State v. Margiotti

2021 Ohio 1826
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 27, 2021
Docket19AP-469
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 2021 Ohio 1826 (State v. Margiotti) 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. Margiotti, 2021 Ohio 1826 (Ohio Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Margiotti, 2021-Ohio-1826.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO

TENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

State of Ohio, :

Plaintiff-Appellee, : No. 19AP-469 v. : (M.C. No. 2019-CRB-11214)

Anthony Margiotti, : (REGULAR CALENDAR)

Defendant-Appellant. :

D E C I S I O N

Rendered on May 27, 2021

On brief: Zachary M. Klein, City Attorney, Melanie R. Tobias, Deputy Chief of Staff-Prosecution, and Orly Ahroni, for appellee.

On brief: Parks and Meade, L.L.C., and Darren L. Meade, for appellant.

APPEAL from the Franklin County Municipal Court

BROGAN, J. {¶ 1} Defendant-appellant, Anthony Margiotti, was convicted on June 20, 2019 of three counts of direct criminal contempt in the Franklin County Municipal Court. Margiotti was sentenced to consecutive terms of 30 days on each contempt finding for a total of 90 days in jail. In a single assignment of error, Margiotti contends that his three separate convictions should have merged into a single conviction because the purported three acts of contempt all arose out of a single continuous course of conduct. {¶ 2} The facts leading up to Margiotti's contemptuous conduct are as follows. On March 6, 2019, Margiotti pled guilty to a charge of disorderly conduct. Margiotti was sentenced to thirty days in jail, with six days credit for time served, and the balance No. 19AP-469 2

suspended upon terms of probation. Three revocations hearings were conducted on Margiotti's conviction for disorderly conduct. Margiotti subsequently was charged with criminal trespass and a hearing was conducted on all matters on June 20, 2019. Margiotti attended the revocation and pre-trial hearing on the new case without counsel. The court discussed the status of Margiotti's two cases, and Margiotti requested a continuance for 30 days to complete community service, which the court granted with an admonition: "Come back with that community service done or come back with a lawyer." (Tr. at 8.) The court then instructed Margiotti to be seated and wait to set the next court date. There was then a break in the proceedings. {¶ 3} Shortly thereafter, the court addressed Margiotti, who is labeled in this portion of the transcript as "Off-Camera Speaker." (Tr. at 9.) Margiotti's first statements are unintelligible, but the court's reaction to these statements was, "First of all, do not raise your voice at me and do not disrespect my bailiff. You got that?" to which Margiotti replied "Yeah." (Tr. at 10.) Margiotti was instructed by the court to "[s]ign the paperwork and leave before you go to jail. That simple. It ain't no other question about—." (Tr. at 10.) To this, Margiotti responded that he would sign the paperwork. The court then immediately advised Margiotti he had three seconds to sign the paperwork or he would be going to jail. The court counted down from three, during which time Margiotti did not sign the continuance, and the court ordered him to be taken into custody. {¶ 4} At this point, Margiotti stated, "All you dumb niggers running around here – [.]" (Tr. at 10.) {¶ 5} The following exchange then transpired: The Court: Oh-hoh (noise), 30 days in jail.

[Defendant]: -- (unintelligible) and all they do is sit there and say fuckin' shit that they're told to say.

The Court: All right.

[Defendant]: Not even fuckin' educated.

The Court: Okay. Sounds like you're going to jail for 30 days, sir.

[Defendant]: It sounds like you're still a dumb fuckin' nigger. No. 19AP-469 3

The Court: And guess what? I'm still your lawyer (sic).

[Defendant]: I'm still a fuckin' --

The Court: I'm still your Judge.

[Defendant]: You're still my lawyer, bitch? Go fuck yourself, nigger.

The Court: Can I have tho --

[Defendant]: Is that what they tell you to say?

The Court: Can I have those files back, please?

Bailiff: Yes, Judge.

(Unintelligible conversation.) (Tr. at 11.) {¶ 6} Margiotti was shortly returned to the courtroom in custody, now with the presence of counsel appointed from the bench, Attorney Robert Beck, Jr. Margiotti was soon thereafter removed at the court's direction due to multiple interruptions, but such misbehavior apparently had no bearing on the court's ultimate finding of contempt. (See Tr. at 16.) Attorney Beck then discussed with the court having Margiotti assessed for competency. (Tr. at 13-14.) The following exchange took place after the request for psychological evaluation: The Court: Mr. Margiotti was here today. We had two cases. We had the pretrial, which was an open trespass. Yes. He's on probation to me for disorderly conduct. We had a conversation. There was an offer from the State to -- for 24 hours of community service to get that case dismissed.

My rev, which I'm trying to inform you one, the only reason is -- the violation is the new case. * * * So prior to you getting involved -- Prior to all this happening, I gave him an opportunity to get another court date * * * to either hopefully talk to a lawyer or complete the community service that will resolve our rev. * * * So while that was going on, while that was happening, he did approach my bailiff trying to get the court date. * * * I did you show you the video, just for the record.

[Attorney] Beck: Yes. No. 19AP-469 4

The Court: You went back and saw it. The joys of technology. I -- Essentially, what happened was, he was trying to get another court date. He was, I felt, harassing my bailiff unnecessarily. I got involved, advised the Defendant to leave, and gave him an opportunity to leave because I felt he was being disruptive to the administration of my docket by not allowing my bailiff to move on to the next case. * * * He chose then to respond to me and continue being disruptive. * * * I mean, so the way I'm writing this entry is: The Court is finding the defendant in direct contempt * * * of court. The defendant directly impaired the Court's administration of the docket. * * * The Court witnessed the behavior, gave the defendant an opportunity to leave. Defendant responded by being disruptive, also using racial epithets toward me. He did that on three different occasions * * * according to the video. * * * Well, he did it again, obviously, but whatever. * * * I'm finding this will be three different -- contemptuous actions in violation of 2705.01. Defendant is sentenced to 90 days in jail, 30 days for each different action. And I am allowing the defendant that you -- through your -- Mr. Beck, I'm allowing you to reapproach in 30 days * * * to be considered for early release pursuant to 2705.08.

(Tr. at 14-17.) Trial counsel moved that the courtroom video of the incident be entered into the record as if played, which the trial court granted. (Tr. at 17-18.) {¶ 7} Trial counsel then raised the argument for what is at issue in the present appeal: [Attorney] Beck: Your Honor, I would argue at this point in time that while, certainly, and -- And it’s the Court's finding. Certainly some things that were very offensive, very polarizing, were said. This was one continuing course of conduct. This was one conversation between the Court and the defendant where, in the course of that conversation, the defendant said three to four pretty powerful and offensive, loaded things, things that certainly would be considered fighting words in some jurisdictions.

However, Your Honor, as a continuing course of conduct, I don't believe those epithets were hurled with a separate animus. I don't believe -- I believe this is just one long, embarrassing string.

(Tr. at 18.) The court responded to this argument as follows: No. 19AP-469 5

The Court: I appreciate the record.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2021 Ohio 1826, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-margiotti-ohioctapp-2021.