State v. Kister

2014 Ohio 4596
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 10, 2014
Docket13CA25
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2014 Ohio 4596 (State v. Kister) 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. Kister, 2014 Ohio 4596 (Ohio Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Kister, 2014-Ohio-4596.]

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

STATE OF OHIO, :

Plaintiff-Appellee, : Case No. 13CA25 v. : DECISION AND CHAD KISTER, : JUDGMENT ENTRY

Defendant-Appellant. : RELEASED 10/10/2014

APPEARANCES:

Timothy Young, Ohio Public Defender, and Eric M. Hedrick, Assistant Ohio Public Defender, Columbus, Ohio, for Defendant-Appellant.

Patrick J. Lang, City of Athens Law Director, and Lisa A. Eliason, City of Athens Prosecutor, Athens, Ohio, for Plaintiff-Appellee.

Hoover, J.

{¶ 1} Defendant-appellant, Chad Kister (“Kister”), appeals his conviction in the

Athens County Municipal Court for the offense of telecommunications harassment, a

misdemeanor of the first degree, in violation of R.C. 2917.21(A)(4). For the following

reasons, we reverse Kister’s conviction.

{¶ 2} Kister has a long history of serious mental health issues. In the summer and

fall of 2012, he was charged with two counts of telecommunications harassment under

R.C. 2917.21 in two separate cases. In the case on appeal, Athens County Municipal Case

No. 12CRB02178, he was charged with telephoning the Ohio Department of Mental

Health on July 30, 2012, and threatening to “bomb the place.” In Athens County Municipal Case No. 12CRB02698, he was charged with making multiple phone calls to

the Athens County Emergency Communications Center in August and September 2012

during which he screamed at the dispatchers, used curse words, and hung up. On the eve

of the scheduled trial date, Kister waived the jury trial and entered a written plea of not

guilty by reason of insanity (“NGRI”) in both cases.

{¶ 3} The cases were tried together before the trial judge on April 25, 2013. On

April 29, 2013, the trial court found Kister not guilty by reason of insanity in Case No.

12CRB02698 but guilty in Case No. 12CRB02178.1 Kister was sentenced on May 13,

2013, in Case No. 12CRB02178 and this appeal followed.

{¶ 4} At the bench trial, witnesses for the State testified that Kister made three

telephone calls to the Ohio Department of Mental Health (“ODMH”) on the morning of

July 30, 2012. The testimony indicated that Kister was incoherent, agitated, using

profanity, and screaming during the calls. Kister also called the ODMH a terrorist

organization and a Nazi organization and stated that the ODMH was “controlling him.”

During one of the calls, Kister identified himself by name and an ODMH employee

believed that she heard him say he was going to “bomb the place, or I’ll bomb this

place.” A partial recording of one of the calls was played at trial and admitted into

evidence as State’s Exhibit A. The recording did not contain the bomb threat statement,

but an ODMH employee verified her voice on the tape and testified that the other voice

on the tape was the same voice that later stated he would “bomb the place.”

{¶ 5} Trooper Jack Moorehead of the Ohio State Highway Patrol testified that he

was charged with investigating the bomb threat at the ODMH. He opened an

1 While we are not privy to the journal entries filed in Case No. 12CRB02698, both Kister and the State agree that he was found NGRI in that case. [See Appellant’s Brief at 1; Appellee’s Brief at 1.] investigation at 10:30 a.m. on the date of the incident after receiving witness statements

from the ODMH employees. That afternoon, Trooper Moorehead, who had traced the

telephone numbers to Kister and an address in Athens County, Ohio, contacted Kister by

telephone. According to Trooper Moorehead, Kister denied making the telephone calls,

but asked that charges be filed against the ODMH employees. Kister also asked Trooper

Moorehead for his badge number, so that he could make a complaint against him.

{¶ 6} Dr. David Malawista was the sole expert witness to testify at trial.2 Dr.

Malawista is a clinical and forensic psychologist who has a long history of evaluating

Kister. Dr. Malawista testified that he evaluated Kister six times in the year prior to the

trial.3 In addition to meeting with Kister, Dr. Malawista also listened to the testimony of

the ODMH employees, the testimony of Trooper Moorehead, and reviewed Kister’s

medical records. Dr. Malawista diagnosed Kister as having paranoid schizophrenia, a

severe mental disease that according to his expert testimony “affects one’s ability to think

clearly, rationally, [and to] organize one’s thoughts.” Dr. Malawista further indicated that

Kister’s “condition, his ability to filter is directly related to the level of his disturbance at

one particular moment[,]” and that his ability to appreciate the wrongfulness of his

actions “depends on the day and circumstance.”

{¶ 7} Dr. Malawista further explained that people with paranoid schizophrenia

“see the world quite differently than, than average people, people that do not have [the]

condition.” In regards to Kister, Dr. Malawista explained that:

2 Both parties waived the right to have a written evaluation report filed with the trial court in addition to Dr. Malawista’s testimony. 3 At least some of those evaluations were conducted in the fall of 2012 to determine whether Kister was competent to stand trial and NGRI in a separate, unrelated case filed in the Athens County Common Pleas Court. At that time, Dr. Malawista determined that Kister was not competent to stand trial and he was placed in Appalachian Behavioral Health Care for 70 days until he was restored to competency. The case sub judice was stayed until Kister was restored to competency. Kister believes that he is constantly being monitored by a wide range of

governmental agencies. And this goes from local, from the sheriff’s

department or other local enforcement agencies, to national entities. The

FBI, the CIA, the, uh, Homeland Security. * * * And he believes that they

are tracking him constantly. They are monitoring his calls, they are

breaking into his home and stealing things from his computer, that he

believes that, um, various electronic devices have been implanted in his

brain. The [sic] both monitor him and somewhat control him. That they

listen in on what is going on, not only that he’s verbally speaking but what

he’s thinking. * * * If you live in his shoes, you would understand how

unhappy and how troubled he is. How angry he is. * * * Um, and my take

on listening to the calls with, uh, the Department of Mental Health is that

they are included in that list of entities that are tormenting him.

{¶ 8} When asked whether Kister’s mental illness impaired his ability to

understand the wrongfulness of the bomb threat to the ODMH employee, Dr. Malawista

stated that: “Clearly, [he] did not believe what he was doing that day was wrong. He, he

believed he was on a mission to try to resolve the torture that he was experiencing on a

daily basis.” And later Dr. Malawista clarified: “I don’t think he did [appreciate the

wrongfulness] at that moment, no.” No testimony was ever submitted by the State to

rebut or contradict Dr. Malawista’s opinions.

{¶ 9} In its written decision filed April 29, 2013, the trial court found that Kister

telephoned the ODMH on July 30, 2012, from his home in Athens County, Ohio, and

threatened to bomb the office building. The trial court further found that “[Kister] has a history of mental illness[,]” “has been diagnosed with Schizophrenia, Paranoid Type, a

severe mental disease” and accepted Dr. Malawista’s opinion that at the time of the bomb

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2014 Ohio 4596, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-kister-ohioctapp-2014.