The Columbus Dispatch

East Cleveland judge can hear case

- By Mark Gillispie

CLEVELAND — A judge in the city where two unarmed blacks died in a 137- shot barrage of Cleveland police gunfire can hear derelictio­n of duty charges against five police supervisor­s accused of failing to control a high- speed chase involving more than 100 officers, the state’s highest court ruled Thursday.

The ruling addresses only where the case can be heard and not the substance of the misdemeano­r charges against the supervisor­s.

The supervisor­s’ attorneys filed an appeal in July 2015 that said the case should be tried in Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court, where charges were originally filed. The Eighth District Court of Appeals agreed and issued an order prohibitin­g East Cleveland Municipal Judge William Dawson from hearing the case after county prosecutor­s filed identical charges in that city.

The Ohio Supreme Court’s unanimous ruling says the supervisor­s have legal remedies through appeals of Dawson’s decisions in the case.

A court employee said Dawson was on the bench Thursday morning and wasn’t available for comment.

Susan Gragel, the attorney who wrote the appeal on behalf of the supervisor­s, said that while she respects the state Supreme Court’s ruling, the Eighth District’s prohibitio­n order correctly addressed the fact that charges were filed in East Cleveland while the same charges were pending in county court.

The supervisor­s — Randolph Dailey, Patricia Coleman, Michael Donegan, Jason Edens and Paul Wilson — were originally indicted by a Cuyahoga County grand jury in May 2014 for failing to control the 22-mile chase that led to Timothy Russell and Malissa Williams being killed in the parking lot of an East Cleveland middle school.

Also indicted was Patrolman Michael Brelo, one of 13 officers who shot at the car, on voluntary manslaught­er charges. Brelo fired 49 times, including a final 15-round volley from the hood of the car.

The chase began near Cleveland police headquarte­rs after an officer standing outside the building reported that a shot had been fired from a beat-up Chevy Malibu passing by. Experts later said it was likely the sound of the car backfiring.

The supervisor­s’ trial originally was scheduled to begin in July 2015 in front of Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Judge John P. O’Donnell, who weeks earlier acquitted Brelo during a bench trial, sparking protests. Then-county Prosecutor Tim McGinty told the supervisor­s and their attorneys at a hearing before trial that identical charges had been filed in East Cleveland and asked O’Donnell to dismiss the county case, which he did.

A message was left Thursday with the new county prosecutor, Michael O’Malley, who took office in January, asking whether his office plans to continue pursuing charges against the supervisor­s.

The city of Cleveland paid the families of Russell and Williams a total of $3 million to settle a federal civil rights lawsuit.

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