State v. Young

2015 Ohio 398
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 30, 2015
DocketE-13-011
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2015 Ohio 398 (State v. Young) 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. Young, 2015 Ohio 398 (Ohio Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Young, 2015-Ohio-398.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT ERIE COUNTY

State of Ohio Court of Appeals No. E-13-011

Appellee Trial Court No. 2011-CR-244

v.

James M. Young DECISION AND JUDGMENT

Appellant Decided: January 30, 2015

*****

Kevin J. Baxter, Erie County Prosecuting Attorney, Mary Ann Barylski and Frank Romeo Zeleznikar, Assistant Prosecuting Attorneys, for appellee.

Derek A. Farmer, for appellant.

JENSEN, J.

{¶ 1} Following a jury trial, defendant-appellant, James M. Young, appeals from

the February 28, 2013 judgment of the Erie County Court of Common Pleas,

memorializing his convictions on various drugs and weapons charges, and the accompanying decisions of the trial court rendered during the course of the proceedings.

For the reasons that follow, we find Young’s first assignment of error well-taken and we

reverse the trial court’s judgment.

I. Background

{¶ 2} On the morning of June 4, 2011, Agent Dennis Rulli, a lead border patrol

agent with the U.S. Customs and Border Protection agency, received a call from a

confidential informant (“CI”) indicating that Young and Anthony Henson were at

Young’s residence, 508 East Jefferson Street in Sandusky, Ohio, cooking crack cocaine.

The CI said that they would be leaving the house and traveling to Farwell Street with an

ounce or two of crack cocaine. Rulli contacted Lieutenant John Orzech, of the Sandusky

Police Department, to report this information. Orzech was not on duty at the time, but he

arranged to have Sergeant Danny Lewis contact Rulli. When Rulli and Lewis spoke, they

made plans to conduct surveillance of Young’s home. Lewis arrived first in his squad

car. When Rulli arrived in an unmarked vehicle, Lewis moved away so as not to be

detected.

{¶ 3} Rulli observed a black male leave the East Jefferson Street residence on a

bicycle. He informed Lewis who headed in the direction of the bicyclist. Soon after,

Young and Henson left the home in a black Hummer. Young drove and Henson got in

the passenger side. Rulli informed Lewis and began to follow the vehicle. Lewis caught

up and resumed following Young while Rulli returned to East Jefferson Street.

2. {¶ 4} As Lewis followed Young’s vehicle, he observed that the county sticker and

the top portion of his license plate were partially obstructed, and he found the validation

sticker difficult to read. Lewis believed this to be a violation of state and local laws. As

the vehicle turned onto Farwell Street, Lewis activated his lights and initiated a traffic

stop. He asked to see Young’s identification. Young did not have his license with him

and Lewis observed that Young appeared nervous. He was allegedly shaking and

mumbling. Lewis called for the K-9 unit to be dispatched.

{¶ 5} The K-9 unit arrived. Justice, the drug-sniffing dog, alerted to the presence

of drugs. Lewis asked Young and Henson if they had drugs with them and Henson

handed over a plastic baggie of suspected crack cocaine. The crack cocaine was

contained within a cupcake wrapper. Lewis had conducted a 2006 investigation in which

Young sold drugs packaged in cupcake wrappers. Lewis searched the vehicle but found

no other drugs or contraband. He arrested Henson. He also arrested Young for

permitting drug use. He contacted Orzech to advise him of the events.

{¶ 6} Lewis left the place of the stop and returned to East Jefferson Street. There

he found Rulli speaking with a woman named Jenny Bailey who was there for a short

time to speak with Young’s mother, Lutricia Bradley. Rulli stayed with Bailey, who he

placed in the back of Lewis’ squad car, while Lewis and other officers went to the door of

the residence. Lewis knocked on the door. He claims that he heard footsteps and running

water and heard someone say “it’s the police.” Allegedly concerned that evidence was

being destroyed, he and the other officers forced entry into the home with guns drawn.

3. {¶ 7} Inside the home, Lewis saw Bradley shoving what appeared to be crack

cocaine down the kitchen sink with a butter knife. Lewis instructed Bradley to move

away from the sink. She did not comply so he went to the sink, turned off the water, and

directed Bradley to sit at the kitchen table. Chad Young, either Young’s brother or son (it

is unclear from the record), was also in the residence, running towards the back of the

home. He complied with the officers’ orders to return to the kitchen. His girlfriend,

Keisha Hargrove, was in a bedroom and she, too, complied with orders to come to the

kitchen. Her minor son was also present. Lewis did not check the remaining rooms in

the house. He asked Bradley for permission to search the home. She refused.

{¶ 8} Orzech arrived and Rulli entered the residence. Orzech and Lewis left to

obtain a search warrant while Rulli and other officers stayed with the occupants. Orzech,

with information obtained from Lewis, drafted the affidavit for search warrant and Lewis

prepared the cover sheets.

{¶ 9} In his affidavit, Orzech described that in 2006, with assistance from a CI,1

Lewis and other officers arranged multiple controlled drug buys from Young and a

female associate. In the course of that investigation, they executed a search warrant that

led to Young’s arrest on charges of trafficking in marijuana, trafficking in cocaine,

trafficking in crack cocaine, possession of cocaine, and possession of crack cocaine.

Young allegedly pled to some of these charges and served some amount of prison time.

1 The 2006 investigation did not involve the same CI as the present case.

4. {¶ 10} Orzech then detailed the June 4, 2011 events. He recounted that the CI had

told Rulli that Young and Henson were cooking crack cocaine and would be leaving 508

East Jefferson Street with an ounce or two of crack cocaine, traveling to the Farwell

Street address. He described that based on this information, Lewis and Rulli set up

surveillance at the East Jefferson Street address. Young and Henson left the residence in

a black Hummer, Lewis followed, and he pulled the vehicle over for obstructed plates

violations as it turned onto Farwell Street. He indicated that the K-9 unit arrived and

alerted to the presence of drugs in the vehicle, and that a baggy of suspected crack

cocaine was found in Henson’s pants pocket.

{¶ 11} Orzech then detailed what was observed by the officers upon their

warrantless entry into the home. He stated that the K-9 unit arrived at East Jefferson

Street and conducted an open-air search of the vehicles there, alerting to a white Denali

registered to Newman’s Motors—a dealership allegedly frequented by Young.

According to the affidavit, Young told Lewis that he resides at 508 East Jefferson Street.

{¶ 12} In his affidavit, Orzech attested that he knows the CI to be reliable and to

have assisted the Sandusky Police Department with investigations leading to the arrest

and convictions of at least five individuals for drug-related offenses, more than 15 drug

buys, and the recovery of more than 10 ounces of crack cocaine, money, and other

paraphernalia.

{¶ 13} Orzech took the warrant application to a judge while Lewis returned to the

residence. Orzech telephoned Lewis after obtaining a signature on the warrant, and

5. Lewis and the other officers began searching the home.

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