State v. Schwab

2013 Ohio 4349
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 23, 2013
Docket12CA39
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2013 Ohio 4349 (State v. Schwab) 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. Schwab, 2013 Ohio 4349 (Ohio Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Schwab, 2013-Ohio-4349.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT ATHENS COUNTY

STATE OF OHIO, : Case No. 12CA39 : Plaintiff-Appellee, : : DECISION AND v. : JUDGMENT ENTRY : TERRY SCHWAB, : RELEASED: 09/23/2013 : Defendant-Appellant. : ______________________________________________________________________ APPEARANCES:

David J. Winkelmann, Athens, Ohio, for appellant.

Keller J. Blackburn, Athens County Prosecutor, and Merry M. Saunders, Athens County Assistant Prosecutor, Athens, Ohio, for appellee. ______________________________________________________________________ Harsha, J.

{¶1} Terry Schwab appeals his convictions for various drug offenses and

argues they are supported by insufficient evidence and against the manifest weight of

the evidence. The first set of charges stemmed from an incident on March 9, 2011, in

which Schwab’s fiancée, Michelle Fidell, sold Oxycodone and her then minor daughter,

Tara Crego, sold Xanax (Alprazolam) to a confidential informant while inside Schwab’s

home. The second set of charges stemmed from an incident on April 1, 2011, in which

law enforcement initiated a traffic stop of a vehicle Schwab was driving, and he

purportedly gave Crego a bottle of Oxycodone which she hid in her bra.

{¶2} Schwab contends no evidence shows he was complicit in the aggravated

trafficking of Oxycodone and in the trafficking of Alprazolam that occurred during the

March 9 incident. However, the State introduced evidence that a few days before the

incident, Schwab told the informant he would have Xanax in a “few days” and would Athens App. No. 12CA39 2

have “the Xanax and the 30’s,” i.e., Oxycodone. The State also offered evidence Fidell

sold drugs for Schwab in the past, the drugs sold to the informant belonged to Schwab,

and before the sales occurred, Schwab nodded his approval for the Xanax sale and

either told Crego to give the informant “what she wants” or to “[j]ust give her anything.”

Based on the State’s version of events, the jury could reasonably find that Schwab

aided and abetted Fidell and Crego in the transactions and return guilty verdicts. The

jury did not clearly lose its way and create such a manifest miscarriage of justice that we

must reverse the convictions. The convictions are not against the manifest weight of

the evidence and sufficient evidence supports them.

{¶3} Next, Schwab complains about his conviction for corrupting another with

drugs for the March 9 incident. The jury found he corrupted Crego with Oxycodone, but

the State presented no evidence he administered or furnished Crego with that drug

during the incident. It is clear from the evidence that Fidell handled the sale of

Oxycodone while Crego handled the Xanax sale. Therefore, we agree insufficient

evidence exists to support the conviction and reverse it. This decision renders

Schwab’s manifest weight argument on this conviction moot.

{¶4} Schwab also challenges his conviction for corrupting another with drugs

(Oxycodone) during the April 1 incident and argues there is no evidence he furnished or

administered the drug to Crego. However, Crego testified that after police initiated the

traffic stop, Schwab handed her a pill bottle of Oxycodone, which she hid in her bra.

Schwab and a passenger snorted pills from this bottle during their road trip. The jury

could infer that Schwab knowingly provided or supplied Crego with the bottle in order to

conceal it from police and avoid criminal liability. The jury could reasonably return a Athens App. No. 12CA39 3

guilty verdict based on the State’s version of events. The conviction is not against the

manifest weight of the evidence and is supported by sufficient evidence.

{¶5} Finally, Schwab challenges his conviction for complicity to aggravated

possession of drugs based on the April 1 traffic stop. However, from Crego’s testimony

the jury could reasonably conclude Schwab handed her the bottle of Oxycodone and

thereby knowingly aided or abetted her in possessing a schedule II controlled

substance. Therefore, we find this conviction is not against the manifest weight of the

evidence and is supported by sufficient evidence.

I. Facts

{¶6} The Athens County grand jury indicted Schwab on one count of

aggravated trafficking in drugs, two counts of corrupting another with drugs, one count

of trafficking in drugs, and one count of aggravated possession of drugs. The matter

proceeded to a jury trial, which produced the following evidence.

{¶7} Byron Guinther, an agent for the Ohio Department of Public Safety,

testified that Patricia Vore agreed to become a confidential informant (“CI”) after he

caught her selling food stamps. On March 9, 2011, she made a controlled buy of three

or four Xanax “bars” and one Oxycodone pill from Schwab’s house. On April 1, 2011,

another CI spoke to Schwab’s fiancée, Michelle Fidell. From that conservation,

Guinther understood that “[t]hey didn’t have anything in hand at that time but [Schwab]

was in route back * * *.” Guinther learned Schwab and Crego were coming back from

Columbus and what vehicle they would be in. He gave this information to law

enforcement agents who initiated a traffic stop of the vehicle.

{¶8} Patricia Vore testified that she has a drug problem and is a felon. Athens App. No. 12CA39 4

Guinther caught her selling food stamps to buy heroin, so she agreed to become a CI to

avoid prosecution for welfare fraud. She told Guinther she could buy drugs from

Schwab. However, she was not confident about this, so before Vore officially became a

CI she went to Schwab’s home on her own to see if she could buy drugs. Her friend

Robert Degarmore was there, and she bought a “Roxy 30,” i.e., Oxycodone, from him.

Schwab told Vore he would have Xanax “in a few days.” Vore also testified Schwab told

her he would “have the Xanax and the 30’s.”

{¶9} Vore made her first controlled buy from Schwab’s house on March 9,

2011. When she arrived, Schwab was on the phone, Fidell, and Crego were in the

living room. Vore asked about Xanax, and Crego pulled out a “big bag” of Xanax bars.

Crego “looked up at [Schwab] and he gave her like a nod, like go ahead and give her

what she wants kind of, because she didn’t know me.” He also told Crego, “Give her

what she wants,” in regards to the Xanax. Crego counted the bars out on a table. Fidell

also got pills out – she had “the 30’s, the pills, or the 15’s,” i.e., the Oxycodone. Vore

negotiated with Fidell and ultimately bought Xanax bars and one Oxycodone pill. Vore

made two more controlled buys at Schwab’s house but dealt with Fidell both times.

{¶10} Eighteen-year-old Tara Crego testified that she and her mom lived with

Schwab for several years. He had medical problems, and Crego and her mom helped

administer his medications. Crego suggested he abused pain medications – he snorted

pills and took more than he could get through doctors. Sometimes Crego went with him

to Columbus when he had doctor’s appointments. On the way home, they would fill his

prescriptions and four or five hours later people would come to buy drugs, typically “30’s

and Xanax.” People bought drugs multiple times a week. Crego claimed Schwab told Athens App. No. 12CA39 5

her mom to sell his drugs for him. Fidell did and gave him the money.

{¶11} Crego testified about two incidents that occurred when she was 17. On

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Related

State v. Schwab
2014 Ohio 336 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2014)

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