City of Cleveland v. Egeland

497 N.E.2d 1383, 26 Ohio App. 3d 83, 26 Ohio B. 258, 1986 Ohio App. LEXIS 8811
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 21, 1986
Docket50440 and 50441
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 497 N.E.2d 1383 (City of Cleveland v. Egeland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Cleveland v. Egeland, 497 N.E.2d 1383, 26 Ohio App. 3d 83, 26 Ohio B. 258, 1986 Ohio App. LEXIS 8811 (Ohio Ct. App. 1986).

Opinions

Markus, J.

The defendants appeal from their convictions for aggravated disorderly conduct by lying in the street after officers asked them to move. They both state that they were demonstrating against nuclear warfare and argue that (a) the jury lacked sufficient evidence to support its verdicts, (b) the prosecutor made an improper argument during his summation, and (c) the court imposed an unreasonably excessive sentence. Defendant Egeland also complains that the court restricted questions and denied requested jury instructions about nuclear warfare hazards as a justification for his conduct.

We agree that the court failed to demonstrate its compliance with statutory factors for sentencing. Otherwise, the defendants have shown no prejudicial legal error. Hence, we affirm the convictions but remand the two cases for resentencing.

I

At the trial, the jury heard testimony from the two police officers who arrested the defendants and the defendants themselves. Defendant Egeland then called “experts” on nuclear technology and allegedly inadequate citizen complaint procedures, to support his claim that nuclear dangers justified his conduct.

The police officers testified that protesters against nuclear warfare had conducted an organized demonstration that day. With permits from the city, they had pitched tents on the northwest quadrant of the Public Square and paraded on city streets during early afternoon hours. They had distributed leaflets and expressed their views to passing citizens without police interference.

Both police officers testified about Thompson’s conduct. At approximately 4:00 p.m., Thompson and some fifty other protesters lay down .in the intersection of Ontario Street and Euclid Avenue. In that position they obstructed traffic on the south side of the Cleveland Public Square. Various’ officérs told the protesters to move from the street and rerouted several hundred cars. Many of the protesters did move from that location, but Thompson remained lying there for twenty minutes.

One of the testifying officers was the police captain in charge of crowd control for that day’s organized demonstration. At approximately 4:20 p.m., he knelt next to Thompson and *85 directed him to move from the street or he would be arrested. Thompson acknowledged that he heard the officer’s instruction and stated that he would not comply. The captain then directed two other, officers to carry Thompson off the street. One of those officers again requested Thompson to leave the street. He did not, so two officers lifted him and carried him to the sidewalk.

The second officer saw approximately thirty-five of the demonstrators leave the street at Euclid and Ontario shortly before he arrested Thompson. That group moved to the east side of the Public Square where they lay down and obstructed traffic for five minutes. This officer identified defendant Egeland as one of the principal participants in the demonstration. He observed Egeland lying with the demonstrators at the Euclid and Ontario intersection. He noted that Egeland left that location after the officers directed the demonstrators to move.

At 5:30 p.m., this officer saw Egeland lying in the intersection of Superior Avenue and East Roadway on the east side of the Public Square. After Egeland remained there fifteen seconds, the officer told him to move from the street. Egeland failed to move, so the officer carried him off the street. He then transported both Thompson and Ege-land to police headquarters.

Defendant Egeland testified that he participated that day in the “No Business As Usual Day” protest against nuclear war. He arrived at the Public Square near noon. His group of “about three dozen” had a permit to march down Euclid Avenue from the Public Square to Cleveland State University. They sought “to inform people of the threat of nuclear war.” They carried signs and distributed leaflets without interference. The parade returned to the Public Square where it “broke up.” The demonstrators at the Public Square increased in number from “fifty or sixty” to “the hundreds” as the afternoon progressed. He and others engaged passersby in conversations about such military activity and its possible effect on Cleveland.

He acknowledged that he was lying in the street for fifteen to twenty minutes on the south side of the square. He claimed that he moved without hearing an officer direct him to do so, because he learned that traffic had been diverted. He then moved to the east side of the square where he and others lay down in the street for a short time. They moved when they again learned that traffic had been diverted.

He then moved around the downtown area with others who carried signs and distributed pamphlets. When he returned to the square, he saw Thompson in the police van and realized that the police had arrested Thompson. He then lay down in front of the van at the place where the police apprehended him. He claimed that he had been there only five seconds when the officer moved him. He stated that others were lying near him at the time. He denied that an officer told him to move, though he said that another protester told him he would be arrested if he did not.

He explained the dangers and consequences of nuclear warfare at great length. He said that his activities that day, including his lying in the street, “was [sic] an attempt to save the world from nuclear destruction.” On each occasion that he lay in the street, he knew “it was going to stop traffic.” It was symbolic to show that people would die in the street in a nuclear attack. He testified that he felt strongly enough about his views that he was willing “to risk the penalty involved in this case.”

Defendant Thompson described his activities that day, beginning at 3:00 p.m. He is a poet, and he read anti-war poems to some of the assembled police *86 officers and others. He acknowledged that he later lay in the street for twenty minutes as the police diverted traffic around him. He admitted that he was lying in the street when an officer told him to move or be arrested. He told the officer he would not move, and the police carried him away. He also described his concerns about the consequences of a nuclear war which motivated his actions.

Defendant Egeland then called an electrical engineer to describe the engineer’s perception of the risks and consequences of nuclear warfare. He also called a law professor to discuss procedures available for public complaint about such matters. Although the court permitted the defendants to explain their conduct, including their beliefs about nuclear war, it restricted some of the “experts’ ” answers.

II

Thompson’s first assigned error and Egeland’s first and fourth assigned errors all challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to support their respective convictions. Section 605.03 of the Codified Ordinances of Cleveland defines the offense for which they were convicted:

“Disorderly Conduct * * *
“(a) No person shall recklessly cause inconvenience, annoyance or alarm to another, by doing any of the following:
<(# * *

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Bluebook (online)
497 N.E.2d 1383, 26 Ohio App. 3d 83, 26 Ohio B. 258, 1986 Ohio App. LEXIS 8811, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-cleveland-v-egeland-ohioctapp-1986.