Prosecutor: There should be no crying in closings
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Jason Phillabaum, an assistant
“Specifically, defense attorneys have strategically been known to cry on cue and beg for their client’s lives,” according to the motions, which notes previous cases where defense attorneys have been admonished for crying in front of a jury during closing arguments.
The motions came following a trial last month in which attorney Greg Howard cried while urging jurors to spare his client, Harvey “Shawn” Johnson. Johnson received life in prison for the kidnapping and strangulation of Kiva Gazaway.
Howard will help represent James O’Hara in a death penalty case in August. O’Hara is accused of stabbing Stanley Lawson in a
Phillabaum and county Prosecutor Robin Piper declined to discuss the motions, but Piper said he thought a trained professional should be able to control emotions in court.
Howard called the motions “petty” and said he can’t wait to argue against them in a July 18 hearing before Common Pleas Judge Andrew Nastoff in this southwest
“They want to kill my clients. They want to win at all costs,” Howard said. “They are tired of losing, so they are trying to limit what I can say in my closing arguments.”
He added that if he could cry on cue, he would be in
“It is emotional; you are trying to save your client’s life. It just comes out,” Howard said.
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Lorain/Elyria, OH

