State v. Miller, Unpublished Decision (2-24-2005)

2005 Ohio 771
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 24, 2005
DocketNo. 84431.
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2005 Ohio 771 (State v. Miller, Unpublished Decision (2-24-2005)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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State v. Miller, Unpublished Decision (2-24-2005), 2005 Ohio 771 (Ohio Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

JOURNAL ENTRY and OPINION
{¶ 1} Defendant-appellant Joseph Miller appeals from his conviction for fifth-degree felony theft upon the conclusion of the bench trial for him and his three co-defendants.

{¶ 2} In his four assignments of error, appellant initially asserts the trial court improperly permitted into evidence a statement he gave to the police detective. Appellant further asserts the trial court's finding of guilt for a fifth-degree felony theft is flawed for two reasons: first, the court failed specifically to find the dollar amount involved; and, second, the court "misapprehended" the burden of proof necessary to prove the dollar amount. As an alternative and additional assertion, appellant claims his trial counsel provided ineffective assistance in failing to raise the foregoing challenge to his conviction.

{¶ 3} This court has reviewed the record with appellant's assertions in mind, however, and finds none has merit. Consequently, his conviction is affirmed.

{¶ 4} Appellant's conviction results from a series of incidents that occurred over the winter months of 2002 and 2003 in Cleveland area Home Depot stores. Store managers and loss-prevention officers ("LPOs") became aware a particular high-cost item was disappearing from the shelves at a significantly elevated rate. The item, a hard plastic kit manufactured by DeWalt, approximately the size and shape of a briefcase and containing many different tools, had a retail value of $499.

{¶ 5} To aid one another, the managers and LPOs circulated their observations concerning the disappearances via voice mail messages. In this manner, over time, a pattern of circumstances surrounding the disappearances became apparent. The incidents occurred just after a group of four to five particular men visited the store; these men seemed to be acting in concert in a peculiar manner.

{¶ 6} One of the men would place a DeWalt kit into a shopping cart, then push the cart around the store while speaking on a cellular telephone. Often, he placed a sign into the cart which covered the kit, and, often, he then permitted another colleague to take over the cart. Whomever had control of a cart eventually pushed it into the outdoor garden center area. Thereafter, either that man left the area without the cart, or one of the others returned indoors with it. In either event, the cart no longer contained the kit. None of the men purchased anything during his visit to the store.

{¶ 7} During the same time period that the men were noticed, the outdoor steel-wire fence that surrounded the garden area was discovered to have been cut open.

{¶ 8} By January 20, 2003 LPO Larry Gleba of Home Depot's Highland Heights store, a former police officer, knew the faces of these particular men. Gleba sat in his office viewing a video monitor of the area where the DeWalt kits were located when one, whom he later identified as Gary Boggs, entered his field of view. Boggs placed a kit into his shopping cart.

{¶ 9} As Gleba watched, Boggs thereupon left the area, passing by another of the men, who later was identified as Karl Owens. Both Boggs and Owens spoke into cellular telephone units rather than to each other. Owens also placed a kit into his cart, along with another item, then covered the merchandise with a sign before he, in turn, left the area.

{¶ 10} Gleba exited his office to enlist a few of the other employees to aid him in a cautious surveillance of the men. For nearly a half-hour, Jason Nobbe followed Owens as he pushed around the store a shopping cart that contained two kits covered by a sign. He constantly talked on his telephone. Often, Boggs joined him and Owens permitted Boggs to take the cart elsewhere.

{¶ 11} At one point during Gleba's surveillance, he saw that two others, later identified as appellant and Brian Whitlow, also were together inside the store. Appellant and Whitlow acted similarly, i.e., each used a cellular unit as they pushed a cart through the store aisles; they frequented the aisles adjacent to the garden area, and sometimes crossed the path of Boggs and Owens.

{¶ 12} Although he attempted to monitor all of the men, Gleba occasionally lost sight of one or another. All of them ultimately abandoned the carts and left the store without making any purchases. Following their departures, Gleba went to the garden area. There he discovered, near a new hole in the steel-wire fence, a cart that contained only a sign.

{¶ 13} Patrick Hardy, LPO based at the Euclid store, observed the men earlier that same day; he more carefully had them followed during their presence in that store. They used the same method of operation. Upon becoming aware their actions in the garden center were monitored, they departed the store; Hardy found that three DeWalt kits had been hidden in areas they had visited.

{¶ 14} The next day, Gleba was not on duty at the Highland Heights store, but assistant store manager Darryl Woods spotted all four of the defendants. Woods telephoned the police to report the presence of "a few individuals [who] were suspected of theft[s]" inside the store. Then he, too, enlisted the aid of his colleagues, including Nobbe, to watch the men.

{¶ 15} Woods' observation was unsubtle enough that within fifteen minutes each of the men left the store without making any purchases. Woods noted the license number and model of the vehicle in which appellant and Whitlow left the parking lot, and, further, Woods and another employee followed Owens and Boggs to the adjacent restaurant. Meanwhile, Nobbe became aware that a pair of wire cutters and some "plastic wire zip ties" had been found near the fence in the garden center. The fence "had been cut in a few spots."

{¶ 16} All four of the men were arrested soon thereafter. As police detective Dennis Matejcic transported Boggs to the station, Boggs offered an oral statement. That same day, Owens also made an oral statement to detectives Matejcic and Bruce Balzano.

{¶ 17} Two days later, appellant indicated to Balzano that he wanted to make a statement. Prior to speaking with Balzano, appellant signed a "waiver of rights" form, then answered questions.

{¶ 18} Appellant admitted to taking part with the other defendants in the theft of a total of six to eight DeWalt kits on two separate occasions, including January 20, 2003. Appellant additionally offered while his statement was converted into written form to show Balzano's partner, Kenneth Visoky, the location of the person to whom the DeWalt kits were delivered. However, appellant proved uncooperative during the ride, and by the time of his return to the station, refused to sign the written version of his statement, claiming "everything he had said was a lie."

{¶ 19} Appellant eventually was indicted with his co-defendants on two counts viz., theft of property in an amount over $5000,1 and possession of criminal tools. All of the defendants elected to have the case tried to the bench. Following the presentation of the state's case-in-chief, the trial court reduced count one of the indictment to theft in an amount over $500 but less than $5000,2 and dismissed count two.

{¶ 20} Ultimately, the trial court found each of the defendants guilty of the lesser-included offense.

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Bluebook (online)
2005 Ohio 771, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-miller-unpublished-decision-2-24-2005-ohioctapp-2005.