State v. Tracy L. Miskel
Decision Date | 28 March 2000 |
Docket Number | 99AP-482,00-LW-1379 |
Parties | State of Ohio, Plaintiff-Appellee v. Tracy L. Miskel, Defendant-Appellant |
Court | Ohio Court of Appeals |
APPEAL from the Franklin County Municipal Court.
Janet E. Jackson, City Attorney, Stephen J. McIntosh, City Prosecutor, and Lara N. Baker, for appellee.
R William Meeks, Samuel H. Shamansky, and Stephen E. Palmer for appellant.
Defendant-appellant, Traci L. Miskel, appeals from a judgment of the Franklin County Municipal Court finding her guilty pursuant to jury trial of one count of operating a motor vehicle with a prohibited breath alcohol content in violation of R.C. 4511.19(A)(3).
On September 7, 1998, State Trooper Tito Duran stopped defendant for speeding. Ultimately, defendant was charged not only with speeding, but with driving while under the influence of alcohol and/or drugs of abuse, and driving with prohibited breath alcohol content.
The matter came before the municipal court for a jury trial. During the course of the trial, defendant attempted to challenge the general reliability of the BAC Verifier, the breath testing instrument used to determine defendant's breath alcohol content. Specifically, defendant sought to (1) cross-examine the state's witnesses on that subject, and (2) introduce testimony from Dr. Harry Shamansky, a proposed expert witness, on the general unreliability of the BAC Verifier. Premised on the Ohio Supreme Court's holding in State v. Vega (1984), 12 Ohio St.3d 185, the trial court refused to allow defendant to pursue either course.
The jury found defendant not guilty of driving while under the influence of alcohol and/or drugs of abuse, but determined defendant was guilty of driving with a prohibited breath alcohol content. The trial court also found defendant guilty of the speeding offense, and sentenced defendant accordingly. Defendant appeals, assigning the following errors:
Defendant's four assigned errors are interrelated, and we address them jointly. Together they assert the trial court violated defendant's rights in precluding cross-examination of the state's witnesses and in prohibiting introduction of expert testimony, both regarding the general unreliability of the BAC Verifier. In particular, defendant contends her right to confrontation under the Sixth Amendment was violated in disallowing cross-examination of the state's witnesses, her right to compulsory process was violated in precluding her from calling Dr. Shamansky as an expert witness, her right to present a complete defense was violated in prohibiting her from cross-examining the state's witnesses, and that her right to due process was violated in precluding evidence attacking the reliability of the BAC verifier.
In City v. Duling (Mar. 31, 1997), Franklin App. No 96APC07-859, unreported (1997 WL 142502), this court addressed a nearly identical situation. In that case, the trial court precluded defendant's cross-examination of police officers and the proposed testimony of Dr. Harry Shamansky, both designed to challenge the general reliability of the BAC Verifier, based on the Ohio Supreme Court's holding in Vega, supra. Conten...
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