State v. Casey, Unpublished Decision (6-18-2002)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 18, 2002
DocketCase No. 01CA2634.
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Casey, Unpublished Decision (6-18-2002) (State v. Casey, Unpublished Decision (6-18-2002)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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State v. Casey, Unpublished Decision (6-18-2002), (Ohio Ct. App. 2002).

Opinions

DECISION AND JUDGMENT ENTRY
Theresa L. Casey appeals her conviction for conveying contraband into a correctional facility, in violation of R.C. 2921.36(A)(2). Casey asserts that the trial court should have granted her motion to suppress. Because we find that Casey was not detained in violation of theFourth Amendment, we disagree. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the Ross County Court of Common Pleas.

I.
The Ross County Grand Jury indicted Casey for knowingly conveying or attempting to convey on to the grounds of a Detention Facility a drug of abuse, a violation of R.C. 2921.36. Casey eventually moved to suppress all evidence found in the warrantless search of her person, vehicle and belongings, as well as any statements made on the day of her arrest. Casey argued that the searches of her person and vehicle were conducted without probable cause.

At the suppression hearing, the state presented the following version of the events of September 8, 2000.

Chillicothe Correctional Institution ("CCI") Investigator Paul Arledge testified that he monitored inmate phone calls to Casey's telephone number. From these phone calls, he concluded, based on his experience, that Casey was planning to smuggle drugs into CCI. Based on his conclusion, he "flagged" Casey, so that when she next came to visit an inmate at CCI, she would either be searched or monitored.

On September 8, 2000, Arledge called her into his office and asked her to submit to a voluntary strip search. This occurred after Casey had been processed into CCI as a visitor, as all visitors to CCI are. Arlege testified that once Casey was in his office, he questioned her about her purpose in coming to CCI and how she got to CCI. When she was processed in as a visitor, she indicated that she was visiting her brother; however, during her meeting with Arledge she admitted that the inmate she intended to visit was not her brother. Arledge testified that he told Casey that she could go regardless of whether she agreed to the search. However, he told her that if she did not agree to be searched, that she would not be permitted to visit the inmate at CCI and that her visitation privileges would be suspended. He also informed her that a Trooper wanted to talk with her when she left CCI and that the Ohio State Highway Patrol ("OSHP") may get a search warrant.

Arledge testified that Casey spent about an hour in CCI. He explained that during this hour: (1) Casey was processed like any other visitor; (2) he questioned her; and (3) once he obtained permission from a higher ranking officer to search Casey, the officers searched her. He estimated that the initial processing procedure took about twenty to thirty minutes of the hour Casey spent in CCI and that the actual search took about ten to fifteen minutes.

After two female corrections officers searched Casey, and found nothing, Casey left CCI.

According to OSHP Trooper Rebecca Leach, an institutional investigator informed her, prior to Arledge's interview with Casey, that there was a visitor by the name of Casey who was present at CCI that CCI personnel suspected of having previously brought illegal drugs into the prison. At that point she contacted the Chillicothe OSHP post and had the dispatcher determine whether Casey owned a vehicle. She found out that Casey had entered the prison with Toni Green, who was not permitted to enter the prison that day.

After receiving information from the OSHP dispatcher that Casey had two temporary vehicle tags in her name, Leach asked OSHP Trooper Mikesh to bring a drug dog to the prison to have the dog work the parking lot. Leach then went outside to the parking lot in an attempt to find a vehicle with one of the temporary tags. She found a white car with a female passenger. As Trooper Mikesh arrived at approximately 2:00 p.m., Casey had completed her visit and was leaving the prison. After instructing Trooper Mikesh on which vehicles to have the dog sniff, Leach approached Casey and asked her to "just hang tight for a second." According to Leach, Casey denied having a vehicle in the parking lot and in response to a question about how she was going to get home, Casey said that she was walking home to Dayton. Casey then walked away from the CCI parking lot, crossed State Route 104 and started hitchhiking southbound.

While Casey was attempting to hitchhike a ride, the drug dog alerted to Casey's vehicle. Trooper Mikesh went to speak with Casey while Leach conducted a search of the vehicle. In her search of Casey's vehicle, Leach found two tips of marijuana cigarettes ("roaches") and a baggy of marijuana in the vehicle. Leach did not interrogate or talk to Casey after the search.

Mikesh drove her patrol car southbound State Route 104 to where Casey was hitchhiking, approximately one-quarter mile south of CCI. Once Mikesh got out of her patrol car, Casey immediately asked Mikesh why she was checking her. Mikesh explained that she routinely checked pedestrians in the vicinity of CCI. Mikesh then asked Casey where she was going. Casey replied that she was walking home to Dayton. Casey's response struck Mikesh as odd because it was raining and Casey was wearing a dress. Mikesh then asked Casey why she would walk to Dayton when her car was in the CCI parking lot. Casey responded that she would come back later for it. Mikesh next informed Casey that a drug-sniffing dog had alerted to her vehicle. According to Mikesh, Casey admitted that there were some roaches in her ashtray.

Mikesh believed that she had not yet arrested Casey because she had not touched Casey and had never told her that she couldn't leave. Once Mikesh was informed that Leach had found drugs in the car, she read Casey a Miranda rights form and waited for another Trooper to pick Casey up.

After the state rested, Casey testified that on September 8, 2000 she arrived at CCI at approximately noon. After she was processed, she waited for about twenty or thirty minutes in the waiting room. An officer then asked her to "come here for a minute" and she stepped into the hallway. The officer informed Casey that an investigator wanted to see her.

The investigator accused her of smuggling drugs into CCI. Casey testified that he told her that if she didn't consent to being searched that she would stay in the office until an officer went downtown to get a warrant and that she couldn't leave until she was searched. Casey testified that she spent twenty or thirty minutes in his office and then asked if she agreed to the search if she would be able to visit the inmate. She also testified that she then waited thirty minutes for the investigator to get someone's signature on a paper before two female corrections officers searched her. Four officers then walked her back to the parking lot. Casey testified that Leach asked her what she was driving and told her to remain there. Casey testified that instead of remaining in the parking lot, she began walking south on State Route 104. When a trooper pulled up next to her at about 2:00 or 2:30 p.m. and asked her where she was going she told her she was going to Dayton. She denied ever admitting that the roaches or other drugs found in her vehicle were hers.

At the end of the hearing, the trial court verbally overruled Casey's motion.1 As a result Casey indicated that she wanted to change her plea to no contest.

In August 2001, Casey pled no contest to the only charge in the indictment. The trial court found her guilty. After a pre-sentence investigation, the trial court sentenced Casey to five years of community control under the intensive supervision of the Ross County Probation Department.

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Casey, Unpublished Decision (6-18-2002), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-casey-unpublished-decision-6-18-2002-ohioctapp-2002.