State v. Kuehl

2025 Ohio 4616
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 3, 2025
Docket2024 CA 0079
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Ohio 4616 (State v. Kuehl) 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. Kuehl, 2025 Ohio 4616 (Ohio Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Kuehl, 2025-Ohio-4616.]

COURT OF APPEALS RICHLAND COUNTY, OHIO FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

STATE OF OHIO, Case No. 2024 CA 0079

Plaintiff - Appellee Opinion & Judgment Entry

-vs- Appeal from the Court of Common Pleas of Richland County, SETH EUGENE KUEHL, Case No. 2024 CR 0532 N

Defendant - Appellant Judgment: Affirmed

Date of Judgment: October 3, 2025

BEFORE: Andrew J. King; Robert G. Montgomery; David M. Gormley, Judges

APPEARANCES: Megan E. Hobart, Assistant Prosecuting Attorney, for Plaintiff- Appellee; Benjamin R. Sorber, for Defendant-Appellant.

Gormley, J.

{¶1} Defendant Seth Kuehl challenges in this appeal a consecutive prison

sentence imposed on him in the Court of Common Pleas of Richland County. Kuehl was

convicted of two counts of robbery and one count of theft. The trial judge sentenced

Kuehl to consecutive prison terms on the robbery charges, resulting in an indefinite prison

term with an aggregate minimum length of eight years and a maximum length of ten years.

Though Kuehl contends that the trial court’s imposition of consecutive sentences was

contrary to law, we find no error in the trial court’s sentence.

The Key Facts

{¶2} In August 2024, three bills of information against Kuehl were filed in the trial

court, with each of those charging documents listing a separate felony charge. The charges alleged that Kuehl, on three different dates in July 2024, had committed two

robberies and one theft. Kuehl pled guilty to all three charges and was sentenced in the

three cases at the same time.

{¶3} In this appeal, Kuehl challenges only the consecutive sentence imposed for

one of the robbery convictions. In the case at issue in this appeal, Kuehl was charged

with robbery after he allegedly demanded that he be given cigarettes and money at a

retail store while he was brandishing a box cutter. Kuehl fled the store with some snacks,

cigarettes, and $140 in cash.

{¶4} Kuehl was also charged with a separate robbery offense (trial-court case

no. 2024 CR 0530 N) for brandishing a boxcutter and demanding money at another retail

store two days after the robbery at issue in this appeal. Kuehl fled from that store with

$20 in cash.

{¶5} After Kuehl pled guilty to both robbery charges — and to an unrelated theft

charge — the trial judge ordered a presentence investigation and scheduled a sentencing

hearing.

{¶6} From the presentence report and from remarks made by Kuehl’s counsel at

the sentencing hearing, the trial judge learned that Kuehl’s ex-wife had been diagnosed

with leukemia and his brother had been murdered. Kuehl had also struggled with

substance abuse. Information presented at the sentencing hearing indicated, too, that

Kuehl had taken responsibility for his crimes by confessing to law-enforcement officers,

by pleading guilty to the bills of information, and by expressing remorse for his

wrongdoing. {¶7} The State, though, pointed out at the sentencing hearing that Kuehl had

performed poorly while under community-control supervision in the past. The risk-

assessment score in the presentence report indicated that Kuehl’s likelihood of recidivism

was high. And the trial judge noted aloud at the sentencing hearing that Kuehl’s

substance-abuse issues had persisted despite his participation in treatment on two prior

occasions. The judge recounted, as well, Kuehl’s prior convictions and mentioned that

Kuehl was at that time facing a misdemeanor charge of possessing drug paraphernalia.

{¶8} The trial judge at the sentencing hearing also mentioned the effect of

Kuehl’s actions on the victims in the cases, and the judge expressed concern about

Kuehl’s handling of difficult situations in his life and his failure to seek counseling or

substance-abuse treatment before committing his most recent crimes.

{¶9} The trial judge then imposed an indefinite prison term with a minimum length

of four years on the F2 robbery charge in trial-court case no. 2024 CR 0530 N as well as

a separate indefinite prison term with a minimum length of four years on the F2 robbery

charge in trial-court case no. 2024 CR 0532 N. (That latter one is the conviction at issue

in this appeal.) The prison terms on the two robbery charges were imposed consecutively

to one another and concurrently with the prison term on the F4 theft charge.

{¶10} The judge advised Kuehl that the sentences for the robbery convictions

were being imposed consecutively because consecutive sentences were, in the judge’s

view, necessary to protect the public from future crime or to punish Kuehl. The judge also

advised that consecutive sentences were not disproportionate to the seriousness of

Kuehl’s conduct and to the danger that he posed to the public because the robberies had

been committed as part of a course of conduct, and the harm caused by Kuehl’s multiple offenses was so great or unusual that no single prison term would adequately reflect the

seriousness of his conduct.

{¶11} Kuehl now appeals the trial court’s judgment imposing a consecutive

sentence on the robbery charge in trial-court case no. 2024 CR 0532 N.

The Trial Court Did Not Err in Imposing Consecutive Sentences

{¶12} Kuehl contends that the record does not support any deviation from R.C.

2929.41(A)’s presumption in favor of concurrent sentences.

{¶13} R.C. 2953.08(G)(2)(a) provides that an appellate court can “increase,

reduce, or otherwise modify a sentence that is appealed . . . or may vacate the sentence

and remand the matter . . . for resentencing . . . if it clearly and convincingly finds . . .[t]hat

the record does not support the sentencing court’s findings.” The Supreme Court of Ohio

has explained that “[t]he plain language of R.C. 2953.08(G)(2) requires an appellate court

to defer to a trial court’s consecutive-sentence findings, and the trial court’s findings must

be upheld unless those findings are clearly and convincingly not supported by the record.”

State v. Gwynne, 2023-Ohio-3851, ¶ 5 (Kennedy, C.J., with two justices concurring in the

opinion and one justice concurring in the judgment). Evidence that is clear and convincing

“will produce in the mind of the trier of facts a firm belief or conviction as to the facts

sought to be established.” Cross v. Ledford, 161 Ohio St. 469 (1954), paragraph three of

the syllabus.

{¶14} When imposing multiple sentences, a trial court should start with the

presumption that a prison term should be imposed concurrently with any other prison

term, unless certain circumstances listed in R.C. 2929.41(A) apply. State v. Jones, 2024-

Ohio-1083, ¶ 11. A trial court may require a criminal defendant to serve sentences consecutively if the court finds that consecutive sentences are “necessary to protect the

public from future crime or to punish the offender and that consecutive sentences are not

disproportionate to the seriousness of the offender’s conduct and to the danger the

offender poses to the public” and that one of the findings in R.C. 2929.14(C)(4)(a)-(c)

applies. Id., quoting R.C. 2929.14(C)(4).

{¶15} In this case, the trial judge made the finding that “[a]t least two of the multiple

offenses were committed as part of one or more courses of conduct, and the harm caused

by two or more of the multiple offenses so committed was so great or unusual that no

single prison term for any of the offenses committed as part of any of the courses of

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2025 Ohio 4616, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-kuehl-ohioctapp-2025.