State v. Sanchez

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 24, 2026
Docket2025 CA 00134
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Sanchez (State v. Sanchez) 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. Sanchez, (Ohio Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Sanchez, 2026-Ohio-1497.]

IN THE OHIO COURT OF APPEALS FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT STARK COUNTY, OHIO

STATE OF OHIO, Case No. 2025 CA 00134

Plaintiff - Appellee Opinion & Judgment Entry

-vs- Appeal from the Court of Common Pleas of Stark County, Case No. 2016CR0957 ANTHONY SANCHEZ, Judgment: Affirmed Defendant - Appellant Date of Judgment: April 24, 2026

BEFORE: Craig R. Baldwin, Robert G. Montgomery, and David M. Gormley, Judges

APPEARANCES: Kyle L. Stone (Stark County Prosecuting Attorney) & Kameisha J. Johnson (Assistant Prosecuting Attorney), Canton, Ohio, for Plaintiff-Appellee; Anthony Sanchez, Chillicothe, Ohio, briefed the case on his own behalf as Defendant-Appellant.

Gormley, J.

{¶1} Defendant Anthony Sanchez challenges a trial-court decision denying his

post-sentence motion to withdraw his guilty pleas. For the reasons explained below, we

affirm the judgment of the trial court.

The Key Facts

{¶2} Sanchez was indicted in July 2016 on several felonies of the first, second,

and third degree. In December of that year — while represented by an attorney whom

Sanchez had hired in September 2016 — Sanchez pled guilty to the charges.

{¶3} At the plea-change hearing, Sanchez told the trial judge that his attorney

had met with him at the jail and that he — Sanchez — was satisfied with the quality of the

legal services that he had received from that attorney. The trial court accepted Sanchez’s

guilty pleas, and Sanchez was later sentenced to a lengthy prison term in the case. {¶4} According to his own affidavit that Sanchez submitted with his August 2025

plea-withdrawal motion, he asked his trial attorney, soon after the sentencing hearing in

2017, to provide a copy of the case file to him. The exhibits attached to Sanchez’s motion

indicate that he did receive at least a portion of the attorney’s case file in July 2017.

{¶5} The August 2025 plea-withdrawal motion was not the first such motion filed

by Sanchez in the case. He filed a similar motion in March 2022. In that earlier motion,

Sanchez claimed that he had been surprised to learn only after the plea change that he

would be required to register as a sex offender (one of the charges was a rape charge), and

he alleged in his motion that he had received ineffective assistance of counsel because his

trial attorney had failed to advise him about that registration requirement. Sanchez also

argued in his 2022 motion that his trial counsel had pressured him into signing the plea

agreement despite Sanchez’s assertion that he was innocent and wanted to go to trial. The

trial court denied Sanchez’s first motion in April 2022 after noting that Sanchez had in

fact been advised of the registration requirement at the plea-change hearing. We affirmed

the trial court’s decision in June 2023. See State v. Sanchez, 2023-Ohio-2042, ¶ 35 (5th

Dist.).

{¶6} In July 2023 Sanchez’s sister made a public-records request to the clerk of

the trial court and asked for a copy of all documents that had been filed in Sanchez’s case.

The sister apparently received in response to that request several documents labeled

“Discovery Receipt” that listed some items that had been sent by the prosecutor to

Sanchez’s trial attorney before Sanchez pled guilty.

{¶7} With those additional “Discovery Receipt” documents in hand, Sanchez —

according to his affidavit that accompanies his 2025 plea-withdrawal motion — sent letters in May 2024 and July 2024 to his trial attorney asking to see copies of the

discovery-related items listed on those receipts.

{¶8} According to his own and other affidavits that Sanchez filed with the 2025

motion, his girlfriend in July or August of 2024 picked up 16 compact discs from

Sanchez’s trial attorney and transferred the information on them to a memory stick or

flash drive. A different attorney then sent the flash drive to Sanchez in September 2024.

{¶9} Sanchez filed his second motion to withdraw his guilty pleas in August 2025

and again — as he had in his 2022 motion — alleged that he had been denied the effective

assistance of counsel in 2016. This time, Sanchez claimed that his trial attorney had

withheld discovery documents from him before the plea change and had lied about the

strength of the State’s evidence in an effort to convince Sanchez to plead guilty. Sanchez

attached multiple affidavits from himself and from his sister and his girlfriend, and he

included, too, some of the discovery-related documents that he said he had seen for the

first time in September 2024 after he obtained what he now believes is his complete case

file from his trial counsel.

{¶10} After reviewing these items, the trial court denied Sanchez’s motion without

holding a hearing. Sanchez now appeals.

Standard of Review

{¶11} A Criminal Rule 32.1 plea-withdrawal motion is addressed to the sound

discretion of the trial court, and “the good faith, credibility and weight of the movant’s

assertions in support of the motion are matters to be resolved by that court.” State v.

Smith, 49 Ohio St.2d 261, 264 (1977). We therefore review solely for an abuse of

discretion any trial-court decision denying a Criminal Rule 32.1 motion. State v.

Waterhouse, 2022-Ohio-655, ¶ 7 (5th Dist.). An abuse of discretion “implies that the court’s attitude is unreasonable, arbitrary[,] or unconscionable.” Blakemore v.

Blakemore, 5 Ohio St.3d 217, 219 (1983).

{¶12} Under Criminal Rule 32.1, a trial court may allow a defendant to withdraw

his or her guilty or no-contest plea after a sentence has been imposed, but only, the rule

says, when that outcome is necessary to correct a “manifest injustice.” A defendant who

seeks to withdraw a guilty plea after sentencing bears the burden of establishing the

existence of that manifest injustice. Smith at 264.

{¶13} A manifest injustice “‘relates to some fundamental flaw in the proceedings’”

that results in “‘a miscarriage of justice or is inconsistent with the demands of due

process.’” State v. Leftwich, 2022-Ohio-1153, ¶ 13 (5th Dist.), quoting State v. Eckley,

2017-Ohio-8455, ¶ 19 (5th Dist.). A post-sentence motion to withdraw “is allowable only

in extraordinary cases.” Smith at 264.

The Trial Court Did Not Err By Denying Sanchez’s Motion

{¶14} Sanchez faults the trial court for denying his motion, and he argues, too,

that the judge should have held a hearing on the motion before issuing any decision.

Sanchez’s Second Criminal Rule 32.1 Motion is Barred by the Claim-Preclusion Doctrine Because He Could Have Raised His Arguments in His First Motion

{¶15} An ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim can be a proper basis for filing a

post-sentence motion to withdraw a guilty plea if the defendant meets his or her burden

of demonstrating a manifest injustice. State v. Griffin, 2023-Ohio-4011, ¶ 17 (7th Dist.);

State v. Howard, 2019-Ohio-5357, ¶ 41 (2d Dist.).

{¶16} The doctrine of res judicata or claim preclusion, however, “bars successive

litigation of issues and events that were or could have been raised in the prior

proceedings.” State v. Spencer, 2010-Ohio-1667, ¶ 11 (8th Dist.). Ohio appellate courts have applied that doctrine to bar successive Criminal Rule 32.1 motions when the second

motion asserts grounds for relief that were or could have been raised in the first motion.

Id. at ¶ 12-13; State v. McLeod, 2004-Ohio-6199, ¶ 12 (5th Dist.); State v. Brown, 2004-

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Related

State v. Owens
2011 Ohio 1175 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2011)
State v. Brown
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State v. Makupson, Unpublished Decision (10-4-2007)
2007 Ohio 5329 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2007)
State v. McLeod, Unpublished Decision (11-16-2004)
2004 Ohio 6199 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2004)
State v. Colvin
2016 Ohio 5644 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2016)
State v. Eckley
2017 Ohio 8455 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2017)
State v. Howard
2019 Ohio 5357 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2019)
State v. Waterhouse
2022 Ohio 655 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2022)
State v. Leftwich
2022 Ohio 1153 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2022)
State v. Smith
361 N.E.2d 1324 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1977)
Blakemore v. Blakemore
450 N.E.2d 1140 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1983)
State v. Sanchez
2023 Ohio 2042 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2023)
State v. Griffin
2023 Ohio 4011 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2023)
State v. Harris
2024 Ohio 2993 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2024)
State v. Morris
2026 Ohio 37 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2026)

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Sanchez, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-sanchez-ohioctapp-2026.