State v. Mitchell ( 2022 )


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  • [Cite as State v. Mitchell, 
    2022-Ohio-4355
    .]
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT OF OHIO
    HAMILTON COUNTY, OHIO
    STATE OF OHIO,                                :   APPEAL NOS. C-220155
    C-220156
    Plaintiff-Appellee,                  :   TRIAL NOS. B-2003758
    B-2003749
    :
    VS.
    :     O P I N I O N.
    WILLIAM MITCHELL,                             :
    Defendant-Appellant.                    :
    Criminal Appeals From: Hamilton County Court of Common Pleas
    Judgments Appealed From Are: Affirmed in Part, Reversed in Part, and Cause
    Remanded
    Date of Judgment Entry on Appeal: December 7, 2022
    Joseph T. Deters, Hamilton County Prosecuting Attorney, and Sean M. Donovan,
    Assistant Prosecuting Attorney, for Plaintiff-Appellee,
    Raymond T. Faller, Hamilton County Public Defender, and Krista Gieske, Assistant
    Public Defender, for Defendant-Appellant.
    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    BERGERON, Judge.
    {¶1}   The production of a rap video in a parking lot set in motion a chain of
    events that ended with defendant-appellant William Mitchell’s arrest and ultimate
    convictions for having weapons under disability and possession of and trafficking in
    marijuana. On appeal, Mr. Mitchell claims that the trial court erred in denying his
    motion to suppress, essentially challenging the police’s extraction of him from an
    apartment where he insists he did not live. He also maintains that the trial court erred
    in issuing a broad firearms forfeiture edict and in failing to merge his offenses for
    trafficking in and possession of marijuana. Based on the record at hand, we find that
    the trial court properly denied Mr. Mitchell’s motion to suppress, but—consistent with
    the state’s concession on the latter two points—we reverse the trial court’s judgments
    in part and remand this cause, sustaining the issues raised in his second assignment
    of error regarding the forfeiture and merger of his allied drug offenses.
    I.
    {¶2}   In the late afternoon hours of July 26, 2020, police received a call from
    a concerned citizen who had witnessed a group of men—including one carrying a
    firearm—filming a music video in the parking lot of an apartment complex. After
    responding to the scene, Cincinnati Police officers observed three men they believed
    to be of interest, one of whom (later determined to be Mr. Mitchell) walked away and
    entered the bordering apartment building. The officers detained the two remaining
    men while they investigated.
    {¶3}   Prior to Mr. Mitchell’s departure from the scene, an officer saw him
    reach into the front passenger side of a nearby parked white Jeep before he
    disappeared into the apartment building. One of the men detained by the officers,
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    Steven Pollard, admitted that the white Jeep belonged to him. The officers entered
    and searched the Jeep, recovering a .380 caliber handgun from beneath the front
    passenger seat. This firearm provided the basis for the weapons under disability
    charge later brought against Mr. Mitchell.
    {¶4}   Mr. Mitchell’s name eventually emerged when one of the officers
    accessed his police cruiser computer and discovered that Mr. Mitchell had used Mr.
    Pollard’s name as an alias in the past. The officer retrieved a letter from the Jeep
    addressed to Mr. Pollard, bearing the address of unit 8 of the Kentucky Avenue
    apartment complex into which Mr. Mitchell had just entered.
    {¶5}   In an attempt to locate Mr. Mitchell, the officers tried to enter the
    complex, but the front entrance to the building was locked. Stymied in the efforts to
    track him down, the officers subsequently released the two remaining men, wrapping
    up their investigation for the day.
    {¶6}   An arrest warrant was issued for Mr. Mitchell for the offense of having
    weapons under disability, premised upon a prior drug-related felony conviction. The
    following day, July 27, Officer Amber Bolte of the Cincinnati Police Department’s
    Fugitive Apprehension Unit received a copy of the arrest warrant and commenced
    efforts to locate him. Following standard procedure, Officer Bolte searched through
    police databases to ascertain his residence. Although the arrest warrant listed Mr.
    Mitchell’s address as one on Lehman Avenue, Officer Bolte’s search identified an
    address on Kentucky Avenue as his most recent place of residence. From the arrest
    warrant affidavit, Officer Bolte knew that the weapons under disability charge flowed
    from the recovery of a handgun from a white Jeep parked outside an apartment
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    complex on Kentucky Avenue. Given those two signs pointing to Kentucky Avenue,
    Officer Bolte figured that was a good place to start her search for Mr. Mitchell.
    {¶7}   A group of officers, including Officer Bolte, arrived at the Kentucky
    Avenue address, noticing a white Jeep parked out front as they pulled up. Concluding
    that this was the same Jeep mentioned in the affidavit supporting the arrest warrant,
    Officer Bolte peered in its window, observing a piece of mail addressed to Mr. Mitchell
    at unit 8 of the apartment complex on Kentucky Avenue. She then proceeded to enter
    the rental office of the apartment complex to speak with a rental agent.
    {¶8}   One of the rental agents confirmed that Mr. Mitchell resided in the
    apartment complex at unit 8, but noted that the lease agreement did not list his name.
    The agent identified Mr. Mitchell from a photograph, adding that he had seen him
    coming and going from the apartment. With the other officers positioned around the
    building to prevent any escape, Officer Bolte ascended the steps to the top floor of the
    apartment building to access unit 8.
    {¶9}   Officer Bolte knocked on the door, announced herself as “Cincinnati
    Police,” and called for Mr. Mitchell to come out. After a period of knocking, officers
    heard movement—what sounded like furniture being moved around inside the
    apartment. The officers continued to knock and call out to Mr. Mitchell for about the
    next half hour, to no avail. During this time, several officers witnessed Mr. Mitchell
    looking out of the apartment unit window on numerous occasions.
    {¶10} Eventually, Officer Bolte retrieved a key from the rental agent and used
    it to unlock the door. However, large pieces of furniture lodged against the door
    prevented her from opening it more than a crack. As officers continued to call out for
    Mr. Mitchell, one of the officers kicked the door the rest of the way open, but the
    4
    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    officers still did not enter the apartment. Appreciating his predicament, Mr. Mitchell
    gave up and came out into the doorway, completely naked, but holding a robe or
    blanket.
    {¶11} Mr. Mitchell stepped out onto the common landing of the apartment,
    still in a state of undress, verified his name, and was taken into custody. Officer Bolte
    asked Mr. Mitchell if he would like some clothes, and he responded in the affirmative,
    even though officers explained that they would have to conduct a protective sweep of
    the apartment before finding him some attire. Officers conducted the protective sweep
    of the apartment to confirm that no one else was inside the apartment while they
    retrieved some clothes. At some point during the sweep, officers observed marijuana
    in plain view and seized the contraband.
    {¶12} Two Hamilton County grand juries returned indictments against Mr.
    Mitchell for having a weapon while under disability and for trafficking in and
    possession of marijuana. With regard to his weapons under disability charge, the
    grand jury issued a forfeiture specification providing: “The Grand Jurors further find
    and specify that on or about the 26th day of July in the year Two Thousand Twenty,
    William Mitchell possessed a COBRA .38 HANDGUN and said property was used in
    the commission of Count 1 hereof.”
    {¶13} Mr. Mitchell filed a motion to suppress, seeking to exclude the
    marijuana found by the officers, which the trial court denied after conducting an
    evidentiary hearing on the motion in April 2021. At the heart of his argument in favor
    of suppression, Mr. Mitchell claimed that he was an overnight guest at the apartment
    where he was arrested, so police needed to obtain a search warrant before they could
    enter the apartment to apprehend him.
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    {¶14} Mr. Mitchell subsequently pleaded no contest to all three charges
    against him and the trial court found him guilty of those charges. The trial court then
    sentenced him to a period of community control and ordered that “firearms are to be
    forfeited to the arresting agency for use and/or destruction.” Mr. Mitchell now
    appeals, featuring two assignments of error. In his first assignment of error, he
    challenges the denial of his motion to suppress. In his second assignment of error, he
    maintains that the trial court committed plain error in issuing an overbroad firearms
    forfeiture mandate and in failing to merge his offenses for trafficking in and possession
    of marijuana.
    II.
    {¶15} In his first assignment of error, Mr. Mitchell contends that the trial
    court erred when it denied his motion to suppress. Specifically, he contests the trial
    court’s factual determination that the police had a reasonable belief that he resided in
    unit 8 of the apartment complex on Kentucky Avenue. The morning of his arrest, two
    incursions into the apartment occurred—first, when the police initially opened the
    door, and second, when the officers entered the apartment to retrieve his clothing. Mr.
    Mitchell takes issue with the initial opening of the door.
    {¶16} “Appellate review of a motion to suppress presents a mixed question of
    law and fact.” State v. Foster, 
    2017-Ohio-4036
    , 
    90 N.E.3d 1282
     (1st Dist.), ¶ 15,
    quoting State v. Burnside, 
    100 Ohio St.3d 152
    , 
    2003-Ohio-5372
    , 
    797 N.E.2d 71
    , ¶ 8.
    In reviewing the decision of the trial court on a motion to suppress, we employ a two-
    step analysis. First, an appellate court “must accept the trial court’s factual findings if
    they are supported by competent, credible evidence.” Foster at ¶ 15. Second, based
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    on the supported factual record, the appellate court must then “review the trial court’s
    application of the law to those facts de novo.” 
    Id.
    {¶17} The crux of Mr. Mitchell’s appeals turns on the trial court’s factual
    determination that he resided at unit 8 of the apartment complex on Kentucky Avenue.
    He contends that he actually resided elsewhere, protesting that he was simply a guest
    at that location. From that premise, Mr. Mitchell posits that police needed to obtain
    a separate search warrant to enter the apartment because he did not live there. It is
    well-established in Ohio that “an arrest warrant founded on probable cause implicitly
    carries with it the limited authority to enter a dwelling in which the suspect lives when
    there is reason to believe the suspect is within.” State v. Martin, 
    151 Ohio St.3d 470
    ,
    
    2017-Ohio-7556
    , 
    90 N.E.3d 857
    , ¶ 78, quoting Payton v. New York, 
    445 U.S. 573
    , 603,
    
    100 S.Ct. 1371
    , 
    63 L.E.2d 639
     (1980). The question before the trial court, in evaluating
    the propriety of the police’s decision to enter the Kentucky Avenue apartment to arrest
    Mr. Mitchell, was whether the officers had “a reasonable belief, founded in common
    sense and based on the totality of the circumstances, that the suspect reside[d] in the
    home and that he [was] present at the time.” State v. Cooks, 2d Dist. Clark No. 2016-
    CA-40, 
    2017-Ohio-218
    , ¶ 11.
    {¶18} Here, while the arrest warrant listed an address on Lehman Avenue,
    police databases identified Mr. Mitchell’s most recent address as a Kentucky Avenue
    address that correlates to the rental office (different than the Kentucky Avenue address
    of the apartment building where he was arrested). Officer Bolte also recalled that the
    underlying incident providing the basis for the arrest (the recovery of the firearm)
    occurred near that apartment complex.          Upon arriving at the Kentucky Avenue
    apartment building, Officer Bolte spotted the white Jeep described in the arrest
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    warrant parked out front. Looking inside the passenger window, Officer Bolte noticed
    a piece of mail sitting on the passenger seat of the vehicle addressed to Mr. Mitchell,
    with the Kentucky Avenue address, apartment unit 8, listed. Moreover, the rental
    agent identified Mr. Mitchell as residing at unit 8 and recalled seeing him coming and
    going from the apartment. And officers observed Mr. Mitchell looking out of the
    window of the apartment on several occasions while waiting for him to answer the
    door.
    {¶19} These facts convinced the trial court that Mr. Mitchell resided in the
    apartment. And based on our review of the record, competent, credible evidence
    existed to support the trial court’s determination at the suppression hearing that police
    did, in fact, have a reasonable belief that he resided at the apartment in question and
    that he was present at the time the warrant was executed. Because Mr. Mitchell does
    not specifically challenge the protective sweep of the apartment (since it occurred at
    his behest to grab some clothes), that nearly resolves this assignment of error.
    {¶20} The final point broached by Mr. Mitchell is that officers violated the
    “knock and announce” rule before entering the apartment. However, he did not raise
    the issue before the trial court; therefore, he has waived the issue on appeal. See State
    v. Billings, 1st Dist. Hamilton Nos. C-200245 and C-200246, 
    2021-Ohio-2194
    , ¶ 15-
    16, quoting City of Xenia v. Wallace, 
    37 Ohio St.3d 216
    , 219, 
    524 N.E.2d 889
     (1988),
    and State v. Wintermeyer, 
    158 Ohio St.3d 513
    , 
    2019-Ohio-5156
    , 
    145 N.E.3d 278
    , ¶ 19
    (“To suppress evidence obtained pursuant to a warrantless search or seizure, the
    defendant must ‘raise the grounds upon which the validity of the search or seizure is
    challenged in such a manner as to give the prosecutor notice of the basis for the
    challenge.’ * * * ‘Arguments not made by the defendant at the suppression hearing are,
    8
    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    therefore, deemed to have been waived.’ ”). Accordingly, we overrule Mr. Mitchell’s
    first assignment of error.
    III.
    {¶21} In his second assignment of error, Mr. Mitchell claims that the trial
    court erred in two instances—first, when it failed to merge his trafficking and
    possession offenses, and second, when it issued a general order forfeiting firearms.
    The state, for its part, agrees.
    {¶22} First, Mr. Mitchell contends that the trial court erred when it failed to
    merge the convictions for trafficking in and possession of marijuana for purposes of
    sentencing as allied offenses of similar import. While some discussion of merger took
    place during the plea colloquy, the sentencing entry reflects a conviction on both
    charges. Because Mr. Mitchell failed to raise this issue before the trial court, he waived
    all but plain error. See State v. Rogers, 
    143 Ohio St.3d 385
    , 
    2015-Ohio-2459
    , 
    38 N.E.3d 860
    , ¶ 3 (“An accused’s failure to raise the issue of allied offenses of similar
    import in the trial court forfeits all but plain error[.]”).
    {¶23} “Where the same conduct by defendant can be construed to constitute
    two or more allied offenses of similar import, the indictment or information may
    contain counts for all such offenses, but the defendant may be convicted of only one.”
    State v. Cabrales, 
    118 Ohio St.3d 54
    , 
    2008-Ohio-1625
    , 
    886 N.E.2d 181
    , ¶ 12, quoting
    R.C. 2941.25(A). In determining whether charges are allied offenses of similar import,
    and accordingly require merger, the court must answer three questions. “If any of the
    following is true, the offenses cannot merge and the defendant may be convicted and
    sentenced for multiple offenses: (1) the offenses are dissimilar in import or
    significance—in other words, each offense caused separate, identifiable harm, (2) the
    9
    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    offenses were committed separately, or (3) the offenses were committed with separate
    animus or motivation.” State v. Ruff, 
    143 Ohio St.3d 114
    , 
    2015-Ohio-995
    , 
    34 N.E.3d 892
    , ¶ 25.
    {¶24} Here, the marijuana found in the apartment where Mr. Mitchell was
    arrested underpins his convictions for both trafficking in and possession of marijuana.
    A review of the record shows that these offenses were not dissimilar in import or
    significance, they represented one and the same transaction, and they were not
    committed with separate animus or motivation. And Ohio courts have long held that,
    in most instances, trafficking and possession charges based on the same contraband
    are allied offenses requiring merger. See State v. Murph, 1st Dist. Hamilton No. C-
    150263, 
    2015-Ohio-5076
    , ¶ 7, quoting Cabrales at ¶ 30 (“ ‘[T]rafficking in a controlled
    substance under R.C. 2925.03(A)(2) and possession of that same controlled substance
    under R.C. 2925.11(A) are allied offenses of similar import’ * * * and the trial court
    should have merged those offenses for the purposes of sentencing.”); see also State v.
    Fenderson, 6th Dist. Erie No. E-21-018, 
    2022-Ohio-1973
    , ¶ 86 (“[T]he trial court erred
    when it failed to merge appellant’s convictions for possession of drugs and trafficking
    in drugs” where the state acknowledged that “both convictions involved the same
    drugs from the same transaction, that there was no evidence [defendant] intended to
    retain a portion of the drugs for his own personal use, that the victim of both offenses
    was society in general, and that the harm from the offenses was not separate and
    identifiable.”). Consequently, as the state acknowledges, the trial court plainly erred
    in failing to merge the marijuana trafficking and possession offenses.
    {¶25} Second, Mr. Mitchell asserts that the forfeiture order’s general reference
    to “firearms” stretches too broadly, as it could be read to apply to weapons with no
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    connection to his weapons under disability offense. The state agrees, conceding in its
    brief that the order should be corrected to apply only to the handgun identified in the
    indictment. Because the defense again failed to raise this issue at the trial level, we
    review only for plain error. See State v. Jones, 11th Dist. Ashtabula No. 2016-A-0017,
    
    2017-Ohio-251
    , ¶ 62-66 (reviewing a forfeiture challenge only for plain error where
    the defendant did not challenge the order below).
    {¶26}    Ohio’s forfeiture scheme is codified in R.C. 2981.01 through 2981.14.
    Pursuant to R.C. 2981.03, property may be forfeited only by the inclusion of a
    forfeiture specification in the charging instrument or by the filing of a civil forfeiture
    action. The weapons under disability count in the indictment in the case numbered
    B-2003749 was accompanied by a forfeiture specification (quoted above) that limited
    itself to a specific handgun.
    {¶27} The forfeiture order in the judgment entry, however, went further,
    invoking the plural of “firearm”: “Firearms are to be forfeited to the arresting agency
    for use and/or destruction.” Beyond a specification covering the Cobra .38 handgun,
    the trial court lacked authority to order any other firearms to be forfeited on the state
    of this record. See State v. Haymond, 5th Dist. Stark No. 2009-CA-00078, 2009-
    Ohio-6817, ¶ 35 (holding that the trial court has no authority to order a weapon
    forfeited where the complaint charging the offenses did not contain a specification
    covering the property subject to forfeiture).
    {¶28} Accordingly, we sustain Mr. Mitchell’s second assignment of error,
    finding plain error in the trial court’s failure to merge his offenses for trafficking in
    and possession of marijuana and in the trial court’s issuance of an overbroad firearms
    forfeiture requirement.
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    *       *      *
    {¶29} In light of the foregoing analysis, we sustain Mr. Mitchell’s second
    assignment of error, reverse in part the trial court’s judgments, and remand this cause
    with instructions to merge Mr. Mitchell’s trafficking in and possession of marijuana
    offenses and to correct the forfeiture order to apply only to the weapon underlying the
    commission of the offense. But we overrule Mr. Mitchell’s first assignment of error
    challenging the trial court’s denial of his motion to suppress.       The trial court’s
    judgments are affirmed in all other respects.
    Judgments affirmed in part, reversed in part, and cause remanded.
    MYERS, P.J., and ZAYAS, J., concur.
    Please note:
    The court has recorded its entry on the date of the release of this opinion.
    12
    

Document Info

Docket Number: C-220155 & C-220156

Judges: Bergeron

Filed Date: 12/7/2022

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 12/7/2022