State v. Belger

2011 Ohio 980
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 3, 2011
Docket10CAA020021
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2011 Ohio 980 (State v. Belger) 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. Belger, 2011 Ohio 980 (Ohio Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Belger, 2011-Ohio-980.]

COURT OF APPEALS DELAWARE COUNTY, OHIO FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

: JUDGES: STATE OF OHIO : Julie A. Edwards, P.J. : W. Scott Gwin, J. Plaintiff-Appellee : William B. Hoffman, J. : -vs- : Case No. 10CAA020021 : : GREGORY M. BELGER : OPINION

Defendant-Appellant

CHARACTER OF PROCEEDING: Criminal Appeal from Delaware County Court of Common Pleas Case No. 08CR-I-08-0411

JUDGMENT: Affirmed

DATE OF JUDGMENT ENTRY: March 3, 2011

APPEARANCES:

For Plaintiff-Appellee For Defendant-Appellant

DAVID A. YOST CHAD A. HEALD Delaware County Prosecuting Attorney Heald & Long 140 N. Sandusky Street 125 North Sandusky Street Delaware, Ohio 43015 Delaware, Ohio 43015 [Cite as State v. Belger, 2011-Ohio-980.]

Edwards, P.J.

{¶1} Defendant-appellant, Gregory Belger, appeals his conviction and sentence

from the Delaware County Court of Common Pleas on one count of possession of

cocaine. Plaintiff-appellee is the State of Ohio.

STATEMENT OF THE FACTS AND CASE

{¶2} On August 8, 2008, the Delaware County Grand Jury indicted appellant on

one count of possession of cocaine in violation of R.C. 2925.11(A), a felony of the fifth

degree. At his arraignment on November 4, 2008, appellant entered a plea of not guilty

to the charge.

{¶3} On October 5, 2009, appellant filed a Motion in Limine to exclude “other

acts” evidence. Appellant specifically sought to exclude, in part, evidence from a traffic

stop of appellant that occurred on July 20, 2008, and also evidence regarding

appellant’s prior conviction for attempted possession of cocaine in Franklin County

Common Pleas Court Case No. 06-CR-08-5752. Prior to trial, the court held that

evidence from the July 20, 2008, traffic stop was admissible. The trial court, with

respect to the prior conviction, held that evidence of the same could not be brought in

during the case in chief, but that, if appellant took the stand, appellee could question

appellant about the same.

{¶4} A jury trial commenced on October 6, 2009. The following evidence was

adduced at trial.

{¶5} Officer David Leighty of the Westerville Police Department was working an

overtime shift on May 20, 2008, when he stopped a red Dodge Nitro after discovering

that the tags on the car had expired on April 29, 2008. Officer Leighty approached the Delaware County App. Case No. 10CAA020021 3

vehicle and asked appellant, who was the only occupant, for his driver’s license and

insurance. Appellant, according to the officer, appeared very nervous and would not

make eye contact with him. Appellant then handed Officer Leighty a credit card.

{¶6} While he was talking with appellant, the officer noticed an odor of burnt

marijuana coming from inside the vehicle and also noted a piece of burnt “chore boy” in

the center console gear shift area. When asked to explain what chore boy was, Officer

Leighty had testified that it was “ [a] little box of copper mesh you use to scrub pan with,

you use in dishpans. They’ll break that up and stuff it into the pipe and use it like a filter

to smoke the rock [of cocaine].” Transcript at 96. At the time he saw the chore boy, the

officer was at the passenger window.

{¶7} Officer Leighty then asked for permission to search appellant’s vehicle and

appellant consented. Appellant then exited his vehicle. The officer identified the piece of

burnt chore boy that he had collected when searching appellant’s vehicle. Officer

Leighty testified that he also found a wooden marijuana pipe in the center armrest

console. The officer also found a cable fitting with burnt residue in one end and a silver

spoon with burnt white residue on top of it. Officer Leighty testified that the spoon was

on top of the wooden pipe and the wooden pipe was above the cable fitting.

{¶8} After appellant was arrested, a cigarette containing marijuana was found

in his wallet.

{¶9} Jeanne Walock, who was working for the BCI & I,1 testified that she did

not test the chore boy because she had already found drug residue on other items from

the stop on May 20, 2008. She testified that she tested the wooden pipe and that it

1 BCI & I is the Bureau of Criminal Identification and Investigation. Delaware County App. Case No. 10CAA020021 4

tested positive for trace amounts of marijuana and that she tested the spoon and cable

fitting and they tested positive for cocaine.

{¶10} The following is an excerpt from her testimony on cross-examination:

{¶11} “Q. Ms. Walock, State’s 1 through 5,2 that you just look at those, do you

know that this is a controlled substance on them? Just when you pick this up and look

at it, would you be able to render an opinion as to whether this is a controlled substance

of this item?

{¶12} “A. No, I’m not.

{¶13} “Q. Not?

{¶14} “A. No, I’m not.

{¶15} “Q. So, you always test an item before you render an opinion as to

whether this was a controlled substance on it; is that correct?

{¶16} “A. Yes. I always conduct tests, chemical tests before I render an

opinion.” Transcript at 139-140.

{¶17} At trial, Officer Leighty was asked, over objection, whether he saw

appellant again on July 20, 2008. The officer testified that he stopped appellant on such

date for driving with expired tags. At the time, appellant was driving the same red Dodge

Nitro and was alone in the car. After a canine drug dog gave a positive alert on

appellant’s vehicle, Officer Leighty searched the same and found burnt chore boy by the

driver’s side floor. Gregory Kiddon of the Bureau of Criminal Investigation Lab in

London, Ohio testified, over objection, that the chore boy contained cocaine. When

2 State’s Exhibit 1 was the chore boy, Exhibit 2 was the wooden pipe, Exhibit 3 was the cable fitting, Exhibit 4 was the silver spoon, and Exhibit 5 was the marijuana cigarette. Delaware County App. Case No. 10CAA020021 5

asked if, by looking at the chore boy, he could tell if there was cocaine on it, Kiddon

responded in the negative.

{¶18} After the trial court denied appellant’s motion of a judgment of acquittal,

appellant’s father, Joseph Belger, took the stand. Belger testified that appellant was

involved in preparing the family residence for sale and that, as part of the preparation,

appellant was cleaning an outbuilding that had been used by his sons and their friends

for music practices for a period of five or six years. Belger testified that people were

coming there to practice and that there were many accumulated items in the

outbuilding. According to Belger, during the period from beginning of May of 2008

through September 12, 2008, appellant was taking trash from the outbuilding and

disposing of it in a dumpster where he worked.

{¶19} At trial, appellant testified that he was in possession of the pipe and spoon

found during the stop of his vehicle on May 20, 2008, but testified that he did not have

any knowledge that there was any cocaine residue on the same. He testified that he

found the items when cleaning out the outbuilding owned by his father.

{¶20} At the conclusion of the evidence and the end of deliberations, the jury, on

October 6, 2009, found appellant guilty of possession of cocaine. As memorialized in a

Judgment Entry filed on February 1, 2010, appellant was placed on community control

for a period not to exceed three years under specified terms and conditions.

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