State v. Jurek

556 N.E.2d 1191, 52 Ohio App. 3d 30, 1989 Ohio App. LEXIS 2508
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 3, 1989
Docket55525
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 556 N.E.2d 1191 (State v. Jurek) 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. Jurek, 556 N.E.2d 1191, 52 Ohio App. 3d 30, 1989 Ohio App. LEXIS 2508 (Ohio Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

J. F. Corrigan, J.

The defendant attorney, Frederick K. Jurek, appeals from his jury trial conviction on three counts of a four-count indictment charging him with bribing a bond commissioner 1 for the purpose of steering criminal cases to preferred judges. The defendant’s five assignments of error relate solely to the admission of tape recordings made by an attorney who acted as a police informant during the four-month investigation.

The defendant argues that the trial court erred in (a) denying his .motion to suppress because the recording by a police informer violated his Fourth Amendment right against illegal searches and Sixth Amendment right to counsel, (b) by denying his motion to dismiss based upon outrageous government conduct, (c) admitting evidence of other crimes in violation of Evid. R. 403(A) and 404(B), and (d) admitting the informant’s recorded hearsay statements without independent proof of a conspiracy as required under Evid. R. 801(D)(2)(e). Each of these errors lacks merit, so we affirm his convictions.

I

The defendant and an attorney who shared the defendant’s office were secretly indicted on October 24, 1986 for bribery and obstruction of justice. Those offenses involved the payment of money to a state witness for the purpose of withholding testimony. The police immediately arrested the attorney whereupon he agreed to cooperate with the police in an unrelated ongoing investigation concerning the steering of criminal cases in the court of common pleas. During the next four months of the investigation the informant carried a tape recorder in order to secretly record his conversations with the defendant and a bond commissioner who was suspected of having *32 discovered a means to bypass the random assignment of judges at arraignment. At times the police also “wired” the informant for remote recording of his conversation.

During the course of the investigation, the prosecution accumulated upwards of seventy-five tapes, twenty-two of which the state introduced at trial. Those tapes revealed that the defendant had on at least three occasions paid money to the bond commissioner in order to have the cases of criminal defendants which he represented steered to certain judges preferred by defense attorneys. The tapes disclosed a scheme whereby the defendant would inform the bond commissioner, who administered the arraignment room, that he wanted certain judges assigned to his defendant’s case. The bond commissioner would then later inform the defendant whether one of those judges was “available.” If an “acceptable” judge was available for the day of his client’s arraignment, the defendant would pay the bond commissioner $300 and invariably that judge would be assigned to the case.

II

The defendant, in his first assignment of error, claims that the trial court should have excluded the tapes of his conversations with the informant because (1) they included “privileged” conversations with his clients, and (2) his right to counsel had attached when the grand jury secretly indicted him for the other offense.

It is well-established that a criminal defendant does not have a reasonable expectation of privacy in his conversations with police informants. Hoffa v. United States (1966), 385 U.S. 293, 302-303. Further, neither the Fourth Amendment nor state law requires the suppression of recordings of such conversations made with the consent of the police informant. State v. Geraldo (1981), 68 Ohio St. 2d 120, 22 O.O. 3d 366, 429 N.E. 2d 141, syllabus; see, also, United States v. Caceres (1979), 440 U.S. 741, 750-751; United States v. White (1971), 401 U.S. 745, 749-754. The defendant argues that those tapes should have been suppressed because they included conversations which the defendant had with clients in his office. However, the attorney-client privilege does not extend to those conversations because they clearly never were intended to be confidential since they were made in the presence of others, including the police informant. Cf. State v. Post (1987), 32 Ohio St. 3d 380, 385-386, 513 N.E. 2d 754, 760-761.

The defendant next argues that the undisclosed recording of his conversations by the police informant after he had already been indicted for bribing a witness violated "his Sixth Amendment right to counsel. Cf. Kirby v. Ilinois (1972), 406 U.S. 682, 689-690. However, the trial court properly refused to exclude that evidence since the defendant’s right to counsel had only attached with respect to the unrelated pending charge. State v. Roe (1989), 41 Ohio St. 3d 18, 22, 535 N.E. 2d 1351, 1358; State v. Clark (1988), 38 Ohio St. 3d 252, 260, 527 N.E. 2d 844, 853; cf. Maine v. Moulton (1985), 474 U.S. 159, 180, fn. 16 (dictum).

The defendant’s first assignment of error is without merit.

Ill

The defendant, in his second assignment of error, argues that the trial court erred in overruling his motion to dismiss based upon “outrageous government conduct.” Cf. United States v. Russell (1973), 411 U.S. 423, 431-432.

The Supreme Court in United States v. Russell, supra, overturned a federal court of appeals decision *33 establishing a defense to a criminal charge, distinct from the defense of entrapment, based upon an excessive degree of governmental participation in the criminal enterprise. While refusing to recognize that defense, the court commented that there could be situations where “the conduct of law enforcement agents is so outrageous that due process principles would absolutely bar the government from invoking judicial processes.” Id. However, in Hampton v. United States (1976), 425 U.S. 484, 490, the Supreme Court in a plurality opinion seemingly foreclosed this “defense” in holding:

“[Where] the police engage in illegal activity in concert with a defendant beyond the scope of their duties the remedy lies, not in freeing the equally culpable defendant, but in prosecuting the police under the applicable provisions of state or federal law.”

Similarly, this court has refused to recognize the due process defense of outrageous government conduct separate from the entrapment defense. See State v. Latina (1984), 13 Ohio App. 3d 182, 185, 13 OBR 229, 232-233, 468 N.E. 2d 1139, 1143-1144. We decline to depart from our earlier ruling.

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Bluebook (online)
556 N.E.2d 1191, 52 Ohio App. 3d 30, 1989 Ohio App. LEXIS 2508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-jurek-ohioctapp-1989.