State v. Knighten

2025 Ohio 4495
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 26, 2025
DocketL-24-1241
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Ohio 4495 (State v. Knighten) 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. Knighten, 2025 Ohio 4495 (Ohio Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Knighten, 2025-Ohio-4495.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT LUCAS COUNTY

State of Ohio/ City of Toledo Court of Appeals No. {48}L-24-1241

Appellee Trial Court No. CRB-24-02369

v.

Rodneshia N. Knighten DECISION AND JUDGMENT

Appellant Decided: September 26, 2025

*****

Autumn D. Adams, Esq., attorney for appellant.

Rebecca Facey, Esq., City of Toledo Prosecutor, and Jimmie L. Jones, Esq., Assistant Prosecutor for appellee.

ZMUDA, J.

{¶ 1} Appellant, Rodneshia N. Knighten, appeals from the July 29, 2024 judgment

of the Toledo Municipal Court convicting her of two counts of child endangerment of the

first degree. Appellant’s sole assignment of error challenges the conviction as against the manifest weight of the evidence. For the reasons that follow, we reverse and remand for a

new trial.

I. Facts and Procedural History

{¶ 2} Following reports of an incident at her home, the city filed a complaint

against appellant on March 19, 2024. On that date, police responded to a witness’ report

that appellant’s two children, around two and four years old, were running around the

sidewalks unsupervised. The witness, a neighbor’s friend named Leyna Patterson,

described the children as wearing no shoes and jackets, and the younger child was in a

soiled diaper that was seeping through the pants. Patterson reported that the children had

gotten as far as several houses away from their house before returning home.

{¶ 3} Police charged appellant with two counts of child endangerment in violation

of R.C. 2919.22(A). Appellant entered pleas of not guilty to the charges on March 20,

2024. The matter proceeded to a bench trial on July 29, 2024. At trial, the state presented

testimony of the responding officer, Officer Habbouche, and testimony of Leyna

Patterson.

{¶ 4} Officer Habbouche testified first. He was asked to recall his visit to

appellant’s house. He testified that he did not see the children outside, or witness any of

the events described in the phone call. Upon arriving at the house, he noticed the

backyard was not fenced in and there were children’s toys in the yard. He went into the

house to speak with the appellant about the call he had received. There were two children

in the house who he concluded were the children reported as running around because they

2. matched the description provided to police in the witness’s report. He estimated the

children to be two and four years old, and the younger child had no clothes on and needed

a diaper change. Habbouche testified about his contact with appellant inside the house as

follows:

I started making contact with the children, and then the mother walked up. When the mother walked up, we identified ourselves and what we were doing there. And she made a statement to me saying that she – that her kids didn’t leave the house and she tried – she basically began to, you know, telling me that is not true what we’re telling her. After I explained to her that, well, if your kids were out playing in the backyard, the backyard is open. And then she started getting upset with me. She said; what, am I supposed to watch them 24/7. She started getting extremely upset with me. And I continued to confront her and question her judgement.

{¶ 5} Patterson testified that she called the police that day because the young

children were running on the sidewalk by themselves, they did not have the proper shoes

or coats on for the cold weather, and the younger child had a very soiled diaper seeping

through their pants. Patterson did not indicate, in her testimony, any specific conditions

that presented an imminent threat of danger to the children, and Patterson also did not see

appellant exit the home to bring the children inside. Patterson testified that, at the time

she made the phone call to the police, the children were no longer running around but she

could see them playing in their backyard from the road. Patterson did not know appellant

and had never seen her before trial, but she had encountered the children before because

they were regularly outside. When asked, she estimated that the children were running

around outside for thirty to forty minutes and travelled as far as 10 or 11 houses away.

3. {¶ 6} After hearing the testimony of Officer Habbouche and Patterson, appellant’s

counsel made a Rule 29 motion, arguing that the city had not met their burden of

presenting evidence of a substantial risk. Responding to the motion for acquittal, the city

stated that their burden was met and supported by the testimony of Officer Habbouche

and Patterson. The city referred to the testimony about the children’s age, the soiled

diaper, and testimony of the witness seeing the children walking on the sidewalk as their

supporting evidence. The city argued:

Though it’s not direct evidence, it’s certainly a strong link to say that these were, in fact, defendant’s children who were left unattended. Young children who were left unattended to be out on a street, and you know, were left to their own devices and left in danger. They lacked supervision. City believes that [its] at least met its prima facie elements.

{¶ 7} The trial court denied the motion for acquittal. Defense proceeded with their

case, calling on appellant to testify on her own behalf and presenting no additional

witnesses.

{¶ 8} Appellant described herself as a single mother of four children, a full-time

employee, and a full-time college student. Appellant admitted that the children described

in the police report were her children. On the day of the police report, her children were

outside playing with toys in their backyard while she was inside the house, watching and

listening for them through a kitchen window as she cleaned. She explained the backyard

was open on just one side because the driveway goes to the backyard. She stated that

although she had dressed them, at some point the children had taken off their shoes and

jackets on their own. Appellant recalled that the weather was fifty degrees that day.

4. Additionally, she admitted in her testimony that the youngest child needed a diaper

change, which she attributed to her child’s lactose intolerance.

{¶ 9} Appellant estimated that the longest period of time that she went without

physically seeing the children while she was cleaning was “probably two or three

minutes. I would just keep, like I said, just looking and seeing what they were doing.”

Appellant testified about when she realized the children were not in the backyard.

Q: Okay. So at what point in time do you think to yourself where are the kids. A: I just looked and I, like, you know, I didn’t see them outside, so I ran straight to the front, and I just seen them, like, trying to go, you know, down the driveway where my car is at. Q: Okay. So explain what direction were they going. A: They were just going, like, towards, like, Berkshire. Q: Okay. So they were coming from the backyard. A: Uh-huh. Q: All right. And what were they doing? A: Just walking.

{¶ 10} Appellant’s response to finding the children in the front driveway was to

bring them inside with her. Not long after bringing the children inside, the police were

knocking on appellant’s door. Appellant called no additional witnesses, and the state

called no witnesses on rebuttal.

{¶ 11} In closing argument, the city summarized their supporting evidence: the

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Bluebook (online)
2025 Ohio 4495, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-knighten-ohioctapp-2025.