Leonard v. Warden, Ohio State Penitentiary, No. 15-3653 (6th Cir. 2017)
Annotate this CaseIn 2000, Leonard followed his former fiancé, Flick, to her home, where he handcuffed Flick and pointed a gun as Flick called to tell Gries that she was not coming to his house. Gries determined that she was in danger. Gries and Minges rushed to Flick’s house. When Leonard heard Gries’s truck, he shot Flick three times in the head, then fired through the door, striking Gries. Gries and Minges left to call the police. Leonard fled. He later surrendered and, in custody, gave a taped confession to Flick’s murder, to attempting to have sex with Flick while she was restrained, and to shooting at Gries and Minges. The defense’s theory was that Leonard was trying to salvage his relationship with Flick, had not intended to kill her, and had not acted with prior calculation. A jury found Leonard guilty of aggravated murder, kidnapping, attempted rape, and felonious assault, but acquitted Leonard of rape and attempted murder. The court imposed a death sentence. The Ohio Supreme Court affirmed. His state post-conviction efforts were unsuccessful. The U.S. Supreme Court denied certiorari. Leonard sought federal habeas relief. The Sixth Circuit affirmed denial of the petition, rejecting arguments concerning: the court’s decision to have Leonard wear a stun belt; alleged prosecutorial misconduct; an alleged conflict of interest involving counsel; ineffective assistance in investigation and failure to impeach Gries and Minges; Ohio’s death penalty scheme; sufficiency of the evidence for an attempted rape conviction; and Ohio’s post-conviction process.
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