State v. Shoemaker
State v. Shoemaker
Opinion
[Cite as State v. Shoemaker,
2015-Ohio-4645.] IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT OF OHIO HAMILTON COUNTY, OHIO
STATE OF OHIO, : APPEAL NO. C-140724 TRIAL NO. C-14CRB-26880 Plaintiff-Appellee, :
vs. : O P I N I O N.
AUDREY SHOEMAKER, :
Defendant-Appellant. :
Criminal Appeal From: Hamilton County Municipal Court
Judgment Appealed From Is: Affirmed
Date of Judgment Entry on Appeal: November 10, 2015
Joseph T. Deters, Hamilton County Prosecuting Attorney, and Paula E. Adams, Assistant Prosecuting Attorney, for Plaintiff-Appellee,
Raymond T. Faller, Hamilton County Public Defender, and David Hoffman, Assistant Public Defender, for Defendant-Appellant.
Please note: this case has been removed from the accelerated calendar. OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
F ISCHER , Judge.
{¶1} Defendant-appellant Audrey Shoemaker appeals her conviction for
one count of obstructing official business in violation of R.C. 2921.31(A), a second-
degree misdemeanor, following a bench trial. She argues her conviction was not
supported by sufficient evidence and was against the manifest weight of the evidence.
Finding neither argument meritorious, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.
Factual and Procedural Posture
{¶2} At the trial in this matter, City of Harrison police officer Robert Seiter
testified that on September 8, 2014, he was working in uniform and a marked police
cruiser. He had been dispatched to New Haven Road to investigate a hit-skip auto
collision. After following up with the victim and completing his report, he drove to a
Speedway gas station to watch surveillance video of the collision. Officer Seiter
testified that the quality of the surveillance video was poor, but from the video he was
able to discern that the other vehicle that had been involved in the collision was an
older model Chevy Impala. He further saw that a black man had been driving the
Impala, and that a white female with blond hair and a tattoo on her chest had been a
passenger in the Impala at the time of the collision.
{¶3} After leaving the Speedway, Officer Seiter observed an older model
Chevy Impala, matching the hit-skip vehicle in the video, parked in the 100 block of
South Sycamore Street in Hamilton County, Ohio. A white female, later identified as
Shoemaker, was standing at the rear of the Impala, which was unoccupied.
Shoemaker was speaking to a group of people standing by another vehicle located
behind her. Officer Seiter exited from his vehicle, approached the group, and asked if
anyone knew to whom the Impala belonged. Shoemaker responded, volunteering
that she did not know who owned the vehicle. Officer Seiter then asked Shoemaker
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directly if she knew who owned the Impala. Again, she replied, “No.” She further
stated that she had no idea who had been driving the vehicle.
{¶4} Officer Seiter then noticed that Shoemaker, who was wearing a tank
top, had a tattoo on her chest. He told Shoemaker that he was investigating a hit-
skip auto collision. He had just watched surveillance video of the hit-skip collision
and he thought she might be the female who had been in the car. He also told her
that a black man had been driving the vehicle. Officer Seiter testified that
Shoemaker replied, “Nope, wasn’t me. I wasn’t at Speedway with a male black. Was
not me.”
{¶5} Officer Seiter then asked Shoemaker where she lived. She turned,
pointed up towards an apartment window, and replied, “Up there.” When Officer
Seiter asked Shoemaker if anyone else was in the apartment, Shoemaker replied,
“Nope. No one else is up there.” With that, Officer Seiter looked up at the apartment
window. He saw a black man with the curtains open looking at him.
{¶6} At that point, Officer Seiter stopped questioning Shoemaker. He read
her the Miranda warnings. Shoemaker told Officer Seiter that she understood them.
Officer Seiter then said, “I know you’re lying to me. I just watched a surveillance
tape. I believe the female is you with that male black in this car.” At that point,
Shoemaker began to cry and said, “I’m sorry for lying. I was in the front passenger
seat. My boyfriend, Kevin Barnett, was driving the vehicle. He’s upstairs. And the
owner of the vehicle was sitting in the backseat.”
{¶7} Shoemaker then took Officer Seiter up to her apartment where he
made contact with the driver of the hit-skip vehicle and issued him some citations.
He also cited Shoemaker for obstructing official business. Officer Seiter testified
that Shoemaker’s false statements had led him away from the actual driver and
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Shoemaker’s own involvement in the hit-skip offense. He testified, “I probably
talked to her for a few minutes prior to her breaking down after being read her
Miranda warnings, and okay, yeah, the gig’s up; I’m lying because I have 17 months
on the shelf in Indiana.” Officer Seiter testified that Shoemaker had caused him to
be delayed in the performance of his duties by five minutes.
{¶8} Following Officer Seiter’s testimony, the state rested. Shoemaker then
moved for an acquittal under Crim.R. 29, which the trial court denied. Shoemaker
did not testify. Following argument by counsel, the trial court found Shoemaker
guilty. It sentenced Shoemaker to 30 days in jail, suspended the 30 days, and placed
her on six months of community control with the condition that she perform 25
hours of community service. The trial court ordered Shoemaker to pay a $100 fine
and court costs.
Sufficiency and Weight: Obstruction of Official Business
{¶9} In a single assignment of error, Shoemaker argues her conviction was
based on insufficient evidence and was against the manifest weight of the evidence.
{¶10} To reverse a conviction for insufficient evidence, the reviewing court
must be persuaded, after viewing all the evidence in the light most favorable to the
prosecution, that no rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of
the crime proven beyond a reasonable doubt. State v. Waddy,
63 Ohio St.3d 424, 430,
588 N.E.2d 819(1992).
{¶11} To reverse a trial court’s decision on the manifest weight of the
evidence, the reviewing court must weigh the evidence and all reasonable inferences,
consider the credibility of the witnesses, and conclude that, in resolving conflicts in
the evidence, the trier of fact clearly lost its way and created a manifest miscarriage
of justice. State v. Thompkins,
78 Ohio St.3d 380, 386,
678 N.E.2d 541(1997).
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{¶12} R.C. 2921.31(A)(1) defines obstructing official business as follows:
No person, without privilege to do so and with purpose to prevent,
obstruct, or delay the performance by a public official of any
authorized act within the public official's official capacity, shall do any
act that hampers or impedes a public official in the performance of the
public official's lawful duties.
{¶13} The Ohio Supreme Court has held that “the making of an unsworn false
oral statement to a public official with the purpose to mislead, hamper or impede the
investigation of a crime is punishable conduct within the meaning of * * * R.C.
2921.31(A).” State v. Lazzaro,
76 Ohio St.3d 261,
667 N.E.2d 384(1996), syllabus.
Shoemaker argues that the state failed to prove that her false statements hampered or
impeded Officer Seiter’s investigation of the hit-skip collision, because she negated the
effects of her false statements by eventually telling Officer Shoemaker the truth and
taking him up to her apartment where he was able to cite the driver of the vehicle for
the hit-skip collision.
{¶14} As the state points out, “there is no element in R.C. 2921.31(A) requiring
the state to prove that the offender’s conduct actually prevented a public official from
doing his job. Rather, the statute is satisfied by ‘any act which hampers or impedes a
public official in the performance of his lawful duties.’ ” State v. Stayton,
126 Ohio App.3d 158, 164,
709 N.E.2d 1224(1st Dist. 1998). Thus, “it is of no moment that the
act did not effectively restrain the officer from ultimately performing his duty, it being
sufficient that the appellant’s action did obstruct or delay the officer in the performance
of his duty.” State v. Dunn, 1st Dist. Hamilton No. C-790319,
1980 Ohio App. LEXIS 11877, *4-5 (March 26, 1980). Therefore, the state did not need to show that
Shoemaker actually prevented Officer Seiter from performing his duty to investigate the
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hit-skip collision, just that she had acted with the purpose to hamper or impede his
performance of that duty.
{¶15} Here, Officer Seiter testified that Shoemaker’s repeated lies in answer to
his questions had hampered his investigation of the hit-skip collision by five minutes.
Although this court has held that “ ‘there must be some substantial stoppage of the
officer’s progress before one can be hampered or impeded, we have declined to state
what period of time constitutes a ‘substantial stoppage.’ ” See State v. Collier, 1st Dist.
Hamilton No. C-140576,
2015-Ohio-3891, ¶ 9, quoting State v. Wellman,
173 Ohio App.3d 494,
2007-Ohio-2953,
879 N.E.2d 215, ¶ 17(1st Dist.), and State v. Stephens,
57 Ohio App.2d 229, 230,
387 N.E.2d 252(1st Dist. 1978). Thus, we have held that as
along as “the record demonstrates that the defendant’s act hampered or impeded the
officer’s performance of his duties, the evidence supports the conviction.”
Id.{¶16} In State v. Collier, this court concluded that the defendant’s failure to tell
the investigating officer that he knew the prime suspect in a murder investigation had
hampered the murder investigation by causing the investigating officer to order
additional phone records, to investigate additional people who may have been involved
in the crime, and to schedule an additional meeting with the defendant to “clear up”
what he had told the investigating officer. Thus, we held that the state had produced
sufficient evidence to show that the defendant had caused a “substantial stoppage” of
the detective’s progress in investigating the homicide. Collier at ¶ 11.
{¶17} Similarly, in State v. Jones, 1st Dist. Hamilton Nos. C-120570 and C-
120571,
2013-Ohio-4775, ¶ 39-40, this court held that although a police officer
investigating an offense had been suspicious that the defendant had been lying to him,
the state had presented sufficient evidence that the defendant’s false oral statements to
police officer had hampered and impeded the officer’s investigation where the
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defendant’s false statements had caused the officer to send a police unit to the
restaurant to verify or contradict the defendant’s initial statement before charging
him, and possibly a codefendant, with the offense of endangering children.
{¶18} In State v. Wellman, we held that the actions of a minority owner of a
club were sufficient to show that the club owner had hampered or impeded two Ohio
Department of Public Safety agents from investigating liquor-permit violations at the
club, where the minority owner, for approximately two to five minutes, had delayed
the officers from talking with the appropriate person regarding the violations, from
gathering physical evidence, and from gaining control of the situation. We
concluded the state had produced sufficient evidence to support the minority club
owner’s conviction for obstructing official business.
Wellman at ¶ 19.
{¶19} Here, Officer Seiter testified that he was investigating a hit-skip collision
when he came upon a vehicle matching the description of the vehicle involved in the
offense. Once he got out of his vehicle, Shoemaker voluntarily began speaking with
him. She told him several times that she had no knowledge of the vehicle’s owner and
that she had not been involved in the collision. Shoemaker’s actions kept Officer Seiter
from talking to the appropriate person for the issuance of the citation. While
Shoemaker eventually cooperated with Officer Seiter, telling him the truth about her
involvement, and leading him to the vehicle’s driver, she only did so after Officer Seiter
had read her Miranda rights to her. Thus, contrary to Shoemaker’s argument, the state
presented sufficient evidence to support her conviction for obstructing official business.
{¶20} Moreover, given our review of the record, we cannot conclude that
Officer Seiter’s testimony was so unreliable or unworthy of belief that the trial court lost
its way and created a manifest miscarriage of justice in finding Shoemaker guilty. See
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Thompkins,
78 Ohio St.3d at 387,
678 N.E.2d 541. We, therefore, overrule
Shoemaker’s sole assignment of error and affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Judgment affirmed.
DEWINE and STAUTBERG, JJ., concur.
Please note: The court has recorded its own entry this date.
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