Ohio court overturns death sentence for
convicted murderer, orders new trial
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[October 05, 2017]
By Kim Palmer
CLEVELAND (Reuters) - A divided Ohio
Supreme Court on Wednesday overturned the death sentence of a man
convicted of murdering a female bartender and ordered a new trial,
saying prosecutors erred in showing jurors knives not used in the crime
that the man owned.
The 4-3 ruling sends the case of defendant Joseph Thomas back to Lake
County for a new trial.
Thomas, 33, of Perry Township, in northeast Ohio, was convicted in 2012
for the kidnapping, rape and aggravated murder of bartender Anne
McSween, 49, which occurred two years earlier in Mentor-on-the-Lake,
located about 30 miles east of Cleveland.
"We are pleased and grateful for the court's ruling," Thomas' attorney
Timothy Sweeney said by telephone.
Lake County Prosecutor Charles Coulson could not be reached for comment
by Reuters, but he told Cleveland.com he plans to file a motion to ask
the court to reconsider the decision.
Justice Terrence O'Donnell, in the lead decision, concluded the lower
court committed an error admitting the weapons into evidence and
allowing prosecutors to infer Thomas was "a dangerous person of violent
character," and "an owner of 'full Rambo combat knives.'"
McSween was found strangled and stabbed to death on her birthday about
150 feet from the bar where she worked. Thomas was convicted of her
murder after prosecutors showed jurors five knives he owned but which
were unrelated to the crime.
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Death row inmate Joseph L. Thomas is shown in this undated Ohio
Department of Rehabilitation and Correction photo at Chillicothe
Correctional Institution in Chillicothe, Ohio, U.S.. Courtesy Ohio
Department of Rehabilitation and Correction/Handout via REUTERS
Prosecutors argued at trial that Thomas was at the bar within two
hours of the murder, had a knife that could have been used to stab
McSween, and that a man matching his description was seen burning
evidence within hours of the murder.
"The state did not recover the murder weapon or obtain a confession,
and Thomas had no significant criminal history," O'Donnell wrote.
O'Donnell said there also was no forensic evidence linking Thomas to
the crime and he passed a polygraph test denying having anything to
do with McSween's death.
In the dissenting opinion, Justice Patrick Fischer wrote that
Thomas' attorneys actually used the same evidence to try to prove
his innocence and therefore the knives were not prejudicial.
(Reporting by Kim Palmer in Cleveland; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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