State v. Mapes

2021 Ohio 257, 167 N.E.3d 569
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 1, 2021
Docket1-20-28
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2021 Ohio 257 (State v. Mapes) 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. Mapes, 2021 Ohio 257, 167 N.E.3d 569 (Ohio Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Mapes, 2021-Ohio-257.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT ALLEN COUNTY

STATE OF OHIO,

PLAINTIFF-APPELLEE, CASE NO. 1-20-28

v.

PETER B. MAPES, OPINION

DEFENDANT-APPELLANT.

Appeal from Lima Municipal Court Trial Court No. 19CRB01421

Judgment Reversed and Cause Remanded

Date of Decision: February 1, 2021

APPEARANCES:

Zachary D. Maisch for Appellant

David Osborne, Jr. for Appellee Case No. 1-20-28

ZIMMERMAN, J.

{¶1} Defendant-appellant, Peter B. Mapes (“Mapes”), appeals the June 10,

2020 judgment entry of sentence of the Lima Municipal Court convicting him of

misconduct at an emergency in violation of R.C. 2917.13(A)(1). For the reasons

that follow, we reverse.

{¶2} On May 28, 2019, at approximately 7:36 p.m., Lieutenant Shawn Cook

(“Lieutenant Cook”), of the Ohio State Highway Patrol responded to a one-vehicle

accident involving Bonnie Juras (“Juras”) in the northbound lanes of I-75, near the

State Route 65 overpass, in Allen County, Ohio. (Dec. 10, 2019 Tr. at 5, 8).

According to Lieutenant Cook, “this particular area is * * * known to have quite a

few crashes. It’s kind of * * * a dangerous area * * * [a]nd this particular day it was

raining, so the roads were wet.” (Id. at 8). Lieutenant Cook testified that his “first

priority” when arriving at an accident scene is “to protect the scene” by ensuring no

“secondary crashes happen.” (Id. at 8-9). “[D]ue to the unique location of this

particular crash, it was important for [Lieutenant Cook] to keep [his] patrol car south

of the crash area due to the incline of the roadway [because] vehicles * * * traveling

northbound can have a difficult time seeing a crash that is on the overpass or just

north of it.” (Id. at 9). Lieutenant Cook further testified that he “actually had to act

as a traffic agent * * * to assure traffic was getting over [and] it was important for

[him] to maintain * * * scene * * * control to ensure all of this traffic was going to

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the right lane and staying in the right lane. So, what that required [him] to do was

keep [his] patrol car near the exit ramp and [he] actually had to walk towards the

bridges deck, so he was sort of another traffic control device [himself], with [his

vest on with [his yellow] reflective vest * * * .” (Id. at 9).

{¶3} According to Lieutenant Cook, his “intention was to get [Mapes] off-

scene as quickly as possible” “to maintain scene security” because “this particular

stretch of road is * * * very dangerous when there is a crash [and he could recall]

many scenarios where this same exact sequence of events has occurred and [Ohio

State Highway Patrol] officers have nearly gotten hit where [Mapes] was parked

at.” (Emphasis added.) (Id.). Indeed, Lieutenant Cook testified that his “idea is to

get people out as quickly as possible” because he does not “want anyone to be north

of that bridge deck because in [his] experience * * * cars [in] in that situation have

become crash victims themselves.” (Id. at 11-12).

{¶4} Lieutenant Cook testified that he requested dispatch to have Juras “walk

back to [him],” but that Mapes “said that [Juras] was not going to come back to

[him].” (Id. at 11). He testified that Mapes did not want Juras to walk back to him

on I-75 over the State Route 65 overpass based on Mapes’s “medical field

experience and injuries and * * * knowing that it was unsafe for [Juras] to walk back

to [him].” (Id. at 17). He further testified that he again “asked [his] dispatch to tell

[Mapes] to have [Juras] walk back to” him and “that request happened two or three

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times and [Juras] never walked back to [him].” (Id. at 14). Thereafter, Lieutenant

Cook and Mapes “had a conversation that was a long distance away” (while

Lieutenant Cook was “still acting as sort of a * * * traffic control device”) during

which Mapes told Lieutenant Cook that “he [was] going to take off * * * with [Juras]

and come back around.” (Id.). He agreed that Mapes’s actions “add[ed] additional

time * * * to complete [his] investigation of the scene[.]” (Id. at 21).

{¶5} On cross-examination, Lieutenant Cook testified that there was a

distance of approximately 400 feet between his cruiser and Mapes’s vehicle and that

it was raining. (Id. at 25). Lieutenant Cook agreed “the danger was there inherent

in the way that the design of that bridge was made, because it was in an area where

there are many accidents.” (Id. at 28). Lieutenant Cook testified that, after Mapes

returned, he parked “right behind [him].” (Id.). In sum, Lieutenant Cook testified

that the accident scene “was pretty volatile and pretty extreme”; that Mapes “refused

to let Mrs. Juras walk on her own back to [his] cruiser; and that Mapes “left and

came back and parked behind [his] cruiser [and] ma[d]e sure that Mrs. Juras was

safe.” (Id. at 35-36). However, when asked if Mapes’s “misconduct” could be

summarized as “not listening to what [he] wanted him to do,” Lieutenant Cook

disagreed and provided the following explanation:

When officers are dispatched to a scene there are multiple things that must be done. * * * [S]cene security. I need to protect the integrity of the crash. Protecting the integrity of the people involved. * * * People can hide evidence. * * * [P]eople can put open containers some

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place. They can put drugs places. Paraphernalia. * * * [T]hey can switch drivers. * * * I have to protect the integrity of the investigation. * * * [I]t’s not just about what Mr. Mapes [sic] intentions were * * * to provide safety. I ha[d] intentions too. And my intentions [were] to keep a crash scene safe. * * * [T]o protect the integrity of the crash scene. So, while * * * I understand * * * what he was doing, he was wrong. * * * I believe I have [sic] the conversation about the weather, it’s not a substantial point to me because I’m standing there too. * * * He didn’t present any qualifications about being a meteorologist. * * * So, those particular things don’t necessarily * * * dictate how I solve and investigate this particular crash [and] those aren’t the only things to protect at a crash scene. * * * [T]here’s a whole bunch of things that aren’t safe but you have to mitigate safety and * * * getting her to me quickly, and in my patrol car and safe is better than having someone else get hit on the side of the road.

(Id. at 36-37).

{¶6} On re-direct examination, Lieutenant Cook testified that the accident

did not shut down all lanes of travel on I-75. (Id. at 40).

{¶7} Mapes testified in his defense that he is a medical doctor and that he

found Juras “standing on the other side of the wire barrier” of I-75 after her “vehicle

had impacted the bridge abutment on the left side of the overpass.” (Id. at 52).

Mapes testified that he assisted Juras with contacting 911 for emergency assistance

and permitted her to wait inside his vehicle until law enforcement arrived. (Id. at

52-53).

{¶8} When Lieutenant Cook arrived at the scene, Mapes exited his vehicle

to see if Lieutenant Cook “require[d] anything”; however, “[a]s [he] got about

halfway across the bridge * * *, [Lieutenant Cook] shouted ‘keys’,” but Mapes

-5- Case No. 1-20-28

could not understand him because of the noise from the traffic and the rain. (Id. at

56-57). Once Mapes understood that Lieutenant Cook wanted the keys to Juras’s

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2021 Ohio 257, 167 N.E.3d 569, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mapes-ohioctapp-2021.