State v. Castagnola

46 N.E.3d 638, 145 Ohio St. 3d 1
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedApril 28, 2015
DocketNo. 2013-0781
StatusPublished
Cited by135 cases

This text of 46 N.E.3d 638 (State v. Castagnola) 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. Castagnola, 46 N.E.3d 638, 145 Ohio St. 3d 1 (Ohio 2015).

Opinions

Kennedy, J.

{¶ 1} In this discretionary appeal from the Ninth District Court of Appeals, we consider whether a search-warrant affiant’s undisclosed evidentiary inference stated as an empirical fact usurped the inference-drawing authority of the magistrate who issued the warrant in reliance on the affidavit. We also consider the application of the particularity requirement of the Fourth Amendment to the search of a computer. For the reasons set forth below, we hold that the search warrant at issue in this case was invalid and that the evidence obtained in executing the warrant must be suppressed. We therefore reverse the judgment of the appellate court.

I. Facts and Procedural History

{¶ 2} David Maistros is the law director and prosecutor for the city of Twinsburg, in Summit County. In April 2010, Maistros charged appellant, Nicholas Castagnola, with selling alcohol to minors, a first-degree misdemeanor. Two months later, on June 15, 2010, Maistros discovered that his family vehicles had been damaged and egged.

{¶ 3} On June 27, a police source known as Source May showed Twinsburg patrolman Alan Ternosky a series of text messages that he had received from Castagnola bragging about having damaged Maistros’s vehicles. After reviewing those messages, Ternosky had Source May wear a concealed recording device and record a conversation with Castagnola at Castagnola’s home. In the recorded conversation, Castagnola admitted that he and Zach Downer had [2]*2damaged and egged Maistros’s vehicles. He added that he had had to “look up” Maistros’s address on court records.

{¶ 4} Armed with the text messages and recording, Twinsburg detective Mark Kreiger sought an arrest warrant for Castagnola and a warrant to search his residence. The detective began the search-warrant affidavit by describing his training and experience in law enforcement and in narcotics investigations. The affidavit then identifies Castagnola’s residence and requests that a search warrant be issued for the premises and persons and vehicles on the property for

[r]ecords and documents either stored on computers, ledgers, or any other electronic recording device to include hard drives and external portable hard drives, cell phones, printers, storage devices of any kind, printed out copies of text messages or emails, cameras, video recorders or any photo imaging devices and their storage media to include tapes, compact discs, or flash drives.

{¶ 5} The affidavit states that any items found would be seized and used as evidence in prosecuting the crimes of retaliation, criminal trespassing, criminal damaging, and possession of criminal tools. In the section titled “This Knowledge Is Based on the Following Facts,” the affidavit sets forth the facts that led the detective to believe that evidence of the crimes charged would be found in the items sought to be seized.

{¶ 6} The affidavit states that approximately 25 incidents of criminal mischief had occurred within the prior two months involving intentional damage to vehicles in Twinsburg and Reminderville. Thereafter, the affidavit quotes the following text messages that Source May received from Castagnola on June 24 and June 25:

Found this address and went to his house and did more than chief[1] it but keep that down ok.
It was funny he lives in Chagrin Falls and his law office is there too and I can’t tell you in text but in person.
Where are you I did some damage.
Well we should chief Twinsburg Police.
What do you think my teaching the prosecutor a lesson LOL.
How many David Maistros’ could there be who are attorneys.
[3]*3LOL as for his car objects are no longer closer than they appear lol.
HAHAHA well he should not mess with me the bastard I hate him so are you and Austin coming to my trial on the 14th?
Ok well it will be fun whether I win or lose.

{¶ 7} The affidavit states that on June 28, Source May agreed to go to Castagnola’s home while wearing a concealed recording device. It states that during the recorded conversation with Source May, Castagnola admitted that he and Downer had damaged Maistros’s cars and a Reminderville police car.

{¶ 8} In lieu of attaching the recording of the conversation or a transcript of the recording to his search-warrant affidavit, the detective paraphrased the exchange between Source May and Castagnola as follows:

[Castagnola] states that that’s some funny shit though isn’t it? Go to his house and knock off his shit. He was so pissed off today in court. * * * Castagnola then says that he found Maistros online in the clerk of courts because he [Maistros] got a parking ticket several years ago. Castagnola said that he * * * went through Maistros’s mailbox to confirm that Maistros did live at the address he found for him online.

{¶ 9} The detective did not state in the search-warrant affidavit the Internet-access capability or other capabilities of Castagnola’s cell phone. Nor did the search-warrant affidavit provide information, beyond the “online” inference, to indicate that Castagnola had conducted an online search for Maistros’s address or that a computer that was used to conduct such a search was located in Castagnola’s residence.

{¶ 10} After reviewing the search-warrant affidavit, a judge of the Stow Municipal Court issued the search warrant. The warrant repeated the affidavit’s ■ description of the items to be searched for and the affidavit’s statement that if the items were found, they would be seized and used as evidence in prosecuting the alleged crimes.

{¶ 11} The execution of the search warrant led to the seizure of numerous items, including two computers, one of which had not been used in two years.

{¶ 12} Natasha Branam, a forensic cyber-crimes analyst at the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Identification and Investigation (“BCI”), examined Castagnola’s computers. She later testified that Castagnola’s computer “was brought in for [a case involving] menacing, threatening, and intimidation.” Initially she reviewed the case synopsis and the search warrant, which said that Castagnola had obtained Maistros’s address online. Branam performed her analysis by making a copy of [4]*4the hard drive of the recently used computer. She then used a forensic software program, that “go[es] through documents, images, videos” on the hard drive. She testified that initially, she was “looking for any evidence of intimidation of David Maistros * * * and anything associated with that.” She searched for the name “David Maistros” using her software program, without result. However, Branam testified that she later found data on David Maistros in the computer’s “unallocated space,” which is “the space where deleted data goes.”

{¶ 13} Branam then “went to the images to find images associated with court websites.” She explained that the “My Image” tab “has all the images associated with the drive being examined.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 N.E.3d 638, 145 Ohio St. 3d 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-castagnola-ohio-2015.