State v. Barnes

2010 Ohio 987
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 15, 2010
Docket2-09-23
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2010 Ohio 987 (State v. Barnes) 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. Barnes, 2010 Ohio 987 (Ohio Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Barnes, 2010-Ohio-987.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT AUGLAIZE COUNTY

STATE OF OHIO, CASE NO. 2-09-23

PLAINTIFF-APPELLEE,

v.

JASON BARNES, OPINION

DEFENDANT-APPELLANT.

Appeal from Auglaize County Municipal Court Trial Court No. 09-TRD-01447

Judgment Affirmed

Date of Decision: March 15, 2010

APPEARANCES:

Jason Barnesfor Appellant

Edwin A. Pierce for Appellee Case No. 2-09-23

SHAW, J.

{¶1} Defendant-appellant, Jason L. Barnes, appeals the July 10, 2009

judgment of the Auglaize County, Ohio Municipal Court, finding him guilty of

speeding, eighty-four miles per hour in a sixty-five miles per hour zone, in

violation of 4511.21(D)(2), and ordering him to pay a fine of $35.00, to pay court

costs, and to be assessed two points on his driver’s license.

{¶2} The facts relevant to this appeal are as follows. On March 17, 2009,

at approximately 2:52 p.m. Barnes was traveling on Interstate 75 in Auglaize

County, Ohio, near the exit for U.S. Highway 33. At this time, Trooper Pilot

Darwin Justice, Jr., of the Ohio State Highway Patrol (“OSHP”), Aviation

Department, was performing speed enforcement in the area through the use of an

OSHP airplane.

{¶3} Trooper Pilot Justice noticed a white vehicle traveling in a marked

one-mile section of the roadway between mile markers 108 and 109. This marked

one-mile section was further divided into quarters, which were marked by white

epoxy transfer mats. The pilot did not notice the white vehicle until it was

approximately half-way into the first marked quarter. When the white vehicle

entered the second marked quarter, the pilot began timing the vehicle until it

entered the third marked quarter and then also timed the vehicle through the third

and fourth marked quarters. Using the time-speed-distance math formula, the pilot

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determined the speed of the white vehicle to be eighty-four miles per hour in both

the second and third quarters of the mile and seventy-seven miles per hour in the

fourth quarter.

{¶4} Upon observing the white vehicle to be speeding, Trooper Pilot

Justice called Trooper Michael Keaton, who was stationary in a marked patrol car

on the berm of the roadway at mile marker 110, to prepare him to stop the white

vehicle. Trooper Keaton exited his vehicle upon being informed by the pilot that

the white car was coming towards him. Trooper Keaton, using hand signals,

ordered the white vehicle to pull over, which it did. The pilot then told Trooper

Keaton that he had stopped the correct vehicle and that the vehicle was traveling at

eighty-four miles per hour at 2:52 p.m. At the time of the stop, Barnes was

driving the white vehicle at issue.

{¶5} Trooper Keaton issued a traffic citation to Barnes for speeding. This

citation was filed in the Auglaize County Municipal Court on March 18, 2009, and

Barnes, pro se, entered a written plea of not guilty that was filed on March 24,

2009. A telephonic pre-trial was conducted on April 7, 2009,1 and the matter was

scheduled for a bench trial to commence on May 8, 2009. On May 8, 2009, a

letter to the court from Barnes, dated May 1, 2009, was filed in the case. This

1 Barnes lives in the State of Kentucky.

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letter requested the court’s assistance in obtaining certain items in discovery from

the prosecution. That same date, the court conducted Barnes’ bench trial.

{¶6} No oral motions were made to the court on the record prior to the

commencement of the trial. The prosecution presented the testimony of Trooper

Pilot Justice and Trooper Keaton and introduced one exhibit, the pilot’s aviation

enforcement report that contained his notes about the vehicle speeds he checked

on the day of Barnes’ citation. These witnesses were also subjected to cross-

examination by Barnes.

{¶7} At the conclusion of the State’s evidence, Barnes testified on his

own behalf. During his testimony, Barnes testified that his employer uses a global

positioning system (“GPS”) through his Verizon Wireless cellular phone, which

provides his location and his speeds while traveling for his employer and alerts his

employer if he drives in excess of the posted speed limit. Barnes introduced nine

exhibits in support of this testimony. Specifically, Barnes testified that

Defendant’s Exhibits 1-6 were documents downloaded from the internet from the

GPS provider that reflect the speeds and path of travel for him from 2:46 p.m.-

2:54 p.m.,2 on the day in question, which showed his rate of speed was not in

excess of the posted speed limit as testified to by Trooper Pilot Justice. These

documents show his speeds as follows: 2:46 p.m. – 57 mph; 2:48 p.m. – 50 mph;

2 The actual times on these documents are from 1:46 p.m.-1:54 p.m. However, Barnes testified, and the documents reflect, that these were times for the Central Time Zone, which is the time zone in which his employer operates.

-4- Case No. 2-09-23

2:50 p.m. – 44 mph; and 2:52 p.m. – 50 mph. The other three exhibits introduced

by Barnes were internet downloads from Wikipedia that discussed some aspects of

GPS. Barnes presented no other witnesses.

{¶8} The court asked questions of Barnes regarding the GPS documents,

some of which Barnes could not fully answer and some of which he had to

speculate as to the answer. The court retained Barnes’ exhibits and told him that

the court was desirous of knowing more about the program and was willing to

conduct some research to determine whether he could consider Barnes’ exhibits.

The prosecutor objected to the admission of these exhibits because Barnes did not

present any evidence regarding the accuracy of the information, the

equipment/program used to determine the speeds, the calibration of any equipment

used to determine the speeds, and the scientific reliability of the

equipment/program.

{¶9} The court took the matter under advisement. On May 12, 2009, the

court filed an entry allowing Barnes until May 26, 2009, to submit the manual for

the GPS to help enable the court to interpret Barnes’ exhibits. On May 15, 2009,

Barnes filed a motion to dismiss his case because the prosecutor failed to provide

him with (1) a copy of the video from the ground trooper’s cruiser, which he

maintained would show that there were other cars in the area that matched the

description of his car and would provide the audio of the conversation between the

-5- Case No. 2-09-23

pilot and the ground patrol, and (2) the ground trooper’s notes/log that would show

the tickets he gave to other motorists that day. This motion was overruled later

that same day.

{¶10} On July 10, 2009, the trial court rendered its decision in writing. In

this entry, the court noted that it had permitted Barnes to submit further

documentary evidence to explain the information contained in his exhibits but that

Barnes did not do so, and the court noted that it was not able to obtain any other

documentary evidence. Thus, the court found that Barnes had failed to support the

technology upon which he was relying to refute that he was speeding.3 The court

then found Barnes guilty of speeding as charged in his citation. This appeal

followed, and Barnes now asserts three assignments of error.

ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR I

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