In Re Application of Tynes

2016 Ohio 3307, 54 N.E.3d 1237, 146 Ohio St. 3d 243
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJune 9, 2016
Docket2015-0543
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2016 Ohio 3307 (In Re Application of Tynes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Application of Tynes, 2016 Ohio 3307, 54 N.E.3d 1237, 146 Ohio St. 3d 243 (Ohio 2016).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

{¶ 1} Applicant, John David Tynes, is a candidate for admission to the practice of law in Ohio. After investigating Tynes’s character, fitness, and moral qualifications to practice law, the admissions committee of the Cincinnati Bar Association recommended that his application be disapproved. Tynes appealed that recommendation to the Board of Commissioners on Character and Fitness pursuant to Gov.Bar R. I(12)(A).

{¶ 2} A panel of the board conducted a hearing and issued a report finding that Tynes was convicted in 1998 by a court-martial for multiple felony offenses arising from his attempts to persuade girls under the age of 15 to engage in sex acts and that that conduct rendered him unfit for admission to the practice of law in Ohio. The panel therefore unanimously recommended that his application be disapproved and that he be prohibited from applying for admission to the bar in the future. The board adopted the panel’s report in its entirety.

{¶ 3} Tynes objects to the board’s recommendation that his application be disapproved and that he be forever barred from reapplying for admission to the bar, arguing that the board focused too heavily on his past felony convictions and the effect that his admission would have on the public’s perception of the legal profession. He contends that despite his past mistakes, he has presented clear and convincing evidence of his rehabilitation and that his application should be approved or that in the alternative, he should be permitted to reapply.

{¶ 4} For the reasons that follow, we disapprove Tynes’s application but will permit him to apply to take the July 2018 or a later bar examination.

*244 Findings of Fact

{¶ 5} In 1998, when he was approximately 50 years old and serving in the military, Tynes began frequenting sexually oriented chat rooms on the Internet. In those chat rooms, he introduced himself to at least four females whom he believed to be under the age of 15. He later communicated with them privately through e-mail and instant messaging. He sent them sexually explicit photographs of himself. He also requested and received similar pictures from the girls.

{¶ 6} On three separate occasions, Tynes sought to arrange in-person meetings with the young girls he had befriended online. He sent numerous e-mail messages to a 13-year-old girl in Louisville, Kentucky, telling her that he wanted to meet her and that he “desperately wanted to make love” to her. He also called her on the telephone, but the girl discouraged Tynes from going to Louisville by telling him that her parents had grounded her.

{¶ 7} A second incident occurred while Tynes was returning home to Virginia from temporary military duty in Texas. He traveled 300 miles out of his way to meet another female whom he believed to be a minor. After renting a motel room, he e-mailed the girl and tried to convince her to sneak out of her home so that they could engage in sex. After considerable discussion, the girl declined to meet him.

{¶ 8} Three months later, Tynes was scheduled to fly from Virginia to Las Vegas on official military business. He arranged’a layover in Chicago, where he rented a hotel room with the intent to engage in sexual activities with a female whom he believed to be a minor and to make a video recording of the encounter. He telephoned the girl and arranged to meet her outside his hotel, but when he appeared for that meeting, he was arrested by agents from the Federal Bureau of Investigation. He fully cooperated with the FBI and informed agents that he had pornographic images of children under the age of 18 in his home. The FBI found those images on his computer hard drive and on many computer 'discs, following a search of his home.

{¶ 9} Tynes was charged under the Uniform Code of Military Justice with four counts of conduct unbecoming an officer, four counts of attempting to persuade a minor to engage in sex, two counts of traveling interstate with the intent to have sex with a minor, one count of knowingly possessing child pornography, and one count of knowingly receiving child pornography. He was convicted of the charges in a court-martial proceeding and sentenced to 30 months of confinement in the United States Disciplinary Barracks. He served 19 months of that sentence.

{¶ 10} Tynes described these events as the most devastating thing that had ever happened to him. At the time he engaged in his criminal conduct, he was *245 married with four children living at home — including three daughters. He stated that there was significant family strife because his children had behavioral problems and he often had to play the role of the “heavy.” He became isolated from his wife and apparently viewed the Internet and his illicit conduct as an escape from his everyday life. The board found that Tynes took full responsibility for his actions, but it noted that he attempted to minimize the scope of his conduct at the beginning of the hearing and that many of the details were brought out only during questioning by the panel members.

{¶ 11} Tynes testified that he struggled following his release from incarceration. Though his wife stood by him and they remain married, they moved several times, due in part to unwanted attention related to his criminal offenses. He was required to register as a sex offender in the various states in which he resided after his release from incarceration, but in November 2011, he received confirmation that his Ohio sex-offender-registration requirements had expired.

{¶ 12} Tynes applied to more than 20 law schools, but Northern Kentucky University’s Salmon P. Chase College of Law was the only one to accept him. He fully disclosed his convictions and incarceration on his law-school applications and has not been charged with any other offenses since his release. When questioned by the panel members, he admitted that he entered a sexually oriented online chat room for adults more than ten years ago, but he emphasized that this isolated incident did not involve minors.

{¶ 13} The Cincinnati Bar Association admissions committee referred Tynes to the Ohio Lawyers Assistance Program (“OLAP”) for a psychological evaluation based on concerns that he had not received any type of counseling or therapy following his release from confinement. Dr. Jeffrey L. Smalldon, a forensic psychologist, conducted the psychological evaluation in the spring of 2013 and concluded that there were no mental-health reasons that would prevent Tynes from engaging in the responsible practice of law. Although Smalldon characterized Tynes as “someone who marches to his own drummer,” he also stated that he is not a habitual rule violator and concluded that his admission to the practice of law would not jeopardize the public in any way.

{¶ 14} Tynes entered into a five-year OLAP mental-health recovery contract in September 2013 and, pursuant to that contract, commenced regular psychotherapy sessions with a licensed independent social worker that November. His therapist testified that he has no meaningful concerns about Tynes’s ability to function as an attorney and that he does not believe that there is a significant risk of recidivism, because Tynes is much healthier from an emotional standpoint than he was when he committed his offenses in 1998.

*246

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Related

In re Application of Tynes (Slip Opinion)
2020 Ohio 631 (Ohio Supreme Court, 2020)
Martindale v. Martindale
2017 Ohio 9266 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2017)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2016 Ohio 3307, 54 N.E.3d 1237, 146 Ohio St. 3d 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-application-of-tynes-ohio-2016.