2007 Ohio 6334 | Ohio Ct. App. | 2007
{¶ 2} Traore's assignments of error are meritless and we affirm the findings of guilt, but we sua sponte remand the case for resentencing because, under State v. Cabrales,3 multiple sentences were improperly imposed when trafficking in marijuana4 and possession of marijuana5 were allied offenses of similar import. In this respect, our judgment is stayed pending the outcome of the Ohio Supreme Court's decision in Cabrales.
{¶ 4} Traore then retrieved a black bag from the Civic, raised the hood, walked towards the passenger side of the engine compartment, and then closed the hood of the Civic. After Traore closed the hood, Mendoza noticed that Traore was no longer carrying the black bag. Based on this observation, it was apparent that Traore had placed the black bag in the engine compartment — certainly a suspicious storage space. Traore then drove away, with Mendoza following. Mendoza testified that Traore almost immediately "zipped" the Civic to the curb and stopped. Traore's beeline for the curb took place so quickly that Mendoza never had time to activate the overhead lights of his cruiser.
{¶ 5} Mendoza approached the Civic and asked Traore for his driver's license, but in response Troare produced an identification document purporting to belong to "Mahamadou Tandia." After scrutinizing the identification offered by Traore, Mendoza quickly concluded that Traore was not the person pictured on the identification card. Soon after, two more officers arrived — Officers Bley and Gober. Mendoza later testified that his suspicion had been further aroused because it appeared that Traore was attempting to hide his true identity from the police.
{¶ 6} Officer Gober then approached and asked Traore to get out of the vehicle. Gober asked Traore if he "had anything on him," and Traore replied that he had some marijuana in his possession. Traore was then handcuffed, arrested, and placed in the back of the police cruiser. Officers then searched the Civic and, under the hood, found the black bag that Traore had previously moved from the passenger compartment to the engine compartment. The black bag contained more marijuana and a small bag of the drug ecstasy. On these facts the trial court denied Traore's suppression motion, and a jury later found Traore guilty. *4
{¶ 8} The
{¶ 9} Mendoza testified that he saw Traore retrieve a black bag from the vehicle, that he then opened the hood and then shortly after closed the hood, and that after the hood was closed, Traore no longer possessed the bag. Mendoza testified that he did not actually see Traore place the bag under the hood because the hood had obstructed the view. But Mendoza testified that he had seen other suspects exhibit similar odd behavior in attempting to hide drugs: "I have made busts before where people have hidden stuff up under their car. To go to a front of the car, put something under the hood of the car, close the hood, go back into [the] car and drive off, I don't know of many people that leave anything in there. A lot of dealers believe when officers search a car, they are just searching the driver's area, rear-seat-passenger area, and maybe the trunk, and that [officers] don't think about looking up under the hood. Underneath the hood is an area that really isn't hit a whole lot by officers. And that's how a lot of the drugs come in." Likewise, Mendoza testified that the area where he observed Traore was a "problem area" insofar as drug trafficking, drug use, and gun control.
{¶ 10} As we have previously explained, "police have probable cause to conduct a search for contraband when detailed information provided to them by a confidential but reliable informant is subsequently corroborated, in some significant combination, with respect to the name or physical description of a suspect, the location of the illegal sale, the time of the sale, the description of the automobile driven by the suspect or the car's license plate numbers."11 *6
{¶ 11} Though we hesitate to say that probable cause to search existed at the outset, we are convinced that the tipster's corroborated description, the drug activity in the surrounding area, and Traore's odd behavior in storing a black bag in the engine compartment and in driving erratically, along with Mendoza's inferences and deductions, at a minimum constituted the reasonable suspicion necessary to constitutionally make a brief investigative detention. During that detention, Traore, by producing identification belonging to someone else, further heightened Mendoza's suspicion that criminal activity was afoot and buttressed Mendoza's decision to investigate further. Finally, once Traore stepped out of the vehicle and admitted that he had some marijuana on him, the officers were able to make a lawful arrest. And because the search of the vehicle was incident to a lawful arrest, Traore's suppression motion was properly denied.
{¶ 13} Traore argues that his conviction for trafficking in and possession of marijuana should be overturned because "no one actually saw him place the bag of marijuana under the hood." As we have noted, Officer Mendoza testified that drug dealers often hid contraband inside the engine compartment; and Mendoza also testified that he saw Traore retrieve a bag from inside the car, open the hood, and close the hood, and that once the hood was closed, the bag had disappeared. The jury was entitled to weigh Mendoza's testimony, and after our review of the record, we conclude that a rational trier of fact could have determined that Traore had possessed and trafficked in marijuana — the evidence was sufficient. We further conclude that the jury did not lose its way and create a manifest miscarriage of justice. Traore's assignment of error challenging the sufficiency and the weight of the evidence is overruled.
{¶ 15} Finally, on our own motion, we vacate the sentences and remand the case to the trial court for resentencing in accordance with our decision in State v. Cabrales.16 Under Cabrales, the commission of trafficking under R.C.
{¶ 16} In conclusion, we must set aside the multiple sentences imposed for the allied offenses and remand this case for the trial court to sentence Traore under either R.C.
Judgment accordingly.
HILDEBRANDT and HENDON, JJ., concur.