State v. Curlee-Jones

2013 Ohio 1175
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 28, 2013
Docket98233
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2013 Ohio 1175 (State v. Curlee-Jones) 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. Curlee-Jones, 2013 Ohio 1175 (Ohio Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Curlee-Jones, 2013-Ohio-1175.]

Court of Appeals of Ohio EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION No. 98233

STATE OF OHIO

PLAINTIFF-APPELLEE

vs.

KATHY CURLEE-JONES DEFENDANT-APPELLANT

JUDGMENT: REVERSED

Criminal Appeal from the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas Case No. CR-543407

BEFORE: Stewart, A.J., Rocco, J., and E.A. Gallagher, J.

RELEASED AND JOURNALIZED: March 28, 2013 ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT

Timothy R. Sterkel 1414 South Green Road, Suite 310 South Euclid, OH 44121

ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE

Timothy J. McGinty Cuyahoga County Prosecutor

BY: Edward D. Brydle Assistant County Prosecutor The Justice Center 1200 Ontario Street, 8th Floor Cleveland, OH 44113 MELODY J. STEWART, A.J.:

{¶1} Defendant-appellant Kathy Curlee-Jones was found guilty of tampering with

evidence, resisting arrest, and two counts of assault on a police officer. The charges

arose from a struggle that ensued after she refused to give the police a cell phone that the

parties erroneously thought had been used to videotape the arrest of her son, codefendant

Lamont Jones. Curlee-Jones believed that video on the cell phone may have documented

her claim that the police used excessive force in Lamont’s arrest. In this appeal, she

argues (1) that the state failed to produce sufficient evidence to support a conviction on

all but the resisting arrest count; (2) that the court erred by refusing to allow her to

cross-examine the officers involved as to whether they had been involved in prior

lawsuits alleging that they used excessive force when making arrests; and (3) that the

court erred by refusing to allow her to introduce Cleveland Police Department policy

regarding the rights of citizens to videotape police actions.

I

{¶2} Curlee-Jones and the state presented completely different versions of what

transpired on the night of her arrest: the police claimed that she was combative,

interfering, and profane; she claimed to have been calm and the object of police brutality

and excess. Despite these conflicting versions of events, the relevant standard of review

for a claim that there is insufficient evidence to support a conviction requires us to view

the evidence in a light most favorable to the prosecution to determine whether any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime proven beyond a

reasonable doubt. State v. Jenks, 61 Ohio St.3d 259, 574 N.E.2d 492 (1981), paragraph

two of the syllabus. Therefore, we must view the evidence most favorably to the state,

not to Curlee-Jones.

{¶3} Viewed in that light, the evidence showed that Lamont Jones and a group of

friends and relatives were gathered at Curlee-Jones’s home preparing to celebrate

Lamont’s 21st birthday. A relative and two friends left to proceed to another house

where Lamont’s birthday party was being held. They were later stopped by three vice

unit police cars for walking in the middle of the street. According to police, when one of

the three looked as though he was about to flee, they decided to detain all three men and

conducted a pat-down. Another person who left Curlee-Jones’s house saw the three

being detained and ran back to Curlee-Jones’s house to report the stop.

{¶4} When Lamont heard about the stop, he ran to the scene yelling, “that’s my

f***ing people, what’s going on?” One of the officers told Lamont to stay back, but

Lamont replied, “F**k that, that’s my people.” Lamont ignored three or four orders to

step back, kept trying to evade the assembled officers to reach the three men, and was

“yelling and screaming and cursing, loud.” One of the officers then put his hand out and

pushed Lamont in the chest, saying, “I’m not telling you again, keep going.” Another

officer stepped between them, at which point Lamont put up his fists, took a fighting

stance, and started swinging wildly. The officer responded in kind and knocked Lamont down. Three officers tried to handcuff Lamont, but because he struggled with them, he

was subdued with a taser.

{¶5} As the officers were struggling with Lamont, Curlee-Jones drove up to the

scene and parked on the curb. She exited her car and approached the police yelling,

“What the hell is going on?” Not knowing who she was and fearing they might lose

control of the situation, the police ordered Curlee-Jones to get back in her car and leave

the scene. She ignored the order and the police again, rather forcefully, ordered her back

to her car to leave the scene. Eventually, Curlee-Jones complied and reentered her

vehicle to leave.

{¶6} As Curlee-Jones reentered her car, the police noticed that one of her

passengers was holding up a cell phone as though he was shooting a video with it saying,

“I got all this, I got all this.” A police sergeant determined that any video taken by the

phone might document Lamont’s actions in assaulting a police officer and resisting arrest,

so he ordered that the phone be taken as possible evidence. A detective went up to the

open passenger door and ordered that the passenger hand over the phone. The passenger,

holding the phone away from the detective, refused several orders to do so. The

detective leaned into the car to grab the phone. The passenger then handed the phone to

Curlee-Jones, who put it down her shirt and started to accelerate away. When she did so,

the detective was part of the way in the car and was being dragged as the car moved.

The detective screamed at Curlee-Jones to stop the car, and eventually pulled his gun on

her to force her to stop. {¶7} When Curlee-Jones stopped the car, she refused to exit it. The police pulled

her from the car amidst her swinging and kicking at the officers who were trying to

handcuff her. She was forced to the ground but struggled, so like her son Lamont, she

was subdued by a taser.

{¶8} The parties later determined that the cell phone lacked video capability and

contained nothing that documented Lamont’s arrest.

II

{¶9} The state charged Curlee-Jones with tampering with evidence under R.C.

2921.12(A)(1). That section states that no person, knowing that an official investigation

was in progress, shall “alter, destroy, conceal, or remove any record, document, or thing,

with purpose to impair its value or availability as evidence in such proceeding or

investigation.” Id.

{¶10} Curlee-Jones argues that her passenger had the right to video the police, so

the police had no right to seize the cell phone that allegedly contained the video. We

must reject this argument because Curlee-Jones did not own the cell phone taken by the

police. When a defendant is aggrieved by an allegedly illegal seizure of a third party’s

property, the Fourth Amendment rights of that defendant have not been infringed. Rakas

v. Illinois, 439 U.S. 128, 134, 58 L.Ed.2d 387, 99 S.Ct. 421 (1978); United States v.

Payner, 447 U.S. 727, 731, 100 S.Ct. 2439, 65 L.Ed.2d 468 (1980). The facts show that

Curlee-Jones only had temporary possession of the cell phone because its owner handed the phone to her to keep it from the police. She had no privacy right in that cell phone,

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2013 Ohio 1175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-curlee-jones-ohioctapp-2013.