State v. Etherson-Tabb

2024 Ohio 550
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 9, 2024
Docket22CA4009
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2024 Ohio 550 (State v. Etherson-Tabb) 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. Etherson-Tabb, 2024 Ohio 550 (Ohio Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Etherson-Tabb, 2024-Ohio-550.]

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

State of Ohio, : Case No. 22CA4009

Plaintiff-Appellee, : DECISION AND v. : JUDGMENT ENTRY

Ryan C. Etherson-Tabb,1 :

Defendant-Appellant. : RELEASED 2/9/2024

______________________________________________________________________ APPEARANCES:

Valerie M. Webb, The Law Office of Valerie M. Webb, LLC, Portsmouth, Ohio, for appellant.

Shane A. Tieman, Prosecuting Attorney, and Jay Willis, Assistant Prosecuting Attorney, Portsmouth, Ohio, for appellee. ______________________________________________________________________ Hess, J.

{¶1} Ryan C. Etherson-Tabb appeals from a judgment of the Scioto County

Court of Common Pleas convicting him of aggravated trafficking in drugs and possessing

criminal tools. Etherson-Tabb presents one assignment of error asserting that the trial

court erred in denying his motion to suppress. For the reasons which follow, we overrule

the assignment of error and affirm the trial court’s judgment.

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

{¶2} On August 25, 2021, Etherson-Tabb was indicted on one count of

aggravated trafficking in drugs, one count of aggravated possession of drugs, and one

1 At the trial level, appellant indicated his last name is “Etcherson-Tabb.” In this decision we have spelled his last name as it appears in the judgment entry from which he appeals. Scioto App. No. 22CA4009 2

count of possessing criminal tools. He pleaded not guilty and filed a motion to suppress.

The trial court conducted the suppression hearing and part of the bench trial

simultaneously.

{¶3} Several witnesses testified for the state, but most pertinent to this appeal is

the testimony of Trooper Nick Lewis of the Ohio State Highway Patrol. He testified that

on Sunday, June 28, 2020, around 11:30 p.m., he saw a vehicle traveling southbound on

U.S. Route 23 (“US 23”). The vehicle caught his attention because it appeared to be a

rental vehicle, and the driver appeared to be wearing a brand-new yellow construction

vest. Trooper Lewis testified that a lot of drug traffickers use rental vehicles, that it is

unusual to see construction workers on US 23 on a Sunday at 11:30 p.m., and that people

sometimes try to look like construction workers to “blend in with traffic.” Trooper Lewis

caught up to the vehicle near the exit to State Route 823 (“SR 823”). The vehicle was in

the right lane, and Trooper Lewis saw its left tires drift completely over the white dash

center lane line before abruptly moving back into the right lane. The driver then took the

southbound exit ramp to SR 823. Trooper Lewis testified that there is a point where the

fog lines for the southbound and northbound exit ramps “basically come into a triangle,”

and the lanes join. Right before that point, he saw the vehicle’s “right side tire” drift over

the southbound exit ramp’s white fog line by about half a tire width. The driver then

activated his turn signal and moved into the other lane.

{¶4} Trooper Lewis had two cameras in his cruiser at the time of the traffic stop—

a front-facing one which captured events happening through the front windshield and a

rear-facing one which captured events happening in the backseat. Trooper Lewis testified

that the cameras were set up to continuously record but only began recording 60 seconds Scioto App. No. 22CA4009 3

before he activated his overhead lights. He indicated that the cameras did not capture the

traffic violations in this case because they occurred more than 60 seconds before he

activated his overhead lights.

{¶5} The video footage starts 90 seconds before Trooper Lewis activated his

overhead lights. The audio is sometimes difficult to hear, but after Trooper Lewis

approaches the vehicle, he can be heard asking the driver, Etherson-Tabb, for his license.

Trooper Lewis testified that Etherson-Tabb gave him a Michigan ID card. On the footage,

Etherson-Tabb tells Trooper Lewis that he is driving a rental car and heading to Ashland,

Kentucky for court. They discuss the reason for the traffic stop, and Trooper Lewis says,

“So you don’t have a driver’s license?” Etherson-Tabb says he does and gives Trooper

Lewis some paperwork. Trooper Lewis briefly looks at it while Etherson-Tabb talks.

Trooper Lewis puts the paperwork inside the vehicle and has Etherson-Tabb exit the

vehicle. Trooper Lewis asks if Etherson-Tabb has any weapons. Etherson-Tabb

indicates he does not and raises his arms up, and Trooper Lewis says he will pat

Etherson-Tabb down if he does not mind. On the footage, it sounds as if he says, “Ok,”

and Trooper Lewis testified that Etherson-Tabb said he did not care. Trooper Lewis then

does a pat-down search, places Etherson-Tabb in the back of the cruiser, and retrieves

the paperwork from his vehicle.

{¶6} Trooper Lewis testified that he returned to his cruiser to verify whether

Etherson-Tabb had a driver’s license. On the footage, once in the cruiser, Trooper Lewis

asks Etherson-Tabb what he has court for, and Etherson-Tabb says it is for a “ticket.”

Trooper Lewis asks if there is anything illegal in Etherson-Tabb’s vehicle. Etherson-Tabb

says there is not and something like “everything you need to do.” Trooper Lewis testified Scioto App. No. 22CA4009 4

that he took this comment to mean Etherson-Tabb would probably consent to a vehicle

search if asked, so Trooper Lewis had Trooper Matt Lloyd head to the scene. At some

point before Trooper Lloyd arrived, Trooper Lewis ran the number on the Michigan ID

card, and the Michigan BMV indicated Etherson-Tabb’s license was expired and

suspended. On the footage, Trooper Lewis and Etherson-Tabb discuss his paperwork.

Trooper Lewis testified that he had “a difficult time” going through it because it was from

two different courts. It appeared to him that Etherson-Tabb had been granted driving

privileges in Michigan for 60 days, which had expired. Trooper Lewis testified that he tried

to figure out if the privileges had been extended.

{¶7} On the footage, Trooper Lewis and Etherson-Tabb discuss the fact that

another person rented the vehicle Etherson-Tabb is driving because he could not do so

with a suspended license. Trooper Lewis also asks where Etherson-Tabb works. He

initially says he is not working right now but then says he does a little construction in

Detroit and is traveling from work. They discuss his driver’s license again and a document

Trooper Lewis says that he is “trying to figure out.” About 10 minutes into the traffic stop,

Trooper Lewis asks dispatch for a “78,” which he testified is a criminal history check. He

testified that he gave dispatch Etherson-Tabb’s driver’s license number, and at that point,

dispatch will “typically run that,” check the status of the person’s license, check for

warrants, and run a criminal history check. However, he acknowledged that he did not

think dispatch could give him any information about the license status that he did not

already have access to from his cruiser.

{¶8} On the footage, Trooper Lewis asks Etherson-Tabb additional questions

about his upcoming traffic case. About 14 minutes into the stop, Trooper Lloyd arrives. Scioto App. No. 22CA4009 5

Trooper Lewis testified that at that point, he thought he was trying to verify whether

Etherson-Tabb had court the next day.

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