State v. Carter

2024 Ohio 1247
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedApril 4, 2024
Docket2023-0156
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 2024 Ohio 1247 (State v. Carter) 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
State v. Carter, 2024 Ohio 1247 (Ohio 2024).

Opinion

[Until this opinion appears in the Ohio Official Reports advance sheets, it may be cited as State v. Carter, Slip Opinion No. 2024-Ohio-1247.]

NOTICE This slip opinion is subject to formal revision before it is published in an advance sheet of the Ohio Official Reports. Readers are requested to promptly notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of Ohio, 65 South Front Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215, of any typographical or other formal errors in the opinion, in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is published.

SLIP OPINION NO. 2024-OHIO-1247 THE STATE OF OHIO, APPELLEE, v. CARTER, APPELLANT. [Until this opinion appears in the Ohio Official Reports advance sheets, it may be cited as State v. Carter, Slip Opinion No. 2024-Ohio-1247.] Criminal law―Sixth Amendment―Right to face-to-face confrontation―Harmless error―Trial court erred in allowing witness to testify by video at trial without making sufficient case-specific findings of necessity, in violation of defendant’s right to face-to-face confrontation under Confrontation Clause of Sixth Amendment to United States Constitution―In light of other evidence presented against defendant at trial, confrontation error was harmless―Court of appeals’ judgment affirmed. (No. 2023-0156—Submitted September 27, 2023—Decided April 4, 2024.) APPEAL from the Court of Appeals for Logan County, No. 8-22-12, 2022-Ohio-4559. __________________ SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

DEWINE, J. {¶ 1} This case involves a criminal defendant’s right to confront the witnesses against him under the Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution. A jury found Eli Carter guilty of having sexual relations with his adopted daughter. Eli complains that his right to face-to-face confrontation was violated because the trial court allowed a witness to testify remotely by way of video conference. {¶ 2} We agree that the trial court erred by allowing the remote testimony. Under United States Supreme Court precedent, a trial judge may only dispense with the requirement of face-to-face confrontation in narrow circumstances. But the trial court in this case did not make sufficient findings to establish that such circumstances existed. {¶ 3} Our conclusion that the trial court erred by permitting the remote testimony does not end our inquiry. We also must determine whether the remote testimony prejudiced Eli. We find that the use of videoconferencing was harmless error. Based on the other evidence presented at trial, there was no reasonable possibility that the trial court’s error in allowing the remote testimony contributed to Eli’s conviction. I. BACKGROUND {¶ 4} In 2023, a jury found Eli guilty of two counts of sexual battery of his adopted daughter, N.C, in violation of R.C. 2907.03(A)(5). The law under which Eli was convicted criminalizes incest; it is a crime to have sexual conduct with one’s natural or adopted child, regardless of the child’s age. See id. A. N.C. is adopted by the Carter family and later reports that Eli had sexually abused her {¶ 5} N.C. testified at trial that she grew up in foster care, having been placed in the system when she was two days old. Over the first 14 years of her life, she had nearly 40 different placements before she entered the Adriel School in West

2 January Term, 2024

Liberty. Adriel is a residential facility for children who have suffered abuse or trauma. The institution provides schooling as well as clinical treatment. {¶ 6} Eli and his wife, Liz, were “teaching parents” at Adriel. They developed a relationship with N.C., who was a “[g]ood student” and “[e]asy to get along with.” When N.C. was about 15 or 16 years old, the Carters brought her into their home as a foster child. They adopted N.C. the next year, in 2007. According to N.C., being adopted felt “like the dream that I had always wanted * * *. I felt like I actually had somewhere that I belonged. I was happy.” {¶ 7} But by N.C.’s account, the dream did not turn out the way she had hoped. N.C. testified that Eli began to sexually abuse her. At first, she noticed Eli would stand outside of the bathroom window while she was inside. Eli “played around a lot”—grabbing the inside of her thigh and squeezing it to the point that it bruised, ripping off her bra, and giving her “wedgies.” Once the abuse started, it only got worse. Eli had a “man cave” where he would play video games. N.C. described an encounter there when Eli put his hands down her pants and rubbed her vagina. Days later, Eli had intercourse with her for the first time. After that, N.C. explained, Eli had intercourse with her on many other occasions over the next several years and forced her to engage in a variety of other sexual acts. {¶ 8} N.C. testified that sometimes when Eli would touch her inappropriately, she would push him away, but most of the time she endured the abuse because she felt she “had to let him do that * * * to sustain being part of that family.” Indeed, Eli had warned N.C. that if she told anyone about the sexual abuse, she “wouldn’t have a family anymore.” {¶ 9} N.C. went away to college at Urbana University in 2008. But, by her account, the abuse persisted. Eli continued to have sexual relations with N.C. when she returned home on weekends, in her college dorm room, and in his truck. {¶ 10} Eventually, N.C. could not endure the abuse anymore and stopped returning home. And in 2010, she told Liz Carter and Eli’s brother, Travis, about

3 SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

what Eli had done. The day after she told Liz, N.C. reported her father’s sexual abuse to the police. The officer who took the report made an audio recording of N.C.’s statement and forwarded it to the department’s detectives. But the detective assigned to the case failed to investigate the allegations. {¶ 11} In 2017, N.C. contacted the prosecutor’s office about her 2010 police report and spoke to Detective Dwight Salyer, who had inherited the case from the detective to whom it was initially assigned. Ultimately, Detective Salyer reopened the investigation and obtained evidence corroborating N.C.’s account. A grand jury indicted Eli on three counts of rape and three counts of sexual battery. The indictment covered three different time periods: (1) December 20, 2006, to December 19, 2007; (2) December 20, 2007, to December 19, 2008; and (3) December 20, 2008, to December 19, 2009. It alleged a single count of rape and a single count of sexual battery for each period. B. The trial court allows a state witness to testify by video {¶ 12} Eli’s jury trial began on February 9, 2022. A couple days before trial, the state moved to allow Michael Mullins to testify by video. Mullins served as CEO of Adriel School when Eli worked there. The state represented that Mullins now lived in Minnesota and argued that he should be allowed to testify remotely because of “the increase in COVID spread and uncertain weather conditions.” {¶ 13} The trial court granted the motion over Eli’s objection. The court observed that the COVID-19 “pandemic and labor shortages at airlines resulting from the pandemic” had made “travel by air uncertain on a daily basis.” And it explained that “[w]eather is unpredictable and could delay or prohibit [Mullins] from reaching Logan County to testify in person.” Further, it noted that the state had identified Mullins as “an important witness” and found that his testimony would be “relevant and admissible as admissions of the [d]efendant.” From these findings, the trial court determined that “the fact specific circumstances of this

4 January Term, 2024

case” rendered Mullins “unavailable to testify in person” and that the video format would not hinder the defense’s ability to cross-examine him. C. The evidence at trial {¶ 14} The state called N.C. as one of its six witnesses at the in-person trial. N.C.

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Bluebook (online)
2024 Ohio 1247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-carter-ohio-2024.