[Cite as State v. Chears, 2021-Ohio-260.]
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
HANCOCK COUNTY
STATE OF OHIO,
PLAINTIFF-APPELLEE, CASE NO. 5-20-24
v.
OSCAR G.D. CHEARS, OPINION
DEFENDANT-APPELLANT.
Appeal from Hancock County Common Pleas Court
Trial Court No. 2016 CR 00238
Judgment Affirmed
Date of Decision: February 1, 2021
APPEARANCES:
Brian A. Smith for Appellant
Phillip A. Riegle for Appellee
Case No. 5-20-24
SHAW, J.
{¶1} Defendant-appellant, Oscar Chears (“Chears”), brings this appeal from
the May 11, 2020 judgment of the Hancock County Common Pleas Court revoking
his community control and sentencing him to an 18-month prison term after it was
determined that Chears violated his community control by committing multiple
felonies in Michigan. On appeal, Chears argues that his prison term was not
supported by the record, that the trial court did not give him appropriate jail-time
credit, and that he was not properly notified of post-release control.
Background
{¶2} On August 12, 2016, Chears stole over $1,000 in goods from Wal-Mart
in Hancock County then drove away. After being informed of the incident, police
officers located his vehicle and attempted to initiate a traffic stop. Chears did not
comply with an officer’s signal to stop and a chase ensued. Chears drove north for
approximately 25 minutes, covering 37.5 miles, and reaching a top speed of 100
mph. He also drove over spike strips that had been deployed. Chears was eventually
apprehended.
{¶3} On August 23, 2016, Chears was indicted for Failure to Comply with
Order or Signal of Police Officer in violation of R.C. 2921.331(B), a felony of the
third degree, and Theft in an amount exceeding $1,000 but less than $7,500 in
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violation of R.C. 2913.02(A)(1), a felony of the fifth degree. Chears originally pled
not guilty to the charges.
{¶4} On November 10, 2016, a change-of-plea hearing was held wherein
Chears agreed to plead guilty to the charge of Failure to Comply with Order or
Signal of Police Officer as indicted, and in exchange the State agreed to dismiss the
Theft charge. The agreement was reduced to writing and it was signed by Chears,
his defense counsel, the prosecutor, and the judge. The trial court conducted a
Crim.R. 11 dialogue with Chears and determined that his plea was knowing,
intelligent, and voluntary. Chears’s plea was accepted, and he was found guilty of
Failure to Comply with Order or Signal of Police Officer, a felony of the third
degree.
{¶5} On December 22, 2016, Chears was sentenced to five years of
community control and he was notified that if he was found in violation of his
community control he would be subject to a prison term of 18 months. Due to the
fact that Chears actually lived in Wayne County, Michigan, his supervision was
transferred to Michigan pursuant to the interstate compact.
{¶6} The next event that occurred that is relevant to this appeal was on
August 30, 2019, when Chears was convicted in Michigan of “Motor Vehicle
Unlawful Driving Away,” and “Police Officer—Assault/Resist,” both felony
offenses. He was sentenced to serve 305 days of incarceration and given two years
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of probation. Because of the Michigan convictions, the State of Ohio filed a motion
to revoke Chears’ community control in the case sub judice.
{¶7} On May 11, 2020, a hearing was held on the allegations that Chears had
violated his community control by committing the felony offenses in Michigan.
Chears did not deny that he had committed the crimes, which were similar in nature
to what had occurred in Hancock County in 2016. The Michigan felonies also
involved Chears fleeing from law enforcement in a vehicle, sideswiping other
drivers, and ramming a vehicle while officers tried to stop him. Chears
acknowledged that he was sentenced to 10 months incarceration for those offenses,
though he stated he was released after 8 months when he completed a cognitive
behavior program.
{¶8} Based on the evidence presented at the hearing, the trial court found that
Chears was in violation of his community control. The trial court then revoked his
community control and imposed the reserved 18-month prison term. A judgment
entry memorializing Chears’s sentence was filed May 11, 2020. It is from this
judgment that Chears appeals, asserting the following assignments of error for our
review.
Assignment of Error No. 1
Because of Appellant’s limited criminal history, Appellant’s
history of adjustment to supervision, and Appellant’s history of
seeking counseling and maintaining gainful employment, the trial
court’s sentence of Appellant was not supported by the record.
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Assignment of Error No. 2
Because the trial court did not credit Appellant with time served
on his sentence, and Appellant was later charged with a
community control violation based on his conviction in the same
case, the trial court erred by not crediting Appellant with the time
served in Michigan, as part of his sentence in Michigan Sixth
Judicial Court case number 2019-271515-FH, pursuant to R.C.
2967.191.
Assignment of Error No. 3
Because the trial court did not properly notify Appellant of the
terms and conditions of post-release control, either at Appellant’s
plea hearing or at his sentencing hearing, the trial court’s
sentence of Appellant with respect to Appellant’s post-release
control was contrary to law.
First Assignment of Error
{¶9} In his first assignment of error, Chears argues that the trial court erred
by imposing the reserved 18-month prison term when it revoked his community
control. Chears contends that he had no criminal history prior to his 2016 felony
conviction, that he expressed remorse in the matter, that he was employed, and that
he was doing better since completing the cognitive behavior program in Michigan.
Standard of Review
{¶10} Under R.C. 2953.08(G)(2), an appellate court will reverse a sentence
“only if it determines by clear and convincing evidence that the record does not
support the trial court’s findings under relevant statutes or that the sentence is
otherwise contrary to law.” State v. Marcum, 146 Ohio St.3d 516, 2016-Ohio-1002,
¶ 1. Clear and convincing evidence is that “ ‘which will produce in the mind of the
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trier of facts a firm belief or conviction as to the facts sought to be established.’ ”
Id. at ¶ 22, quoting Cross v. Ledford, 161 Ohio St. 469 (1954), paragraph three of
the syllabus.
Relevant Authority
{¶11} “ ‘The trial court has full discretion to impose any sentence within the
authorized statutory range, and the court is not required to make any findings or give
its reasons for imposing maximum or more than [a] minimum sentence[ ].’ ” State
v. Castle, 2d Dist. Clark No. 2016-CA-16, 2016-Ohio-4974, ¶ 26, quoting State v.
King, 2d Dist. Clark No. 2012-CA-25, 2013-Ohio-2021, ¶ 45; State v. White, 3d
Dist. Marion No. 9-19-32, 2020-Ohio-717, ¶ 8. Nevertheless, when exercising its
sentencing discretion, a trial court must consider the statutory policies that apply to
every felony offense, including those set out in R.C. 2929.11 and R.C. 2929.12.
State v. Kerns, 3d Dist. Logan No. 8-18-05, 2018-Ohio-3838, ¶ 8, citing State v.
Mathis, 109 Ohio St.3d 54, 2006-Ohio-855, ¶ 38.
{¶12} Revised Code 2929.11 provides that sentences for a felony shall be
guided by the overriding purposes of felony sentencing: “to protect the public from
future crime by the offender and others, to punish the offender, and to promote the
effective rehabilitation of the offender using the minimum sanctions that the court
determines accomplish those purposes without imposing an unnecessary burden on
state or local government resources.” R.C. 2929.11(A). In order to comply with
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those purposes and principles, R.C. 2929.12 instructs a trial court to consider
various factors set forth in the statute relating to the seriousness of the offender’s
conduct and to the likelihood of the offender’s recidivism. R.C. 2929.12(A)-(E).
Analysis
{¶13} In this case Chears was convicted of a third degree felony. Given that
Chears elected to enter a guilty plea, and that the 2016 offense in Hancock County
was his first felony offense, the trial court placed him on community control. The
trial court indicated that it wanted to give Chears an opportunity, particularly to
obtain his GED. Nevertheless, the trial court reserved an 18-month prison term if
Chears was found in violation of his community control. Pursuant to R.C.
2929.14(A)(3)(b), a prison term for a third degree felony violation such as the one
in this case “shall be a definite term of nine, twelve, eighteen, twenty-four, thirty,
or thirty-six months.” Thus the trial court’s reserved prison term was within the
appropriate statutory range.
{¶14} As Chears was a resident of Michigan, he was monitored in Michigan.
Subsequently, in 2019, Chears committed two felonies in Michigan, and the State
of Ohio sought to revoke his community control in Ohio. After a hearing on the
matter, the trial court found that Chears was in violation of his community control.
He was then sentenced to the reserved 18-month prison term.
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{¶15} Chears now argues that the imposition of his reserved 18-month prison
term was not supported by the record. He contends that the trial court could have
elected to impose a lesser prison term or to use other community control sanctions
in this matter.
{¶16} Contrary to Chears’ argument, he was not even sentenced to a
“maximum” prison term in this case. For his third degree felony he was ordered to
serve an 18-month prison term, which is only half of the maximum possible, thirty-
six months. Notwithstanding this point, Chears was initially not even sent to prison,
he was given an opportunity on community control to abide by the conditions of his
supervision, and he failed to do so when he committed two new felonies in
Michigan. Those new felonies, as the trial court stated, were of a similar character
to the felony he was already convicted of here in Ohio. Because of the new felonies
in Michigan, and their similar nature to Chears’s prior conviction here in Ohio, the
trial court determined that Chears was no longer amenable to community control.
{¶17} Chears may argue that his mindset had changed since his conviction
in Michigan, but for approximately eight months prior to the revocation of his
community control in this case, he had been incarcerated in Michigan, and shortly
before that term of incarceration he committed the offenses in Michigan. Based on
those issues it is inaccurate to suggest he had been proceeding well on community
control up until the point that his community control was revoked in 2020.
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{¶18} Moreover, when Chears was initially sentenced to community control
in this matter, and notified of the reserved 18-month prison term, the trial court
indicated it had considered the principles and purposes of sentencing in fashioning
its sentence. Although the trial court must consider the purposes and principles of
felony sentencing set forth in R.C. 2929.11 and the sentencing factors listed in R.C.
2929.12, the sentencing court is not required to “state on the record that it considered
the statutory criteria or discuss them.” State v. Maggette, 3d Dist. Seneca No. 13-
16-06, 2016-Ohio-5554, ¶ 32, quoting State v. Polick, 101 Ohio App.3d 428, 431
(4th Dist.1995). Rather, a trial court’s statement that it considered the required
statutory factors, without more, is sufficient to fulfill its obligations under the
sentencing statutes. State v. Abrams, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 103786, 2016-Ohio-
4570, citing State v. Payne, 114 Ohio St.3d 502, 2007-Ohio-4642, ¶ 18. Here, the
trial court did explicitly state that it had considered the requisite statutes in its 2016
sentencing.
{¶19} Given that the trial court was in compliance with the sentencing
statutes when Chears was originally sentenced, and that the trial court properly
found that Chears was in violation of his community control based on his felony
convictions in Michigan, we cannot find that the trial court erred by revoking his
community control and imposing a prison term. The prison term was also within
the appropriate statutory range, which means the sentence is presumptively valid.
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State v. Wrasman, 3d Dist. Logan No. 8-19-36, 2019-Ohio-5299, ¶ 8; State v.
Sanders, 3d Dist. Auglaize No. 2-19-13, 2020-Ohio-3506, ¶ 18, appeal not
allowed, 160 Ohio St.3d 1440, 2020-Ohio-4983, ¶ 18.
{¶20} Chears has not met his burden on appeal to establish, by clear and
convincing evidence, that the trial court erred by imposing the reserved prison term.
His violations of community control by committing substantially similar felonies
support the trial court’s determination that he was no longer amenable to community
control, particularly since he was making the same mistakes years after the original
incident. For all of these reasons, Chears’s first assignment of error is overruled.
Second Assignment of Error
{¶21} In Chears’s second assignment of error, he argues that the trial court
erred by not providing him with jail-time credit in this case for the time he spent
incarcerated on the convictions in Michigan. He argues that since the community
control violation in this case was predicated on the Michigan convictions, his
incarceration in Michigan was not separate and apart from the case sub judice.
{¶22} Chears’s argument facially misreads the requirements to receive jail
time credit. Revised Code 2929.19(B)(2)(g)(i) requires that when a trial court
determines at sentencing that a prison term is necessary or required, it must
Determine, notify the offender of, and include in the sentencing
entry the total number of days, including the sentencing date but
excluding conveyance time, that the offender has been confined
for any reason arising out of the offense for which the offender is
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being sentenced and by which the department of rehabilitation
and correction must reduce the definite prison term imposed on
the offender as the offender’s stated prison term * * *
under section 2967.191 of the Revised Code. The court’s
calculation shall not include the number of days, if any, that the
offender served in the custody of the department of rehabilitation
and correction arising out of any prior offense for which the
prisoner was convicted and sentenced.
(Emphasis added.)
{¶23} Chears contends that his convictions and prison terms were
interconnected since his community control was being revoked in this case for his
felonies committed in Michigan. Chears ignores the fact that the reserved prison
term in this case was for the crime he committed in Ohio by failing to stop for police
for over 30 miles as he drove across spike strips and endangered motorists. Chears’s
incarceration in Michigan was for his specific crimes in Michigan. Based on those
Michigan crimes, the trial court found that Chears had not demonstrated he was
continuously amenable to community control, therefore the trial court imposed the
reserved prison term. That reserved prison term was based on Chears’s original
crimes in this case in Ohio. Simply put, Chears is not entitled to jail-time credit in
this case for days that he spent incarcerated on other charges, in another state
altogether.1 See State v. Thomas, 3d Dist. Marion No. 9-16-41, 2017-Ohio-607;
State v. Slappey, 3d Dist. Marion No. 9-12-58, 2013-Ohio-1939, ¶ 37 (“a defendant
1
Moreover, his original defense counsel may have recognized this as he did not claim that Chears was entitled
to jail-time credit related to the Michigan convictions.
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is not entitled to jail-time credit for any period of incarceration in another
jurisdiction that arises from facts separate and apart from those on which the current
sentence is based.”).
{¶24} Based on the record before us we cannot find that the trial court erred
by declining to credit Chears with any time he spent incarcerated in Michigan for
the crimes he committed in Michigan. Therefore, Chears’s second assignment of
error is overruled.
Third Assignment of Error
{¶25} In his third assignment of error, Chears argues that the trial court did
not properly notify him regarding post-release control at his plea hearing or at his
sentencing hearing, so he contends that his sentence with respect to post-release
control was contrary to law. More specifically, Chears argues that the trial court
improperly informed him during his plea and at the sentencing hearing that if he
was sent to prison, and if he was placed on post-release control, and if he violated
his post-release control, he could be subject to up to three years of additional prison
time. Chears argues that the trial court erred by informing him that he could face
up to “three years” of additional prison time based on a post-release control
violation, when the maximum amount would have been 18 months if he received a
maximum sentence, or 9 months based on an 18-month sentence. Put another way,
Chears contends that the trial court improperly told him at the plea hearing that he
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was potentially facing more prison time if he violated post-release control than he
actually would have been subject to if he violated post-release control in the future.
{¶26} In State v. Grimes, 151 Ohio St.3d 19, 2017-Ohio-2927, ¶ 1, the
Supreme Court of Ohio defined what is required to impose post-release control,
holding,
that to validly impose postrelease control when the court orally
provides all the required advisements at the sentencing hearing,
the sentencing entry must contain the following information: (1)
whether postrelease control is discretionary or mandatory, (2) the
duration of the postrelease-control period, and (3) a statement to
the effect that the Adult Parole Authority (“APA”) will
administer the postrelease control pursuant to R.C. 2967.28 and
that any violation by the offender of the conditions of postrelease
control will subject the offender to the consequences set forth in
that statute.
A review of the record shows that all of the requirements under Grimes were met in
this case. In fact, the requirements were met multiple times.
{¶27} At the plea hearing in this matter, the trial court notified Chears of the
maximum possible penalties of his crimes, including the fact that he could be placed
on post-release control for three years. The trial court also stated at the plea hearing
that the maximum possible prison sentence that Chears would face when he was
sentenced was 36 months, and that half of that, 18 months, was his “maximum
exposure for a series” of post-release control violations.2 (Tr. at 26). Thus the trial
2
Chears’s primary argument in this matter seems to be that the trial court misinformed him prior to this point
in the Crim.R. 11 dialogue. Even assuming the trial court misstated the amount of prison time Chears could
face if he violated post-release control shortly before this point at the hearing, the trial court corrected itself
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court properly informed Chears of his maximum potential post-release control
prison exposure at the plea hearing. In fact, the trial court stated that since
sentencing had not been held, and it had not seen a pre-sentence investigation yet,
it wanted to cover the “worst case scenario” with Chears, thus covering the
maximum possible terms. (Id.)
{¶28} Then, at the 2016 sentencing hearing, the trial court again referenced
post-release control as a possibility, if Chears was ever sent to prison. The trial
court’s judgment entry of sentencing thoroughly and accurately stated all of the
post-release control requirements, including that Chears’s maximum possible prison
term exposure for post-release control violations was one-half of his stated prison
term.
{¶29} Finally, when Chears’s community control was revoked in 2020, and
he was actually sentenced to his reserved 18-month prison term, he was fully and
accurately notified regarding post-release control.
THE COURT: * * * Further will find that at the conclusion of
having to serve his 18-month prison sentence, that the
Department of Corrections will have to make a decision about
whether or not to place the Defendant upon post-release control
supervision. In the event the Department of Corrections
determines that the Defendant should be placed on post-release
control, they can place him on post-release control for up to three
years. However, as Judge Niemeyer advised you, Post-release
control is not mandatory. They are not required to put you on
with the appropriate information. Nevertheless, we fail to see how there can be anything prejudicial about
informing a defendant at a plea hearing that he was subject to more potential post-release control
consequences than he actually would be.
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supervision. If they choose to place you on supervision at the
conclusion of your sentence, there will be rules that you will have
to follow. And if you were to violate any of your rules of post-
release control supervision, you could, as a sanction, be ordered
back to prison, for up to nine months for any single violation, but
you can never be ordered back for more than one half of your
total stated prison term for any combination of violations.
[The trial court then continues to inform Chears regarding post-release
control supervision.]
(May 11, 2020, Tr. at 55-56).
{¶30} After reviewing the record, we find that Chears has clearly and
convincingly demonstrated any error here related to his post-release control. The
trial court appropriately informed him that he may be subject to up to three years of
post-release control, and that there could be certain consequences for violating that
post-release control if he was even placed on it. This places the trial court in
compliance with appropriate notifications under State v. Grimes, 151 Ohio St.3d 19,
2017-Ohio-2927, ¶ 1. Therefore, Chears’s third assignment of error is overruled.
Conclusion
{¶31} For the foregoing reasons, Chears’s assignments of error are overruled
and the judgment of the Hancock County Common Pleas Court is affirmed.
Judgment Affirmed
WILLAMOWSKI, P.J. and ZIMMERMAN, J., concur.
/jlr
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