Hunter v. Ohio Attorney Gen.

Decision Date09 May 2017
Docket NumberCase No. 1:16-cv-561
PartiesTRACIE M. HUNTER, Petitioner, v. OHIO ATTORNEY GENERAL, et al., Respondents.
CourtU.S. District Court — Southern District of Ohio

TRACIE M. HUNTER, Petitioner,
v.
OHIO ATTORNEY GENERAL, et al., Respondents.

Case No. 1:16-cv-561

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO WESTERN DIVISION

May 9, 2017


Black, J.
Litkovitz, M.J.

REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION

Petitioner, Tracie M. Hunter, a former judge on the Hamilton County, Ohio, Juvenile Court, has filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 with the assistance of counsel. In the petition, petitioner challenges her conviction and sentence for "Having An Unlawful Interest in a Public Contract" as charged in Count 6 of the indictment returned in Hamilton County Court of Common Pleas Case No. B-1400110.1 (Doc. 1; see also Doc. 12, Exs. 25-26). Respondents are the Ohio Attorney General, the Hamilton County Court of Common Pleas, and Hamilton County Common Pleas Court Judge Patrick Dinkelacker. (See Doc. 8 n.1, at PAGEID#: 60; Doc. 21). This matter is before the Court on the petition; the Ohio Attorney General's return of writ with exhibits; the return of writ filed by the Hamilton County Court of Common Pleas and the Honorable Patrick Dinkelacker; petitioner's brief in reply to the respondents' returns of writ; the sur-reply brief filed by the Hamilton County Court of Common Pleas and the Honorable Patrick Dinkelacker; and petitioner's sur-rebuttal brief. (Docs. 1, 12, 27, 32, 39, 40).2

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I. PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

State Trial Proceeding

In January 2014, the Hamilton County grand jury returned an eight-count indictment in Case No. B-1400110 charging the petitioner with two counts of tampering with evidence in violation of Ohio Rev. Code § 2921.12(A)(2) (Counts 1 and 3); two counts of forgery in violation of Ohio Rev. Code § 2913.31(A)(2) (Counts 2 and 4); two counts of having an unlawful interest in a public contract in violation of Ohio Rev. Code § 2921.42(A)(1) (Counts 5-6); and two counts of theft in office in violation of Ohio Rev. Code § 2921.41(A)(2) (Counts 7-8). (Doc. 12, Ex. 1). The grand jury issued a second indictment in Case No. B-1400199 charging petitioner with the additional offense of misuse of credit cards in violation of Ohio Rev. Code § 2913.21(B)(2). (Id., Ex. 2). The two indictments were consolidated. (See id., Ex. 12).

The matter proceeded to trial before a jury, which was unable to reach a verdict on eight of the nine criminal charges.3 Petitioner was convicted only of the offense charged in Count 6 of the indictment in Case No. B-1400110. That count charged that "from on or about [July 25, 2013] to on or about [August 30, 2013]," petitioner, "a public official, knowingly authorized, or employed the authority or influence of her office to secure the authorization of any public contract, to wit: AN EMPLOYMENT CONTRACT, in which [petitioner], a member of her family, or any of her business associates had an interest." (Id., Ex. 1, at PAGEID#: 115-16) (emphasis in original omitted). The Ohio Court of Appeals, First Appellate District, provided the following summary of the trial proceedings leading to petitioner's conviction on Count 6, which includes a summary of the evidence presented at trial to establish petitioner's guilt on that

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charge, the proceedings that were held after the verdict on Count 6 was returned, and the sentence that was ultimately imposed:4

In 2010, Hunter ran for a judgeship in the Hamilton County Juvenile Court. Following litigation over the counting of provisional ballots, she was determined to have won the election and was sworn in on May 25, 2012.

Over time, employees in the prosecutor's office noticed what they believed to be a pattern of Hunter backdating certain entries. These employees suspected that Hunter was backdating the documents with the specific intention of depriving their office of the ability to timely appeal the decisions. After an internal investigation concluded, the Hamilton County prosecuting attorney asked the common pleas court to appoint special prosecutors to investigate the activity. The common pleas court appointed two special prosecutors, who conducted their own investigation and eventually convened a special grand jury to assist them. At the conclusion of the investigation, the grand jury indicted Hunter on nine counts involving several alleged instances of illegal conduct while in office.

The Termination Proceedings against Steven Hunter

The sixth count of the indictment alleged that Hunter had an unlawful interest in a public contract. . . . According to the testimony presented during trial, the charge stemmed from the termination proceedings against Steven Hunter, an employee of the Hamilton County Juvenile Court's Youth Center ("Youth Center") and Hunter's brother.

Steven Hunter was employed as a juvenile corrections officer. On July 7, 2013, Steven Hunter was involved in an incident in which he was alleged to have hit a youth in the intake department of the detention center. As a result of that incident, Dwayne Bowman, the superintendent of the Youth Center, recommended that the court terminate Steven Hunter and that a hearing be scheduled for that purpose.

Steven Hunter was informed of the decision on July 25, 2013. Shortly after 10:30 that evening, Hunter sent an email to all employees of the Youth Center in which she identified a number of safety concerns, which she said had been brought to her attention as a result of an email she had sent out previously. She said that she would schedule a closed meeting to discuss the issues with the corrections

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officers.

Bowman testified that the email was troubling. He said that he was concerned that the email "would cause confusion with the staff at the youth center. Mr. Hunter's termination process was still occurring and I believe that it could jeopardize that process." Bowman noted that many of the items on Hunter's list echoed the main explanations that Steven Hunter had given for his actions during the July 7 incident, suggesting that the email was Hunter's way of inserting herself into the proceedings. Brian Bell, assistant superintendent of the Youth Center, had similar concerns, testifying that he felt that "she was going to speak to the residents about it to conduct basically her own investigation."

On July 29, 2013, Hunter sent an email to Bowman in which she requested that he send her a number of documents. The email demanded

copies of all incident reports related to [the youth] and any and all JCOs involving [the youth] and other staff, prior or subsequent to alleged incident with JCO Hunter. All incidents reported during any time frame that [the youth] was detained at the Youth Center, shall be included.

Please provide copies of all drug tests performed of [the youth] during all times at Youth Center. Medical reports of any positive drug tests shall also be included, including the substance detected.

Please forward all copies of all incidents reported involving [the youth] with police.

Bowman replied by asking Hunter if she wanted only the incident reports, or if she also wanted "other documents related to our investigation." Bowman testified that he had asked that clarifying question because Hunter was requesting documentation that was "above and beyond the information that we would normally provide to someone not directly involved in the investigation or someone from the investigative team." He was concerned at that point and was "trying to protect the integrity of the disciplinary process, of the investigation, *** and also to give the judge the opportunity to clarify that she was not asking for that kind of information, but just the information of the incident." Rather than restraining her query, Hunter replied that she wanted "all documentation of every incident and every employee pertaining to [the youth] during his stay at the Youth Center ***."

Bowman testified that this exchange was very stressful for him. He said that he was greatly concerned because "[i]t was something that I had not experienced before for a judge to be directly involved in an incident here at the Youth Center. Certainly the fact that this was the brother of the judge." Likewise, Bell testified that he had never seen a judge directly involved in the disciplinary process of a

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Youth Center employee. According to Bell, the types of documents provided to Hunter would not have been provided to an employee under any circumstances.

Bowman provided the documents to Hunter that day. Steven Hunter testified that Hunter then provided the documents to him, which he in turn brought to his attorney that evening. His attorney testified that she only accepted some of the documents. His attorney testified that she refused to accept some of the documents because it would have been "unethical" for her to take them and that she was "concerned that [she] might have to make an ethical report to the Supreme Court about the person that gave him" the documents.

The next morning, Steven Hunter appeared with his attorney for the hearing. Bell testified that, under normal circumstances, the first hearing is continued because the employee receives his discovery packet at the first hearing and usually requires time to review the documents. Steven Hunter's counsel was able to proceed with the hearing that day, which concluded after several hours. Steven Hunter was eventually terminated.

The Trial and Verdict Return

After Hunter's indictment, the case proceeded to a lengthy jury trial. After five weeks of testimony, the jury received the case. Jury deliberations began the afternoon of Wednesday, October 8, 2014. On Friday at 4 p.m., the jurors said that they had reached a verdict on Count 6, but were unable to reach a verdict on the other counts. The foreperson gave the completed verdict form to the trial court. In open court, the trial court reviewed the document and ordered the jury to be polled as to whether the verdict was theirs. Each member of the jury answered affirmatively without equivocation. The trial court then said:

I'm going to - - I have indicated that
...

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