's death row, with those who have died in red. He
didn't expect the busloads of schoolchildren who had appeared at
executions earlier this year. "The protests are taking place locally,"
Kookoothe said.
Friday, Gov. Bob Taft denied Brewer's request for
clemency. Defense attorneys had argued that Brewer deserved mercy
because he had no criminal record before the slaying and has been a
model prisoner. The death was to be witnessed by Byrne's mother,
Myrtle Kaylor of Dayton, Ohio, and Byrne's husband, Joe, now
remarried and living in New Jersey with his wife and three children.
Greene County Prosecutor William Schenck, who prosecuted Brewer,
also planned to attend the execution, at Joe Byrne's request. (The
Associated Press contributed to this story. )
April 29, 2003
LUCASVILLE, Ohio -- A man who confessed to the
horrific rape and murder of the wife of his former college
fraternity brother was executed Tuesday morning by lethal injection
at the state prison. David Brewer, 44, had led police to the body of
Sherry Bryne, 21, who he had lured to a motel, raped, kidnapped and
murdered on March 21, 1985.
There were no last-ditch appeals to
attempt to stave off his execution. Brewer was pronounced dead at
10:20 a.m. Brewer ordered a last meal that included fried chicken,
macaroni and cheese, apple pie and root beer soda. Brewer went to
the death house at the Southern Ohio Corrrectional Facility shortly
after 10 a.m.
Brewer used his final statement to claim there
were "innocent" persons on death row - but he wasn't one of them. "Just
that I'd like to say to the system in Ohio, as far as the death row
inmates are concerned, there are some that are innocent," Brewer
said. "I’m not one of them. But there are plenty that are innocent.
I hope the state recognizes that. That’s all I have to say."
'Help Me, Please'
Brewer arranged to meet Byrne at the Red Carpet
Inn located in Sharonville, saying he and his wife had stereo
speakers for sale. When Byrne arrived, Brewer’s wife, Kathy, was not
at the motel. Brewer, a former appliance salesman from the Dayton
area, then raped and beat Byrne, forcing her into the trunk of his
car. Brewer then drove for several hours. While inside the trunk,
Byrne managed to write "Help me please" in lipstick on a piece of
paper and shove it through the trunk. Several motorists saw the sign
and reported the license plate of the vehicle to police.
Body in Storage
After finding out the police were looking for
him, Brewer stabbed and strangled the victim and left her body in a
ditch in a farming area. He would later return to put Byrne’s body
in the trunk of his car. He later moved the body, again, to a
storage facility in Franklin. Brewer later led police to the body.
An autopsy revealed that Byrne had been stabbed numerous times and
her throat cut. At his trial, Brewer claimed that he never meant to
kill Byrne and planned to let her go. However, when he let her out
of the trunk of his vehicle and she screamed and ran away, Brewer
said he "lost control."
Brewer had been denied clemency by Gov. Gov. Bob
Taft. Brewer became the second condemned killer executed in Ohio in
2002 and the seventh since 1999, when executions resumed in the
state. On Feb.12, Richard Fox, 47, was executed for the 1989 murder
of woman in Wood County.
AP April 29, 2003
LUCASVILLE Ohio (AP) - A man was executed Tuesday
for kidnapping his friend's wife, stuffing her in the trunk of his
car, and strangling and stabbing her when she tried to escape. David
Brewer, 44, was executed by injection at 10:20 a.m.
Authorities said
Brewer, 44, sexually assaulted and beat Sherry Byrne, 21, in a motel
room on March 21, 1985, after luring her there on the pretense of
meeting him and his wife, Cathy. He then abducted her and drove
around with her in the trunk of his car for several hours. By the
time authorities traced the license plate to Brewer, he had killed
Byrne after she tried to escape in Beavercreek, a Dayton suburb
about 40 miles northeast of the motel.
Brewer confessed to killing Byrne and told police
her body was in a rented storage locker in nearby Franklin. He
pleaded innocent by reason of insanity and was convicted of
aggravated murder and kidnapping Brewer's execution was the seventh
in Ohio since 1999, the year the state resumed executing inmates
after reinstating the death penalty in 1981. The U.S. Supreme Court
had declared the death penalty unconstitutional in 1972, saying it
was applied too arbitrarily.
On Friday, Gov. Bob Taft denied Brewer's request
for clemency. Defense attorneys had argued that Brewer deserved
mercy because he had no criminal record before the killing and has
been a model prisoner. Brewer, who lived in Centerville, near Dayton,
and managed a rental appliance store, was a former fraternity
brother of Byrne's husband, Joe Byrne.
Brewer later told police he
was attracted to his friend's wife. Authorities said after sexually
assaulting and beating Byrne in the motel room, he abducted her and
drove around with her in the trunk of his car for several hours.
Police said passing motorists had reported seeing
a piece of paper with "help me please" written in lipstick shoved
through the crack in the trunk of a car. Brewer told police where to
find Byrne's body. Police said she had been beaten, choked with a
necktie and stabbed 15 times.
Joe Byrne never went back to the home he and his
wife, a cosmetics saleswoman, had bought in the Cincinnati suburb of
Springdale, hoping to have their first child there. He moved into
his parents' home in Middletown. Overcome with grief, he was unable
to return to his old job. Joe Byrne sold his house, keeping only a
few items, including a basketball jersey that his wife had slept in.
He remarried in 1987 and took a job as a financial executive with a
paper company in New Jersey the following year, trying to escape the
memories. He said he still suffers on the anniversary of his first
marriage, Byrne's birthday and the day she was killed.
Attorney
General State of Ohio
Case Notes:
On 4/29/03, David M. Brewer was executed by lethal
injection.
GRADY, J.
Defendant, David Brewer, appeals from the trial court's order
dismissing his petition for post-conviction relief. In 1985,
Defendant was convicted of two counts of aggravated murder with
death specifications and was sentenced to death. Defendant's
conviction and death sentence was affirmed on direct appeal. State
v. Brewer (1990), 48 Ohio St.3d 50 On June 3, 1991, Defendant filed
a petition pursuant to R.C. 2953.21 seeking post-conviction relief.
The trial court granted the State's motion for summary judgment and
dismissed Defendant's petition on August 2, 1993. Defendant appealed
to this court. We affirmed the trial court's judgment.
On July 18, 1995, Defendant filed a second
petition for post-conviction relief. As grounds for relief Defendant
claimed ineffective assistance of trial counsel based upon an
alleged conflict of interest. According to Defendant, the defense
attorney who represented him during his capital trial was employed
part-time as an assistant Ohio Attorney General at the time, and
defense counsel did not disclose to the Defendant the potential
conflict of interest resulting from counsel's part-time employment.
Defendant's conflict of interest claim was not previously been
presented to the trial court in his earlier post-conviction petition.
On September 28, 1995, the trial court held an evidentiary hearing
on this claim for relief. At the conclusion of that hearing, the
trial court ruled from the bench that Defendant had failed to
demonstrate that he had suffered any adverse effects as a result of
defense counsel's representation. On October 4, 1995, the trial
court issued the following judgment entry dismissing Defendant's
petition for post-conviction relief:
This matter came before the Court on the 28th day
of September, 1995, for an evidentiary hearing upon Defendant-Brewer's
Petition to Vacate or Set Aside Sentence. After hearing the evidence
presented and considering the arguments of counsel the Court hereby
finds that the Defendant's Petition is without merit. Defendant's
Petition to Vacate or Set Aside Sentence is hereby dismissed.
Defendant has timely appealed from the trial
court's dismissal of his second petition for post-conviction relief,
arguing that the trial court was required to enter findings of fact
and conclusions of law when it dismissed his post- conviction
petition, and that in any event the trial court should have granted
his request for post-conviction relief due to defense counsel's
conflict of interest. For the reasons which follow we find no merit
in these arguments and will affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Defendant was convicted of aggravated murder and
was sentenced to death. The Court of Appeals, Greene County,
affirmed, and defendant appealed. The Supreme Court, Herbert R.
Brown, J., held that: (1) prohibition against use of victim impact
statements in sentencing phases of a capital trial under the Supreme
Court's decision of Booth v. Maryland applies only in jury tried
cases, not to bench trials; (2) testimony of homicide victim's
husband concerning content of victim's telephone conversation with
defendant, that according to victim she was going to meet defendant
and defendant's wife at motel to celebrate defendant's wife's
pregnancy, was admissible to show why victim went to defendant's
motel, and admission of other statements defendant made to victim at
same time was not reversible error; and (3) State established
aggravating circumstance that defendant committed aggravated murder
while also committing kidnapping, and such circumstance outweighed
mitigating circumstances. Affirmed.
At about 10:15 on the morning of Thursday, March
21, 1985, Sherry Byrne called her husband Joe and told him that she
was going to the Red Carpet Inn in Sharonville, north of Cincinnati,
to meet appellant, David Brewer, and his wife Kathy. Appellant and
Joe were boyhood acquaintances and college fraternity brothers, and
the two couples saw each other socially. *51 According to Sherry,
appellant and his wife were at the motel to celebrate Kathy's
pregnancy, and to deliver a set of stereo speakers which appellant
had promised Joe.
Sherry and her dog arrived at the motel sometime
before noon that morning. Appellant was there alone, having told his
wife that he would be in Cincinnati for the day on business.
Appellant and Sherry engaged in sexual intercourse. Appellant
testified at trial that Sherry was a willing partner. However, he
made statements to police officers suggesting that Sherry may not
have been willing, or might have been intimidated by his size.
According to appellant, Sherry expressed guilt about what had
happened. They left the motel and drove in his car to a park "to
talk about it." Sherry was upset and threatened to tell her husband.
He put her in the trunk of his car because he "couldn't handle it"
and because he "could not get her to calm down."
He maintained throughout that she voluntarily got
into the trunk. He then drove to a less populated area north of
Cincinnati where he opened the trunk and tried to convince Sherry
not to tell her husband or his wife. He bound her feet with speaker
wire, closed the trunk again, and drove to another location.
After
another conversation, he locked her in the trunk once more and
returned to the motel in Sharonville. There he moved **494 Sherry's
car from the motel parking lot to a place about a block away. He
then took Sherry to a park in Mason, drove around and unlocked the
trunk twice, trying to convince her not to tell her husband. He then
drove back toward Sharonville, stopping at a convenience store to
release the dog. The dog was later recovered in Mason. The dog's
license tag was missing.
Appellant returned to the motel and checked
out at around 4:30 p.m. He then went to the Remco store on Linden
Avenue in Dayton ("Remco"), where he was employed as a manager. He
was in the store about ten minutes. When he came out, he heard
Sherry pounding on the lid of the trunk. Appellant went to a nearby
drugstore and bought some tape "for bondage." Appellant told police
officers that he used the tape to bind Sherry's hands, but he denied
this at trial.
Appellant then drove through the Beavercreek and
Sugar Creek areas and proceeded southeast toward Wilmington,
stopping once for gas and several times to attempt to persuade
Sherry to stop pounding on the trunk lid. Several witnesses saw a
hand holding a piece of paper through a gap in the trunk seal with
the words "HELP ME PLEASE" written in what appeared to be lipstick.
These people called law enforcement authorities. Patrol officers
searched for the car. The Beavercreek police also ran a computer
check of the license number. They called appellant's home and Remco.
They visited the Remco store to search for appellant's car.
After buying gas a second time, appellant drove
north toward Xenia. At the Cattlemen's Inn on U.S. Route 35, he
stopped and made a pay phone call to Remco. One of the employees
told appellant that the police were looking for him "about the way
you were driving." Appellant then drove to a remote area near
Factory Road, where he stopped between 7:30 and 8:00 in the evening.
Appellant opened the trunk, but closed it quickly when a car drove
by. Appellant left the area when the car returned. Appellant
returned to Remco at about 8:00 and called the Beavercreek police.
He spoke with Sergeant *52 Richardson, who told him to come to the
station that night and bring his car.
Appellant said he would be
there in about a half hour. Appellant stayed at Remco for about ten
minutes, then left in his car. He stopped a short distance away and
opened the trunk to tell Sherry he would let her go in a remote area.
Appellant then went back to the Factory Road area.
When appellant opened the trunk, he claimed that
Sherry got out, slapped him, and ran. Appellant caught her and
choked her, first with his hands and then with a necktie. Appellant
went back to his car and got a butcher knife. He stabbed Sherry
several times, then slashed her throat. Leaving Sherry's body in a
roadside ditch, appellant drove to the Beavercreek police station.
He went into a restroom to wash blood from his shoes and hands. He
then spoke with the officers, who asked about the "HELP" sign that
had been seen sticking out of his trunk. Appellant said he had
picked up a female hitchhiker, and had been riding around with her.
He explained the sign as a prank suggested by the hitchhiker, whom
he said he could not identify. The Beavercreek police cited
appellant for inducing panic and released him.
Appellant returned to the Factory Road area and
placed Sherry's body in the trunk of his car. He stopped by Remco to
call his wife, telling her he would be home soon. He then went home
and went to bed. In the meantime, Joe Byrne became concerned when
his wife failed to come home. He called Kathy Brewer, who told him
she had not seen Sherry that day, was not pregnant, and knew nothing
about any stereo speakers. Joe notified the police and filed a
missing persons report. Accompanied by a friend, he drove around the
Sharonville area that night looking for Sherry or her car. The
friend later found Sherry's car where appellant had left it.
The following day, appellant placed the body in a
sleeping bag and drove to Franklin. He rented a self-storage locker,
purchased a padlock, and left Sherry's body. Appellant cleaned his
car at a car wash and went to work at Remco. Later that morning,
appellant called Joe Byrne. Appellant asked Joe if the police
considered appellant to be a suspect. The following evening,
appellant and Kathy visited Joe at his home to console him. Joe
believed that "someone who knew both of us" was responsible for
Sherry's disappearance, and appellant expressed a fear that this
same person might want to "get" Kathy.
The following Monday,
appellant was called by the Springdale Police Department to come in
for questioning. Appellant was interviewed by Officer David Koenig,
Lieutenant Ronald Pitman, and Detective Augustus Teague. The
interview began at 6:43 that evening and lasted until 2:25 the
following morning. There were, however, numerous interruptions, so
that the total time of questioning was slightly less than three
hours. The entire interview was tape recorded.
Appellant, though told he was not in custody, was
fully advised of his Miranda rights. In the interview, he gave
several stories to the police. At first, he claimed only to have
called Sherry from a pay phone to tell her about the stereo speakers.
When asked about the "HELP ME PLEASE" sign hanging out of his trunk,
appellant repeated, with some embellishments, the hitchhiker story
he told the Beavercreek police. When questioned about discrepancies
in his story, appellant admitted that he had lied.
He revealed that
he met Sherry at the motel. He claimed that Sherry was fearful
because she had been getting obscene phone calls and was being
followed by a mysterious stranger. According to this story, he last
saw Sherry at the motel. At 10:47 p.m., the officers took a break
from interviewing appellant. Appellant wanted to speak to his wife.
The police approached Kathy Brewer and told her "there were numerous
problems in the interview with her husband * * *." Kathy became
hysterical and was taken to the hospital. She returned to the
station at about 2:00 a.m., accompanied by her father and brother.
In the intervening hours, the police searched appellant's car
pursuant to a written waiver signed by appellant, but had no other
contact with him.
Upon her return, the officers asked Kathy to
speak with her husband. They told her that they would observe the
meeting through a two-way mirror. Detective Teague testified that
Kathy was also informed that the officers would be able to listen to
their conversation. Kathy went into the interview room alone and
spoke with appellant for a few minutes, while the officers, Kathy's
father and brother listened and watched through the two-way mirror.
This conversation (wherein appellant admitted killing Sherry) was
not recorded or introduced into evidence at trial. Kathy came out of
the room and told the officers that appellant wanted to speak to
them again. Detective Teague restarted the tape recorder at about
2:15, and appellant confessed to the killing.
He told where he had
hidden Sherry's body. Later that morning, appellant led officers to
the scene of the killing. While in the car, appellant, after
indicating his awareness of his Miranda rights, gave further details.
He gave additional statements to the Beavercreek police later that
day.
The police recovered Sherry Byrne's body from the
storage locker. The Hamilton County Coroner's office performed an
autopsy. The autopsy revealed that Sherry's killer had attempted to
strangle her, which caused fractures of her hyoid bone and of her
spinal cord at the seventh cervical vertebra.
The deputy coroner
testified that the attempted strangulation did not kill her, but
would have left her partially paralyzed. There were multiple stab
wounds to her chest and abdomen and a slash across her throat
inflicted with a butcher knife. There were bruises on her chest "caused
by a blunt injury," bruises on her arms "consistent with defense
wounds," bruising in her pelvic area, which may have been caused by
"forcibl[e] thrust[ing]" of a man's body on top of her, and a knife
wound to her right hand.
On March 28, 1985, appellant was indicted by the
Greene County Grand Jury on **496 one count of aggravated murder
during the commission of a kidnapping, R.C. 2903.01(B) and one count
of aggravated murder with prior calculation and design, R.C.
2903.01(A).
Each count carried two specifications of aggravating
circumstances: commission of the offense while committing or
attempting to commit kidnapping, R.C. 2929.04(A)(7) and commission
of the offense in order to escape detection, apprehension, trial or
punishment for another offense, R.C. 2929.04(A)(3). Appellant pled
not guilty and not guilty by reason of insanity. The insanity plea
was withdrawn before trial. Appellant waived his right to a jury and
elected to be tried by a three-judge panel. Appellant was found
guilty on both counts and all specifications on September 19, 1985.
A hearing on mitigation and imposition of
sentence was held on October 16, 1985.