State v. Glasser

2012 Ohio 3265
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 27, 2012
Docket11CA11
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2012 Ohio 3265 (State v. Glasser) 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. Glasser, 2012 Ohio 3265 (Ohio Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Glasser, 2012-Ohio-3265.]

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

STATE OF OHIO, : Case No. 11CA11 : Plaintiff-Appellee, : : DECISION AND v. : JUDGMENT ENTRY : TERRENCE GLASSER, : : RELEASED: 06/27/12 Defendant-Appellant. : ______________________________________________________________________ APPEARANCES:

Timothy Young, State Public Defender, and Stephen P. Hardwick, Assistant State Public Defender, Columbus, Ohio, for appellant.

Keller J. Blackburn, Athens County Prosecutor, Athens, Ohio, for appellee. ______________________________________________________________________ Harsha, J.

{¶1} Terrence Glasser appeals his convictions for two counts of aggravated

arson for setting fire to his home and an outbuilding on his property. Glasser contends

that although the trial court gave the jury legally correct instructions on the mens rea

and causation elements for aggravated arson, the wording or formatting of the

causation instructions undercut the State’s burden to prove the required mens rea.

Specifically, he complains about the wording indicating he is responsible for “the natural

and foreseeable consequences” of his conduct. After reviewing the charge in its

entirety, we conclude that the trial court’s causation instruction did not dilute the mens

rea element of “knowingly,” which the jury had to find to convict Glasser.

{¶2} Next, Glasser complains that when he testified at trial, the court incorrectly

made him invoke the marital communications privilege in the jury’s presence. We agree

that the trial court erred because the jury could improperly infer that Glasser was hiding Athens App. No. 11CA11 2

incriminating statements he made to his wife. However, the error was harmless given

the substantial other evidence of his guilt.

{¶3} Glasser also contends that the trial court erred when it conducted part of a

hearing on the admission of the State’s trial exhibits outside of his presence. Even if we

assume defense counsel did not waive Glasser’s right to be present, Glasser cannot

establish plain error. Glasser’s counsel was at the hearing, and deciding whether to

contest the admissibility of exhibits is a legal issue within the professional judgment of

counsel. Glasser does not argue that his counsel rendered ineffective assistance and

has not demonstrated that the outcome of the trial would have been different but for his

absence. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

I. Facts

{¶4} A grand jury indicted Glasser on two counts of aggravated arson. He

pleaded not guilty to the charges, and the matter proceeded to a jury trial where

although several witnesses testified, only a summary of the evidence follows.

{¶5} Roman Brandau, a fire and explosion investigator for the Ohio State Fire

Marshall’s Office, testified that he investigated the incident on the Glassers’ property.

His investigation revealed that two fires had been intentionally set – one in an

outbuilding and one in a bedroom. When he interviewed Glasser at the hospital,

Brandau noticed a strong odor of petroleum distillate on him. Glasser agreed to give

Brandau his clothing for analysis. By the time Brandau retrieved fire debris bags from

his car, Glasser placed his shirt, jeans, and shoes in a bag. Brandau also found a

safety cap/lid and a handkerchief in the bag. Later testing revealed that all the items

had medium petroleum distillate on them, which could be from paint thinner, charcoal Athens App. No. 11CA11 3

starter, or lamp oil. Brandau also collected newspaper remnants from the floor near a

side door because he thought the paper might have been used to accelerate the fire’s

movement from the outbuilding to the house. The remnants tested positive for medium

isoparaffinic product, which could be from mineral spirits or lamp oil.

{¶6} Brandau and another investigator interviewed Glasser again two days

later at Appalachian Behavioral Health Care (ABH), a state psychiatric hospital. During

the interview Glasser claimed that he did not remember starting the fire in the

outbuilding. But later, he said: “To the best … to the best of my * * * recollection, and

I’m not 100% sure if it’s correct is I just wadded up a bunch of papers and lit’em on fire.”

He did this in the “very back” of the outbuilding. Glasser told investigators he used a Bic

lighter he got from a toolbox and newspaper already in the outbuilding. Glasser put an

“X” on a diagram of the outbuilding to mark the location where he lit the papers on fire.

Although investigators did not tell Glasser where the fire originated, he marked the

exact area of origin investigators found – the southeast corner of the building. He also

acknowledged that he probably put newspaper by the side door to move the fire from

the outbuilding to the house. Glasser admitted that the thought of setting fire to the

house crossed his mind but was “99% sure” he did not set the house on fire. Glasser

acknowledged that he thought he wadded up newspaper inside the house but could not

remember where he placed it. Brandau admitted that during the interview Glasser had

a visible injury on his forehead and complained that his head hurt several times.

{¶7} Richard Casto, owner and operator of a fire investigation firm, testified that

State Farm hired him to evaluate the Glassers’ property. Casto concluded someone

intentionally set two fires on the property – one in the outbuilding and one in a bedroom. Athens App. No. 11CA11 4

Casto found a “combustible trailer” in the house, i.e., newspapers and other papers laid

through a hallway into the bedroom to unnaturally move the fire from one area to

another. He knew the papers were on the floor before the fire because they were

adhered to the carpet, and “you could peel it up and the carpet was pristine below it * *

*.”

{¶8} A.G., Glasser’s seven-year old son, testified that before his dad walked

him to school the morning of the fires he was “acting kind of funny. And he had this big

chunk tooken out of his head. * * * And he was laying papers down.” A.G. explained

that Glasser was “wadding [papers] up a little bit and putting them down.” He saw

Glasser do this by a side door of the house and near a shelf by the front door. Robin

Warren, a Nelsonville-York City Schools bus driver, testified that when she saw Glasser

walking his son to school that day, he was “like staggering like he was, I don’t know, like

he was hurt or something because his face was all messed up.” According to Warren,

his face was red, and he had a cut on his nose.

{¶9} Margaret Whitmore, the Glassers’ next door neighbor, testified that the fire

from the Glassers’ outbuilding spread to her attached garage while she was home.

Whitmore’s daughter, Millie Gwilym, testified that when she saw the Glassers’

outbuilding engulfed in flames, she told her mother and ran to the Glassers’ front door.

She found it ajar and yelled to get the attention of any occupants. After getting no

response, she went inside and continued to yell. She did not see any smoke in the

house. Glasser entered the living room and seemed angry that Gwilym had come

inside. She told him about the fire, and he said “the fire department’s been called.”

Gwilym turned and left, thinking he would follow her outside. Instead, he shut and Athens App. No. 11CA11 5

locked the door behind her.

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2012 Ohio 3265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-glasser-ohioctapp-2012.