State v. Diebert

2025 Ohio 2620
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 25, 2025
DocketWD-24-062
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2025 Ohio 2620 (State v. Diebert) 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. Diebert, 2025 Ohio 2620 (Ohio Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Diebert, 2025-Ohio-2620.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT WOOD COUNTY

State of Ohio Court of Appeals No. WD-24-062

Appellee Trial Court No. 24CRB0153

v.

Michael Allen Diebert DECISION AND JUDGMENT Appellant Decided: July 25, 2025

*****

Karin L. Coble, for appellant.

Alyssa M. Blackburn, Prosecuting Attorney for appellee.

SULEK, P.J.

{¶ 1} Appellant, Michael Diebert, appeals from the August 6, 2024 judgment of

the Bowling Green Municipal Court convicting him of violating a protection order. For

the following reasons, the trial court’s judgment is affirmed. I. Background

{¶ 2} On October 25, 2023, the Wood County Common Pleas Court issued a civil

stalking protection order (CSPO) pursuant to R.C. 2903.214 prohibiting Diebert from

coming within 500 feet of T.K. or his wife, P.K. The order further required that if

Diebert “accidentally comes in contact with [T.K. or P.K.] in any public or private place,

[Diebert] must depart immediately.” (Emphasis in original.) Notably, the CSPO

expressly included “encounters on public and private roads, highways, and

thoroughfares.” The order was effective until April 25, 2024.

{¶ 3} On August 6, 2024, Diebert was tried for recklessly violating the CSPO in

violation of R.C. 2919.27(A), a first-degree misdemeanor, during an encounter that

occurred on November 25, 2023, a month after the CSPO was issued. The encounter

occurred near a pedestrian bridge located on East Water Street in North Baltimore,

approximately 500 feet west of Diebert’s home, that spans over a small creek. At the

trial, the following testimony and evidence was presented.

{¶ 4} T.K. testified that he was an 81-year-old resident of North Baltimore, Ohio,

a small town. He and his wife, P.K., frequently feed approximately 30 stray cats that live

around North Baltimore. T.K. and P.K. learned that some cats had been abandoned in an

area near the pedestrian bridge on East Water Street, so they began to leave cat food near

the bridge. T.K. testified that they had been feeding the cats near the bridge for

approximately one month before November 25, 2023.

2. {¶ 5} On November 25, 2023, T.K. and P.K. were driving eastbound on Water

Street, intending to leave food for the cats on the west side of the pedestrian bridge. As

they approached the bridge, they saw a man walking eastbound along Water Street, also

toward the bridge. They did not know who he was at first because they initially saw only

the back of the man. As they neared the bridge, however, they passed the man and he

looked toward their vehicle. They realized the man was Diebert. T.K. said he was unsure

whether Diebert recognized them, but he observed Diebert begin recording video of their

vehicle, which he thought meant that Diebert must have recognized them. T.K. testified

that Diebert did not speak to them or make any gestures as he passed their vehicle.

{¶ 6} After they parked next to the bridge, T.K. and P.K. decided not to get out of

their vehicle right away, and instead they waited for Diebert to cross the bridge and leave.

T.K. testified that because they had a CSPO, they expected Diebert to leave the area right

away and not “dillydally.” T.K. said that Diebert did not leave right away, but instead

Diebert went to one side of the bridge “and pointed something, looked over his shoulder

and pointed something towards us and stood there for a few minutes.” Diebert then

crossed the bridge and did the same thing on the other side of the bridge before walking

away. T.K. testified that he was not sure if Diebert was pointing a gun at them, so T.K.

and P.K. waited inside their vehicle until Diebert “was well on his way” back to his house

before they got out to feed the cats.

{¶ 7} The state played a video that Diebert recorded with his cell phone as he was

walking along East Water Street toward the bridge that day. In the video, concrete

3. barricades are visible where the bridge meets East Water Street on both sides to prevent

vehicles from driving onto the bridge. In the beginning of the video, a brown Toyota

SUV with an Ohio license plate beginning with DY9 passes Diebert on his right side as

he walks toward the bridge. The vehicle stops just before the barricade, about 10 seconds

after the video starts. Diebert continues walking on the left side of the street, passing the

stopped SUV without speaking or changing his pace, for approximately 20 seconds

before he reaches the barricades. He then steps around the barricades onto the bridge.

Once he gets onto the bridge, he stops and raises his binoculars and looks toward the

creek on the north side of the bridge for approximately 10 seconds. During those

seconds, Diebert’s camera is facing away from the SUV. He then turns around and walks

to the other side of the bridge, which takes him approximately 15 to 20 seconds, raises his

binoculars again, and looks toward the south side of the creek for approximately 15

seconds. During those 15 seconds, Diebert’s camera records the parked SUV. Diebert

then continues on his path, exiting the bridge and walking away from the SUV as he

points his camera over his left shoulder, recording the view behind him. In total,

Diebert’s two stops to look over the two sides of the bridge with his binoculars appear to

have delayed his path over the bridge by no more than 45 seconds.

{¶ 8} About 15 seconds after Diebert exits the bridge, a person is seen getting out

of the driver’s side of the SUV and waving at Diebert. Diebert pauses for approximately

10 seconds as the person walks around the front of the SUV to the south side of the street,

near the creek, and is then followed by a second person. Diebert then resumes walking

4. along the street without pausing or otherwise changing his pace while continuing to

record video over his shoulder. At no point during the entire video, which is just over 3

minutes long, is anyone heard speaking.

{¶ 9} T.K., on cross-examination, admitted that he did not contact the police about

his encounter with Diebert until more than two weeks after it occurred because he had not

realized that Diebert’s actions could be a violation of the CSPO. T.K. also confirmed that

he told the police that Diebert stopped on the bridge for five to ten minutes, which T.K.

conceded was not true. T.K. explained that it just felt that long while he was waiting in

his vehicle for Diebert to leave the bridge. T.K. also admitted that when he reported

Diebert’s actions to the police, he did not tell the police that he thought Diebert might

have had a gun, and instead he told the police that Diebert pointed a camera at them.

{¶ 10} Officer Brad McBride, a police officer with the North Baltimore police

department, also testified. Through a search warrant, Officer McBride obtained a video

from a home security camera mounted on the exterior of Diebert’s home. The camera

pointed down East Water Street toward the west, in the direction of the bridge. Unlike

Diebert’s cell phone recording, this video did not have any audio.

{¶ 11} The security video is largely similar to Diebert’s cell phone video, though

the security video has a few details not present in the cell phone video. The security

video shows Diebert walking with a cell phone at just above shoulder height as he walks

away from the bridge.

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Related

State v. Downton
2025 Ohio 4903 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2025)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2025 Ohio 2620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-diebert-ohioctapp-2025.