State v. Annotico, Unpublished Decision (12-14-2000)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 14, 2000
DocketNo. 76202.
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Annotico, Unpublished Decision (12-14-2000) (State v. Annotico, Unpublished Decision (12-14-2000)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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
State v. Annotico, Unpublished Decision (12-14-2000), (Ohio Ct. App. 2000).

Opinions

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION
Defendant-appellant Robert Annotico appeals from his convictions for one count of possession of cocaine, a schedule II drug, in excess of 25 grams, but less than 100 grams (R.C. 2925.11) and one count of possession of criminal tools (R.C. 2923.24) entered after a jury trial. Defendant contends that the evidence was insufficient to sustain the conviction; the judgment was against the manifest weight of the evidence; counsel was ineffective; the trial court erred in sentencing him; and that the trial court erred in imposing a $19,000 fine. We affirm the convictions, but remand for resentencing.

Defendant and his co-defendant, Sheri Rigor, were tried together. The following facts were introduced at trial.

Ronald James Loftis testified that he was arrested with the defendant and co-defendant Rigor. Loftis pled guilty in exchange for his testimony. Loftis stated that he met the defendant and co-defendant more than a year earlier at a party where they were smoking drugs together. He said that on the night in question, the defendant and co-defendant picked him up at his house located on East 64th and Woodland so that they could smoke drugs together. According to Loftis, the defendant and the co-defendant brought the drugs with them. Loftis stated that he was sitting in the front passenger seat, defendant was driving and co-defendant Rigor was sitting in the back seat. According to Loftis, when the officers stopped the vehicle, co-defendant Rigor had the drugs on her person. Loftis claimed that he never possessed the drugs and only had a crack pipe on his person which he threw on the floor. Loftis denied that the drugs were his and admitted that he had several prior convictions for drug abuse.

Cleveland Police Officer Wilsman testified that he and his partner Matt Baeppler were on duty the night of April 14, 1997. They were patrolling the area of East 64th and Buckeye around 2:00 a.m. when he noticed a Jeep Cherokee traveling northbound on East 64th run a stop sign. The officers followed the vehicle, pulled it over and called for back up. Defendant was driving the car, Loftis was in the front passenger seat and co-defendant Rigor was in the back seat.

As the officers exited the patrol car and proceeded to approach the vehicle they saw co-defendant Rigor make a furtive movement. Since the officers suspected a weapon was involved they ordered everyone out of the vehicle with their hands up. The officers removed co-defendant Rigor first. At that time, Officer Wilsman overheard co-defendant Rigor ask Officer Potts what was happening. Officer Potts informed her that a female officer was on her way to conduct a pat down search to determine what Rigor had stuffed in her pants. Rigor then pulled out the bag of crack from her pants. Officer Wilsman recalls Rigor said something to the effect of He gave me this or My boyfriend gave me this or Somebody gave me this, but he could not recall the exact words. (Tr. at 183-184). At that point all the occupants were placed under arrest and the vehicle impounded.

When the vehicle was inventoried, a smaller bag of suspected crack cocaine was found in the glove compartment. Also found was a crack pipe under the driver's seat, and a broken crack pipe in the back seat. The jeep was registered in the name of co-defendant Sheri Rigor.

Officer Baeppler corroborated Officer Wilsman's testimony. He also added that the arrest occurred in an extremely high drug area. (Tr. at 243). He stated that when he asked the occupants of the car how they were related to each other, the defendant responded that he was Rigor's boyfriend. Officer Baeppler testified that a pager was taken from Rigor and that while he had custody of the pager it was going off incessantly. He called one of the numbers on the pager and the person at that number asked where Sheri was.

Officer Baeppler testified that he wrote up the police report regarding the arrests and that he wrote down that Rigor had said, they told me to hide this. He admitted he was not present when Rigor made the statement, but that is what he thought she said based on what the other officers told him. The officer stated that a total of three pagers were confiscated and that he did not attempt to ascertain to whom the pagers were registered. $129.00 was confiscated from the defendant.

Officer Terrence Potts testified that he responded to Officer Baeppler and Wilsman's call for back up. When he arrived on the scene he assisted the officers in getting co-defendant Rigor out of the vehicle. Officer Potts explained to Rigor that they were waiting for a female officer to conduct a pat down search of Rigor to determine what she stuffed down her pants. Potts stated that he then asked Rigor what it was that she had hidden and to take it out. She told the officer that it was not a gun and that He gave it to me. My boyfriend gave it to me. (Tr. at 202). At that point, she unzipped her pants and produced the bag of cocaine. Later, it was determined that defendant was Rigor's boyfriend.

After the trial court heard and overruled motions for acquittal by both defense attorneys, co-defendant Sheri Rigor took the stand in her defense. She stated that she had no prior convictions. According to Rigor, on the night in question she and defendant were at a bar on Denison Avenue and left shortly after midnight. She and the defendant had been dating for about three and one-half years. While at the bar they met up with Loftis, whose house she and defendant had been at many times. All three of them left the bar together and got into her jeep to go to Loftis' house. Although it was her vehicle, defendant drove. On the way to the house, Loftis yelled out that a police car was following them. She said that when the police pulled the car over, Loftis turned around in the front seat, threw a bag in her lap and screamed at her to hide it in her privates. Then Loftis continued to shuffle around in the front seat and Rigor heard the glove compartment open and close. Rigor denied that the pager that the officers found was hers. She claimed that she told the officers that the bag of drugs in her pants was given to her by Loftis. She denied ever telling the officers that the defendant was her boyfriend. She also denied that they ran a stop sign and contended that the police stopped them for no apparent reason.

Based on the above evidence, the jury found the defendant guilty of both counts. The trial court thereafter sentenced the defendant to nine years on the drug possession and one year for the possession of criminal tools, to be served consecutively. Defendant was also fined a total of $19,000.

Defendant now timely appeals assigning five assignments of error. We will address defendant's assignments of error in the order asserted and together where such discussion is appropriate.

I. THERE WAS INSUFFICIENT EVIDENCE TO SUPPORT A CONVICTION.

II. THE VERDICT WAS AGAINST THE MANIFEST WEIGHT OF THE EVIDENCE.

Defendant argues that there was no evidence presented that he had actual or constructive possession of the drugs. He contends that he did not own the vehicle in which the drugs were found and that although he was driving the vehicle, there were two other people in the car with him. This assignment of error has no merit.

The standard of review we must observe in passing on sufficiency of the evidence and manifest weight of the evidence issues were set forth by the Supreme Court of Ohio as follows in State v. Thompkins (1997),78 Ohio St.3d 380, 386-87:

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Annotico, Unpublished Decision (12-14-2000), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-annotico-unpublished-decision-12-14-2000-ohioctapp-2000.