State v. Jones ( 2014 )


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  • [Cite as State v. Jones, 
    2014-Ohio-3110
    .]
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT OF OHIO
    HAMILTON COUNTY, OHIO
    STATE OF OHIO,                              :          APPEAL NO. C-130359
    TRIAL NO. B-1202578
    Plaintiff-Appellee,                :
    vs.
    :
    O P I N I O N.
    CHRISTOPHER JONES,
    :
    Defendant-Appellant.
    :
    Criminal Appeal From: Hamilton County Court of Common Pleas
    Judgment Appealed From Is: Affirmed
    Date of Judgment Entry on Appeal: July 16, 2014
    Joseph T. Deters, Hamilton County Prosecuting Attorney, and Melynda Machol,
    Assistant Prosecuting Attorney, for Plaintiff-Appellee,
    Robert R. Hastings, Jr., for Defendant-Appellant.
    Please note: this case has been removed from the accelerated calendar.
    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    FISCHER, Judge.
    {¶1}   Defendant-appellant Christopher Jones appeals his conviction for
    heroin possession stemming from a drug-dog sniff of a vehicle driven by Jones. After
    the trial court denied Jones’s motion to suppress, Jones was found guilty of
    possession by a jury. Because we determine that the trial court properly denied
    Jones’s motion to suppress, and that Jones’s remaining assignments of error are
    similarly without merit, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
    Jones’s Motion to Suppress
    {¶2}   The state indicted Jones for trafficking in and possession of heroin,
    following the discovery of heroin in a rental vehicle driven by Jones. Jones filed a
    motion to suppress the evidence found in the vehicle, arguing that the police had
    obtained the evidence as the result of an unlawful search of his person and the
    vehicle in violation of his Fourth Amendment rights. Jones also moved to suppress
    any statements made by him to police during the encounter because those
    statements had been obtained in violation of his Miranda rights.
    {¶3}   The trial court held a hearing on the motion to suppress where the
    state presented the testimony of Officers Ted Robinson, Victoria Wysel, William
    Wolner, and Phillip Stoup. Officers Robinson and Wysel testified that they had
    received information from another officer who had received a tip from a confidential
    informant that a light-colored or silver Hyundai SUV would be conducting a drug
    transaction at the Pleasant Ridge Community Center (the “Center”).            Officers
    Robinson and Wysel had been sitting in an unmarked police cruiser in the parking
    lot of the Center when they observed a light-colored SUV pull into the lot. The
    officers observed the driver, Jones, exit from the vehicle and walk across the parking
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    lot toward two other men. Jones and the two men then proceeded away from the
    Center, toward a tree line, and over an embankment, at which point the officers
    called for a uniformed officer, Officer Wolner.
    {¶4}   Officers Wolner, Wysel, and Robinson approached all three men and
    questioned Jones as to why he had parked his vehicle at one end of the lot and had
    walked across the lot to speak with the other men. Jones denied driving to the
    Center, stating that he had walked there. Officer Wolner testified that he had asked
    the men for identification and then had searched the computer system for any open
    warrants on them. The search revealed multiple capiases for Jones, including one
    for driving under suspension. Officer Wolner then placed Jones in handcuffs and
    conducted a pat down of his person, revealing car keys in Jones’s pocket. Officer
    Wolner placed Jones in the back of a police cruiser.
    {¶5}   Once Jones denied any contact with the vehicle that the officers had
    seen Jones driving, the officers called for a drug-sniffing dog. Officer Stoup arrived
    shortly thereafter at the Center with a dog trained to detect heroin. Officer Stoup
    testified that the dog’s exterior sniff of the vehicle driven by Jones had detected the
    presence of drugs. The officers then used the keys recovered from Jones’s pocket to
    open the locked doors on the vehicle. The officers recovered heroin, a scale, and
    pieces of lottery tickets from the middle console. Officer Wysel read Jones his
    Miranda rights, and then Officer Wolner transported Jones to the Hamilton County
    Justice Center. En route, Jones continued to disassociate himself from the vehicle.
    {¶6}   Jones also testified at the motion-to-suppress hearing. He admitted
    that he had lied to police about driving the vehicle because his license had been
    suspended. Jones, however, denied any knowledge of the drugs, and stated that the
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    vehicle had belonged to an acquaintance, “Miranda.”            Jones had Miranda’s
    permission to take the car to the Center to use the gym. Jones realized later that the
    car had been rented from Enterprise. At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court
    denied the motion to suppress.
    Trial
    {¶7}   After the denial of Jones’s motion to suppress, the matter proceeded to
    a jury trial. The state presented the testimony of Officers Wysel, Stoup, Wolner, and
    Robinson, whose testimony largely mirrored their testimony at the motion-to-
    suppress hearing. The state also offered the testimony of Officer Otis Wellborn, who
    had received the tip from the confidential informant regarding Jones.          Officer
    Wellborn testified that the informant, deceased by trial, had known Jones because
    they had dealt “dope” together, and that the informant had told Officer Wellborn that
    Jones would be meeting the informant at the Center, would be driving a silver
    Hyundai Sante Fe, and would have “dope” either in his vehicle or on his person.
    Officer Wellborn then had relayed this information to Officers Robinson and Wysel.
    Officer Wellborn testified that the silver Hyundai had been rented from Enterprise
    by Miranda Short.
    {¶8}   Jones did not present any witnesses at trial; however, he submitted
    into evidence a membership agreement for the Cincinnati Recreation Commission.
    {¶9}   The jury could not reach a verdict on the trafficking charge, and the
    trial court declared a mistrial on that count.        The jury found Jones guilty of
    possession, and the trial court sentenced him to four years in prison and imposed a
    one-year driver’s license suspension.
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    The Search of Jones’s Vehicle
    {¶10} In his first assignment of error, Jones argues that the trial court erred
    in overruling his motion to suppress.      Jones’s arguments challenge the officers’
    actions leading up to and including the search of the vehicle. Because the trial court
    did not make any findings of fact in its decision denying the suppression motion, we
    must review the record to determine whether sufficient evidence exists to support
    the trial court’s legal decision. See State v. Shields, 1st Dist. Hamilton No. C-100362,
    
    2011-Ohio-1912
    , ¶ 9, citing State v. Brown, 
    64 Ohio St.3d 476
    , 
    597 N.E.2d 97
     (1992),
    syllabus.
    {¶11} Jones argues in his appeal that the warrantless search of the vehicle
    violated his Fourth Amendment rights.          The Fourth Amendment protects an
    individual’s reasonable expectations of privacy, and warrantless searches and
    seizures are per se unreasonable. State v. Brewster, 1st Dist. Hamilton Nos. C-
    030024 and C-030025, 
    2004-Ohio-2993
    , ¶ 19, citing Stoner v. California, 
    376 U.S. 483
    , 490, 
    84 S.Ct. 889
    , 
    11 L.Ed.2d 856
     (1964), and Horton v. California, 
    496 U.S. 128
    , 
    110 S.Ct. 2301
    , 
    110 L.Ed.2d 112
     (1990).       A person who has no reasonable
    expectation of privacy in an area lacks standing to challenge a police search of that
    area. State v. Bush, 1st Dist. Hamilton No. C-000158, 
    2001 Ohio App. LEXIS 995
    , *4
    (Mar. 9, 2001), citing United States v. Salvucci, 
    448 U.S. 83
    , 95, 
    100 S.Ct. 2547
    , 
    65 L.Ed.2d 619
     (1980).
    {¶12} Although the state did not argue at the motion-to-suppress hearing
    that Jones lacked standing to challenge the search, the state raises this issue to this
    court. Where a driver has permission to use a vehicle, the driver has a reasonable
    expectation of privacy in that vehicle. State v. Carter, 
    69 Ohio St.3d 57
    , 63, 630
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    N.E.2d 355 (1994). Because Jones testified that he had obtained permission to use
    the vehicle from an acquaintance, Short, and the state did not argue at the motion-
    to-suppress hearing that Jones lacked standing, we determine that Jones had
    standing to challenge the search of the vehicle. See United States v. Garcia, 
    897 F.2d 1413
    , 1418 (7th Cir.1990).
    {¶13} Because Jones had standing to challenge the search of the vehicle, we
    must determine whether the officers had justification for their actions leading up to
    the search. The officers first encountered Jones when they acted on a tip from a
    confidential informant regarding a light-colored or silver SUV that would be carrying
    drugs to the Center. The officers witnessed Jones drive a vehicle, which matched the
    description given by the informant, into the parking lot of the Center, and then walk
    across the lot toward the tree line with two other men. Jones argues that because
    none of the officers testified as to the reliability of the confidential informant, the
    officers’ subsequent actions were improper. Here, we determine that the officers’
    actions were justifiable without reliance on the informant’s statements.
    {¶14} When an officer makes an investigative stop based solely on a tip from
    an informant, the state must show that the tip has sufficient indicia of reliability to
    justify the stop. See City of Maumee v. Weisner, 
    87 Ohio St.3d 295
    , 299-300, 
    720 N.E.2d 507
     (1999). Officers may briefly question someone and ask for identification,
    however, without implicating the Fourth Amendment; therefore, the officers acted
    properly in briefly questioning Jones in the parking lot regarding his behavior and in
    requesting identification. See State v. Ruehlmann, 1st Dist. Hamilton No. C-100784,
    
    2011-Ohio-6717
    , ¶ 12, citing Hiibel v. Sixth Judicial Dist. Court of Nevada,
    Humboldt Cty., 
    542 U.S. 177
    , 185, 
    124 S.Ct. 2451
    , 
    159 L.Ed.2d 292
     (2004); State v.
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    Pierce, 
    125 Ohio App.3d 592
    , 596-97, 
    709 N.E.2d 203
     (10th Dist.1998). When
    questioned, Jones denied driving the vehicle, and stated that he had walked to the
    Center. Jones’s behavior in walking away from the Center with two men, parking his
    vehicle at a distance from them, and attempting to disassociate himself from the
    vehicle gave the officers justification to briefly detain Jones while they checked for
    outstanding arrest warrants on him. See Ruehlmann at ¶ 12.
    {¶15} Once the police officers learned that Jones had outstanding warrants,
    they arrested him. The officers placed Jones in the back of a police cruiser and then
    used a drug dog to conduct an exterior search of the parked vehicle driven by Jones.
    Where a vehicle has been “lawfully detained,” a drug dog’s exterior sniff of the
    vehicle is not a search for Fourth Amendment purposes. State v. Lopez, 
    166 Ohio App.3d 337
    , 
    2006-Ohio-2091
    , 
    850 N.E.2d 781
    , ¶ 21 (1st Dist.); see Illinois v.
    Caballes, 
    543 U.S. 405
    , 408-409, 
    125 S.Ct. 834
    , 
    160 L.Ed.2d 842
     (2005)
    (determining that no legitimate expectation of privacy exists where a drug dog
    conducts a sniff of the exterior of a vehicle during a lawful traffic stop).
    {¶16} In this case, the drug-dog sniff did not subject Jones to any additional
    detention or delay because he had already been placed under arrest on the open
    warrant. The officers saw Jones drive and park the vehicle in the lot of the Center,
    thus no risk existed that the vehicle did not belong to Jones, and the officers did not
    prevent anyone else from driving the vehicle. Therefore, we determine that Jones’s
    vehicle was lawfully detained at the time of the drug-dog sniff, and that no Fourth
    Amendment violation occurred. See United States v. Robinson, W.D.N.C. No. 5:08-
    cr-20, 
    2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 98432
    , *8-9 (Oct. 8, 2009), relying on Caballes at 411
    (no Fourth Amendment violation occurred where a defendant was under lawful
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    arrest at the time officers conducted a dog sniff of the defendant’s vehicle: the
    officers left the vehicle where the defendant parked it, and the officers did not
    prevent anyone else from taking possession of the vehicle).
    {¶17} Once the drug dog indicated the presence of drugs in Jones’s lawfully-
    detained vehicle, probable cause existed to search that vehicle. See Lopez at ¶ 22.
    Therefore, we determine that the officers’ search of the vehicle did not violate Jones’s
    Fourth Amendment rights, and the trial court properly denied Jones’s motion to
    suppress. We overrule Jones’s first assignment of error.
    Out-of-Court Statements Explaining Police Investigation
    {¶18} In his second assignment of error, Jones argues that the trial court
    erred in admitting hearsay testimony from Officer Wellborn regarding the
    information he received from the informant, which led the police to investigate
    Jones.
    {¶19} The state argues that the informant’s statements as testified to by
    Officer Wellborn were admissible because the statements explained the officers’
    presence at the Center and their subsequent conduct during the investigation of
    Jones. See State v. Thomas, 
    61 Ohio St.2d 223
    , 232, 
    400 N.E.2d 401
     (1980). In
    Thomas, the defendants stood trial for operating a gambling house, and the
    investigating officers testified at trial that they had received a tip regarding a “sports
    bookmaking” operation in Roseville, Ohio, which led them to investigate the
    defendants. 
    Id.
     The defendants argued that the admission of the officers’ statements
    violated their right of confrontation, and that the statements were inadmissible
    hearsay. The Ohio Supreme Court disagreed, finding that the testimony explained
    the investigative activities of the officers and that “extrajudicial statements made by
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    an out-of-court declarant are properly admissible to explain the actions of a witness
    to whom the statement was directed.” 
    Id.
    {¶20} The court distinguished Thomas in State v. Ricks, 
    136 Ohio St.3d 356
    ,
    
    2013-Ohio-3712
    , 
    995 N.E.2d 1181
    , ¶ 20. The Ricks court faced the similar issue of
    whether police officer testimony offered to explain an officer’s actions during an
    investigation violated a defendant’s right of confrontation. The testimony at issue in
    Ricks involved out-of-court statements by an alleged accomplice, which implicated
    the defendant in a murder and robbery of a drug dealer. The court determined that
    testimony offered to explain police officers’ actions can be admissible as nonhearsay
    if certain conditions are met: “the conduct to be explained should be relevant,
    equivocal, and contemporaneous with the statements”; the testimony must survive a
    balancing test under Evid.R. 403; and “the statements cannot connect the accused
    with the crime charged.” Id. at ¶ 27, relying on State v. Blevins, 
    36 Ohio App.3d 147
    ,
    
    521 N.E.2d 1105
     (10th Dist.1987). Because the statements from the accomplice went
    beyond nonhearsay purposes and connected the defendant to the crime, the court
    determined that the statements were hearsay. Id. at ¶ 45. The court determined that
    the out-of-court statements offered in Thomas were offered for nonhearsay purposes
    because they provided “general background to explain what had led the police to
    begin an investigation” and the statements did not tie the defendants in that case to
    the crime charged. Id. at ¶ 20.
    {¶21} Applying the test as laid out in Ricks, we determine that Officer
    Wellborn’s testimony regarding the statements by the informant connected Jones to
    the crimes charged, and thus were inadmissible hearsay. Officer Wellborn testified
    that the informant had told him that the informant would be meeting Jones at the
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    Center and that drugs would be on Jones’s person or in his vehicle. Officer Wellborn
    could have stopped short of linking Jones to the drug charges, while also explaining
    how the officers began their investigation. See Ricks at ¶ 51 (French, J., concurring),
    quoting 2 McCormick, Evidence, Section 249, at 193-195 (7th Ed.2013) (“[i]t is
    usually possible to explain the course of an investigation without relating historical
    aspects of the case, and in most cases, testimony that the officer acted ‘upon
    information received,’ or words to that effect, will suffice.”).    Therefore, Officer
    Wellborn’s testimony related to the informant’s statements linking Jones to the
    criminal drug activity was hearsay.
    {¶22} Nevertheless, because Jones’s counsel failed to object to Officer
    Wellborn’s testimony after an initial sustained objection, this court reviews the
    admission of the testimony for plain error. See State v. Frazier, 
    73 Ohio St.3d 323
    ,
    332, 
    652 N.E.2d 1000
     (1995). Under a plain-error analysis, this court must affirm a
    conviction unless, but for the allegedly inadmissible evidence, the outcome of the
    trial would have been different. See State v. Lukacs, 
    188 Ohio App.3d 597
    , 2010-
    Ohio-2364, 
    936 N.E.2d 506
    , ¶ 34 (1st Dist.). Here, it cannot be said that the outcome
    of the trial would have been different absent the informant’s statements. The trial
    court dismissed the trafficking charge against Jones. As to the possession charge,
    the lawful search of the vehicle driven solely by Jones revealed heroin. Prior to
    uncovering the heroin, Jones had lied to police, telling them he had walked to the
    Center, and Jones had been arrested on an unrelated, outstanding warrant.
    Therefore, we overrule Jones’s second assignment of error.
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    Sufficiency of the Evidence
    {¶23} In his third assignment of error, Jones argues that the evidence
    adduced at trial was insufficient as a matter of law to support his conviction for
    possession under R.C. 2925.11(A). He contends that, because the heroin was in a
    closed console in a vehicle, which had been rented by someone else, no evidence
    existed that Jones possessed the heroin. We disagree.
    {¶24} The state need not prove that Jones actually possessed the heroin in
    order to prove possession, if the evidence shows that Jones constructively possessed
    the heroin by exercising dominion and control. See State v. Jackson, 1st Dist.
    Hamilton No. C-110570, 
    2012-Ohio-2727
    , ¶ 14, citing State v. Wolery, 
    46 Ohio St.2d 316
    , 329, 
    348 N.E.2d 351
     (1976). Furthermore, the state can show that a defendant
    has exercised dominion and control over an object through circumstantial evidence.
    See State v. Brown, 1st Dist. Hamilton No. C-120327, 
    2013-Ohio-2720
    , ¶ 43. In
    conducting a sufficiency-of-the-evidence inquiry, this court is not limited to
    considering only admissible evidence. See State v. Benton, 1st Dist. Hamilton Nos.
    C-130556, C-130557 and C-130558, 
    2014-Ohio-2163
    , ¶ 20, citing State v. Brewer, 
    121 Ohio St.3d 202
    , 
    2009-Ohio-593
    , 
    903 N.E.2d 284
    , ¶ 1, 19.
    {¶25} The evidence presented at trial showed that the officers had received a
    tip that a light-colored or silver SUV driven by Jones would be arriving at the Center
    carrying drugs.   A car, which had been driven by Jones and had matched the
    description given to the officers, had pulled into the Center’s parking lot.      The
    subsequent questioning and arrest of Jones by the officers had then led the officers
    to find heroin in the vehicle. Thus, the record contains sufficient evidence for the
    jury to conclude that the state had proven the elements of heroin possession beyond
    11
    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    a reasonable doubt. See State v. Jenks, 
    61 Ohio St.3d 259
    , 
    574 N.E.2d 492
     (1991),
    paragraph two of the syllabus.
    {¶26} We overrule Jones’s third assignment of error.
    Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
    {¶27} Jones’s fourth assignment of error lists several alleged omissions on
    the part of his counsel, which he argues amount to ineffective assistance of counsel.
    In order to succeed in reversing his conviction for ineffective assistance, Jones must
    not only show that his counsel’s performance was deficient, but that a reasonable
    probability exists that, but for his counsel’s omissions, the result of his trial would
    have been different. See Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 687, 694, 
    104 S.Ct. 2052
    , 
    80 L.Ed.2d 674
     (1984); State v. Bradley, 
    42 Ohio St.3d 136
    , 
    538 N.E.2d 373
    (1989), paragraphs two and three of the syllabus.
    {¶28} Jones, without citation to any legal authority, argues that his counsel
    was ineffective because he failed to: argue that the reliability of the informant had
    not been established by the state at the motion-to-suppress hearing; object to
    hearsay at the motion-to-suppress hearing; argue that the search of the vehicle had
    not been part of a traffic stop and that the police had failed to seek a search warrant;
    continue to object to Officer Wellborn’s hearsay testimony regarding statements by
    the informant; ask for a limiting instruction that hearsay evidence should not be used
    to prove the truth of the matter asserted; request a jury instruction on constructive
    possession; argue that Jones’s Confrontation Clause rights were violated; and argue
    that Jones did not receive a fair trial.
    {¶29} Assuming for purposes of argument that the failures constituted
    deficient performance, we are not persuaded that, had Jones’s counsel performed the
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    acts listed by Jones, the result would have been different. Jones lied to police in an
    attempt to disassociate himself from the vehicle, the officers arrested Jones on an
    unrelated, outstanding warrant, and a lawful search of the vehicle revealed the
    presence of heroin. Thus, we overrule Jones’s fourth assignment of error.
    Conclusion
    {¶30} In conclusion, Jones’s assignments of error are without merit. We
    affirm the judgment of the trial court.
    Judgment affirmed.
    CUNNINGHAM, P.J., and DINKELACKER, J., concur.
    Please note:
    The court has recorded its own entry on the date of the release of this opinion.
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