State v. Evans

760 N.E.2d 909, 144 Ohio App. 3d 539
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 13, 2001
DocketAppeal No. C-000565, Trial No. B-9904303
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 760 N.E.2d 909 (State v. Evans) 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. Evans, 760 N.E.2d 909, 144 Ohio App. 3d 539 (Ohio Ct. App. 2001).

Opinions

Painter, Judge.

The trial court, after initially overruling a motion to suppress, reconsidered and, based on our decision in State v. Holt, 1 suppressed one written and two oral statements made by the defendant-appellee, Julius Evans. We affirm the trial court’s suppression of two of the statements because they were a product of coercion. But we hold that the remaining oral statement was not subject to suppression for that reason and remand the case for further proceedings.

I. Assault Becomes Murder

The relevant facts are not disputed. In late 1998, Evans, who was then fifteen years old, was charged with felonious assault. The charge was initially dismissed without prejudice because the state could not positively identify the attacker. Evans, when questioned by the police about the assault, had declined to comment, and the victim had subsequently died from the injuries sustained in the attack without regaining consciousness. According to the officer heading the investigation, though the police were unable to proceed against Evans, he remained the prime suspect in what had become a murder investigation.

II. Evans Confined for Unrelated Offense

In the interim, Evans was charged with an unrelated aggravated assault. He admitted his culpability for that assault and was adjudicated delinquent by the juvenile court. The court ordered Evans to be confined and to receive therapy at Hillcrest School, a residential treatment center for juvenile offenders. Hillcrest is operated by the juvenile court, and the residential treatment counselors who assumed responsibility for the care and therapy of the juveniles are employees of the court.

III. Evans Makes Three Statements

During Evans’s first two weeks in custody at Hillcrest, he made two oral statements and one written statement to the residential treatment counselors. All three incriminated him in the initial aggravated assault that had become a murder. Largely on the strength of these three statements, Evans was charged with murder.

The circumstances under which Evans made the three incriminatory statements determine the outcome of this appeal. It is undisputed that Evans was ordered to Hillcrest by the juvenile court for confinement and therapy and that *547 Hillcrest’s counselors were employees of the court. One residential treatment counselor even stated that she considered herself to be a law enforcement officer, though other counselors did not so describe themselves.

There is also no dispute that Evans’s stay at Hillcrest was involuntary. Had Evans chosen to leave Hillcrest without permission, the police would have been called, Evans would have been picked up, and he would have been returned to juvenile court to answer for a violation of the court’s commitment order.

Similarly, there is no dispute that Evans was required to participate in therapy. Had Evans failed to participate, he could have been found in violation of the court order that he do so, and he would have risked transfer to a far more restrictive facility operated by the Department of Youth Services. But, initially, Evans’s' failure to participate meant that he would have been unable to join in group activities, and that he could not have gone home on the weekends, as other residents were eligible to do. The record is clear that, according to the staff at Hillcrest, some residents initially resisted the therapeutic indoctrination procedures, but that all juvenile residents eventually succumbed to the pressure and participated.

When Evans arrived at Hillcrest, his indoctrination to therapy required that he complete a “commitment offense paper.” Evans was told to write about all the crimes that he had committed, whether or not they related to the crimes for which he had been sent to Hillcrest, and whether or not he had ever been adjudicated delinquent by the court for them. Apparently, the instructions for the paper typically included a statement that the policy of Hillcrest was to seek an account of past offenses for purposes of therapy, not prosecution. But Evans’s particular instruction form, from which several pages are now missing, apparently did not include this preamble. None of the staff recalled orally advising Evans that his paper was for therapy rather than for prosecution. Nor did any member of the staff recall warning Evans that he had a right not to incriminate himself.

Hillcrest authorities deemed Evans’s first attempt to complete the “commitment offense paper” unacceptable because “incomplete.” The staff required that he try again. To assist him in being more thorough, a counselor provided Evans with a list of fourteen charges that had at one time been brought against him, and he was specifically told to write separately about each of them. The last of these fourteen charges was the initial aggravated assault that had become a murder. Evans submitted his more detailed “commitment offense paper” a week and a half later. What he wrote about the fourteenth charge was- essentially a confession to murder.

Once Evans’s “commitment offense paper” had been completed to the satisfaction of the staff, Evans was required to present the paper orally in a group- *548 acceptance session before his counselors and his peers. This subsequent indoctrinational step was similarly a condition of Evans’s court-ordered therapy, and completion of the step was required before he could become eligible for home visits and further group participation. Evans’s oral recitation of his paper was also a confession to his involvement in the death of the victim.

Finally, after Evans had submitted his revised “commitment offense paper” to the staff but the day before he presented the paper to his group, Evans was transported to the hospital to receive treatment for a medical condition. Evans rode to the hospital in a car driven by his counselor. The counselor asked Evans how someone so young had accumulated such an extensive record. Evans replied with an explanation that included further incriminating statements about his involvement in the murder.

The following week, Hillcrest’s supervisor for the residential treatment counselors heard about Evans’s series of confessions. He decided to report the details to Hillcrest’s resident social worker, who in turn called the police. As a result of the subsequent investigation, Evans was charged with murder. Evans’s three statements were crucial to the state’s case against him.

Evans moved to suppress all three statements that he had made while in custody at Hillcrest. The trial court originally denied the motion to suppress, stating that Evans’s three separate confessions were voluntary under the totality of the circumstances and that there had been no custodial interrogation that would have required that Evans receive Miranda warnings. Then, upon further consideration and a review of our decision in State v. Holt 2 the court reversed itself and granted Evans’s motion to suppress all three statements.

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Bluebook (online)
760 N.E.2d 909, 144 Ohio App. 3d 539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-evans-ohioctapp-2001.