State v. Brodt

2022 Ohio 1528
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 4, 2022
Docket21CA1140
StatusPublished

This text of 2022 Ohio 1528 (State v. Brodt) 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. Brodt, 2022 Ohio 1528 (Ohio Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Brodt, 2022-Ohio-1528.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT ADAMS COUNTY

STATE OF OHIO, : Case No. 21CA1140

Plaintiff-Appellee, :

v. : DECISION AND JUDGMENT ENTRY MORGAN BRODT, :

Defendant-Appellant. : RELEASED 5/04/2022 ______________________________________________________________________ APPEARANCES:

Joy L. Marshall, Columbus, Ohio, for appellant.

C. David Kelley, Adams County Prosecutor, Michele L. Harris, Adams County Special Assistant Prosecutor, West Union, Ohio, for appellee. ______________________________________________________________________ Hess, J.

{¶1} Morgan Brodt appeals her conviction for attempted aggravated possession

of drugs after she pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 30 months in prison. In her first

assignment of error, Brodt contends that the trial court erred in its consideration of the

record and the principles and purposes of sentencing when it sentenced her. In her

second assignment of error, Brodt contends that the trial court failed to appropriately

apply the factors of R.C. 2929.12 to her sentence. However, Brodt essentially asks this

court to independently weigh the evidence in the record and substitute our judgment for

that of the trial court concerning the sentence that best comports with R.C. 2929.11,

governing the purposes and principles of felony sentencing, and R.C. 2929.12, which

addresses factors to consider when imposing a sentence under R.C. 2929.11. R.C. Adams App. No. 21CA1140 2

2953.08(G)(2) does not permit us to conduct this type of review. We overrule her

assignments of error and affirm the trial court’s judgment.

I. PROCEDURAL HISTORY

{¶2} In June 2020, the Adams County grand jury indicted Brodt on one count of

aggravated possession of drugs, a violation of R.C. 2925.11(A), a second-degree felony.

Brodt initially pleaded not guilty, but in June 2021 she entered into a plea agreement with

the state and entered a guilty plea to an amended offense of attempted aggravated

possession, a third-degree felony.

{¶3} At the sentencing hearing, the trial court noted that it had reviewed the

presentence investigation report, which contained letters from her current employers, her

AA sponsor, and the Oxford House, a rehabilitation center to which Brodt had eventually

transferred without the court’s knowledge. The court noted there was no letter from The

Healing Place, the rehabilitation center Brodt first entered and which the court was told

she was during the entire pendency of the case. The court stated that there was a

presumption of prison and that Brodt had multiple cases and previous prison sentences

over the past 10 years for multiple drug-related offenses, including multiple felony drug

offenses. The court commented on the particular severity of the facts surrounding Brodt’s

offense, “the severity of the fact pattern in this case, being an overdose with a small child

in a bathroom with a tub full of water. And then the child being next to an unprecedented

amount of methamphetamine.” The court stated that Brodt’s criminal drug conduct

continued after the incident in question and up through the day before entering the

rehabilitation facility. At or near the time of this conviction, Brodt was charged in Clermont Adams App. No. 21CA1140 3

County for conveying drugs into its jail.1 Although Brodt admitted that she had made a

terrible mistake, which could have been potentially tragic for her child, she realized when

she was arrested that she had gone far over the line. The trial court noted that even

though Brodt claimed to have realized the serious nature of the offense, she continued to

engage in drug use afterwards, noting that despite “all this, uh, epiphanies, it never

stops?” Brodt stated that she went into drug rehabilitation in August 2020 and is learning

how to maintain her sobriety and is working at a nonprofit to help others.

{¶4} The court stated that it had considered the record, the oral statements, and

the presentence investigation report and considered the principles and purposes of

sentencing under R.C. 2929.11. The court also stated it considered the overriding

purposes of felony sentencing and the seriousness and recidivism factors in R.C.

2929.12. The trial court was particularly concerned with the large quantity of drugs and

troubled by the fact that Brodt packed up chocolate milk, cereal, brownies, and an iPad

with cartoons on it and put her three-year-old child in the same small bathroom with

fentanyl and methamphetamine, “you bring her in * * * with methamphetamine and

fentanyl large, huge amounts, any, any, which had she touched with her finger would

have probably killed her or touched with her tongue absolutely would have killed her.” The

trial court reviewed Brodt’s lengthy criminal history. The court noted with some skepticism

that Brodt had entered a drug rehabilitation facility in August 2020, but that on the day

before entering rehabilitation, she shot up with heroin as “one last party.” Brodt conceded

that was what she “guessed” had happened. The trial court’s concern with the facts

surrounding Brodt’s offense was a significant factor in the trial court’s sentencing decision:

1There appears to be a typographical error in the sentencing transcript. Statements made by Brodt’s attorney were incorrectly attributed to the trial court. Adams App. No. 21CA1140 4

Court: * * * The pictures from the bathroom. * * * I’ve talked a lot for many years. I’ve warned a lot for many years that my fear was that some parent was going to leave their drugs around and the child was going to get ahold of them and die. * * * But I could never imagine this scene. This scene never made sense to me to intentionally lock the child into a room with the [vo]luminous amounts of drug enticing them with things they liked, like chocolate milk, brownies, Fruit Loop cereal, iPad with cartoons, Lay’s Potato chips. The child was in there so long, they [sic] ate a bowl of cereal. While you were * * * doing drugs. The iPad was actually playing cartoons. * * * I kind of gave you the clue at the beginning, uh, there’s [a] presumption [of] prison.

The trial court stated it did not believe prison was going to help Brodt because she had

been sent to prison numerous times before and upon her release would relapse.

However, the court believed that a prison term would keep Brodt, who was 24-weeks

pregnant with her second child, sober while incarcerated and would ensure that her

newborn would be born drug-free.

{¶5} The trial court sentenced Brodt to a 30-month prison term and imposed a

$2,500 fine.

II. ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR

{¶6} Brodt presents two assignments of error:

I. The trial court erred in considering the record, oral statements, victim impact statements and presentence report, as well as the principle and purposes of sentencing under Ohio Revised Code Section 2929.11(A) in its sentence of Megan Brodt for Attempted Aggravated Possession of a Controlled Substance, a Felony of the Third Degree.

II. The trial court failed to appropriately apply the factors of ORC §2929.12 that were present and persuasive in sentencing the Appellant.

III. LAW AND ANALYSIS

{¶7} Brodt challenges the trial court’s decision to sentence her to prison and asks

us to modify the sentence to community control.

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2022 Ohio 1528, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-brodt-ohioctapp-2022.