DocketNumber: Nos. 91AP-1060, 91AP-1061.
Judges: McCormac, Young, Tyack
Filed Date: 7/2/1992
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 646
Defendant-appellant, Joaquin Ospina, appeals his convictions in the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas of two counts of trafficking in drugs for his possession and sale of cocaine in an amount equal to or greater than one hundred times the bulk amount in violation of R.C.
"First Assignment of Error
"Plain error, contra the
"Second Assignment of Error
"Prejudicial error occurs in a jury trial when the trial court allows, over objection, the prosecutor to impeach, through cross-examination, the silence of the accused at the time of his arrest when the accused did not speak or comprehend the English language. *Page 647
"Third Assignment of Error
"The verdict was against the manifest weight of the evidence."
In his first assignment of error, appellant maintains that the state committed plain error which denied him his constitutional right to confront adverse witnesses when it failed to call its confidential informant to testify against appellant at trial. The informant was not a codefendant in appellant's case. Presumably, appellant relies on the plain error doctrine due to his own failure to call the informant as a witness at trial or to otherwise object to her absence at trial.
Crim.R. 52(B) allows appellate recognition of error not brought to the attention of the trial court only if it was plain error affecting a substantial right of appellant. Traditionally, notice of plain error is taken with utmost caution only under exceptional circumstances and only when necessary to prevent a manifest miscarriage of justice. State v. Long (1978),
Appellant relies on Roviaro v. United States (1957),
Generally, the rule is that the state can withhold the identity of a confidential informant unless disclosure is helpful and beneficial to the defense. See State v. Beck (1963),
In a subsequent case involving a controlled drug sale by a police informant, the court, in State v. Williams (1983),
The record in this case proves that the identity and whereabouts of the informant employed by the sheriff's department to effectuate the controlled drug sale were revealed to appellant's defense counsel prior to trial. Therefore, the informant in this case was disclosed and no error whatsoever was committed by the trial court in this respect.
Appellant's contention that he was denied the right to confront an adverse witness against him because the prosecution did not call the informant to testify during its case in chief is meritless. Appellant could have subpoenaed the informant to testify on his behalf if he thought her testimony would impeach that of the testifying police officer. Moreover, the state's election not to call the informant as a witness in this case did not render their evidence insufficient to prove the charges against appellant beyond a reasonable doubt.
Finally, as the prosecutor explains, appellant was not denied effective assistance of counsel by his defense counsel's failure to call the informant to testify. It is not an unreasonable defense tactic to elect to impeach the witness produced by the prosecution rather than to discredit the prosecution's witness' testimony with the conflicting testimony of another witness. More importantly, appellant has not demonstrated any prejudice by his trial counsel's failure to call the informant as a witness because there is no showing or reasonable inference that the informant's testimony would contradict that of the police officer. It is more likely that it would only have jeopardized his defense.
For the foregoing reasons, appellant's first assignment of error is overruled.
Appellant's second assignment of error alleges prejudice resulting from the prosecution's cross-examination of appellant, over objection, regarding appellant's silence at the time of his arrest. Appellant specifically objected to the prosecutor's question whether appellant had previously provided the sheriff's department with the same exculpatory version of the events which led to his arrest that he testified to at trial. Appellant objected to the question on the basis that the prosecutor improperly inquired into appellant's post-arrest *Page 649
silence as forbidden by Doyle v. Ohio (1976),
In Doyle, supra, the United States Supreme Court held that testimony of a defendant's post-arrest silence, which also occurs subsequent to the administration of Miranda
warnings,1 violates the defendant's privilege against self-incrimination incorporated into the Due Process Clause of the
The rule announced in Doyle was distinguished in Jenkins v.Anderson (1980),
In this case, the record proved that appellant was arrested as the result of a drug raid. Appellant was interrogated by Franklin County Sheriff deputies following his arrest.2
Appellee maintains that Doyle, supra, is fully inapplicable to this case because the record does not prove that appellant's silence occurred subsequent to the administration of Miranda
warnings. Appellee relies upon Fletcher v. Weir (1982),
In Fletcher, supra, the Supreme Court confronted the situation wherein the defendant's failure to come forth with his exculpatory version of his innocence *Page 650
occurred after his arrest, but without affirmative evidence in the record that it occurred subsequent to the administration ofMiranda warnings. The court specifically held that, in the absence of the affirmative assurances embodied in Miranda
warnings, cross-examination of a defendant who chooses to testify in his own behalf regarding his post-arrest silence does not violate due process of law. Id. at 607,
In State v. Sabbah (1982),
Appellee's assessment of the record in this case is accurate and not even disputed by appellant. The transcript indicates that appellant was probably not administered Miranda warnings as he should have been. Appellant specifically testified that he has never received Miranda warnings by any of the arresting officers, nor did the police provide an interpreter which was obviously necessary to facilitate their interrogation of appellant. Although the clear implication from the transcript is that appellant's Miranda rights were violated, the issue presented by the prosecutor's cross-examination of him comes squarely within the rule of Fletcher, supra.3 Since there is no *Page 651 constitutional question presented by the prosecutor's cross-examination of appellant, we must turn to Ohio's Rules of Evidence to determine whether the cross-examination of appellant's post-arrest silence was improper as appellant asserts that it was. In Sabbah, supra, the court instructed the trial courts to determine, on a case-by-case basis pursuant to Evid.R. 403(A), the precise circumstances under which a defendant's pre-arrest silence is so inconsistent with his exculpatory testimony at trial that a reference to such silence is probative of the defendant's credibility or recent fabrication, and acknowledged that the high danger of jury misuse of a pre-arrest silence exists with equal force as with post-Miranda silence.
Appellant argues that the prosecutor's cross-examination was inadmissible because it was highly prejudicial as compared to its probative value. Appellant argues that the balancing test of Evid.R. 403(A) compelled the trial court to exclude cross-examination of appellant's failure to provide the arresting officers with the exculpatory statements offered by him at trial because the reason for appellant's failure to provide his exculpatory version at the time of his arrest was his inability to comprehend and speak the English language. Appellant urges that the prosecutor was required to lay a proper foundation that appellant could comprehend and speak the English language before he could proceed with cross-examination of appellant's post-arrest silence in this case. Appellant argues that the prosecutor's cross-examination of his post-arrest silence without first laying a foundation, that appellant understood the English language when, in fact, the prosecutor knew appellant did not comprehend or speak the English language, was tantamount to forcing an admission by appellant that he was involved in the drug activity at the location of the drug raid.
Appellant's assertion that the prosecutor failed to lay a foundation seems to be an attempt to establish that appellant's post-arrest silence was not, in fact, inconsistent with his direct examination and, therefore, the cross-examination was inadmissible for impeachment purposes as a prior inconsistent statement. Appellant's inability to comprehend and speak English is largely undisputed. Nevertheless, appellant's inability to speak English does not, in itself, render his silence inconsistent with his exculpatory direct examination. Rather, his inability to comprehend and speak English merely *Page 652 explains the inconsistency between appellant's post-arrest silence and in-court testimony. Therefore, the prosecutor did not have a duty to lay a foundation that appellant could understand and speak the English language prior to cross-examining him on his post-arrest silence.
Appellant responded on cross-examination through an interpreter that the reason he did not provide the arresting officers with his exculpatory version of the events surrounding his arrest was that the sheriff's deputies would not inform him in Spanish of the reasons for his arrest, nor would they provide an interpreter at any time during their post-arrest interrogations. Moreover, the presence of two interpreters throughout appellant's trial allowed appellant's counsel to easily defeat any inference that appellant's post-arrest silence amounted to an admission of guilt. In short, no prejudice resulted from the cross-examination of appellant for impeachment purposes of his post-arrest silence.
Appellant's second assignment of error is overruled.
Appellant's third assignment of error asserts that the jury's verdict was against the manifest weight of the evidence. The weight to be given the evidence and credibility of witnesses are issues to be decided by the trier of fact; and a reviewing court may not reverse the judgment of conviction in a criminal case where the record shows that a guilty verdict was returned by a jury on sufficient evidence and where no prejudicial error occurred in the actual trial of the case or in the instructions given the jury by the court. State v. DeHass (1967),
Appellant's conviction of trafficking drugs for his possession of cocaine in an amount equal to or greater than one hundred times the bulk amount in violation of R.C.
At oral argument, the issue was raised whether appellant's separate conviction of trafficking drugs for sale of cocaine in an amount equal to or greater than one hundred times the bulk amount, or one thousand grams, in violation of R.C.
In State v. Yanowitz (1980),
In this case, there was insufficient evidence to prove that appellant was aware of an offer to sell one kilo. Appellant was shown to only have delivered an amount less than one kilo. Thus, appellant's conviction for trafficking drugs for the sale ofcocaine in an amount equal to or exceeding one hundred times the bulk amount in violation of R.C.
Finally, the conviction of sale under R.C.
Appellant's third assignment of error is partly sustained and partly overruled.
Appellant's first two assignments of error are overruled. His third assignment of error is partially overruled and partially sustained. The judgment of the trial court for possession of cocaine in the superbulk amount is affirmed. The judgment for sale of cocaine in the superbulk amount is reversed and *Page 654 conviction of sale in the amount of less than superbulk is to be entered with appellant to be resentenced therefor in accordance with this opinion.
Judgments partially affirmedand partially reversed.
JOHN C. YOUNG, P.J., and TYACK, J., concur.