State v. Koffel , 2024 Ohio 4519 ( 2024 )


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  • [Cite as State v. Koffel, 
    2024-Ohio-4519
    .]
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
    SEVENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    COLUMBIANA COUNTY
    STATE OF OHIO,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    JOSEPH KOFFEL,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    OPINION AND JUDGMENT ENTRY
    Case No. 
    23 CO 0046
    Criminal Appeal from the
    Court of Common Pleas of Columbiana County, Ohio
    Case No. 2023 CR 268
    BEFORE:
    Carol Ann Robb, Cheryl L. Waite, Katelyn Dickey, Judges.
    JUDGMENT:
    Affirmed.
    Atty. Vito J. Abruzzino, Prosecuting Attorney, Atty. Shelley M. Pratt, Assistant Prosecuting
    Attorney, Columbiana County Prosecutor’s Office, for Plaintiff-Appellee and
    Atty. Robert T. McDowall Jr., Robert T. McDowall Co, LLC, for Defendant-Appellant.
    Dated: September 10, 2024
    –2–
    Robb, P.J.
    {¶1}   Defendant-Appellant Joseph Koffel appeals the decision of the Columbiana
    County Common Pleas Court denying his motion to suppress evidence discovered when
    he was arrested on a municipal court warrant. The trial court applied the good faith
    exception to the exclusionary rule. Appellant believes the arresting officer’s reliance on
    the warrant was not objectively reasonable. For the following reasons, the trial court’s
    judgment is affirmed.
    STATEMENT OF THE CASE
    {¶2}   On March 4, 2022, Appellant was a passenger in a car during a traffic stop.
    Due to the smell of marijuana, the police asked the occupants to exit the vehicle and
    identify themselves. According to dispatch, the system showed Appellant had a warrant
    through East Liverpool Municipal Court. Appellant claimed he had already been arrested
    on the warrant and sentenced on the case. The police at the scene waited for dispatch
    to “confirm” the information regarding the status of the warrant. After dispatch confirmed
    the existence of an outstanding warrant, Appellant was arrested. During a search incident
    to arrest, methamphetamine was discovered on Appellant.
    {¶3}   Appellant was indicted for aggravated drug possession and aggravated
    drug trafficking, both third-degree felonies due to the amount of drugs. He filed a motion
    to suppress the drugs arguing the arrest was not lawful because the dispatcher
    “mistakenly” told the police officers an arrest warrant was outstanding. He emphasized
    the municipal court labeled his case inactive and pointed out the warrant should have
    been purged from the municipal court database after he was arrested on a subsequent
    secret indictment.
    {¶4}   The arrest warrant relied upon by the officer was issued on May 25, 2021
    in East Liverpool Municipal Court No. 2021 CRA 728 for felony domestic violence based
    on a May 22, 2021 incident. On December 2, 2021, the municipal court ruled, “The above
    case is placed in the inactive files for lack of prosecution. Bench warrant, warrant, and/or
    summons shall remain active.”
    {¶5}   In the meantime, in Columbiana County Common Pleas Court No. 2021 CR
    409, a grand jury issued a secret indictment on July 14, 2021, apparently based on the
    Case No. 
    23 CO 0046
    –3–
    same conduct at issue in the municipal court complaint. Appellant was arrested on the
    indictment on October 10, 2021 and arraigned on November 15, 2021. He pled guilty
    and was sentenced to community control on January 4, 2022.
    {¶6}   The record in the municipal court case was not updated until Appellant was
    brought before that court on March 7, 2022 (after the arrest at issue herein). The
    municipal court then dismissed the case, noting he was indicted and already sentenced
    in 2021 CR 409.
    {¶7}   The state filed a response to Appellant’s motion to suppress the drugs found
    during his arrest on the municipal court warrant. The state pointed out exclusion is not a
    necessary consequence of a Fourth Amendment violation and asked the court to apply
    the good faith exception to the exclusionary rule. The state urged law enforcement’s
    reliance on the warrant was reasonable, especially because confirmation was obtained
    after the initial dispatch declaring a warrant was reported as active in the municipal court’s
    database. The state emphasized that any error regarding the status of the arrest warrant
    here was not the responsibility of the police.
    {¶8}   The parties advised the trial court a hearing was not necessary as the facts
    were not in material dispute. On September 11, 2023, the trial court denied the motion
    to suppress. It was pointed out that even if the arrest warrant had become invalid by the
    time of Appellant’s arrest, the question of whether the exclusionary rule should be applied
    was a separate issue. The court reviewed an Ohio Supreme Court case applying the
    good faith exception to the exclusionary rule where a police officer was objectively
    reasonable in relying on a warrant that was later found to be invalid. See State v.
    Hoffman, 
    2014-Ohio-4795
    . The trial court concluded the exclusionary rule would not
    serve the purpose of deterring police misconduct because there was no evidence any
    action by a police officer was objectively unreasonable, in bad faith, or in flagrant
    disregard of the Fourth Amendment.
    {¶9}   Appellant thereafter pled no contest to the charges, and the court imposed
    a jointly-recommended prison term of 18 months on each count (concurrent with each
    other and consecutive to 21 CR 409).         Appellant filed a timely notice of appeal to
    challenge the suppression decision.
    Case No. 
    23 CO 0046
    –4–
    ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
    {¶10} Appellant sets forth the following assignment of error:
    “WHETHER A POLICE OFFICER WHO IS PROVIDED CONFLICTING
    INFORMATION ON WHETHER A SUSPECT HAS AN OUTSTANDING AND ACTIVE
    ARREST WARRANT ACTS IN AN OBJECTIVELY REASONABLE MANNER BY
    ACCEPTING THE INFORMATION RELAYED BY DISPATCH WITHOUT ADDITIONAL
    INQUIRY.”
    {¶11} In general, the denial of a motion to suppress presents a mixed question of
    law and fact on appeal. State v. Castagnola, 
    2015-Ohio-1565
    , ¶ 32, citing State v.
    Burnside, 
    2003-Ohio-5372
    . The trial court’s resolution of factual questions while weighing
    the evidence is accepted if it is supported by competent, credible evidence, and the
    reviewing court then independently determines whether the facts satisfied the applicable
    legal test without deference to the trial court’s legal conclusion. Burnside at ¶ 8. If a
    warrant is invalid, the court “must then determine whether the good-faith exception
    applies, and that question is a question of law, subject to de novo review by the appellate
    court.” Castagnola at ¶ 32. The parties agreed Appellant’s motion presented a legal
    issue to the trial court.
    {¶12} Appellant contends the reliance on the warrant was not objectively
    reasonable. He believes the fact that the officer waited to arrest him until after the initial
    dispatch was confirmed shows the officer had concerns as to the accuracy of the report
    on the warrant’s status.     Noting he told the officer the case was already resolved,
    Appellant claims “a simple internet search would have disclosed” the municipal court
    labeled the case “inactive” in the same entry stating the warrant “shall remain active” and
    claims this information would have “raised unanswered questions.” He then claims a
    check of the common pleas court’s website would have led to the discovery of an
    indictment (suggesting this could have been compared to the date, charge, and victim in
    the municipal court case that generated the May 25, 2021 arrest warrant).
    {¶13} A Fourth Amendment violation does not automatically result in the
    suppression of evidence under the exclusionary rule, which is a judicially created
    deterrent remedy and not a personal constitutional right. Hoffman, 
    2014-Ohio-4795
    , at ¶
    24. The propriety of applying a suppression remedy under the exclusionary rule in a
    Case No. 
    23 CO 0046
    –5–
    certain situation invokes a distinct analysis from the question of whether a defendant’s
    Fourth Amendment rights were violated. 
    Id.
     Before excluding evidence, “the deterrence
    benefits of suppression must outweigh its heavy costs.” Id. at ¶ 25.
    {¶14} The Supreme Court has explained the exclusionary rule is not applicable
    “when, for instance, law-enforcement officers act in objectively reasonable good-faith
    reliance on a search warrant that is later determined to be invalid, or on an arrest warrant
    that has been recalled or quashed or is otherwise no longer active.” (Citations omitted.)
    State v. Harrison, 
    2021-Ohio-4465
    , ¶ 44. “The exclusionary rule is designed to deter
    police misconduct that flagrantly, deliberately, or recklessly violates the Fourth
    Amendment. When officers act in good-faith reliance on a warrant that is later determined
    to be invalid, suppressing that evidence does not serve the purpose of the exclusionary
    rule.” Hoffman at ¶ 46.
    {¶15} Accordingly, evidence will not be excluded when it is discovered by an
    officer acting in good faith when executing a warrant issued by a court. Id. at ¶ 29-31,
    citing United States v. Leon, 
    468 U.S. 897
     (1984) (applying the good faith exception where
    a search warrant was subsequently invalidated for a lack of probable cause), Herring v.
    United States, 
    555 U.S. 135
     (2009) (applying the good faith exception where police
    arrested a suspect on a warrant, which had been recalled, in reliance on a police database
    that had not been changed after a hard copy of the warrant was returned to the clerk’s
    office in a neighboring county months earlier), and Arizona v. Evans, 
    514 U.S. 1
     (1995)
    (applying the good faith exception where the officer relied on incorrect information in a
    court database about an outstanding arrest warrant). A judicial employee’s mistake as to
    an arrest warrant does not prompt the application of the exclusionary rule, which deals
    with deterring police misconduct. Evans at 15.
    {¶16} Under the good-faith exception to the exclusionary rule, the court will not
    suppress evidence where the officer was “objectively reasonable” in relying on a warrant
    issued by a court. Hoffman, 
    141 Ohio St.3d 428
    , at ¶ 31. In such cases, once the warrant
    is issued by the court, exclusion of the evidence obtained due to the execution of the
    warrant would not deter police illegality. 
    Id.
     In general, an officer is not reasonably
    expected to question judicial authority.     Id. at ¶ 6, 31, 44 (no suppression where
    magistrate admitted rubber-stamping thousands of warrants without making probable
    Case No. 
    23 CO 0046
    –6–
    cause determinations, as the police officer had no reason to question the warrant he was
    executing).
    {¶17} Under the circumstances existing here, the police officer was objectively
    reasonable in relying on the arrest warrant, which was proper when issued and remained
    specifically labeled by the municipal court as an active warrant. To recap, dispatch
    informed the officer Appellant had an outstanding warrant from the municipal court.
    Appellant claimed he resolved the matter. The officer then waited until the warrant was
    confirmed by dispatch before placing Appellant under arrest. As for the municipal court’s
    docket mentioning the case was placed in an inactive file, the same docket entry
    specifically reflected the warrant would remain active. Law enforcement would not be
    unreasonable in relying on the court’s statement that the warrant would remain active.
    Under such circumstances and confirmation by dispatch, a suspect’s declaration that he
    believes he resolved a charge does not require an officer to conduct his own roadside
    computer search of a common pleas court’s record to sort through felony indictments in
    order to ascertain if any of the suspect’s indictments have dates, elements, and victims
    corresponding to a municipal court case with an outstanding warrant while also reviewing
    these aspects of the municipal court’s charging document.
    {¶18} As the trial court found, the application of the exclusionary rule to this case
    would not serve the purpose of deterring police misconduct; there was no evidence any
    action by the police officer was objectively unreasonable, in bad faith, or in flagrant
    disregard of the Fourth Amendment. Rather, the police officer’s reliance on the arrest
    warrant was objectively reasonable. Accordingly, Appellant’s assignment of error is
    without merit.
    {¶19} For the foregoing reasons, the trial court’s judgment is affirmed.
    Waite, J., concurs.
    Dickey, J., concurs.
    Case No. 
    23 CO 0046
    [Cite as State v. Koffel, 
    2024-Ohio-4519
    .]
    For the reasons stated in the Opinion rendered herein, the assignment of error is
    overruled and it is the final judgment and order of this Court that the judgment of the Court
    of Common Pleas of Columbiana County, Ohio, is affirmed. Costs waived.
    A certified copy of this opinion and judgment entry shall constitute the mandate in
    this case pursuant to Rule 27 of the Rules of Appellate Procedure. It is ordered that a
    certified copy be sent by the clerk to the trial court to carry this judgment into execution.
    NOTICE TO COUNSEL
    This document constitutes a final judgment entry.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 23 CO 0046

Citation Numbers: 2024 Ohio 4519

Judges: Robb

Filed Date: 9/10/2024

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/16/2024