dissenting.
This ease has troubled me from the start. As I reviewed the briefs and the arguments surrounding the criminal conviction of appellant Miller and his three companions, I was astonished that in these days of crowded court dockets and overtaxed law enforcement resources, such a prosecution would ever occur in the first place, much less be brought before this court on its fourth round of appellate review. It seems clear to me that there is more to this case than an avid desire to suppress nude swimming at a private pool. However, my speculations about the less than admirable motivation behind the arrest and conviction of Duane Miller and his friends cannot change the fact that the majority finds that Miller’s conviction should be affirmed. As I believe there is simply no evidence which could support a rational trier of fact in the conclusion that Miller acted with the requisite reckless disregard of a known risk that he would be seen and would affront others, I dissent.
As the majority correctly points out, we must reverse a conviction as violative of due process if, after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, we determine that no rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 313, 99 S.Ct. 2781, 2785-86, 61 L.Ed.2d 560 (1979). It is my view that applying this standard to the facts presented at trial, Miller’s conviction cannot stand. The Norton, Ohio Public Decency statute (which is identical to Ohio Rev.Code § 2907.09) states:
(A) No person shall recklessly do any of the following, under circumstances in which his or her conduct is likely to be viewed by and affront others, not members of his or her household:
(1) Expose his or her private parts, or engage in masturbation.
(Emphasis added.) The ordinance clearly requires not only that a defendant act recklessly, but the defendant must do so in circumstances where he is likely to be seen and to offend others.
Every first-year law student knows that “recklessness” is not simply an adjective. Rather, it is a legal term of art with specific meaning and requirements. The Ohio Rev.Code § 2901.22(C) defines “recklessness” as follows:
A person acts recklessly when, with heedless indifference to the consequences, he perversely disregards a *779known risk that his conduct is likely to cause a certain result or is likely to be of a certain nature. A person is reckless with respect to circumstances when, with heedless indifference to the consequences, he 'perversely disregards a known risk that such circumstances are likely to exist.
(Emphasis added.) Under Ohio law, Miller could only be guilty of indecency if he “recklessly” flaunted his nudity with “heedless indifference to the consequences” and with “perverse disregard” of a “known risk” that he would likely be seen and offend others. The uncontested evidence before the court simply does not support such a finding.
The testimony demonstrates that Miller acted with the utmost discretion during his entire time at the pool. When he first removed his bathing suit, he did so beside the pool and kept his clothes and towel by the water’s edge. J.App. at 75. When he exited the pool to move to the hot tub, he immediately wrapped himself in his towel and moved his clothes to a table “five or ten feet away” from the jacuzzi. Id. at 76, 78. His private parts were exposed only during the short distance between the ja-euzzi and his towel which was sitting on a nearby chair. Miller was not naked on the diving board, he did not use the slide, he was not jumping in and out of the pool. Id. at 75-76. In short Miller was discrete even with respect to being observed by the other swimmers at the pool. It is hard to imagine how such discretion could be turned into “heedless indifference” and “perverse disregard” for the known possibility that he would be seen by others.
However, even conceding that Miller’s nudity in itself could constitute recklessness in certain circumstances, those circumstances were not present in this case. For example, there was no evidence that Miller acted recklessly with regard to a “known risk” that he might be seen. He testified that he had only been to the pool once or twice before and only at night. Id. at 83. All the parties acknowledged that this area was not primarily a residential area. In fact, one of Miller’s co-defendants, Robert Rhodes, who was familiar with the surrounding area both in the daylight and at night, and had been to the pool some twenty times, testified with respect to the two houses near the pool:
To be honest, I did not even know there were houses around there. Every time I had gone by I only have noticed three landmarks, the swimming pool, the Loyal Oak Golf Club and what was at one time the Brown Derby Restaurant, which was changed hands to another name [sic], and then it’s burnt down since.
Id. at 71. There was also testimony indicating that a number of trees and a considerable stretch of yard blocked the view from the pool to the Rhodes house. Id. at 73. Further, Jack Leatherman, another co-defendant testified that the owner of the pool had assured patrons that his privacy fence had been approved by the city and that nude swimming was okay. Id. at 68-9. Finally, there was testimony to indicate that the bright lights at the pool made it difficult to see beyond the pool area. Id. at 69. Under these circumstances, it requires a real stretch to impute to Miller, who was unfamiliar with the area and only had visited the pool at night, the requisite knowledge of the risk that he might be seen.
Perhaps the most telling fact with respect to Miller’s supposed “perverse disregard” of a “known risk” that he might be seen is the surprise and outrage of Miller and the other defendants when police told them they had been watched with binoculars by police and neighbors from Maxine Clapper’s breakfast nook. Officer Tomb-lin, describing the spontaneous responses of the defendants at the time of arrest said:
A. They wasn’t aware that they were being watched. They seemed upset that this had happened.
Q. They were upset with whom?
A. The owner, in other words, they came there with the intention it was private and that seemed to be the main conversation.
Id. at 61. All of the defendants and even the arresting officer acknowledged that the defendants were unaware they could be seen or even of the possibility that they *780could be seen from the surrounding area. While recklessness certainly does require less than subjective intent, it requires more than mere negligence to the possibility that an event might occur. See State v. Klein, 51 Ohio App.2d 1, 364 N.E.2d 1169 (1977) (negligence is insufficient to convict when recklessness is required).
The Majority focuses on three facts — the proximity of the Clapper house to the pool, the bright pool lights and the fact that the plastic covering on the fence was incomplete — to determine that the evidence was sufficient to convict Miller of recklessness. However, when one considers the remaining facts in the record, including Miller’s discretion at the pool, his lack of knowledge of the surrounding area, his belief that the pool was private, the assurance that the privacy fence had been approved by the city, his shock at the fact that he could actually be seen by neighbors, and perhaps most significantly, that these events took place at a late-night private swimming club which professed to allow nude swimming, a rational trier of fact could conclude, at most, that Miller was negligent in walking nude from the jacuzzi to his towel. As discussed above, negligence is simply insufficient to convict Miller for a crime which requires, as one of its essential elements, criminal recklessness. The prosecution was required to demonstrate criminal recklessness as it is defined by Ohio law to convict Miller for criminal behavior. Miller’s original conviction in this case was unjust because the evidence is simply insufficient to demonstrate the requisite recklessness. Unfortunately, the majority compounds the original injustice to Miller by once again allowing evidence of Miller’s arguable negligence to stand in for criminal recklessness and denying him deserved habeas relief.
As I believe that the evidence in this case was constitutionally insufficient under the standard articulated in Jackson v. Virginia, I would reverse the decision of the district court and grant Miller’s petition.