State v. Struble

2017 Ohio 9326
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 29, 2017
Docket2016-L-108
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2017 Ohio 9326 (State v. Struble) 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. Struble, 2017 Ohio 9326 (Ohio Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Struble, 2017-Ohio-9326.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

ELEVENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

LAKE COUNTY, OHIO

STATE OF OHIO, : OPINION

Plaintiff-Appellee, : CASE NO. 2016-L-108 - vs - :

MAX S. STRUBLE, :

Defendant-Appellant. :

Criminal Appeal from the Lake County Court of Common Pleas, Case No. 2016 CR 000346.

Judgment: Affirmed in part; reversed in part and remanded.

Charles E. Coulson, Lake County Prosecutor, and Anna C. Kelley, Assistant Prosecutor, Lake County Administration Building, 105 Main Street, P.O. Box 490, Painesville, OH 44077 (For Plaintiff-Appellee).

Charles R. Grieshammer, Lake County Public Defender, 125 East Erie Street, Painesville, OH 44077 (For Defendant-Appellant).

THOMAS R. WRIGHT, J.

{¶1} After a jury trial, appellant, Max S. Struble, was found guilty of illegal

assembly or possession of chemicals for the manufacture of drugs, count one;

aggravated possession of drugs, count two; and possessing criminal tools, count three.

He challenges the denial of his pro se motion to represent himself at trial; two

evidentiary rulings; and contends his conviction on count one is against the manifest weight of the evidence. The conviction on court one is reversed and the convictions on

counts two and three are affirmed.

{¶2} On March 30, 2016, Patrolmen Michael Bruening and Ryan Butler of the

Mentor City Police Department were engaged in a theft investigation involving various

retail stores on Mentor Avenue. As part of the theft detail, the officers surveilled parking

lots of stores for suspicious behavior. The officers wore civilian clothes and drove an

unmarked vehicle. They were on the lookout for cars with several people, some of

whom would make multiple trips into a store while the others remained in the vehicle.

{¶3} At approximately 11:30 a.m., the two officers were parked beside a Target

retail store when they noticed a tan Saturn pull into the parking lot. The Saturn had four

occupants, two females in the front seat, and two males in the back. The two females

were later identified as Paige Tiedman and Gwendolyn Tingley. Appellant was sitting

behind the front passenger seat.

{¶4} Appellant and Tiedman exited the vehicle and went into Target, while the

other two remained in the vehicle. Seeing this as suspicious, Bruening followed

appellant and Tiedman into the store, while Butler continued to watch the vehicle

occupants. Initially, Bruening could not locate either appellant or Tiedman in the store.

During this time, appellant briefly returned to the Saturn, but immediately went back into

the store. After a few moments, Bruening saw appellant make a purchase at the in-

store pharmacy. After the purchase was completed and appellant left the area, a

pharmacy employee told Bruening that appellant purchased two boxes of Sudafed,

each containing forty-eight pills.

{¶5} Ultimately, appellant and Tiedman separately returned to the car. When

2 the last of them exited the store, Bruening returned to his car. Since Sudafed contains

pseudoephedrine, a chemical used to manufacture methamphetamine, the officers

followed the Saturn a short distance to a second retail store, Lowe’s.

{¶6} Appellant exited, this time with Gwendolyn Tingley. Appellant changed

from a black long-sleeved shirt he wore at Target into a yellow t-shirt. Bruening

followed appellant and Tingley into Lowe’s. Upon catching up to them in the plumbing

department, Bruening saw appellant identify a product on a shelf, drain cleaner, used in

the manufacturing of methamphetamine. Appellant then left Tingley and returned to the

Saturn. Bruening saw Tingley buy drain cleaner.

{¶7} Bruening and Butler continued to follow the Saturn when it left and called

for assistance. Patrolman Bryan Distrelrath, operating a marked patrol car nearby,

responded. When the Saturn turned onto another road, the driver, Paige Tiedman,

failed to signal. Bruening and Butler thereafter instructed Distrelrath to initiate a stop.

The three officers approached the Saturn, and were joined by a fourth officer.

{¶8} As Bruening and Butler approached the passenger side of the stopped

car, they smelled a faint odor of marijuana. Butler asked appellant if there were drugs

inside their vehicle. Appellant confirmed that he had smoked marijuana and had a

marijuana pipe in his pants pocket. Butler ordered appellant to exit the car and

conducted a pat-down search. In addition to the pipe, the officer found a cut straw and

two small bags of white powder in his pockets. When asked, appellant said that the

white powder was cocaine. Subsequent tests revealed that the powder was

methamphetamine and a trace of methamphetamine was found on the straw.

{¶9} The other three occupants and the Saturn’s interior were also searched.

3 As to Paige Tiedman, a coffee filter and twenty-five methamphetamine pills were found

in a baggie under her dress. As to Gwendolyn Tingley, a small hand-held Eagle torch

was found in her purse. As to the second male in the back seat, an empty box of

Sudafed was found in his pocket. The Target and Lowe’s bags were located on the

floor beside appellant’s feet. One of the Sudafed boxes had already been opened, the

pills had been removed, and shoved into the second Sudafed box. The Lowe’s bag

only contained a two-pound bottle of drain cleaner. A separate box of non-

pseudoephedrine Sudafed and various papers with appellant’s name on them were

found in a black bag.

{¶10} Appellant was ultimately indicted on three charges: illegal assembly or

possession of chemicals for the manufacturing of drugs, a third-degree felony under

R.C. 2925.041; aggravated drug possession, a fifth-degree felony under R.C. 2925.11;

and possessing criminal tools, a fifth-degree felony under R.C. 2923.24. Since

appellant was indigent, a public defender was appointed to represent him. At a pretrial

held in May 2016, defense counsel informed the trial court that appellant refused to

speak with her every time she met him at the county jail. In response, appellant stated

that he was assuming his counsel was intelligent and could read the same discovery

materials he was given, and, therefore, there was no real reason for him to speak with

her. He told the court that he thought defense counsel might be working with the

prosecution to delay his trial so that the prosecution could create more evidence against

him. However, appellant did not ask for a new attorney.

{¶11} In the weeks following the pretrial, appellant filed copies of letters he sent

to his trial counsel. In some of the letters, he asked counsel to send him copies of

4 various cases, statutes, and discovery items. In one of the letters, he instructed counsel

to move to dismiss the indictment on the basis that one of the police officers involved in

the traffic stop lied under oath during his preliminary hearing. The dispute centered

upon whether the officers, upon initially approaching the Saturn, said they smelled

marijuana or alcohol. A motion to dismiss was not filed.

{¶12} A three-day jury trial ensued. After the state presented three of its nine

witnesses, appellant requested the trial court to allow him to self-represent for the

remainder of the trial. In support, appellant asserted that defense counsel did not

subpoena certain witnesses to testify on his behalf, and that counsel was refusing to

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Holley
2022 Ohio 4465 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2022)
State v. March-Natali
2022 Ohio 4061 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2022)
Bank of New York Mellon v. Workman
2020 Ohio 3330 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2020)
State v. Struble
2019 Ohio 4650 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2019)
State v. Freshwater
2019 Ohio 2968 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2019)
State v. Brewer
2019 Ohio 2969 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2019)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2017 Ohio 9326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-struble-ohioctapp-2017.