State v. Dixon

2012 Ohio 4689
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 25, 2012
Docket11CA3413
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2012 Ohio 4689 (State v. Dixon) 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. Dixon, 2012 Ohio 4689 (Ohio Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Dixon, 2012-Ohio-4689.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT SCIOTO COUNTY

STATE OF OHIO, : : Plaintiff-Appellee, : Case No. 11CA3413 : vs. : Released: September 25, 2012 : TYRONE R. DIXON, : DECISION AND JUDGMENT : ENTRY Defendant-Appellant. : APPEARANCES:

Bryan Scott Hicks, Lebanon, Ohio, for Appellant.

Mark E. Kuhn, Scioto County Prosecutor, and Pat Apel, Assistant Scioto County Prosecutor, Portsmouth, Ohio, for Appellee.

McFarland, J.:

{¶1} Appellant, Tyrone Dixon, appeals his conviction in the Scioto County

Court of Common Pleas after a jury found him guilty of trafficking in drugs,

possession of drugs, possessing criminal tools, possession of marihuana, and

conspiracy to traffic in drugs. The charges included major drug offender

specifications and within the vicinity of a school specifications. Dixon raises two

assignments of error, arguing 1) the trial court erred in overruling his motion to

suppress the evidence; and 2) the trial court erred in sentencing him to a mandatory

term of 20 years. In response to the Court’s order, Dixon raised an additional Scioto App. No. 11CA3413 2

assignment of error, arguing Count 2 should not be a first degree felony because

the verdict form did not specify the drug involved.

{¶2} Having reviewed the record, we find the trial court correctly overruled

Dixon’s motion to suppress the evidence and we overrule his first assignment of

error. However, the trial court did incorrectly state a portion of Dixon’s sentence

was mandatory, when it was not, and we sustain Dixon’s second assignment of

error. Further, the trial court should have reduced the degree of the offense in

Count 2, as the verdict form failed to specify the controlled substance involved,

and we sustain Dixon’s third assignment of error. Additionally, although not

raised by Dixon, we sua sponte notice errors on the verdict forms for counts 8 and

9 which require us to vacate and remand Appellant’s conviction on count 8, and to

remand the matter on count 9, in order for the trial court to reduce the degree of the

offense. Accordingly, we affirm in part and reverse in part the trial court’s

judgment and remand the case for proceedings consistent with this opinion.

FACTS

{¶3} On October 25, 2010, Officer Steve Timberlake was unloading items

from his vehicle when an unknown male approached him. The male knew

Timberlake by name and told him there were men from Detroit selling drugs out of

Katherine Lansing’s residence at 616 Sixth Street in Portsmouth, Ohio. The next

morning, Timberlake found an anonymous note on his vehicle’s windshield, Scioto App. No. 11CA3413 3

addressed to him, indicating there were “D-boys” at the house on Sixth Street, and

illegal activity was occurring at another location in Portsmouth.

{¶4} Timberlake viewed the Scioto County Court of Common Pleas’

website and determined Lansing was on probation. Timberlake contacted Nick

Ferrara, the court’s chief probation officer, and discussed the tip about Lansing.

Ferrara noted Lansing’s listed address was not on Sixth Street, but she had not

been reporting to her probation officer and had an outstanding warrant for her

arrest. Ferrara determined the 616 Sixth Street address was incorrect, as the

probation department was located on Sixth Street, and 616 would have been an

alleyway.

{¶5} As a result of this conversation, Timberlake began checking the police

department’s records for mention of Lansing. One month earlier, on September

22, 2010, a caller telephoned the police to report a burglary at 518 Sixth Street,

Portsmouth, Ohio. The report identified the caller as “Catherine Lansing,” the

resident.

{¶6} Based upon this new information that placed Lansing at 518 Sixth

Street only one month earlier, Ferrara decided it would be prudent to visit the

residence and arrest Lansing. Because of Timberlake’s tip that there may be as

many as five additional persons present, who were allegedly selling drugs, Ferrara

requested Timberlake and other officers from the Portsmouth Police Department Scioto App. No. 11CA3413 4

assist with the home search for safety reasons. Timberlake and two other officers

accompanied Ferrara and two probation officers to the residence.

{¶7} Upon arriving at the residence, part of the group went to the front door,

while the others covered the rear. One of the probation officers at the front door

knocked and announced his presence. The officers heard scuffling inside, but no

verbal response, and no one answered the door. The officers at the back then

noticed one to two males approaching the second story window in a manner that

indicated they were attempting to exit the window. The officers shouted this

information to the others at the front of the house. At that point, Ferrara ordered

one of the probation officers to breach the door.

{¶8} Upon entering the residence, the officers saw Maurice Williams

descending the stairs. They escorted him to the living room without incident. Law

enforcement found Daniel Pippen in the upstairs restroom and Dixon, Evan

Howard, and Eric Durr in a small upstairs bedroom. The bedroom had a dresser

and a mattress in it, along with a pile of money on the floor. The money totaled

$3,090.

{¶9} Probation officers were unable to locate Lansing within the house, but

they did find mail addressed to her at the residence, as well as a photo of her on the

refrigerator. With evidence the house was Lansing’s residence, the officers

conducted a search for contraband. Scioto App. No. 11CA3413 5

{¶10} Law enforcement found a total of $16,803, 1,824 oxycodone pills,

cocaine, heroin, marihuana, and two digital scales. Some of the pills and money

were in a sock underneath a cushion on the couch. Other drugs and money were in

a plastic Walmart bag by the door to the basement. Most of the marihuana was

behind the dresser in the upstairs bedroom. There was additional money under the

mattress in the same room. There was even money inside of a woman’s shoe.

Officers found the digital scales in the kitchen. After the search, Dixon attempted

to claim all of the contraband as his, but when officers asked him what was his,

Dixon was unable to identify all of the contraband the officers found.

{¶11} The grand jury indicted Dixon and the others within the house for

trafficking in drugs, possession of drugs, trafficking in cocaine, possession of

cocaine, possession of criminal tools, possession of marihuana, and conspiracy to

traffic in drugs, many of which included aggravating specifications. During the

jury trial, the trial court dismissed the counts relating to the cocaine, and the jury

convicted Dixon of the remaining counts and found the money recovered was

subject to forfeiture. The verdict forms read, in relevant part:

Count 1: “Trafficking in Drugs/Oxycodone/Vicinity of a School/Major

Drug Offender.” The jury found the amount equaled or

exceeded 100 times the bulk amount and was within 1,000 feet

of a school. Scioto App. No. 11CA3413 6

Count 2: “Possession of Drugs/Major Drug Offender.” The jury found

the amount equaled or exceeded 100 times the bulk amount.

Count 3: “Trafficking in Drugs/Heroin/Within the Vicinity of a School.”

The jury found the amount was equal to or greater than one

gram but less than five (5) grams, and was within 1,000 feet of

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