State v. Mathis

CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJune 18, 2026
Docket2025-0091
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Mathis (State v. Mathis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Mathis, (Ohio 2026).

Opinion

[Until this opinion appears in the Ohio Official Reports advance sheets, it may be cited as State v. Mathis, Slip Opinion No. 2026-Ohio-2269.]

NOTICE This slip opinion is subject to formal revision before it is published in an advance sheet of the Ohio Official Reports. Readers are requested to promptly notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of Ohio, 65 South Front Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215, of any typographical or other formal errors in the opinion, in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is published.

SLIP OPINION NO. 2026-OHIO-2269 THE STATE OF OHIO, APPELLANT, v. MATHIS, APPELLEE. [Until this opinion appears in the Ohio Official Reports advance sheets, it may be cited as State v. Mathis, Slip Opinion No. 2026-Ohio-2269.] Criminal law—A police officer who initiates a traffic stop of a motorist with multiple independent bases for reasonable suspicion that the motorist is committing or had committed a crime need not abandon that traffic stop if the officer’s subsequent investigation extinguishes one, but not all, of the bases for his reasonable suspicion—Court of appeals’ judgment reversed and cause remanded to trial court. (No. 2025-0091—Submitted December 10, 2025—Decided June 18, 2026.) APPEAL from the Court of Appeals for Cuyahoga County, Nos. 113678 and 113862, 2024-Ohio-5707. __________________ HAWKINS, J., authored the opinion of the court, which KENNEDY, C.J., and FISCHER, DEWINE, DETERS, and SHANAHAN, JJ., joined. BRUNNER, J., dissented and would dismiss the appeal as having been improvidently accepted. SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

HAWKINS, J. {¶ 1} We are asked in this case to determine whether a police officer who initiates a traffic stop of a motorist with multiple independent bases for reasonable suspicion that the motorist is committing or had committed a crime must abandon that traffic stop if the officer’s subsequent investigation extinguishes one—but not all—of the bases for his reasonable suspicion. We conclude that the officer need not end his investigation if the traffic stop remains justified by a basis for reasonable suspicion that is independent from the extinguished basis. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the Eighth District Court of Appeals, and we remand the matter to the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas for proceedings consistent with this opinion. Background {¶ 2} The Euclid Police Department received a report of an armed robbery, with the suspect’s vehicle described as a gold or tan Dodge or Chrysler minivan with a license plate possibly beginning with “TWL.” {¶ 3} Two days after the armed robbery, a Euclid police officer who had been advised of the armed robbery initiated a traffic stop on appellee, Rasheed Mathis, who was driving a light blue Chrysler minivan with the license plate “JWL 5635.” The officer later testified that he had originally decided to initiate the stop of the vehicle because its windows appeared to him to be illegally tinted. The officer also testified that as he drove closer to Mathis’s vehicle to initiate the traffic stop, he realized that it possibly matched the vehicle described in the armed-robbery report. {¶ 4} After pulling Mathis’s vehicle over, the officer approached it on foot and noticed—before speaking to Mathis—that the paint color and license plate did not exactly match the vehicle described in the armed-robbery report. The officer nevertheless continued the traffic stop, and during the stop, he and his partner

2 January Term, 2026

smelled burnt marijuana coming from the vehicle and his partner saw burnt marijuana inside the vehicle. The officers then asked Mathis to step out of the vehicle, frisked him, and discovered that Mathis—a convicted felon—had a loaded firearm in one of his pockets. {¶ 5} Mathis filed a motion to suppress after he was charged with multiple crimes based on his possession of the firearm. He argued that once the officer realized that Mathis’s vehicle did not match the description of the vehicle described in the armed-robbery report, the officer should have ended the traffic stop. The trial court held a suppression hearing, and it subsequently issued a journal entry granting the motion to suppress. It did not, however, state on the record its findings of fact. {¶ 6} The State filed an appeal in the Eighth District and filed a motion in that court requesting an order directing the trial court to state its findings of fact on the record. The Eighth District granted the State’s motion and remanded the case to the trial court. {¶ 7} At a hearing held after remand, the trial court stated its finding that the traffic stop “wasn’t about tinted windows” but was instead performed to investigate the armed robbery. Based on that finding, the trial court concluded that the investigation “should have stopped” as soon as the police officer determined that Mathis’s vehicle did not match the vehicle described in the armed-robbery report. {¶ 8} The State appealed for a second time, and the Eighth District affirmed the trial court’s judgment, holding that “the police improperly extended the stop even after they no longer had a reasonable suspicion to detain Mathis.” 2024-Ohio- 5707, ¶ 33 (8th Dist.). We accepted the State’s appeal to review the following proposition of law:

When officers are confronted with evidence of a crime during a valid traffic stop, they are not required to abandon the

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investigation of that crime simply because the crime may be unrelated to the initial purpose of the stop.

See 2025-Ohio-1090. Law and Analysis {¶ 9} The Eighth District analyzed the traffic stop under the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Article I, Section 14 of the Ohio Constitution was not analyzed below, and Mathis has not argued that it affords him greater protection than the Fourth Amendment. Accordingly, we review the traffic stop solely under the Fourth Amendment. {¶ 10} The Fourth Amendment guarantees the right of the people to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures. An investigatory traffic stop by a law- enforcement officer is a “seizure” of the vehicle’s occupants and must therefore “be conducted in accordance with the Fourth Amendment.” Heien v. North Carolina, 574 U.S. 54, 60 (2014), citing Brendlin v. California, 551 U.S. 249, 255-259 (2007). In determining whether a traffic stop was lawful, we ask whether the officer had reasonable suspicion that the motorist had committed or was committing a criminal violation, including a traffic violation, State v. Mays, 2008-Ohio-4539, ¶ 7, citing Delaware v. Prouse, 440 U.S. 648, 663 (1979), and Berkemer v. McCarty, 468 U.S. 420, 439 (1984). An officer has reasonable suspicion to conduct a traffic stop when the officer has “‘a particularized and objective basis for suspecting’” that a motorist has violated the law, Navarette v. California, 572 U.S. 393, 396 (2014), quoting United States v. Cortez, 449 U.S. 411, 417-418 (1981). {¶ 11} Determining whether a traffic stop was reasonable under the Fourth Amendment involves an objective inquiry. See Heien at 66. This means that we do not consider “the actual motivations of the individual officers involved.” Whren v. United States, 517 U.S. 806, 813 (1996). When determining whether a traffic stop is reasonable, we do not consider whether “the officer had some ulterior motive

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for making the stop, such as a suspicion that the violator was engaging in more nefarious criminal activity,” Dayton v. Erickson, 1996-Ohio-431, syllabus.

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Related

Scott v. United States
436 U.S. 128 (Supreme Court, 1978)
Delaware v. Prouse
440 U.S. 648 (Supreme Court, 1979)
United States v. Cortez
449 U.S. 411 (Supreme Court, 1981)
Berkemer v. McCarty
468 U.S. 420 (Supreme Court, 1984)
Whren v. United States
517 U.S. 806 (Supreme Court, 1996)
Brendlin v. California
551 U.S. 249 (Supreme Court, 2007)
United States v. Timothy Martin
289 F.3d 392 (Sixth Circuit, 2002)
Florida v. Jardines
133 S. Ct. 1409 (Supreme Court, 2013)
United States v. Shank
543 F.3d 309 (Sixth Circuit, 2008)
Prado Navarette v. California
134 S. Ct. 1683 (Supreme Court, 2014)
State v. Mathis
2024 Ohio 5707 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2024)
Dayton v. Erickson
1996 Ohio 431 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1996)

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State v. Mathis, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mathis-ohio-2026.