This сause came on to be heard upon the appeal from the Hamilton County Municipal Court.
Defendant-appellant, Regina Sansalone, appeals her conviction for resisting arrest.
On April 29, 1990, Cincinnati police officer James Lucas was in the process of issuing a parking citаtion to a vehicle parked in a zone marked “No Parking Anytime.” Before Lucas had completed the citation, appellant emerged from a nearby store, approached Luсas, and requested that he “forget about” the ticket since she was about to move her car. When Lucas declined, appellant got into the automobile and responded, “Well you’re an asshole.” Appellant pulled away from the curb and stated, “You’re a real asshole,” as Lucаs dropped the ticket into the departing vehicle.
Lucas got into his cruiser, pursued appеllant, pulled her over, and asked to see her license. A computer check showed that аppellant was under a financial-responsibility suspension and, consequently, Lucas issued apрellant a citation for operating a vehicle while under this suspension. Appellant refused tо sign the citation and “crumbled it up,” claiming that she had adequate insurance coverage. Lucas placed appellant under arrest, and she allegedly attempted to break away from Lucas’s grip.
Appellant was charged with disorderly conduct, driving without a license, and resisting arrest. After а trial to the court, appellant was found not guilty of the charges of disorderly conduct and driving without а license, but guilty of resisting arrest. She received a suspended thirty-day sentence, was placed on probation for one year, and was ordered to perform twenty hours of community service. Her single assignment of error contends that thé trial court erred by convicting her of resisting arrest because the necessary element of a “lawful arrest” was not proven by the state.
R.C. 2921.33 provides that “[n]o person, recklessly or by force, shall resist or interfere with a lawful arrest of himself or another.” Although thе arrest must be “lawful,” it is not necessary for the state to prove that the defendant was in fact guilty of thе offense for which the arrest was made to uphold a conviction for resisting arrest.
State v. Hurst
(Nov. 22, 1989), Hamilton App. No. C-880706, unreported,
[3] In the case
sub judice,
appellant was arrested for disorderly conduct. In
Coffel v. Taylor
(S.D.Ohio 1978),
A review of the record before us reveals that Officer Lucas did not have a reasonablе basis to believe that appellant had committed the offense of disorderly conduct. Lucas testified that when he dropped the parking citation into appellant’s departing vehicle and she again uttered the word “asshole,” he then decided to pursue her, not for the purpose of questioning her ability to operate a motor vehicle, but to charge her specificаlly with disorderly conduct. The record reflects that, at that point in time, appellant had callеd Lucas an “asshole” and a “real asshole,” and had asked him “if [he] was having a bad day.” While Lucas tеstified that appellant’s remarks were uttered in a “loud” tone and that he was “offended” by her comments, the record is devoid of any indicia that any reasonable person would have found appellant’s language alarming or annoying so as to provoke the immediate violent respоnse or retaliatory breach of the peace required by
State v. Hoffman
(1979),
The judgment of the trial court is reversed and appellant is discharged.
Judgment reversed.
