State v. Laing, Unpublished Decision (12-2-1999)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 2, 1999
DocketNo. 73927.
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Laing, Unpublished Decision (12-2-1999) (State v. Laing, Unpublished Decision (12-2-1999)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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State v. Laing, Unpublished Decision (12-2-1999), (Ohio Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION
Defendant-appellant, Courtney Laing, appeals his conviction in the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas for drug trafficking, in violation of R.C. 2925.03. For the reasons set forth below, we reverse.

On August 28, 1997, a Cuyahoga County Grand Jury indicted appellant and three co-defendants — Marilyn Lysius, James Guy and Elaine Rankine — for trafficking in marijuana, in an amount exceeding five thousand grams but less than twenty thousand grams, in violation of R.C. 2925.03. Appellant, Guy and Rankine were also indicted for kidnapping a child under the age of thirteen years, in violation of R.C. 2905.01, and for extortion, in violation of R.C. 2905.11. Lysius was also indicted for child endangering, in violation of R.C. 2919.22.

On September 25, 1997, Lysius pled guilty to misdemeanor child endangering and to a felony of the fourth degree drug trafficking charge and agreed to testify at her co-defendants' trial.

Trial commenced on November 3, 1997 against appellant, Rankine and Guy. The jury found appellant and Rankine not guilty of the kidnapping and extortion charges, but hung as to the drug trafficking charge against them. The jury found Guy guilty of drug trafficking and extortion, but hung on the kidnapping charge.

On December 4, 1997, the state again proceeded to trial against appellant and Rankine on the drug trafficking charge.

Before beginning the trial, the trial judge told appellant and Rankine that if they pled guilty, he would sentence them to eighteen months in prison with credit for time served, but if they went to trial and were found guilty, he would sentence them to five years. The trial judge stated, "You don't have to take the plea. You can take it to the box. If you get convicted, I'll give you five years. It's either win it all or lose it all." Neither appellant nor Rankine accepted the plea and the case proceeded to trial.

Marilyn Lysius testified for the state that she was living in Philadelphia in July of 1997. Sometime near the end of July she was approached by an acquaintance who asked her if she would do a favor for "Tony." The acquaintance told Lysius that Tony would pay her $1200 to $1300 to fly from Cleveland to Los Angeles to pick up a suitcase and bring it back to Cleveland.

Along with her four-year-old son, Kymahli, Lysius took a bus to Cleveland. Tony met Lysius and Kymahli at the Greyhound bus station in Cleveland and took them to the North Point Inn, which abuts the bus terminal. After purchasing a plane ticket to Los Angeles for Lysius, Tony took Lysius and Kymahli to the airport. According to Lysius, Tony informed her at the airport that she could not take Kymahli with her, but that he would watch him.

Following Tony's instructions, Lysius met with a woman in Los Angeles who gave Lysius a floral suitcase, tagged with the name "Marsha James," and then sent her to a Greyhound bus station to catch a bus for the return trip to Cleveland. Lysius testified that Greyhound baggage handlers took the floral suitcase from her before she boarded the bus and stowed it in the luggage carrier of the bus.

According to Lysius, the bus broke down once and she had to change buses several times during the two-day trip to Cleveland. Lysius testified that Tony was waiting for her upon her arrival at approximately 7 a.m. on August 4, 1997 at the Greyhound bus station in Cleveland. When Lysius attempted to retrieve the floral suitcase, however, it could not be located.

Upon learning that the bag could not be located, Tony paid for a room for Lysius at the North Point Inn, and then took her to a check-cashing store to obtain a false identification card, with the name "Marsha James" on it, in case she would later need identification to retrieve the bag. Tony then dropped Lysius off at the North Point Inn, with instructions to find the bag.

Lysius testified that Kymahli was not with Tony when he met her at the Greyhound bus station. When Lysius asked Tony if she could see Kymahli, Tony told her that all she needed to worry about was his bag, not her son. Lysius testified that when Tony dropped her off at the North Point Inn, he told her, "Remember, you have a son in this."

Lysius then attempted to locate the missing bag. She called various Greyhound terminals along the route from Los Angeles to Cleveland and returned to the Cleveland Greyhound station several times to ask about the bag. Sometime in the evening, a Greyhound supervisor called the Cleveland Police Department for Lysius.

Upon questioning, Lysius told the officers about her arrangement with Tony, her trip to Los Angeles, the missing bag and her concern for the safety of her son. Lysius described the car that Tony drove as a gold Toyota Corolla. Several plainclothes police officers and Lysius then rode around the area, looking for Tony or his car. Unable to locate him, the officers returned Lysius to her hotel room at the North Point Inn.

The next day, law enforcement personnel from various agencies, including the Caribbean Gang Task Force and the Federal Bureau of Investigation, were called in to assist with the investigation. The officers set up undercover surveillance at the North Point Inn in case Tony tried to contact Lysius and put a "trap and trace" on the hotel telephone line so they could trace all incoming calls.

Detective Shelley Patena testified that at approximately 1:00 p.m. on August 5, 1997, she went to the North Point Inn to get a detailed description of the missing bag and to obtain Lysius' consent for the police to open and search the bag if it was eventually found. Along with several other officers, Patena then checked the "Lost Baggage" area at the Greyhound bus station and found the missing suitcase. Upon opening the bag, the officers found a blue comforter covering up four large bricks of marijuana, each wrapped in plastic, with a total weight of 12,025.3 grams.

Tony did not contact Lysius on August 5, 1997. Aware that he might be watching the hotel, however, the officers instructed Lysius to walk across the parking lot of the North Point Inn to the Greyhound bus station to retrieve the bag. She did so and returned to her hotel room to wait, with various law enforcement officers, for a telephone call from Tony.

Sergeant Timothy Patton testified that Tony still had not contacted Lysius by 7:30 a.m. on August 6, 1997, so he ordered an officer to take Lysius to the Justice Center for booking. Shortly after the booking was completed, however, Patton was advised that Tony had attempted to contact Lysius at the hotel. Consequently, Lysius was taken back to the North Point Inn and placed in Room 321. The officers set up a "command post" in the room across the hall from Lysius and installed a tape recorder to tape any telephone calls made to or from Room 321.

Special Agent John Jacobs testified that he obtained Lysius' permission for FBI agents to search her residence in Philadelphia. In the early afternoon of August 6, 1997, the Philadelphia agents advised Jacobs that they had obtained Tony's pager number. The officers then instructed Lysius to page Tony. When Tony returned Lysius' page, he let her speak with Kymahli for a few minutes and then told her that he would call back in ten minutes.

Detective Michael Gray testified that when Tony had not called back after several hours, Lysius paged him again. Tony called Lysius back and told her that he was going to send a woman (later identified as Rankine) to get her. Tony also told Lysius that he would send Kymahli with the woman and that Lysius should give her the bag.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
State v. Laing, Unpublished Decision (12-2-1999), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-laing-unpublished-decision-12-2-1999-ohioctapp-1999.