State v. Carmichael – Affirmed: Strangulation, Child Endangering
Summary
The Ohio Court of Appeals, Second Appellate District, affirmed the conviction of Precious Carmichael on charges of strangulation, a fourth-degree felony under R.C. 2903.18, and child endangering, a first-degree misdemeanor. The court rejected Carmichael's argument that reasonable parental discipline should serve as an affirmative defense to strangulation, holding that such a defense is unavailable as a matter of law. The trial court's judgment was affirmed, with Carmichael sentenced to five years of community control including 45 days of local incarceration.
“Strangulation, R.C. 2903.18, is a fairly new statute having been enacted in 2023. Counsel can find no cases that reference parental discipline as an affirmative defense to this violation.”
Ohio criminal defense practitioners should note that R.C. 2903.18 (2023) removes parental discipline as an affirmative defense to strangulation. When a defendant seeks jury instructions on reasonable parental discipline in a choking/strangulation context, trial courts are likely to follow this appellate ruling and refuse the instruction. Prosecutors handling similar domestic violence cases involving parents disciplining children should anticipate defense arguments under R.C. 2903.18 but can rely on this authority to defeat them at the trial court level.
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What changed
The appellate court affirmed all four assignments of error. The court held that reasonable parental discipline is not an affirmative defense to strangulation under R.C. 2903.18 (enacted 2023), rejecting the argument that parental discipline necessarily overlaps with conduct prohibited by the statute. The court also upheld the trial court's admission of prior-bad-acts evidence and found the evidence legally sufficient to support the convictions. Finally, the appellate court found no ineffective assistance of trial counsel.\n\nAffected parties—defendants charged with strangulation or child endangering in Ohio who seek to raise parental discipline as a defense—should note that Ohio appellate courts will not instruct juries on such a defense as to strangulation charges. The ruling clarifies the scope of R.C. 2903.18 in domestic/parental contexts and may inform charging decisions and defense strategy in similar cases.
Penalties
Five years of community control sanctions with local incarceration for 45 days and other conditions
Archived snapshot
Apr 24, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
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April 24, 2026 Get Citation Alerts Download PDF Add Note
State v. Carmichael
Ohio Court of Appeals
- Citations: 2026 Ohio 1473
- Docket Number: 30618
Judges: Tucker
Syllabus
The trial court did not err by refusing to instruct appellant's jury on reasonable parental discipline as an affirmative defense to strangulation and child endangering. The trial court properly overruled appellant's motion to exclude prior-bad-acts evidence. Appellant's strangulation and child-endangering convictions are supported by legally sufficient evidence and are not against the manifest weight of the evidence. The record does not support appellant's claim of ineffective assistance of trial counsel. Judgment affirmed.
Combined Opinion
[Cite as State v. Carmichael, 2026-Ohio-1473.]
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
MONTGOMERY COUNTY
STATE OF OHIO :
: C.A. No. 30618
Appellee :
: Trial Court Case No. 2024 CR 00608
v. :
: (Criminal Appeal from Common Pleas
PRECIOUS CARMICHAEL : Court)
:
Appellant : FINAL JUDGMENT ENTRY &
: OPINION
...........
Pursuant to the opinion of this court rendered on April 24, 2026, the judgment of the
trial court is affirmed.
Costs to be paid as stated in App.R. 24.
Pursuant to Ohio App.R. 30(A), the clerk of the court of appeals shall immediately
serve notice of this judgment upon all parties and make a note in the docket of the service.
Additionally, pursuant to App.R. 27, the clerk of the court of appeals shall send a certified
copy of this judgment, which constitutes a mandate, to the clerk of the trial court and note
the service on the appellate docket.
For the court,
MICHAEL L. TUCKER, JUDGE
LEWIS, P.J., and HANSEMAN, J., concur.
OPINION
MONTGOMERY C.A. No. 30618
MICHAEL MILLS, Attorney for Appellant
MICHAEL P. ALLEN, Attorney for Appellee
TUCKER, J.
{¶ 1} Precious Carmichael appeals from her conviction following a jury trial on
charges of strangulation, a fourth-degree felony, and child endangering, a first-degree
misdemeanor.
{¶ 2} She contends the trial court erred by refusing to instruct the jury on reasonable
parental discipline as an affirmative defense to both charges and by overruling her motion
to exclude prior-bad-acts evidence. She also challenges the legal sufficiency and manifest
weight of the State’s evidence to sustain her convictions and alleges ineffective assistance
of counsel.
{¶ 3} For the reasons set forth below, we find Carmichael’s assignments of error to
be unpersuasive. Accordingly, the trial court’s judgment is affirmed.
I. Background
{¶ 4} A grand jury indicted Carmichael on the above-referenced charges for
disciplining her six-year-old daughter by choking her and whipping her with a charger cord.
Carmichael pleaded guilty but later withdrew the plea. Prior to trial, she filed a notice of intent
to assert reasonable parental discipline as an affirmative defense. She also filed several
motions in limine, including a motion to exclude prior-bad-acts evidence about having
choked her daughter on other occasions. The trial court overruled the motion in limine shortly
before the State introduced the challenged evidence. As for the requested affirmative
defense instructions, the trial court concluded, as a matter of law, that reasonable parental
discipline was not an affirmative defense to strangulation. The trial court also determined
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that the evidence did not support a finding of reasonable parental discipline as to either
charge.
{¶ 5} The jury found Carmichael guilty of both charges. The trial court sentenced her
to five years of community control sanctions with local incarceration for 45 days and other
conditions. Carmichael timely appealed, advancing four assignments of error.
II. Analysis
{¶ 6} The first assignment of error states:
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN OVERRULING THE DEFENDANT’S
PROPOSED JURY INSTRUCTIONS.
{¶ 7} Carmichael challenges the trial court’s denial of her request for jury instructions
on the affirmative defense of reasonable parental discipline. After reviewing case law
governing the defense, she addresses it in the context of strangulation. Her substantive
argument is as follows:
Strangulation, R.C. 2903.18, is a fairly new statute having been enacted in
- Counsel can find no cases that reference parental discipline as an
affirmative defense to this violation. However, the statute is broadly written and
the Appellant argues that certain actions taken in the pursuit of parental
discipline would necessarily overlap with the prohibitions of this statute.
R.C. 2903.18 defines strangulation as “[. . .] any act that impedes the normal
breathing or circulation of the blood by applying pressure to the throat or neck,
or by covering the nose and mouth.” The concept of child restraint falls
underneath the scope of parental discipline. In this case, [the child] testified
the Appellant sat on top of her back while holding the back of her neck. Trial
Trans. Pg. 198. The Appellant submits that the much larger weight of an adult
3
on top of a child would restrict breathing whether or not the child’s neck was
being touched. Further, the statute separates the terms throat from neck in the
definition. The Appellant submits that while it is possible to restrict breathing
or blood flow by applying force to the front of the neck (throat) or the sides of
the neck (where the arteries are located), applying pressure to the back of the
neck does neither. If this Honorable Court finds that a parent’s right to restrain
a child is a necessary power under parental discipline, then the Appellant
submits she was entitled to an affirmative defense jury instruction as to both
counts of strangulation and child endangerment.
Appellant’s Brief, p. 9-10.
{¶ 8} “Requested jury instructions should ordinarily be given if they are correct
statements of law, if they are applicable to the facts in the case, and if reasonable minds
might reach the conclusion sought by the requested instruction.” State v. Adams, 2015-Ohio-
3954, ¶ 240. We “review a trial court’s determination that sufficient facts do or do not exist
to support a jury instruction for an abuse of discretion,” which means that the determination
was unreasonable, arbitrary, or unconscionable. State v. Chambers, 2024-Ohio-3341, ¶ 165
(6th Dist.).
{¶ 9} Carmichael asks us to recognize reasonable parental discipline as an
affirmative defense to a charge of strangulation under R.C. 2903.18(B)(3), which provides
that no person shall knowingly “[c]ause or create a substantial risk of physical harm to
another by means of strangulation or suffocation.” “Physical harm” includes “any injury,
illness, or other physiological impairment, regardless of its gravity or duration.”
R.C. 2901.01(A)(3). “‘Strangulation or suffocation’ means any act that impedes the normal
4
breathing or circulation of the blood by applying pressure to the throat or neck, or by covering
the nose and mouth.” R.C. 2903.18(A)(1).
{¶ 10} An affirmative defense “is in the nature of a ‘confession and avoidance,’ in
which the defendant admits the elements of the crime, but seeks to prove some additional
fact that absolves the defendant of guilt.” State v. Rhodes, 63 Ohio St.3d 613, 625 (1992).
“A defendant in a criminal case must admit commission of the act constituting the criminal
offense before an affirmative defense may be submitted to the jury.” State v. Dadayev, 2023-
Ohio-2326, ¶ 22 (2d Dist.), citing State v. Morefield, 2015-Ohio-448, ¶ 30 (2d Dist.).
{¶ 11} In her argument quoted above, Carmichael insists that she did not commit an
act of strangulation. She claims she restrained her daughter by sitting on the child’s back.
She attributes the child’s difficulty breathing to having this body weight on her back. Although
Carmichael also placed her hands around the back of the child’s neck, she maintains that
using her hands this way did not restrict the child’s breathing. Phrased in the language of
the strangulation statute, Carmichael contends she did not impede her daughter’s normal
breathing or circulation of blood by applying pressure to the child’s throat or neck. If the jury
accepted this argument, the proper response would have been a not-guilty verdict
predicated on deficiencies in the State’s evidence rather than her proof of an affirmative
defense.
{¶ 12} Because Carmichael does not acknowledge that she impeded her daughter’s
breathing by applying pressure to the child’s throat or neck as an act of reasonable parental
discipline, she has not shown that she would have been entitled to the requested affirmative
defense instructions. Even if reasonable parental discipline theoretically could be an
affirmative defense in a strangulation case (an issue we need not decide), Carmichael has
not shown an abuse of discretion in the trial court’s refusal to give the instruction. As for the
5
child-endangering charge, Carmichael makes no separate argument, relying instead on the
same argument about strangulation. Accordingly, the first assignment of error is overruled.
{¶ 13} The second assignment of error states:
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN OVERRULING THE DEFENDANT’S
MOTION IN LIMINE TO EXCLUDE PRIOR BAD ACTS.
{¶ 14} Carmichael contends the trial court erred in allowing the jury to hear part of a
recording of a forensic interview with her daughter. When discussing the incident at issue,
which involved Carmichael placing her hands around the back of the child’s neck, the
interviewer asked: “Has anyone else ever done that to the back of your neck before?” The
child shook her head “no” and said, “Only my mom.” In her motion in limine, Carmichael
argued that the child’s response alleged that she had choked the child on other occasions.
She asserted that this prior-bad-acts evidence was subject to exclusion under
Evid.R. 404(B). The State disagreed, noting that the question was whether anyone else had
choked the child. According to the State, the child’s negative response, with the clarifying
statement “only my mom,” meant that no prior choking incidents had occurred other than the
one at issue. The trial court agreed with the State, reasoning that the evidence was “not
intended to be used to show that the Defendant has any propensities to engage in abusive
conduct with respect to her children or her child.”
{¶ 15} Although the child’s response could be read as an allegation that Carmichael
had choked her on other occasions, we have reviewed a video recording of the exchange
and believe it more reasonably should be read as suggested by the State. Immediately after
the child mentioned that her “paw pops” had a “hard hand” like her mother, the interviewer
asked whether anyone else ever had choked the child by placing hands around the back of
her neck. The interviewer appears to have been inquiring into whether the child’s “paw pops”
6
or anyone else had done so previously. The child’s negative head shake combined with her
comment “only my mom” seems to us intended to convey that the incident at issue was the
only choking that had occurred. The prosecutor also never argued that Carmichael had
shown a propensity for choking her daughter. Under these circumstances, the trial court did
not abuse its discretion by refusing to exclude the evidence under Evid.R. 404(B). The
second assignment of error is overruled.
{¶ 16} The third assignment of error states:
THE STATE OF OHIO FAILED TO PRESENT SUFFICIENT EVIDENCE TO
SUPPORT THE CONVICTION FOR R.C. 2903.18 AND R.C. 2919.22 AND
THE APPELLANT’S CONVICTION WAS AGAINST THE MANIFEST
WEIGHT OF THE EVIDENCE.
{¶ 17} Carmichael challenges the sufficiency and weight of the evidence to sustain
her convictions for strangulation and child endangering. She claims the State’s evidence
established only that she restricted her daughter’s breathing by sitting on the child. She
argues that restricting airflow by sitting on her daughter’s back did not constitute
strangulation and was not an act of child endangering.
{¶ 18} “An appellate court’s function when reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence
to support a criminal conviction is to examine the evidence admitted at trial to determine
whether such evidence, if believed, would convince the average mind of the defendant’s
guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. The relevant inquiry is whether, after viewing the evidence
in a light most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found the
essential elements of the crime proven beyond a reasonable doubt.” State v. Jenks, 61 Ohio
St.3d 259 (1991), paragraph two of the syllabus.
7
{¶ 19} Our analysis is different when reviewing a manifest-weight argument. When a
conviction is challenged on appeal as being against the weight of the evidence, an appellate
court must review the entire record, weigh the evidence and all reasonable inferences,
consider witness credibility, and determine whether, in resolving conflicts in the evidence,
the trier of fact “clearly lost its way and created such a manifest miscarriage of justice that
the conviction must be reversed and a new trial ordered.” State v. Thompkins, 78 Ohio St.3d
380, 387 (1997). A judgment should be reversed as being against the manifest weight of the
evidence “only in the exceptional case in which the evidence weighs heavily against the
conviction.” State v. Martin, 20 Ohio App.3d 172, 175 (1st Dist. 1983).
{¶ 20} With the foregoing standards in mind, we reject Carmichael’s legal-sufficiency
and manifest-weight arguments. She was found guilty of strangulation under
R.C. 2903.18(B)(3) for impeding her daughter’s normal breathing by applying pressure to
the child’s throat or neck. Carmichael did not testify at trial, and the only witness with first-
hand knowledge of what occurred was her daughter, the victim. The child testified that she
was home with Carmichael and two younger siblings on the evening of September 27, 2023.
One of the boys told Carmichael that their sister had been “dancing dirty.” When
Carmichael’s daughter denied the allegation, Carmichael accused her of lying. Carmichael
proceeded to grab a charger cord to whip the child, who ran upstairs. Carmichael ordered
her daughter to return to the living room and “dragged” the child down the last two steps.
{¶ 21} The victim fell to the floor on her stomach with Carmichael on top of her. It
appears from the record that she was straddling the child’s back. Carmichael’s daughter
testified that her mother’s hands were on the back of her neck, and her mother was “choking
[her] on the back of—from the back of [her] neck, and [she] couldn’t breathe.” Later in her
testimony, the child recalled Carmichael’s hands being on her neck for a minute or two. She
8
felt like she was going to faint and thought she might have to go to the hospital. The child
testified that she sustained bruising from her mother’s hands on her neck. She added that
she was able to breathe again after her mother got off of her. On cross-examination, the
victim agreed that her mother had been on top of her back “grabbing” the back of her neck.
The child also agreed with defense counsel that her mother being on top of her made it hard
to breathe. She agreed that “all this weight on [her] was choking [her] ability to breathe.”
{¶ 22} The victim’s testimony attributed her difficulty breathing to Carmichael doing
two things: (1) applying hands to the child’s neck and choking her “from the back of [her]
neck” and (2) sitting on the child’s back. Carmichael’s act of sitting on her daughter did not
constitute strangulation, but her act of choking the child from the back of the neck did. The
victim’s testimony about sustaining bruising to her neck and being choked from the back of
her neck supported a finding that Carmichael knowingly had caused physical harm by
impeding the child’s normal breathing by applying pressure to the child’s throat or neck.
{¶ 23} In arguing otherwise, Carmichael claims it is impossible to choke a person by
applying pressure to the back of the neck. We note, however, that the victim testified about
her mother choking her “from the back of [her] neck.” (Emphasis added.) The jury reasonably
could have found that Carmichael’s adult hands wrapped around the sides of her six-year-
old child’s neck and consequently restricted the child’s breathing. This conclusion is
supported by the testimony of an examining physician who reviewed photographs of the
child and identified “abrasions and bruising on the chin and anterior neck and extending
down above the collarbone on the left.” This conclusion also is supported by the child’s
demonstration of the choking during a forensic interview. Carmichael concedes that
breathing can be impeded by applying pressure to the sides of the neck where arteries are
located.
9
{¶ 24} Having reviewed the record, we find legally sufficient evidence to support a
strangulation conviction under R.C. 2903.18(B)(3). Viewing the evidence in a light most
favorable to the prosecution, the jury could have found the essential elements of the crime
were proven beyond a reasonable doubt. Carmichael’s strangulation conviction also is not
against the weight of the evidence. In finding her guilty, the jury did not clearly lose its way
and create a miscarriage of justice. This is not an exceptional case in which the evidence
weighs heavily against the conviction.
{¶ 25} As for child endangering, Carmichael was found guilty of violating
R.C. 2919.22(B)(1), which prohibits recklessly abusing a child under age 18. State v. Hoff,
2024-Ohio-5837, ¶ 23 (2d Dist.). For purposes of R.C. 2919.22(B)(1), “‘abuse’ includes acts
of the child’s parents causing ‘physical or mental injury that harms or threatens to harm the
child’s health or welfare.’” State v. Cantrell, 2024-Ohio-5406, ¶ 35 (applying
R.C. 2151.031(E)). Although a parent generally has a right to use corporal punishment, such
punishment is unlawful if it violates this definition of abuse. See R.C. 2151.031(D) (Emphasis
added.) (“Except as provided in division (E) of this section, a child exhibiting evidence of
corporal punishment or other physical disciplinary measure by a parent, guardian, custodian,
caretaker, person having custody or control, or person in loco parentis of a child is not an
abused child . . . .”). The nature of an injury resulting from corporal punishment may be
evidence that a defendant’s actions were not lawful parental discipline. Cantrell at ¶ 37.
{¶ 26} In addition to evidence of strangulation, the State presented evidence that
Carmichael had whipped her daughter with a charger cord. The child testified that
Carmichael struck her multiple times with the cord, including a lash on her face. An
examining physician testified that the victim had linear bruises with loop marks on various
parts of her body, including her buttocks, flank, thigh, back, and face. The pattern was
10
consistent with an injury caused by a cord. At the time of trial, the child continued to receive
mental-health counseling due to the incident.
{¶ 27} Carmichael’s assignment of error fails to address the whipping aspect of the
State’s case. In addition to considering evidence of strangulation, the jury reasonably could
have found that whipping with a charger cord recklessly caused physical or mental injury
and harmed or threatened the victim’s welfare. This conclusion is supported by legally
sufficient evidence and is not against the manifest weight of the evidence. Accordingly, the
third assignment of error is overruled.
{¶ 28} The fourth assignment of error states:
APPELLANT WAS DENIED EFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL AS
GUARANTEED BY ARTICLE I, SECTON 10 OF THE OHIO CONSTITUTION
AND THE SIXTH AND FOURTEENTH AMENDMENTS.
{¶ 29} Carmichael notes that after withdrawing her guilty plea, she did not testify at
trial and was unable to pursue the affirmative defense of reasonable parental discipline. She
asserts that her inability to present an effective defense constituted ineffective assistance of
counsel.
{¶ 30} We review alleged instances of ineffective assistance of counsel under the
two-part analysis found in Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (1984), which the Ohio
Supreme Court adopted in State v. Bradley, 42 Ohio St.3d 136 (1989). To prevail on an
ineffective-assistance claim, a defendant must show that trial counsel rendered deficient
performance and that the deficient performance prejudiced the defense. Strickland at 687;
Bradley at paragraph two of the syllabus.
{¶ 31} Carmichael has not specified what her attorney did or failed to do that
constituted deficient performance. Her assignment of error potentially implies deficient
11
performance in connection with withdrawal of the guilty plea, her decision not to testify,
pursuit of the affirmative defense, or the failure to “effectively offer any defense.” But
Carmichael’s withdrawal of her guilty plea and decision not to testify were personal choices,
and the record does not reflect what, if anything, her attorney advised her on those issues.
Therefore, she cannot demonstrate deficient performance regarding them.
{¶ 32} As for the failed affirmative defense and her lack of any effective defense, an
unfavorable outcome alone does not establish deficient performance. Defense counsel
advocated for the affirmative defense. Counsel also raised a defense to strangulation by
attributing the child’s inability to breathe to Carmichael being positioned on top of her. During
closing arguments, defense counsel told the jury:
Now the biggest hurdle you’re going to have to jump over is that
human—there’s no doubt that [Carmichael] grabbed her—or excuse me.
[Carmichael] grabbed [the child] hard in the back of the neck. And there’s no
doubt that during this incident, [the child’s] ability to breathe was impeded.
Yeah. But you have to find beyond a reasonable doubt that grabbing the neck
caused her to be unable to breathe. Even if you find that [Carmichael] caused
[the child] to not be able to breathe clearly by some other action of hers, it’s
the law, is the law, and it’s got to be by applying pressure to the throat or neck.
And if not, you’ve got to find against the State. And that’s what we have.
...
What did [the child] herself tell us when she was on the stand? I asked
her several questions about this, and she was consistent. And I submit the
truth that mom was on top of her, too heavy for a little girl like that and pressing
the breath out of her. I may not be quoting her verbatim, but that is darn close
12
that she—it was mom sitting on top of her while she’s grabbing her back neck
that kept her from breathing.
Tr. 305-307.
{¶ 33} Although the jury ultimately found Carmichael guilty, she has not identified
anything more defense counsel could have done. Nor has she identified any act that counsel
performed deficiently. As a result, we see no ineffective assistance. The fourth assignment
of error is overruled.
III. Conclusion
{¶ 34} The judgment of the Montgomery County Common Pleas Court is affirmed.
.............
LEWIS, P.J., and HANSEMAN, J., concur.
13
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