State v. Anders , 2018 Ohio 1375 ( 2018 )


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  • [Cite as State v. Anders, 
    2018-Ohio-1375
    .]
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
    FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    ROSS COUNTY
    STATE OF OHIO,                                  :    Case No. 17CA3595
    Plaintiff-Appellee,                     :
    v.                                              :    DECISION AND
    JUDGMENT ENTRY
    JASON A. ANDERS,                                :
    RELEASED: 04/04/2018
    Defendant-Appellant.                     :
    APPEARANCES:
    Timothy Young, Ohio Public Defender, and Nikki Trautman Baszynski, Ohio Assistant
    Public Defender, Columbus, Ohio, for appellant.
    Matthew S. Schmidt, Ross County Prosecuting Attorney, and Pamela C. Wells, Ross
    County Assistant Prosecuting Attorney, Chillicothe, Ohio, for appellee.
    Harsha, J.
    {¶1}     After a jury convicted Jason A. Anders of three counts of rape, the court
    sentenced him to an aggregate prison term of 30 years to life. Claiming that his
    constitutional right to a speedy trial was violated when the state waited nearly two years
    and nine months after the indictment to arrest him, Anders asserts the trial court
    incorrectly denied his motion to dismiss the charges. Although this delay was
    presumptively prejudicial and triggered a speedy trial analysis, our review of the factors
    in Barker v. Wingo, 
    407 US 514
    , 530, 
    92 S.Ct. 2182
    , 
    33 L.Ed.2d 101
     (1972), supports
    the trial court’s decision. The delay was not so protracted or egregious that it
    warranted granting relief absent a showing of some particularized trial prejudice, which
    Anders has not done.
    {¶2}     Next Anders contends that his convictions for rape were against the
    manifest weight of the evidence because the victim’s testimony was inconsistent,
    Ross App. No. 17CA3595                                                                   2
    unreliable, and incredible. We have reviewed the entire record, weighed the evidence,
    applied all reasonable inferences, and considered the credibility of witnesses. As a
    result we conclude that the jury did not clearly lose its way in resolving conflicts in the
    evidence and create such a manifest miscarriage of justice that we must reverse the
    rape convictions. The jury was free to credit the child victim’s testimony, which
    established beyond a reasonable doubt that Anders committed the three rapes.
    {¶3}    Therefore, we overrule Anders’s assignments of error and affirm his
    convictions and sentence.
    I. FACTS
    {¶4}    In February 2014, the Ross County Grand Jury returned a secret
    indictment charging Jason A. Anders with three counts of rape in violation of R.C.
    2907.02(A)(1)(b), with the specification that the victim, J.D., was less than ten years old.
    The indictment alleged that the rapes occurred in the period from August 2007 through
    June 2008. The court issued a warrant on the indictment with special instructions to
    enter it into the LEADS1 database as a radius pick-up of 12 and to direct it to Detective
    Tony Wheaton of the Ross County Sheriff’s Office for service.
    {¶5}    Nearly 33 months later in November 2016, the U.S. Marshal’s Office
    arrested Anders on the warrant. Less than a month following the service of the warrant,
    Anders filed a motion to dismiss the indictment based on a purported violation of his
    constitutional right to a speedy trial. He claimed that the post-indictment delay of 33
    months between the issuance of the indictment and his arrest violated the Sixth
    1LEADS stands for the Law Enforcement Automated Data System. See State v. Chancey, 4th Dist.
    Washington No. 15CA17, 
    2015-Ohio-5585
    , ¶ 16.
    2   Radius 1 refers to a warrant active anywhere in the United States.
    Ross App. No. 17CA3595                                                             3
    Amendment. He argued: (1) the delay was presumptively prejudicial; (2) the delay was
    caused solely by the state’s negligence as it made no efforts to serve him with the
    warrant; (3) he timely asserted his right to dismissal of the charges; and (4) his defense
    was impaired by the delay because neither he nor his family have any recollection of
    ever living at the Bainbridge, Ohio address where the offenses were alleged to have
    occurred.
    A. Motion to Dismiss
    1. The State’s Evidence
    {¶6}   Detective Wheaton testified at the hearing on the motion to dismiss.
    Wheaton indicated he took several initial steps to attempt to contact Anders in October
    2012, prior to the indictment. He ran a background check that listed Anders’s address
    as 27 West Main St., Mt. Sterling, Ohio. Because that address was in Madison County,
    he asked the Madison County Sheriff’s Office to contact Anders and request that he
    contact the Ross County Sheriff’s Office. In December 2012 and February 2013, Det.
    Wheaton personally travelled to the Mt. Sterling address in unsuccessful attempts to
    locate Anders. In July 2013, he again travelled to the Mt. Sterling address, where a new
    tenant advised him that Anders had moved out the previous summer; however,
    Anders’s mail was still coming there. Det. Wheaton checked with the local post office
    and determined that Anders had not left a forwarding address.
    {¶7}   Det. Wheaton then attempted to contact Anders’s parents at the
    Washington Courthouse address supplied by the victim’s father, Shane. Det. Wheaton
    twice requested the Washington Courthouse Police Department to contact Anders’s
    Ross App. No. 17CA3595                                                                   4
    parents. Moreover, he personally travelled to the parents’ residence and left notes for
    them to contact him; he never received any response.
    {¶8}   After issuance of the secret indictment in February 2014, Det. Wheaton
    again made multiple attempts to locate Anders. In March 2014, Det. Wheaton ran a
    check on OLEG,3 but it listed the Mt. Sterling address Wheaton had used
    unsuccessfully. Wheaton also maintained contact with Shane, who had informed
    Wheaton that he was still communicating with some of Anders’s old friends and family
    members in an effort to find him. Again in September 2014 and July 2015, Det.
    Wheaton contacted Shane, who had no new information on Anders’s whereabouts.
    {¶9}   In January 2015, Det. Wheaton ran Anders’s social security number
    through LEADS, but it still showed the old Mt. Sterling address. He also checked
    Facebook but was unable to find Anders there.
    {¶10} In August 2015, Shane telephoned Det. Wheaton to say he was unsure
    where Anders was living “but he had heard that he may be living somewhere in
    Kentucky.” In August 2015 and January 2016, Det. Wheaton requested a LEADS check
    of Anders in both Ohio and Kentucky. The Ohio check came back with the Mt. Sterling
    address. The Kentucky LEADS search was not fruitful because Det. Wheaton was not
    LEADS certified and Anders’s Kentucky driver’s license was necessary to obtain an
    accurate check. Because Det. Wheaton did not know whether Anders had a Kentucky
    driver’s license, the dispatch center could not obtain information outside of the Ohio
    system other than there were no warrants or convictions for Anders in Kentucky. Det.
    Wheaton also checked for any Facebook accounts for Anders again but he was
    3OLEG is the Ohio Law Enforcement Gateway. See State v. Smith, 
    2016-Ohio-5062
    , 
    70 N.E.3d 150
    , ¶
    11 (4th Dist.).
    Ross App. No. 17CA3595                                                                5
    unsuccessful. Again Wheaton talked to Shane, who could not provide any information
    other than he was still hearing that Anders was living somewhere in Kentucky.
    {¶11} In September 2016, the U.S. Marshal’s Office contacted the Ross County
    Sheriff’s Office and asked if it needed assistance in locating any individuals with
    outstanding warrants. The sheriff’s office gave the warrant for Anders to the U.S.
    Marshal’s Office for service. In October or November 2016, the U.S. Marshal’s Office
    located Anders in Kentucky and arrested him.
    {¶12} On cross-examination Det. Wheaton acknowledged that he had not tried
    to contact the IRS or the Kentucky Bureau of Motor Vehicles to locate Anders.
    However, he continued unsuccessfully to search additional social media outlets like
    Twitter. And he had contacted Anders’s former Ohio employer, who provided the same
    Mt. Sterling address.
    2. The Defense Testimony
    {¶13} Anders testified that from the dates of the alleged rapes in 2007-2008 until
    his arrest, he lived in three different places in Ohio—the Moxley Road, Bainbridge
    house where the crimes allegedly occurred, an apartment in Mt. Sterling, and his wife’s
    brother’s residence in Washington Courthouse—as well as three different places in
    Kentucky. He got married before he moved to Kentucky, worked at two different jobs
    there, and made no effort to conceal where he was living. Anders had no idea he had
    an outstanding warrant for his arrest, so he had no reason to hide.
    {¶14} At the conclusion of the hearing the trial court ruled from the bench and
    denied the motion.
    B. Jury Trial
    Ross App. No. 17CA3595                                                                              6
    {¶15} The case proceeded to a jury trial, which revealed that Shane worked with
    Anders and in October 2007, they decided to move into a home together on Moxley
    Road in Bainbridge, Ohio. Shane’s family included his wife and two sons, J.D. and D.D.
    In the winter of 2007-2008, when J.D. was six years old and in kindergarten, he lived at
    the Bainbridge home.
    1. The State’s Case
    {¶16} J.D. testified that his parents slept in an upstairs bedroom and he and his
    brother slept in Anders’s bedroom on the first floor, although they were supposed to
    sleep on couches in the living room. According to J.D., he slept in the bed with Anders
    and his brother slept on the couch in that bedroom.
    {¶17} J.D. testified about the following incidents of inappropriate sexual behavior
    that winter. In the first incident J.D. was playing with Batman and Superman action
    figures in Anders’s bedroom when Anders stuck his penis in J.D.’s mouth for a few
    minutes. J.D. stopped because it left a “bad taste” and he was choking. Anders then
    lay on his back on his bed and told J.D. to sit on his penis “like a toilet.” Anders put a
    wet substance on his penis, saying that it might help, and then Anders moved his penis
    in and out of his butt, for a few minutes. Upon stopping, Anders told J.D. not to tell his
    father, Shane. J.D. testified that Anders’s anal rape hurt and caused him to bleed
    twice.4
    {¶18} In the second incident about a week later, Anders drove J.D. around in his
    car. On the way back home after J.D. told Anders to go faster, Anders stopped the car
    4 Although J.D. testified about two separate rapes on this first date, one involving oral intercourse and the
    other involving anal intercourse, the state eventually submitted the case to the jury on only the anal rape
    that had occurred that day because it had charged Anders with only three rapes, not four.
    Ross App. No. 17CA3595                                                               7
    in the middle of the road, exposed his penis, put it in J.D.’s mouth, and said “suck on
    this.” After 20 seconds, J.D. stopped because “it tasted nasty.”
    {¶19} In the third incident about a month or two after the second one, J.D., who
    was sleeping on the bed in Anders’s bedroom, woke up to find Anders sucking his
    penis. Anders stopped after about a minute, and he told J.D. not to tell his father.
    {¶20} Sometime after these incidents occurred, Anders and J.D.’s family moved
    to separate places. J.D. testified he did not initially disclose these incidents because he
    was scared. In 2008 or 2009, when Anders, Shane, and J.D. were in the same place,
    Shane asked J.D. if Anders had ever touched him inappropriately. J.D. said no
    because Anders was present, causing J.D. to be scared. When he was in fourth-grade,
    J.D. finally told his mother that Anders had abused him, but she did not tell law
    enforcement officers about it. In September 2012, J.D. told his cousin, Doug, who told
    J.D.’s father, Shane, about it. Shane took J.D. to the sheriff’s office to report the abuse,
    and subsequently the Child Protection Center interviewed J.D.
    2. The Defense Case
    {¶21} Anders testified that he met Shane when they were both working at YUSA.
    He met the rest of Shane’s family when Shane invited Anders over for a cookout. The
    family was then living in an apartment so Anders and Shane decided to move into a
    house together to save money. Anders stated that he took the downstairs bedroom and
    that Shane’s family all stayed upstairs. Anders denied that J.D. ever slept in his room.
    He recalled that sometimes the boys were left at home with him and that he took them
    fishing and to McDonald’s. Anders’s parents lived close by, and they sometimes took
    care of the boys too.
    Ross App. No. 17CA3595                                                              8
    {¶22} Anders recalled there was tension over a vehicle trade and it was more
    severe than Shane described. Anders claimed that it was an “even trade,” but that
    Shane later determined he wanted money in addition to the vehicle. According to
    Anders the relationship between the two of them soured “quite a bit” and they had a
    heated discussion over the money issue.
    {¶23} Anders ultimately left the home because he didn’t like being around
    domestic disputes between Shane and his wife, who argued frequently over money.
    Life in the house became more chaotic. But leaving the house still did not resolve the
    situation with the truck, so eventually Anders gave the truck back to Shane to avoid any
    further issues. However, that didn’t stop Shane from continuing to demand money.
    {¶24} When asked about J.D.’s allegations and testimony, Anders stated
    unequivocally that none of that story ever happened. He also stated that though he
    visited with Shane and his family periodically after moving out, Shane never asked
    Anders whether he had abused J.D.
    3. The Verdicts
    {¶25} At the conclusion of the trial the jury returned verdicts finding Anders guilty
    of all three rapes. The trial court sentenced Anders to an aggregate prison sentence of
    30 years to life.
    II. ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
    {¶26} Anders assigns the following errors for our review:
    I. JASON’S RIGHT TO A SPEEDY TRIAL WAS VIOLATED WHEN THE
    STATE WAITED TWO YEARS AND NINE MONTHS AFTER THE
    INDICTMENT TO ARREST HIM.
    II. JASON’S VERDICT WAS AGAINST THE MANIFEST WEIGHT OF
    THE EVIDENCE.
    Ross App. No. 17CA3595                                                                9
    III. LAW AND ANALYSIS
    A. Constitutional Right to Speedy Trial
    {¶27}   In his first assignment of error Anders asserts that the delay of 33
    months between the indictment and his arrest violated his constitutional right to a
    speedy trial. Anders contests the trial court’s denial of his motion to dismiss, which was
    based on the purported violation of the Sixth Amendment.
    {¶28} “The Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Article I,
    Section 10 of the Ohio Constitution guarantee a criminal defendant the right to a speedy
    trial.” State v. Doughman, 
    2017-Ohio-4253
    , __ N.E.3d __, ¶ 17 (4th Dist.), citing State
    v. Blackburn, 118 Ohio St.3d163, 
    2008-Ohio-1823
    , 
    887 N.E.3d 319
    , ¶ 10. The Due
    Process Clause makes the Sixth Amendment speedy-trial provision applicable to the
    states. State v. Spencer, 
    2017-Ohio-456
    , 
    84 N.E.3d 106
    , ¶ 29, citing Klopfer v. North
    Carolina, 
    386 U.S. 213
    , 
    87 S.Ct. 988
    , 
    18 L.Ed.2d 1
     (1967).
    {¶29} Appellate review of a trial court's decision on a motion to dismiss for a
    violation of the speedy trial requirements presents a mixed question of law and fact.
    State v. James, 4th Dist. Ross No. 13CA3393, 
    2014-Ohio-1702
    , ¶ 23; State v. Brown,
    
    131 Ohio App.3d 387
    , 391, 
    722 N.E.2d 594
     (4th Dist. 1998). Thus, appellate courts will
    defer to a trial court's findings of fact as long as competent, credible evidence supports
    them. Brown, 
    131 Ohio App.3d at 391
    , 
    722 N.E.2d 594
    . Appellate courts then
    independently determine whether the trial court properly applied the law to the facts. 
    Id.
    When we review the legal issues presented in a speedy trial claim, we must strictly
    construe the relevant statutes against the state. 
    Id.,
     citing Brecksville v. Cook, 
    75 Ohio St.3d 53
    , 57, 
    661 N.E.2d 706
    , 709 (1996).
    Ross App. No. 17CA3595                                                                 10
    {¶30} To determine whether a defendant has been deprived of constitutional
    speedy-trial rights, we must balance four factors: (1) the length of the delay, (2) the
    reason for the delay, (3) the defendant’s assertion of a speedy-trial right, and (4)
    prejudice to the defendant. State v. Triplett, 
    78 Ohio St.3d 566
    , 568, 
    679 N.E.2d 290
    (1997), citing Barker v. Wingo, 
    407 U.S. 514
    , 530, 
    92 S.Ct. 2182
    , 33 L.Ed2d 101 (1972);
    Doughman at ¶ 18. None of the factors is per se determinative of the issue; instead, a
    court considers the factors collectively. See Spencer at ¶ 30, citing Barker at 532.
    Unfortunately, the Supreme Court’s formulation of the Barker test compels courts to
    approach these cases on an ad hoc basis. See Vermont v. Brillon, 
    556 U.S. 81
    ,91, 129
    S.Ct.1283, 
    173 L.Ed.2d 231
     (2009).
    {¶31} In promulgating its ad hoc balancing test in Barker, the Supreme Court
    gave minimal guidance to courts as to the relative weights to be assigned within and
    among the four elements. This minimal guidance has led to inconsistent analyses—
    straight-balancing and weighted-balancing—and results in resolving constitutional
    speedy-trial claims. As one commentator recently stated, “[t]he consequence of the
    Barker [sic] court’s broad language and conflicting ideas has been widely varying
    application of the Barker test. Yet ‘[t]he complex nature of the Barker v. Wingo
    balancing test makes it impossible to evaluate the court’s results for consistency.’
    Commentators have expressed a variety of concerns about how courts misapply the
    Barker factors to the detriment of defendants.” (Footnotes omitted.) See Osnowitz,
    Demanding a Speedy Trial: Re-Evaluating the Assertion Factor in the Barker v. Wingo
    Test, 67 Case W.Res.L.Rev. 273, 284 (2016); see also Brooks, A New Speedy Trial
    Standard for Barker v. Wingo: Reviving a Constitutional Remedy in an Age of Statutes,
    Ross App. No. 17CA3595                                                               11
    61 U.Chi.L.Rev. 587 (1994) (proposing a new speedy-trial “motive test,” focusing on the
    reason for trial delays because the straight-balancing and weighted-balancing
    approaches to the Barker test that federal and state courts have adopted “depend on
    the flawed premise that society and individual defendants have inherently conflicting
    interests in the speed with which a defendant is brought to trial”); Billings v. Bruce, 
    965 P.2d 866
    , ¶ 50-54 (Mont.1998), citing Brooks in adopting a new analysis including
    features of both the straight-balancing and motive tests, overruled in State v. Ariegwe,
    
    167 P.3d 815
    , ¶ 106 (Mont.2007). Despite these flaws in the ad hoc balancing system,
    precedent from both the United States and Ohio Supreme Courts requires us to forge
    ahead. Brillon, 
    556 U.S. 81
    , 91, 
    129 S.Ct. 1283
    , 
    173 L.Ed.2d 231
    ; State v. Adams, 
    144 Ohio St.3d 42
    , 2015-Ohio- 3954, 
    945 N.E.3d 127
    , ¶ 88.
    1. Length of the Delay
    {¶32} “The United States Supreme Court has recognized that the first factor,
    length of the delay, involves a double inquiry.” State v. Spencer, 
    2017-Ohio-456
    , 
    84 N.E.3d 106
    , ¶ 31 (4th Dist.), citing Doggett v. United States, 
    505 U.S. 647
    , 651, 
    112 S.Ct. 2686
    , 
    120 L.Ed.2d 520
     (1992). First, an accused must show that the length of the
    delay was “presumptively prejudicial” to trigger the Barker four-part balancing analysis.
    
    Id. at 651-652
    . Second, once the Barker analysis is triggered, the court must readdress
    the delay and balance it against the three remaining factors. 
    Id. at 652
    .
    {¶33} Courts generally find post-accusation delay to be presumptively prejudicial
    enough to trigger the Barker analysis when it approaches one year. Spencer at ¶ 32,
    citing Doggett at fn. 1. In February 2014, the Ross County Grand Jury secretly indicted
    Ross App. No. 17CA3595                                                                 12
    Anders, who was not served with the warrant and arrested until November 2016, i.e.,
    nearly 33 months later. Consistent with our precedent, we find that the 33-month delay
    between Anders’s indictment and his arrest on the warrant was presumptively
    prejudicial enough to trigger the entire Barker analysis.
    {¶34} Next we readdress the length of the delay, in conjunction with the other
    factors. In his brief Anders offers little comment other than to acknowledge the court
    found the threshold of presumptive prejudice occurred in the 33-month delay between
    the indictment and his arrest. He does imply that the court didn’t give enough weight to
    the delay when balancing it with the remaining Barker factors. In pronouncing its ruling
    from the bench (there is no subsequent entry in the record memorializing the ruling), the
    trial court seemed to place the length of the delay somewhere below the level of being
    egregious, but it is difficult to tell from reading the transcript of the hearing. The court
    did conclude that the delay was not so long or intolerable as to be outcome
    determinative by itself. Because Anders’s brief focuses upon the length of the delay as
    it affects whether he needs to affirmatively show actual prejudice, we will do likewise in
    our review. However, we do note our agreement with the trial court’s apparent
    conclusion that this delay does not reach an egregious level like that in Doggett. But
    the length of the delay does weigh in Anders’s favor.
    {¶35} Although Anders claims that the trial court erred by not applying the
    presumption of prejudice associated with the 33-month delay to obliterate the need for
    an affirmative showing on his part, we reject his claim because presumptive prejudice
    alone does not establish a speedy-trial violation. Here the trial court considered the
    length of the delay in its balancing of the pertinent factors. See State v. Triplett, 78 Ohio
    Ross App. No. 17CA3595                                                                              13
    St.3d at 570, 
    679 N.E.2d 290
    , quoting Doggett at 656 (“while such presumptive
    prejudice cannot alone carry a Sixth Amendment claim, ‘it is part of the mix of relevant
    facts, and its importance increases with the length of delay’ ”). We will revisit Anders’s
    focus in reviewing the prejudice factor of the analysis.
    2. Reason for the Delay
    {¶36} Anders claims that the trial court erred by determining the state’s
    negligence was not the reason for the delay. He argues the trial court’s determination
    of this factor was erroneous because it: attempted to assign blame to him for moving;
    without any evidentiary support, found that Det. Wheaton did more work than many
    other officers would have done; and excused the fact that Wheaton failed to do more to
    follow up the lead about Anders’s potential presence in Kentucky.
    {¶37} The trial court found that the state was not to “blame” for the delay, i.e.,
    that it did not intentionally or negligently cause the 33-month delay in serving Anders
    with the warrant on the indictment.5 In Doggett the Supreme Court of the United States
    instructed courts subsequently reviewing the second Barker factor to afford
    considerable deference to the trial court’s finding on the reason for the delay. Doggett
    at 652. Accordingly, we follow that guidance here and conclude competent, credible
    evidence supports the court’s factual finding.
    {¶38} Det. Wheaton testified at the hearing on the motion to dismiss that he
    conducted several LEADS and OLEG checks, searched social media sites, contacted
    5 Anders seems to take issue with the trial court apportioning “blame” in its analysis of the issue.
    However, the Supreme Court of the United States has utilized the term “blame” when addressing the
    reason for the delay. See Doggett, 
    505 U.S. at 651
    , 
    112 S.Ct. 2686
    , 
    120 L.Ed.2d 520
     (“whether the
    government or the criminal defendant is more to blame for th[e] delay”), cited with approval in Brillon, 
    556 U.S. at 90
    , 
    129 S.Ct. 1283
    , 
    173 L.Ed.2d 231
    .
    Ross App. No. 17CA3595                                                                14
    sheriff’s offices and a post office, travelled personally to Mt. Sterling and Washington
    Courthouse, and talked with J.D.’s father, Shane, in his unsuccessful attempts to locate
    Anders.
    {¶39} Although Det. Wheaton acknowledged Shane told him in August 2015 he
    “heard that” Anders “might” be living somewhere in Kentucky, the trial court reasonably
    concluded that, “the detective did not have concrete evidence or proof that [Anders] had
    even gone to Kentucky.” Even without more detailed evidence, Det. Wheaton
    requested a Kentucky LEADS check, continued searching social media sites, and kept
    contacting Shane.
    {¶40} Under these circumstances, the trial court’s factual finding that the state
    was not negligent is supported by competent, credible evidence. This is clearly not a
    case where the sheriff’s office stood by idly, doing nothing until a defendant is
    fortuitously arrested by another agency. The proper question is not whether the state
    could have done more, but rather whether it did enough to be reasonable, i.e. not
    negligent. Up to this point the record indicates the state was relatively diligent in its
    efforts.
    {¶41} Moreover, even if we assume that the state was negligent in failing to
    properly follow up on the unverified Kentucky lead, this factor would only weigh slightly
    in his favor because the Kentucky tip was made in August 2015; any delay attributable
    to not acting on this new information would account for only 15 months of the 33-month
    delay. See Spencer, 
    2017-Ohio-456
    , 
    84 N.E.3d 106
    , ¶ 34, quoting Doggett, 
    505 U.S. at 657
    , 
    112 S.Ct. 2686
    , 
    120 L.Ed.2d 520
     (“ ‘to warrant granting relief, negligence
    unaccompanied by particularized trial prejudice must have lasted longer than
    Ross App. No. 17CA3595                                                                 15
    negligence demonstrably causing prejudice’ ”). The 15-month delay from Shane’s
    disclosure of the hearsay that Anders might be living somewhere in Kentucky, to the
    service of the warrant, “was not so protracted or intolerable as to warrant relief absent
    some particularized trial prejudice.” Spencer at ¶ 34, citing State v. Manley, 4th Dist.
    Adams No. 97CA637, 1997 W: 451360 (Aug. 6, 1997) (finding that the 29-month delay
    caused by the state’s negligence was not so protracted or intolerable as to warrant relief
    absent some particularized trial prejudice).
    {¶42} Affording Anders the benefit of this assumption, we agree with him that
    this factor weighs in his favor, but not to the extent he claims. This factor weighs
    minimally for Anders.
    3. Anders’s Assertion of Right to Speedy Trial
    {¶43} The trial court and the parties agree that Anders timely asserted his
    constitutional right to a speedy trial by raising it in his motion to dismiss within a month
    after being arrested. This factor weighs in favor of Anders.
    4. Prejudice to Anders
    {¶44} Looking at the prejudice component, we find no evidence in the record
    that Anders suffered any actual prejudice here. “The three interests that the
    constitutional speedy-trial right is designed to protect are: (1) to prevent oppressive
    pretrial incarceration; (2) to minimize anxiety and concern of the accused; and (3) to
    limit the possibility that the defense will be impaired.” State v. Doughman, 2017-Ohio-
    4253, __ N.E.3d __, ¶ 23, citing Barker, 
    407 U.S. at 532
    , 
    92 S.Ct. 2182
    , 
    33 L.Ed.2d 101
    . Anders was not incarcerated during the post-indictment delay and he suffered no
    anxiety or concern during this period because he was not aware of the pending charges
    Ross App. No. 17CA3595                                                                16
    raised in the secret indictment. He did not assert any actual impairment of his trial
    defense that was attributable to the delay. In his motion to dismiss he simply claimed
    he was prejudiced by the delay because neither he nor his family recalled living at the
    Bainbridge, Ohio house where the rapes occurred. But he testified at the hearing on the
    motion to dismiss, as well as at trial, that he lived at that house during the relevant time
    period.
    {¶45} Nonetheless, Anders argues that the delay was so protracted that a
    presumption of prejudice relieves him of any duty to affirmatively show actual prejudice.
    Even if we credit Anders’s claim that Det. Wheaton negligently caused the delay
    because of his failure to do more to follow up on the Kentucky residence tip, that
    negligence can only account for 15 months of the post-indictment delay. That period is
    not so protracted or intolerable to warrant relief absent some showing of particularized
    trial prejudice.
    {¶46} Courts generally have found such presumptive prejudice to negate any
    need for an affirmative showing only in cases where the post-indictment delay lasted at
    least five years. See Barker. See also State v. Stevens, 3d Dist. Logan No. 8-14-09,
    
    2014-Ohio-4875
    , ¶ 24, quoting U.S. v. Serna-Villarreal, 
    352 F.3d 225
    , 232 (5th
    Cir.2003); State v. Rice, 
    2015-Ohio-5481
    , 
    57 N.E.3d 84
    , ¶ 29 (1st Dist.).
    {¶47} Similarly, in State v. Boyd, 4th Dist. Ross No. 04CA2790, 2005-Ohio-
    1228, ¶ 15, 17, we held that a 17-month delay between a defendant’s indictment and
    arrest did not violate the defendant’s constitutional right to a speedy trial because it
    “was not so protracted or intolerable as to warrant relief absent some particularized trial
    prejudice.” In Boyd the defendant had no knowledge of the indictment against him, so
    Ross App. No. 17CA3595                                                                 17
    he could not have suffered anxiety and concern. Nor did he allege that the delay
    impaired his ability to defend himself. See also State v. Bailey, 2d Dist. Montgomery
    No. 20764, 
    2005-Ohio-5506
     (17-month delay between indictment and arrest did not
    violate defendant’s constitutional right to a speedy trial because he was unaware of the
    pending indictment until shortly before his arrest and his claim of prejudice was not
    credible).
    {¶48}   Although Anders cites Doggett, 
    505 U.S. 647
    , 
    112 S.Ct. 2686
    , 
    120 L.Ed.2d 520
    , in support of his claim of presumptive prejudice, that case involved an 8 ½
    -year delay, which is significantly longer than the less than 3-year delay here. The
    delay in Doggett was egregious because it was over six times the 1-year delay
    necessary for triggering the Barker analysis. And for six of the 8 ½ years, the
    government did practically nothing to find Doggett (it had initially asked a foreign
    government to “expel” Doggett back to the U.S.). As the Doggett court noted, the
    “tolerance of such negligence varies inversely with its protractedness.” 
    Id. at 657
    .
    Neither the 33-month total delay, nor the 15-month delay assumptively assigned to the
    scope of the Kentucky search, reach the level necessary to warrant Ander’s assertion.
    {¶49} Therefore, the prejudice factor weighs heavily against Anders.
    5. Balancing of the Factors
    {¶50} Although the first, second, and third factors weigh in favor of Anders, the
    second factor weighs only slightly in his favor and fourth factor weighs heavily against
    him. The minimal weight of the second factor is still not enough to carry the day in the
    absence of some particularized trial prejudice. After considering the totality of the
    circumstances, we conclude that the trial court correctly determined that the state did
    Ross App. No. 17CA3595                                                                 18
    not violate Anders’s constitutional right to a speedy trial. We overrule Anders’s first
    assignment of error.
    B. Manifest Weight of the Evidence
    {¶51} In his second assignment of error Anders contends that the jury verdicts
    finding him guilty of three counts of rape were against the manifest weight of the
    evidence.
    1. Standard of Review
    {¶52} In determining whether a criminal conviction is against the manifest weight
    of the evidence, we must review the entire record, weigh the evidence and all
    reasonable inferences, consider the credibility of witnesses, and determine whether the
    trier of fact clearly lost its way in resolving conflicts in the evidence, and created such a
    manifest miscarriage of justice that we must reverse the conviction. State v.
    Thompkins, 
    78 Ohio St.3d 380
    , 387, 
    678 N.E.2d 541
     (1997); State v. Hunter, 
    131 Ohio St.3d 67
    , 
    2011-Ohio-6524
    , 
    960 N.E.2d 955
    , ¶ 119. We are reminded that generally, the
    weight and credibility of evidence are to be determined by the trier of fact. See State v.
    Kirkland, 
    140 Ohio St.3d 73
    , 
    15 N.E.3d 818
    , 
    2014-Ohio-1966
    , ¶ 132.
    2. The Victim’s Testimony
    {¶53} Anders argues that the jury’s guilty verdicts were against the manifest
    weight of the evidence because J.D.’s testimony was inconsistent, unreliable, and
    incredible. He cites purported inconsistencies, including: (1) J.D. testifying that he only
    rode with Anders once in his car, but Shane testified that J.D. took multiple trips with
    Anders (2) J.D. and Shane testifying that J.D.’s cousin, Doug, reported the abuse to the
    police, but two detectives testified that Doug’s name is not included in investigative
    Ross App. No. 17CA3595                                                                    19
    records; (3) J.D. testifying that he never told his father about the abuse, but later
    testifying that he did; (4) J.D. testifying that he told his father about the abuse after he
    told a child-protection worker, when he actually told Shane about it before then; and (5)
    J.D. testifying that he and his brother slept in Anders’s bedroom because they did not
    want to sleep on the floor, but J.D. later testified that they were supposed to sleep on
    couches in the living room. He also argues that J.D.’s testimony was largely
    uncorroborated, and that potential key witnesses, like the child-protection worker who
    interviewed J.D. about the abuse, were not called to testify.
    {¶54} J.D.’s testimony was consistent on most of the details of the three rapes—
    anal intercourse in Anders’s bedroom, oral intercourse performed in Anders’s car, and
    oral intercourse performed by Anders in Anders’s bedroom. And Shane corroborated
    that he had learned about the abuse after J.D. reported the abuse to his ex-wife and to
    his nephew. Anders’s defense appeared to primarily rely upon the animus between
    Anders and Shane that resulted from an exchange of their vehicles. But Shane testified
    that he remained friends with Anders after they moved from the Bainbridge house, and
    that they continued to see each other.
    {¶55} “ ‘A jury, sitting as the trier of fact, is free to believe all, part or none of the
    testimony of any witness who appears before it.’ ” State v. Reyes-Rosales, 4th Dist.
    Adams No. 15CA1010, 
    2016-Ohio-3338
    , ¶ 17, quoting State v. West, 4th Dist. Scioto
    No. 12CA3507, 
    2014-Ohio-1941
    , ¶ 23. We defer to the trier of fact on these evidentiary
    weight and credibility issues because it is in the best position to gauge the witnesses'
    demeanor, gestures, and voice inflections, and to use these observations to weigh their
    credibility. Id.; State v. Koon, 4th Dist. Hocking No. 15CA17, 
    2016-Ohio-416
    , at ¶ 18.
    Ross App. No. 17CA3595                                                               20
    {¶56} The jury was free to credit J.D.’s testimony, which established the three
    rapes, and to discount Anders’s abbreviated denial. Notwithstanding its
    inconsistencies, J.D.’s testimony is not so incredible as to be unworthy of the jury’s
    acceptance of it. We have reviewed the entire record, weighed the evidence and all
    reasonable inferences, and considered the credibility of witnesses. We conclude that in
    resolving conflicts in the evidence, the jury did not clearly lose its way and create such a
    manifest miscarriage of justice that we must reverse the rape convictions. Therefore,
    we overrule Anders’s second assignment of error.
    IV. CONCLUSION
    {¶57} The trial court properly denied Anders’s motion to dismiss, and the jury’s
    verdicts finding him guilty of three rapes are supported by the manifest weight of the
    evidence. Having overruled Anders’s assignments of error, we affirm his convictions
    and sentence.
    JUDGMENT AFFIRMED.
    Ross App. No. 17CA3595                                                            21
    JUDGMENT ENTRY
    It is ordered that the JUDGMENT IS AFFIRMED and that Appellant shall pay the
    costs.
    The Court finds there were reasonable grounds for this appeal.
    It is ordered that a special mandate issue out of this Court directing the Ross
    County Court of Common Pleas to carry this judgment into execution.
    Any stay previously granted by this Court is hereby terminated as of the date of
    this entry.
    A certified copy of this entry shall constitute the mandate pursuant to Rule 27 of
    the Rules of Appellate Procedure.
    Hoover, P.J.: Concurs in Judgment and Opinion.
    McFarland, J.: Concurs in Judgment and Opinion as to Assignment of Error II;
    Concurs in Judgment Only as to Assignment of Error I.
    For the Court
    BY: ________________________________
    William H. Harsha, Judge
    NOTICE TO COUNSEL
    Pursuant to Local Rule No. 14, this document constitutes a final judgment
    entry and the time period for further appeal commences from the date of filing
    with the clerk.