State v. Warren

2025 Ohio 1814
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 21, 2025
Docket30258
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Ohio 1814 (State v. Warren) 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. Warren, 2025 Ohio 1814 (Ohio Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Warren, 2025-Ohio-1814.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT MONTGOMERY COUNTY

STATE OF OHIO : : Appellee : C.A. No. 30258 : v. : Trial Court Case No. 23CRB3882 : UNIQUA N. WARREN : (Criminal Appeal from Municipal Court) : Appellant : :

...........

OPINION

Rendered on May 21, 2025

ARVIN S. MILLER, Attorney for Appellant

MARC T. ROSS, Attorney for Appellee

.............

HANSEMAN, J.

{¶ 1} Appellant Uniqua N. Warren appeals from her convictions for obstructing

official business and resisting arrest following a bench trial in the Dayton Municipal Court.

In support of her appeal, Warren claims that her convictions were not supported by -2-

sufficient evidence and were against the manifest weight of the evidence. For the reasons

outlined below, we disagree with Warren’s claims and will affirm the judgment of the trial

court.

Facts and Course of Proceedings

{¶ 2} On October 25, 2023, Warren was charged by complaint with one second-

degree-misdemeanor count of obstructing official business in violation of R.C. 2921.31(A)

and one second-degree-misdemeanor count of resisting arrest in violation of R.C.

2921.33(A). Warren pled not guilty to both charges and the matter proceeded to a bench

trial on March 18, 2024.

{¶ 3} During Warren’s trial, the State called Dayton police officer Zachary

Newsome to testify as a witness. Ofc. Newsome testified that during the early morning

hours of October 25, 2023, he and his partner, Ofc. Poteet, were on duty in a marked

police cruiser patrolling the west side of Dayton when they observed a white Jeep Patriot

(“the vehicle”) traveling at a high rate of speed on Siebenthaler Avenue. The officers did

not clock the vehicle’s speed with a radar gun, but Ofc. Newsome recalled having to drive

70 mph to catch up with it. Ofc. Newsome also recalled that the posted speed limit in the

area was less than 70 mph.

{¶ 4} As Ofc. Newsome was catching up with the speeding vehicle, he observed

the vehicle run a red light at the intersection of Siebenthaler Avenue and Philadelphia

Drive. Shortly thereafter, Ofc. Newsome saw the vehicle pull into a Marathon gas station.

Ofc. Newsome testified that he followed the vehicle to the gas station and activated the -3-

overhead lights on his police cruiser to effectuate a traffic stop for the speeding and red-

light violations.

{¶ 5} Continuing, Ofc. Newsom testified that he had pulled up to the vehicle in his

police cruiser and told the driver, later identified as Warren, to exit her vehicle. In

response, Warren exited the vehicle and then walked away. Ofc. Newsome testified that

he yelled for Warren to stop, but Warren ignored his order and walked to a third-party

vehicle that was parked at the gas station. When Ofc. Newsome said: “[H]ey stop, hey

stop, what are you doing[?]” Warren responded: “I’m getting my cell phone.” Trial Tr., p.

68. Ofc. Newsome thereafter walked over to Warren and the vehicle that Warren had

approached.

{¶ 6} During his testimony, Ofc. Newsome explained that he had been equipped

with a body camera that recorded his interactions with Warren on the morning in question.

The video footage captured by Ofc. Newsome’s body camera was played for the trial

court and admitted into evidence as State’s Exhibit 1. The video footage established that

the body camera began recording from the time that Ofc. Newsome approached Warren

at the third-party vehicle.

{¶ 7} At the beginning of the video, Warren was speaking with Ofc. Newsome while

standing beside the front, passenger-side door of the third-party vehicle. Ofc. Poteet then

approached Warren while Warren told Ofc. Newsome: “You did not see me driving.” Ofc.

Newsome responded: “You literally just got out of the car.” Warren then repeated herself,

saying: “You didn’t see me driving.” Ofc. Newsome responded, “yeah, I did,” and Warren

again said: “You didn’t.” -4-

{¶ 8} While Ofc. Newsome and Warren were speaking, the driver of the third-party

vehicle could be seen holding a cellphone out of the passenger-side window. The driver

eventually said: “Hey, hey, hey, officer, officer, here her phone (sic) I’m about to go[.]”

Warren then opened the passenger-side door of the third-party vehicle as if she were

going to get inside. Ofc. Newsome, however, shut the door before Warren could enter the

vehicle. As that was happening, Ofc. Poteet took the cellphone from the driver’s hand.

The driver of the third-party vehicle thereafter indicated that he was leaving and told the

officers to: “Have a good night.” Ofc. Newsome responded, “alright you too, see you later,”

and that vehicle drove away.

{¶ 9} As the third-party vehicle drove away, Ofc. Newsome asked Warren: “You

got a driver’s license on you? Or do you want to go in the back of the car?” Warren

responded: “No. I’m not going no fucking where.” In response to that comment, Ofc.

Newsome said, “yeah you are” and immediately grabbed Warren’s left wrist and tried to

place her hand behind her back. Warren, however, resisted Ofc. Newsome’s attempt to

place her hand behind her back and yelled: “Don’t. Don’t. Why you putting your hands on

me?” In response, Ofc. Newsome said: “Don’t pull away from me.” Warren continued to

resist and said: “Did I do something illegal?” In response, Ofc. Newsome told Warren to

put her hands behind her back multiple times, and Warren continued to resist and yell

that she was not driving. The video showed that Ofc. Newsome and Ofc. Poteet had to

work together to place Warren’s arms behind her back to handcuff her.

{¶ 10} Ofc. Newsome testified that he had placed Warren in handcuffs to detain

her so that he could identify her and determine why she was driving recklessly. He -5-

indicated that he had decided to use handcuffs because he had safety concerns given

that Warren ignored his order to stop walking, would not listen to him, and would not

provide him with her driver’s license.

{¶ 11} After the officers handcuffed Warren, the video showed the officers

escorting Warren to their police cruiser while she continued yelling at them. As they

approached the police cruiser, Ofc. Poteet said: “Okay, you’re either getting a ticket or

going to jail, how about that?” In response, Warren said: “I’m not doing neither.” Ofc.

Poteet then said: “You got to cooperate with us.” Warren responded: “No. Then let me

go. Then let me go.” Ofc. Poteet once again tried to reason with Warren and said: “You

got to cooperate with us or you’re going to jail.” Warren thereafter refused to get inside

the police cruiser and said: “I’m not doing that. No. Y’all not putting me in the back of that

car.”

{¶ 12} In addition to verbally protesting against the officers putting her in the police

cruiser, Warren could be seen placing her right leg against the doorframe of the cruiser

and going deadweight to prevent the officers from getting her in the backseat. The video

also showed Ofc. Poteet go to the other side of the cruiser so that he could grab Warren’s

arms and pull her body across the backseat as Ofc. Newsome guided her legs into the

cruiser. Once the officers got Warren inside the cruiser, she called them “stupid mother

fuckers.” In response, Ofc. Newsome told Warren: “Well, now you are going to jail.”

However, at trial, Ofc. Newsome explained that he was only threatening Warren with jail

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Bluebook (online)
2025 Ohio 1814, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-warren-ohioctapp-2025.