State v. Sess

737 N.E.2d 969, 136 Ohio App. 3d 689
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 17, 1999
DocketTrial No. B-9706321. Appeal No. C-990246.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 737 N.E.2d 969 (State v. Sess) 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. Sess, 737 N.E.2d 969, 136 Ohio App. 3d 689 (Ohio Ct. App. 1999).

Opinions

Hildebrandt, Presiding Judge.

Plaintiff-appellant, the state of Ohio, appeals the judgment of the Hamilton County Court of Common Pleas granting the motion to suppress filed by defendant-appellee, John Sess. For the following reasons, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

Sess was a veteran officer with the Cincinnati Police Division. In 1997, he transferred to the Regional Narcotics Unit (“RENU”), an operation conducted jointly by the Hamilton County Sheriff and the Cincinnati Police Division, under the command of Captain Keith Groppe. On Sess’s first day at RENU, April 21, 1997, Groppe informed Sess that Sess would be taking a polygraph test as part of his orientation. Groppe asked Sess to reveal any information that might come out during the polygraph test. In response, Sess told Groppe that, in the early *691 1980s, he had planted marijuana on a suspect in a drug case. Sess, though, apparently did not tell Groppe any identifying information about that incident, such as the name of the suspect, the exact date when the incident occurred, or the names of the other officers who had worked on the case.

On April 24, 1997, during an investigation by the police division’s internal-affairs unit, and after he had asserted his Miranda rights, Sess signed a document entitled “Rule 2.26 — Manual of Rules and Regulations and Disciplinary Process for the Cincinnati Police Division.” That document stated:

“A member must, upon direction of the Police Chief or his designated representative, respond completely and truthfully to all questions that are specifically, directly and narrowly related to his performance as a police officer. Since the member is required by rule and case law to answer, and has no right against self-incrimination, the response to such questions may be used only in the application of administrative justice. The member is immune in any subsequent related criminal proceeding from the uses of his answers or fruits thereof.
“Should the member fail or refuse to respond completely and truthfully to all questions of this nature directed to him as a member of the Police Division, he will be given a direct order to do so. Refusal or failure to then respond will result in the pursuit of disciplinary action against the member for failure to obey the order. That disciplinary action may result in administrative sanction against the member which may include dismissal from his employment as a member of the police division.”

After signing the 2.26 document, Sess told the investigators the details of the incident where he had planted drugs on the suspect. Among other things, he told them that the suspect’s name was Shadarle Ragan. Also, he explained that Officer Gary Seal had been involved with Ragan’s arrest. (Sess explained that Seal had been unaware that the drugs had been planted.)

Ultimately, Sess was terminated from the-police department. Also, he was criminally indicted for tampering with evidence and tampering with records. He pleaded not guilty and filed two motions to suppress. The first asked the trial court to suppress his April 21, 1997, statements to Groppe. The trial court granted the motion, but this court reversed that judgment on appeal, holding that Sess was neither in custody nor suspected of criminal activity when he made the statements.

The second motion asked the court to suppress the statements made on April 24, 1997. Again, the trial court granted the motion. The court held that the statements themselves and all the fruits derived from them were inadmissible. *692 The state, certifying that this matter cannot proceed without the suppressed evidence, 1 now appeals the granting of the second motion to suppress. The state asserts three assignments of error.

In the state’s first assignment, it asserts that the court erred in concluding that Sess’s statements made on April 24 were immunized. In response, Sess relies upon the Ohio Supreme Court’s decision in Jones v. Franklin Cty. Sheriff, 2 which he claims controls here. In Jones, the court upheld disciplinary action taken against a deputy sheriff who was required to answer questions regarding alleged misconduct. In doing so, the court held that a public employee may be required to answer questions regarding misconduct if the employee is assured that criminal prosecution will not result from compliance with the investigation. 3 In Jones, the narrow issue before the court was whether the public employee’s silence when asked to divulge potentially incriminating information could form the basis of disciplinary proceedings. 4

Though the trial court in the instant case based its decision upon the holding in Jones, we conclude that the issues here are properly decided without reference to that case. It is well settled that coerced statements are not admissible in a criminal prosecution. As recognized by the Supreme Court of the United States in Garrity v. New Jersey, 5 if a public employee is forced to make the Hobson’s choice of answering questions that may incriminate him or of forfeiting his job, statements made pursuant to such questioning are not voluntary and cannot be used in a subsequent prosecution against the public employee. The prohibition against the use of statements in such cases is properly based, therefore, not upon the doctrine of immunity, but rather upon the firmly entrenched constitutional doctrine that coerced statements cannot be used against a defendant in a criminal case. 6

And while it can be argued that the grant of immunity removes the taint of coercion from investigative proceedings, 7 we cannot accept the proposition that *693 the grant of immunity in the instant case rendered the potentially incriminatory statements voluntary with respect to the subsequent criminal prosecution. Indeed, Sess’s assertion of his Fifth Amendment rights prior to the questioning by the internal-affairs unit indicated his unwillingness to make any statement. Further, in the Rule 2.26 document itself, it is acknowledged that Sess was required to answer and could not invoke his right against self-incrimination without facing disciplinary measures.

Thus, the Supreme Court of Ohio’s pronouncements concerning immunity in Jones, which involved an appeal from the State Personnel Board of Review and not a criminal prosecution, need not be discussed in resolving the instant appeal. We hold merely that Sess’s statements were involuntary because he was faced with the prospect of losing his employment if he refused to answer the questions posed by the internal-affairs unit. Thus, the trial court properly suppressed the statements, and the first assignment of error is overruled.

The state’s second assignment involves the testimony of Seal and Ragan, whose identities were revealed by Sess in his statements.

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2021 Ohio 4346 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2021)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
737 N.E.2d 969, 136 Ohio App. 3d 689, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-sess-ohioctapp-1999.