{¶ 1} The state of Ohio appeals from a dismissal on double-jeopardy grounds of an indictment against Keith Baranski for receiving stolen property (“RSP”). The trial court had previously dismissed an indictment charging Baranski with theft of the same property involved in the RSP charge. The state asserts that the trial court erred in dismissing the RSP indictment because dismissal of the theft charge did not place Baranski in jeopardy for purposes of reindicting him. We agree. Jeopardy attaches in a jury trial when the jury is sworn, and it attaches in a bench trial when the first witness is sworn. It also attaches upon a plea and a finding of guilty. None of those events occurred in the earlier theft proceedings.
{¶ 2} Logic tells us that before one can claim the protection against double jeopardy in a subsequent prosecution, the accused must have been subject to jeopardy in the first instance. Because jeopardy did not attach in the theft case, a double-jeopardy defense was not available to Baranski in the subsequent RSP matter. Thus, the trial court erred in dismissing the indictment on the basis of double jeopardy.
I. FACTS
{¶ 8} In February 2004, the Scioto County Grand Jury indicted Keith Baranski, who was incarcerated in Pennsylvania, on one count of theft from an elderly person. Eventually, Baranski was transferred to Ohio under the Interstate Agreement on Detainers (“IAD”), and the case was set for trial. In November
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2004, the trial court dismissed the theft indictment with prejudice because Baranski had not been brought to trial within the 120-day time limit specified in the IAD. The state signed its approval of the court’s judgment entry of dismissal, but subsequently appealed that decision. We affirmed the dismissal of the theft case in
State v. Baranski,
Scioto App. No. 04CA2971,
{¶ 4} Before we rendered our decision, the state obtained a new indictment against Baranski for RSP in violation of R.C. 2913.51(A). The second indictment alleged that Baranski “did receive, retain or dispose” the same property (a collection of Indian artifacts) from the same victims on the same date specified in the previous theft indictment.
{¶ 5} Baranski filed a motion to dismiss the new indictment on double-jeopardy grounds. He asserted that jeopardy attached when the theft case “was filed.” He also argued that when the property taken is identical to the property received, theft and RSP are clearly “allied offenses of similar import” under R.C. 2941.25(A). Thus, he claimed that double jeopardy barred the state from bringing the successive prosecution against him. Upon finding that “the offense of Receiving Stolen Property and Theft of that same property constitute allied offenses of similar import,” the trial court granted Baranski’s motion to dismiss on the grounds of double jeopardy.
II. ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
{¶ 6} In this appeal, the state asserts that “the trial court erred in dismissing the indictment against appellee [Baranski].” Because this contention depends upon the application of constitutional law, we review it on a de novo basis.
III. DOUBLE JEOPARDY
{¶ 7} Baranski’s motion to dismiss was based upon double-jeopardy grounds, which protect an accused against a second prosecution for the “same offense” after an “acquittal” and after a “conviction,” as well as providing protection against multiple punishments for the same offense.
State v. Moss
(1982),
{¶ 8} Because the trial court granted the motion to dismiss the indictment before jeopardy attached, the state was not prohibited by double-jeopardy concerns from reindicting Baranski.
State v. Larabee
(1994),
{¶ 9} Baranski apparently convinced the trial court that an allied-offense-of-similar-import analysis mandated dismissal based upon double jeopardy. In addition to the flaw in Baranski’s reasoning concerning when jeopardy attaches, he also relies on substantive law that has no applicability to our facts. He cites a number of cases for the proposition that theft and RSP are allied offenses of similar import, see, especially,
State v. Yarbrough,
IV. CONCLUSION
{¶ 10} For the first time, Baranski asserts several other bases under which dismissal may have been appropriate and asks us to consider them in reviewing the judgment. We decline to do so because they were not raised in the motion
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before the trial court, and to address them would essentially require us to usurp its role as the initial decision-maker. See
Murphy v. Reynoldsburg
(1992),
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
