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State v. Johnson - Child Victim Testimony Statute Violation

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Filed March 6th, 2026
Detected March 7th, 2026
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Summary

The Ohio Court of Appeals reversed and vacated parts of a trial court's judgment against Chadwick Johnson, finding that the trial court violated Johnson's right to confrontation by allowing child victims to testify outside his presence without proper findings. The appellate court remanded the case for a new trial on specific charges due to insufficient evidence.

What changed

The Ohio Court of Appeals, in State v. Johnson, reversed and vacated parts of a trial court's judgment against Chadwick Johnson. The appellate court determined that the trial court erred by allowing child victims to testify outside the appellant's presence without making the necessary factual findings required by the child victim testimony statute. This violation infringed upon Johnson's right to confrontation. The court found that without the children's testimony, the evidence was insufficient to support convictions for aggravated menacing and domestic violence (threats) related to the children, and also insufficient for one count of aggravated menacing against his ex-wife.

This ruling has significant implications for how child testimony is handled in Ohio courts and potentially other jurisdictions with similar statutes. The case is remanded for a new trial on the charges pertaining to the child victims. Regulated entities, particularly legal professionals and courts, must ensure strict adherence to statutory requirements regarding child testimony and the right to confrontation to avoid similar reversals and potential retrials. The decision highlights the critical need for proper procedural findings before allowing testimony under such statutes.

What to do next

  1. Review trial court procedures for child victim testimony to ensure compliance with statutory requirements and confrontation rights.
  2. Ensure all necessary factual findings are made on the record before allowing testimony outside the defendant's presence.
  3. Consult legal counsel regarding the implications of this ruling on ongoing or future cases involving child victims.

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March 6, 2026 Get Citation Alerts Download PDF Add Note

State v. Johnson

Ohio Court of Appeals

Syllabus

In allowing the child victims to testify outside of appellant's presence without making any of the factual findings regarding necessity required under the child victim testimony statute, the trial court violated appellant's right to confrontation. The trial court's error was not harmless because without the children's testimony, insufficient evidence supported appellant's convictions as to the children for aggravated menacing and domestic violence (threats). Insufficient evidence supported appellant's conviction of aggravated menacing in relation to his ex-wife, so the trial court erred in overruling his motion for acquittal. Judgment reversed in part, vacated in part, and remanded for a new trial on the charges pertaining to the child victims.

Combined Opinion

[Cite as State v. Johnson, 2026-Ohio-757.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
MONTGOMERY COUNTY

STATE OF OHIO :
: C.A. No. 30506
Appellee :
: Trial Court Case No. 2025-CRB-536
v. :
: (Criminal Appeal from Municipal Court)
CHADWICK JOHNSON :
: FINAL JUDGMENT ENTRY &
Appellant : OPINION
:

...........

Pursuant to the opinion of this court rendered on March 6, 2026, the judgment of the

trial court is reversed in part, vacated in part, and remanded for further proceedings

consistent with the opinion.

Costs to be paid by the State.

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,

MARY K. HUFFMAN, JUDGE

LEWIS, P.J., and TUCKER, J., concur.
OPINION
MONTGOMERY C.A. No. 30506

AARON M. HERZIG and NATHAN R. COYNE, Attorneys for Appellant
MARC T. ROSS and GREGORY J. PARKER, Attorney for Appellees

HUFFMAN, J.

{¶ 1} Chadwick Johnson appeals from a judgment entry of conviction, following a

bench trial in municipal court, of three counts of aggravated menacing and one count of

domestic violence (threats). For the following reasons, the judgment of the trial court is

reversed in part, vacated in part, and remanded for a new trial on two counts of aggravated

menacing and one count of domestic violence (threats).

Facts and Procedural History

{¶ 2} On March 3, 2025, Johnson was charged with three counts of domestic violence

(threats) and three counts of aggravated menacing, and he pled not guilty the same day.

Each of Johnson’s ex-wife and the couple’s two children—identified here as K.J., Jane Doe,

and John Doe, respectively—was the alleged victim of one domestic violence charge and

one aggravated menacing charge.

{¶ 3} On April 7, 2025, in accordance with R.C. 2945.481(C)(1)(a), the State filed a

motion to allow Jane and John Doe to testify outside of Johnson’s presence. The motion

stated that Jane Doe was 9 years old and John Doe was 11 years old, and that the offenses

with which Johnson was charged were offenses of violence, as defined under

R.C. 2901.01(A)(9)(a). Citing R.C. 2945.481(E), the State argued that requiring the children

to testify in Johnson’s presence would cause extreme fear, rendering them unable to

communicate, and that there was a substantial likelihood they would suffer serious emotional

2
trauma due to their youth, the serious nature of the alleged threats by Johnson, and the fact

that John Doe was already in counseling for anxiety.

{¶ 4} On April 11, 2025, Johnson opposed the motion, asserting that

R.C. 2945.481(C)(1)(a) requires evidentiary findings before a witness may testify remotely,

and that the State set forth no evidence. According to Johnson, a reading of the entirety of

R.C. 2945.481 “reveals that R.C. 2945.481(C)(1)(a) is not mandatory.” He argued that to the

extent that the court were to find the statute to be mandatory, it would violate his rights to

confrontation under the Ohio and United States Constitutions. Citing Maryland v. Craig,

497 U.S. 836 (1990), and State v. Carter, 2024-Ohio-1247, Johnson claimed that “before a

witness may testify remotely, the trial court must find remote testimony necessary on a case-

by-case basis.” Noting that the Twelfth District, in State v. Wallace, 2024-Ohio-4955

(12th Dist.), determined R.C. 2945.481(C)(1)(a) to be a mandatory provision, Johnson

directed the court’s attention to the dissenting opinion therein. (“My colleagues’ interpretation

[of R.C. 2945.481(C)(1)(a)] suggests that the General Assembly intended to abrogate the

United Supreme Court decision in Craig, which it had no authority to do.”). Id. at ¶ 45. He

further asserted that the majority in Wallace cast doubt on the constitutionality of the statute.

(“These important constitutional issues may need to be addressed in a future appeal, but

unfortunately there is no such constitutional challenge regarding the defendant’s

confrontation rights presented in this interlocutory victim’s rights appeal.”) Id. at ¶ 10.

{¶ 5} On April 15, 2025, after determining Jane Doe to be competent to testify, the

court considered the State’s motion under R.C. 2945.481(C)(1)(a). The State asserted that

the statute was mandatory and proffered email correspondence from John Doe’s therapist

regarding the extreme anxiety testifying in Johnson’s presence would cause for the child, as

well as the therapist’s curriculum vitae. Defense counsel objected to the admission of the

3
documents and the granting of the motion, citing Craig and Crim.R. 16(K). Counsel asserted

that “before a witness may testify remotely the trial court must find remote testimony

necessary on a case by case basis,” further arguing that it would be difficult for counsel to

communicate with Johnson from another room. The defense finally requested that

Johnson’s parents be present with the children if the court were to grant the motion.

{¶ 6} The court determined the language of R.C. 2945.481(C)(1)(a) to be

“mandatory,” and it granted the State’s motion. It admitted the proffered exhibits only “for

appellate review,” noting that its ruling on the testimony of the children outside of the

courtroom was “based solely on the language contained in the statute.” In addressing

logistics, the court set up a separate courtroom for the child victims’ testimony, denied

defense counsel’s request for Johnson’s parents to be present with the victims, set up a two-

way video connection between the courtrooms by means of a laptop computer, and provided

defense counsel a Bluetooth headset to use to communicate with Johnson. After the children

indicated that they did not want to view Johnson, the laptop displaying the video was placed

12-14 feet from the witness stand. Johnson remained in the other courtroom while the

children testified.

{¶ 7} Johnson moved for acquittal at the conclusion of the State’s case and at the

end of trial, but his motions were denied. Johnson was convicted of all three counts of

aggravated menacing, and one count of domestic violence (threats) as to Jane Doe. He was

acquitted of domestic violence (threats) as to John Doe and K.J.

{¶ 8} Disposition occurred on April 14, 2025. The court merged the aggravated

menacing offense with the domestic violence (threats) offense as to Jane Doe, and the State

4
elected to proceed to sentencing on the domestic violence offense. 1 Johnson was

sentenced to 180 days on one count of aggravated menacing, with credit for 123 days, with

57 days to be served at the jail; 180 days on the second count of aggravated menacing, with

credit for 64 days and 116 days suspended; and 30 days for domestic violence threats, with

credit for 64 days. He was also sentenced to two years of non-reporting community control,

and a post-conviction no contact order was issued, effective until April 15, 2026.

Assignments of Error and Analysis

{¶ 9} Johnson asserts two assignments of error. In his first assignment of error, he

claims that for several reasons, the trial court erred in granting the State’s motion for the

children to testify outside of Johnson’s presence. First, he argues that R.C. 2945.81(C)(1)(a)

“is facially unconstitutional” under Article 1, Section 10 of the Ohio Constitution, which

guarantees a defendant in a criminal case the right “to meet the witnesses face to face.”

Johnson asserts that even if we find that the statute is facially constitutional,

R.C. 2945.481(C)(1)(a) is unconstitutional as applied to him under the Ohio Constitution.

According to Johnson, the trial court erred by interpreting R.C. 2945.481(C)(1)(a) to mandate

out-of-court testimony at the State’s request because the statute explicitly requires “case-

specific findings of fact under division (E) in all circumstances.” Johnson asserts that the

“face to face” language of the Ohio Constitution is “broader” than that of the Sixth

Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which protects a defendant’s right to be “confronted

with the witnesses against him.”

1 Johnson’s initial judgment entry of conviction resolved only five of the six charged offenses,

and on May 16, 2025, this court issued a show cause order regarding the unresolved count
of aggravated menacing. The subsequent nunc pro tunc entry erroneously states that
Johnson was convicted of two counts of aggravated menacing, one count of domestic
violence (threats), and found not guilty/acquitted of two counts of domestic violence (threats)
and one count of aggravated menacing. It further erroneously states that Johnson was
convicted of domestic violence in violation of R.C. 2919.25(B) instead of R.C. 2919.25(C).

5
{¶ 10} Johnson further argues that R.C. 2945.481(C)(1)(a) is unconstitutional facially

and as applied under the United States Constitution. He claims that the statute “dispenses

with a defendant’s Sixth Amendment right . . . without requiring case-specific findings of

necessity based on admissible evidence,” and that the statute cannot survive Craig or Coy

v. Iowa, 487 U.S. 1012 (1988). Johnson asserts that in the absence of any case-specific

findings of necessity, the court applied R.C. 2945.481(C)(1)(a) in an unconstitutional

manner. Finally, he argues that allowing Jane and John Doe to testify was not harmless

error because their testimony was “the keystone to the State’s case.”

{¶ 11} The State responds that it set forth reasons in its motion to have the children

testify outside of Johnson’s presence, and for “this reason alone, the statute cannot be

facially unconstitutional under either the Ohio or U.S. Constitution in all its applications.”

Regarding Johnson’s “as-applied” challenges, the State directs our attention to State v.

Wallace. As to whether or not it was harmless error to allow the children to testify, the State

asserts that “[e]ven removing the live testimony of the children, there is still overwhelming

proof of [Johnson’s] guilt for aggravated menacing against, at the very least [Jane Doe and

K.J.].” The State asserts that Johnson’s aggravated menacing conviction against K.J. “is

independent and unaffected [by] the testimony of the child victims.”

{¶ 12} In his second assignment of error, Johnson asserts that the trial court erred in

overruling his Crim.R. 29 motion for acquittal. The State responds that sufficient evidence

supported Johnson’s convictions. We first address the confrontation issue.

Standard of Review

{¶ 13} “‘Where preserved by objection, review of Confrontation Clause claims is

for harmless error.’” State v. Hartman, 2016-Ohio-2883, ¶ 83 (2d Dist.), quoting State v.

Habo, 2013-Ohio 2142, ¶ 35 (11th Dist.). “‘A constitutional error can be held harmless if we

6
determine that it was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.’” State v. Edwards, 2013-Ohio-

1290, ¶ 27 (11th Dist.), quoting State v. Conway, 2006-Ohio-791, ¶ 78, citing Chapman v.

California, 386 U.S. 18, 24 (1967). The harmless error inquiry is not merely an examination

of the sufficiency of the remaining evidence; rather, “‘the question is whether there is a

reasonable probability that the evidence complained of might have contributed to the

conviction.’” State v. Miller, 2020-Ohio-3854, ¶ 42 (11th Dist.), quoting State v. Conway,

2006-Ohio-791, ¶ 78. “A lack of prejudice exists where there is ‘other evidence of guilt’ before

the jury that is ‘overwhelming.’” Id., quoting State v. Edwards, 2013-Ohio-1290, ¶ 40

(11th Dist.). “The remedy for this error is a new trial.” State v. May, 2011-Ohio-6637, ¶ 53

(7th Dist.).

R.C. 2945.481 and Confrontation Rights

{¶ 14} R.C. 2945.481 is part of Ohio’s statutory framework governing when child

victims may testify outside the physical presence of a defendant in a criminal proceeding. It

requires the State to file a motion at least seven days before trial, except for good cause

shown, asking that testimony be taken outside the defendant’s physical presence. “The

purpose of the rule is to provide sufficient time for defense counsel to prepare for the

hearing.” State v. Messenger, 2022-Ohio-3120, ¶ 45 (7th Dist.).

{¶ 15} R.C. 2945.481 states, in relevant part:

(C)(1)(a) In any proceeding in the prosecution of any charge of a

violation listed in division (A)(2)(a) of this section or an offense of violence and

in which an alleged victim of the violation or offense was a child who was less

than thirteen years of age when the complaint, indictment, or information was

filed, whichever occurred earlier, the judge, upon motion of the prosecution,

the child victim, or the child victim’s attorney, if applicable, shall order the

7
testimony of the child victim to be taken in a room other than the room in which

the proceeding is being conducted and be broadcast into the room in which

the proceeding is being conducted to be viewed by the jury, if applicable, the

defendant, and any other persons who are not permitted in the room in which

the testimony is to be taken but who would have been present during the

testimony of the child victim had it been given in the room in which the

proceeding is being conducted.

(b) In any proceeding that is not otherwise eligible for the protections

provided for in division (C)(1)(a) of this section, and in which an alleged victim

of the violation was a child who was less than eighteen years of age when the

complaint, indictment, or information was filed, whichever occurred earlier,

upon motion of the child victim, the child victim’s attorney, if applicable, or the

prosecution, and upon a showing by a preponderance of the evidence that the

child will suffer serious emotional trauma if required to provide live trial

testimony, the judge shall order that the testimony of the child victim be taken

in a room other than the room in which the proceeding is being conducted and

broadcast into the room in which the proceeding is being conducted to be

viewed by the defendant who is charged with the violation or act and any other

persons who are not permitted in the room in which the testimony is to be taken

but who would have been present during the testimony of the child victim had

it been given in the room in which the proceeding is being conducted.

(2) Except for good cause shown, the prosecution, child victim, or child

victim’s attorney, if applicable, shall file a motion under this division at least

seven days before the date of the proceeding. The judge may issue the order

8
upon the motion of the prosecution, child victim, or child victim’s attorney, if

applicable, filed under this section, if the judge determines that the child victim

is unavailable to testify in the room in which the proceeding is being conducted

in the physical presence of the defendant, for one or more of the reasons set

forth in division (E) of this section. If a judge issues an order of that nature, the

judge shall exclude from the room in which the testimony is to be taken every

person except a person described in division (A)(3) of this section. The judge,

at the judge’s discretion, may preside during the giving of the testimony by

electronic means from outside the room in which it is being given, subject to

the limitations set forth in division (A)(3) of this section. To the extent feasible,

any person operating the televising equipment shall be hidden from the sight

and hearing of the child victim giving the testimony, in a manner similar to that

described in division (A)(3) of this section. The defendant shall be permitted to

observe and hear the testimony of the child victim giving the testimony on a

monitor, shall be provided with an electronic means of immediate

communication with the defendant’s attorney during the testimony, and shall

be restricted to a location from which the defendant cannot be seen or heard

by the child victim giving the testimony, except on a monitor provided for that

purpose. The child victim giving the testimony shall be provided with a monitor

on which the child victim can observe, during the testimony, the defendant.

{¶ 16} R.C. 2945.481(E), in turn, states:

For purposes of divisions (C) and (D) of this section, a judge may order

the testimony of a child victim to be taken outside the room in which the

proceeding is being conducted if the judge determines that the child victim is

9
unavailable to testify in the room in the physical presence of the defendant due

to one or more of the following:

(1) The persistent refusal of the child victim to testify despite judicial

requests to do so;

(2) The inability of the child victim to communicate about the alleged

violation or offense because of extreme fear, failure of memory, or another

similar reason;

(3) The substantial likelihood that the child victim will suffer serious

emotional trauma from so testifying.

As noted above, without addressing Johnson’s constitutional challenges and without

any case-specific findings, the trial court determined that remote testimony was mandatory

over objection based on the language of R.C. 2945.481(C)(1)(a).

{¶ 17} “There are two primary ways to challenge the constitutionality of a statute: by

facial challenge or through an ‘as-applied’ challenge.” Jones v. MetroHealth Medical Center,

2017-Ohio-7329, ¶ 60 (8th Dist.), citing Harrold v. Collier, 2005-Ohio-5334, ¶ 37. A “facial

challenge asserts that the law is unconstitutional as applied to the hypothetical conduct of

any person, without reference to the defendant’s specific conduct or circumstances.” State

v. Naylor, 2024-Ohio-1648, ¶ 76 (11th Dist.), citing Kruppa v. Warren, 2009-Ohio-4927, ¶ 12

(11th Dist.). “Facial challenges are the most difficult to mount successfully since the

challenger must establish that ‘no set of circumstances exists under which the act would be

valid.’” Id., quoting Wymsylo v. Bartec, Inc., 2012-Ohio-2187, ¶ 21. “In an as-applied

challenge, on the other hand, the challenger contends that the statute’s application violates

his or her constitutional rights under the circumstances of a particular case.” State v.

Grevious, 2022-Ohio-4361, ¶ 18, citing United States v. Christian Echoes Natl. Ministry, Inc.,

10
404 U.S. 561, 565 (1972). “An as-applied challenge asserts that a statute is unconstitutional

as applied to the challenger’s particular conduct.” Naylor at ¶ 76, citing Kruppa, ¶ 12.

{¶ 18} “Ordinarily, the Sixth Amendment’s Confrontation Clause ‘guarantees the

defendant a face-to-face meeting with witnesses appearing before the trier of fact.’” Pitts v.

Mississippi, 607 U.S. __, 146 S.Ct. 413, 415 (2025), quoting Coy, 487 U.S. at 1016. “In child-

abuse cases, however, that rule sometimes gives way.” Id. “Consistent with the Sixth

Amendment, a court may screen a child witness from the defendant when ‘necessary to

protect [the child] from trauma that would be caused by testifying in the physical presence

of the defendant, at least where such trauma would impair the child’s ability to

communicate.’” Id., quoting Craig, 497 U.S. at 857. Before invoking this procedure, however,

a court “must ‘hear evidence’ and make a ‘case-specific’ finding of ‘[t]he requisite . . .

necessity.’” Id., quoting Craig at 855.

{¶ 19} Regarding Johnson’s position that the Ohio Constitution confers “broader

rights” than the Sixth Amendment, the Ohio Supreme Court has noted that “[o]ne might

argue that because of its explicit textual recognition of the right to face-to-face confrontation,

the Ohio provision provides rights to the accused greater than those recognized by the

United States Supreme Court in Craig regarding the federal guarantee.” Carter, 2024-Ohio-

1247, at ¶ 33. In 1980, however, the Ohio Supreme Court “dismissed the proposition that

‘the Ohio constitutional provision is more demanding of a face-to-face confrontation that that

of the United States Constitution.’” Id., quoting State v. Madison, 64 Ohio St.2d 322, 330

(1980). In 1990, the Ohio Supreme Court “held that Article I, Section 10 of the Ohio

Constitution ‘provides no greater right of confrontation than the Sixth Amendment,’ State v.

Self, 56 Ohio St.3d 73, 79, 564 N.E.2d 446 (1990), and noted that [the Court’s] interpretation

of the Ohio Constitution ‘paralleled’ the United States Supreme Court’s interpretation of the

11
federal guarantee.” Id., quoting Self at 78. See also State v. Bansobeza, 2025-Ohio-2704,

¶ 39 (2d Dist.), quoting Self at 79.

{¶ 20} While the trial court failed to conduct any analysis in making its blanket

determination that R.C. 2945.481(C)(1)(a) is mandatory, a practice we discourage, case law

and the plain language of the statute demand a different result. Although reviewing a prior

version of R.C. 2945.481, State v. Collins, 2011-Ohio-6365 (7th Dist.), is instructive

regarding the applicability of R.C. 2945.481(E) to R.C. 2945.481(C)(1)(a). Therein, the

Seventh District considered the distinction between R.C. 2945.481(A)(2) and (C) or (D).

Collins noted that “[u]nder the plain language of [R.C. 2945.481(A)(2)], the prosecution may

move for a deposition, and may request that the deposition be videotaped as described, and

the court ‘shall’ grant those motions . . . .” Id. at ¶ 69. Such a motion “does not trigger the

requirements of R.C. 2945.481(E).” Id. “The requirements of R.C. 2945.481(E) explicitly

apply only to sections (C) and (D) which qualify testimony given outside the courtroom.” Id.

at ¶ 70. This conclusion is further supported by the plain language of division (F)(2) of the

statute, which states that a “judge who makes any determination regarding . . . the taking of

testimony outside of the room in which a proceeding is being conducted under division (C)

or (D) of this section, shall enter the determination and findings on the record in the

proceeding.” (Emphasis added.). See also State v. Knauff, 2011-Ohio-2725 (4th Dist.)

(R.C. 2945.481 requires case-specific findings of necessity before a judge can utilize closed-

circuit television procedures.).

{¶ 21} The Third District recently compared the language in R.C. 2945.482, which

concerns the testimony of a victim with a developmental disability, with R.C. 2945.481. State

v. Saunders, 2024-Ohio-2224 (3d Dist.), citing State v. Pflug, 2007-Ohio-2037, (6th Dist.)

(also considering a prior version of R.C. 2945.481). Saunders found that the “language in

12
R.C. 2945.482 is closely aligned to the language in R.C. 2945.481, which is the recodified

version of the statute at issue in Self regarding child sex offense victims.” Id. at ¶ 43.

Saunders compared R.C. 2945.482(D) to R.C. 2945.481(C), and R.C. 2945.482(F) to

R.C. 2945.482(E). “In Pflug, the Sixth District examined Craig and Self, then rejected the

defendant’s argument that R.C. 2945.482 is unconstitutional because it allegedly deprived

him of his constitutional right of confrontation.” Saunders at ¶ 43, citing Pflug at ¶ 6, 18-33.

{¶ 22} Finally, as noted above, while Wallace found R.C. 2945.481(C)(1)(a) to be

mandatory, the case involved an interlocutory victim’s rights appeal that did not address the

constitutionality of the statute, and we conclude that any reliance on Wallace by Johnson is

misplaced. Based upon the foregoing, R.C. 2945.481, by its plain language, does not run

afoul of the right to confrontation in the Ohio or U.S. Constitution, but the trial court’s

interpretation of the statute did so in that it failed to comply with the statute’s plain language

and with Craig.

Harmless Error

{¶ 23} We must next determine if the Confrontation Clause violation was harmless

beyond a reasonable doubt. See U.S. v. Moses, 137 F.3d 894 (6th Cir. 1998) (allowing child

witness to testify by closed-circuit television without complying with statutory requirements

was not harmless error where the child provided the only eyewitness testimony and

remaining evidence was of questionable value); Lomholt v. Burt, 219 F.Supp.2d 977

(N.D.Iowa 2002) (finding any Confrontation Clause error from children testifying via closed-

circuit television was harmless where defendant’s confession and other corroborating

evidence was sufficient to sustain conviction). To resolve this issue, we review the evidence

adduced at trial.

13
{¶ 24} Jane Doe testified that Johnson lived in Michigan, and on the weekend of

December 13-15, 2024, she and John Doe had visitation with him. On Sunday, they planned

a trip to the Boonshoft Museum, and while stopped at a Walmart on the way, K.J. called her

and John Doe, which “set [Johnson] off.” According to Jane Doe, K.J. was on speakerphone,

and Johnson began loudly yelling at the children to get off the phone, using profanity. John

Doe was in the front seat, and Jane Doe, who was “really scared,” was in the back seat. The

children ended the call, and K.J. then texted them that “everything was going to be all right.”

{¶ 25} After the call, Jane Doe testified, Johnson was driving “a little bit crazy” and

swerving back and forth across the road. Jane Doe was nervous and feared “we were going

to crash.” Johnson did not try to hurt her or John Doe. Jane Doe testified that she “didn’t

really think he was going to hurt us in any way,” and she stated that he has never spanked

her or her brother. She testified that K.J. had advised the children that “if anything felt bad”

to make a recording of what was happening so K.J. could “send it to her lawyer because she

didn’t want us to lie about anything.” Jane Doe then recorded Johnson with her Apple watch

without his knowledge. She identified two recordings that were played in court, noting that

in the first recording, which was made on the way to the Boonshoft, she and Johnson were

audible. Jane Doe said that she, Johnson, and John Doe were audible in the second

recording, which was made in the Boonshoft parking lot. According to Jane Doe, they did

not enter the museum because she “didn’t feel safe going in because I was too scared.” She

testified that she believed Johnson was threatening her, John Doe, and K.J., because he

had previously threatened to kill all of them.

{¶ 26} Jane Doe testified that K.J. taught her and John Doe to use code words

regarding Johnson. The word “pickle,” or a pickle emoji in a text message, meant “that you

need somebody to come find you or you need help.” She testified that “banana,” or a banana

14
emoji, signified that the children need the police immediately, and that she texted a banana

emoji to K.J. In response, K.J. asked if the police were needed, and Jane Doe replied

“maybe” because Johnson had gotten out of the car and was smoking a cigarette. Johnson

then “came over to me while I was texting mom because he saw me and I couldn’t text yes

because he was staring directly at my phone.” She identified an exhibit reflecting the text

messages.

{¶ 27} Jane Doe stated that Johnson got back in the car, and after initially refusing to

take the children home, he drove to the Centerville police station where he and K.J. normally

exchange the children. K.J. arrived thereafter, and once in her vehicle, Jane Doe played the

recordings from her watch for her. In turn, K.J. played them for a police officer who had

responded to the scene.

{¶ 28} Jane Doe testified that she and John Doe hugged Johnson goodbye when

they left, and that she “had a really good weekend with him until that day.” She stated that

she loved Johnson and believed that he loved her, but “when he said he threatened to kill

us I thought he was being legit.”

{¶ 29} John Doe testified that he had just turned 12. He stated that on the date of the

incident, when the phone call with K.J. ended, Johnson “started yelling at us and saying that

we don’t spend enough time with him and that sort of stuff” in a voice that was “very high

and angry.” Johnson used profanity and made John Doe feel “scared and threatened a little

bit.” He did not respond to Johnson because he was too scared “because of the stuff he was

saying.” John Doe was not aware that Jane Doe was recording Johnson from the backseat.

He identified his, Johnson’s, and Jane Doe’s voices on the recordings, and he stated that

he believed Johnson would kill him based upon the “way that he was looking at us and the

fact that he’s threatened to do that before.” John Doe stated Johnson was driving fast and

15
swerving the car, and it “made me feel scared for my life.” He did not use his phone or his

watch to call for help because Johnson was watching him, and John Doe worried doing so

would further anger his father. He acknowledged that Johnson never made a threatening

gesture towards him or tried to hit him. He stated that although Johnson verbally indicated

that he would never harm the children, the reassurance “wasn’t really working because he

was still in an angry threatening mood.” When asked if he ever believed Johnson would hurt

him, John Doe responded, “I think maybe. I don’t know exactly but I feel like if he got mad

enough he would hurt us.” John Doe believed that Johnson was going to kill him that day

“because of all the threats that he made and the reckless driving on his part.” He testified

specifically that he was worried about the threats potentially occurring in the future “because

he was still driving so I didn’t think he could do anything but I was worried he would

eventually.” John Doe acknowledged that Johnson had never spanked or hit him, that he

loved his dad, and Johnson loved him.

{¶ 30} After arriving at the police station and hugging Johnson goodbye, John Doe

told Centerville Police Officer Eckenrode what happened in the car. He testified consistently

with Jane Doe about their use of code words, “since this type of stuff has happened before,”

further stating that “banana is I need you to call the cops and pick me up dad’s doing

something scary.”

{¶ 31} K.J. testified that Johnson was scheduled to have visitation with the children

one weekend a month in Ohio, typically at a hotel in Centerville. On the day of the incident,

while her divorce from Johnson was pending, and in the course of her call with the children,

K.J. suggested to Jane Doe that Johnson could renew the family’s Cincinnati Zoo

membership that included the Boonshoft Museum. Although K.J. was on speakerphone,

Johnson spoke to her “through the kids,” stating, “tell your mom that I don’t need to do what

16
she is telling me to do and this is my weekend and she needs to get off the phone.” K.J.

described Johnson as “angry, elevated, loud, profanity, and yelling at me. Just rageful.” After

the call ended, K.J. texted the children, telling them to let her know if they were okay. She

identified a subsequent “text thread” between her and the children. K.J. stated that “banana”

or a banana emoji “was part of a safety system that we had set up the three of us, [Jane

Doe, John Doe,] and myself.” She testified that there “were two emojis and two code words,

pickle and banana.” According to K.J., “Pickle meant that they needed to speak with me,

that they felt unsafe, or needed to contact me for any reason. That was kind of the safer of

the two.” In contrast, “Banana was supposed to be used in case of an absolute emergency.

If we needed to involve law enforcement.” K.J. advised the children “not to ever use” the

banana code “unless they really meant it.”

{¶ 32} K.J. identified a text message that she sent to Jane Doe’s and John Doe’s

phones at 11:48 a.m. that stated: “Do not hesitate to call me back if you feel unsafe or

uncomfortable in any way. You are ALWAYS allowed to reach out to me, will not get in

trouble. I love you both so much. I would appreciate knowing you’re okay after hearing how

Dad is acting right now.” She testified that she received a response from Jane Doe stating,

“I have [two] recorded,” “HE IS CRAZY help,” and a banana emoji. K.J. testified that she

responded, “Police? Yes or no?” After Jane Doe responded “maybe,” K.J. advised her and

John Doe to keep their phones on, and Jane Doe responded, “Ok I’m scared.” Jane Doe

subsequently told K.J., “Meet us at the police station now we are going home.”

{¶ 33} K.J. testified that she called 911. She provided the text messages to Officer

Eckenrode, and Jane Doe played the recordings for K.J. and the officer in the parking lot.

K.J. testified that she believed that when Johnson said, “You have no idea how easy it would

17
be for me to kill all three of you,” he was referring to her and the children. She believed the

threat to be real based upon prior threats “that were very similar to both me and the kids.”

{¶ 34} On cross-examination, K.J. acknowledged that according to an order in place

for almost a year in domestic relations court, Johnson is permitted to contact the children

only between 8:00 and 9:00 p.m. when they are with her, and she may contact the children

only between 8:00 and 9:00 p.m. when they are with him. She acknowledged that she

routinely disregarded the order during Johnson’s visitations, and based on phone records

produced in prior litigation with Johnson, she acknowledged that she called John Doe and

Jane Doe each just before 11:30 a.m. on December 15, 2024. She further acknowledged

that she called her divorce attorney twice at 11:56 a.m. and at 11:58 a.m. prior to calling

911, and that she called the Centerville Police Department at 12:32 p.m., reporting her

suspicion that Johnson was on drugs. K.J. acknowledged that the text messages she

provided to law enforcement were screen shots from her phone, and that she specifically

“called law enforcement because of the banana issue.”

{¶ 35} K.J. stated that when she arrived at the police station, Johnson was there with

the children, and an officer was speaking to him. Upon her arrival, the children came to her

vehicle, and at no point did Johnson speak to K.J. directly or call her phone. She further

acknowledged that at no point in time was Johnson not in the presence of law enforcement

while she was at the police station. According to her testimony, she did not feel any threat

from Johnson at the station. K.J. reiterated that she “was fearful when he was alone with the

kids when I heard how he was speaking to them,” but she stated, “I do feel safe with law

enforcement.” Finally, K.J. acknowledged that she did not hear the recordings that inspired

her fear until Jane Doe played them in K.J.’s vehicle at the police station. When asked if she

had “any knowledge or information from any source . . . that on December 15, that [Johnson]

18
ever physically touched or physically threatened the kids or you,” K.J. responded, “I don’t

have any, no.”

{¶ 36} Officer Chad Eckenrode of the Centerville Police Department testified that on

December 15, 2024, he was dispatched for a welfare check on an eleven-year-old and a

nine-year-old child in the custody of their father. He proceeded to the Centerville police

station to take the call. Eckenrode arrived before Johnson and then immediately contacted

him upon his arrival. Eckenrode was aware that K.J. had reported that she suspected

Johnson was on drugs. He did not notice any illegal substances or odor of alcohol when

speaking to Johnson. Within five minutes, K.J. arrived with another male whom she identified

as her boyfriend. Eckenrode spoke to her also, and he used his body-worn camera to record

the recordings made by Jane Doe. One recording was made at 11:45, and the other at 11:53

a.m.

{¶ 37} Eckenrode stated that the recordings were “disturbing” because Johnson

“made mention that he could have killed all three of them . . . during a heated argument

where he’s using profanity.” Eckenrode said that Johnson was in an agitated state in the

recordings. According to Eckenrode, when confronted, Johnson acknowledged making the

statements but stated “they were just a poor choice of words.” Eckenrode’s interaction with

Johnson was also recorded on his body camera, which was played for the court. After K.J.

took the children home and returned with a protection order, Eckenrode arrested Johnson.

Eckenrode stated that K.J. took screenshots of the text messages from her phone to provide

to police, and he said that what K.J. sent him were the same texts that she showed him in

the parking lot.

{¶ 38} We have viewed Eckenrode’s body camera video. When the officer

approached Johnson’s vehicle, he was outside, on the passenger side, reaching into the

19
backseat and appeared calm. Johnson explained that K.J. had interrupted his limited

parenting time. After the children spoke to K.J. for five to seven minutes, he told them to get

off the phone. Johnson repeatedly expressed frustration with his situation and stated that he

loved his children. Johnson acknowledged that he became upset and raised his voice to his

children. According to Johnson’s testimony, prior to K.J.’s phone call, he and the children

“had a great time,” playing laser tag, going out to dinner, and wrestling on the bed in his

hotel room.

{¶ 39} Eckenrode asked Johnson to wait in his car while he spoke to K.J. Eckenrode’s

body camera footage shows K.J. was seated in the backseat of a vehicle with the door open,

with Jane Doe in the middle seat beside her and John Doe on the other side. On Eckenrode’s

approach to K.J.’s vehicle, she immediately said that Johnson had told the children that if

he “wanted to kill them he would have already done it,” and that she taught them to make

recordings “when he acts like that.” Jane Doe can be seen retrieving a recording from her

watch at K.J.’s instruction, which was played for Eckenrode. Johnson can be heard ranting

in an agitated manner at his children using profanity. He can also be heard telling the children

that if he intended to kill them, they would already be dead, and saying, “Do you know how

easy it would be for me to kill all three of you?” K.J. stated that Johnson had made previous

threats and that an existing protection order prohibited harassment and threats, but the kids

were not included in the order.

{¶ 40} Another profanity-laced recording was played for Eckenrode at K.J.’s urging.

K.J. stated that she did not understand how Johnson’s conduct was not “endangerment at

this point.” Jane Doe can be heard to say that the recordings were made “all in the car just

now.” Eckenrode advised K.J. to remove the children from the scene and return with her

protection order.

20
{¶ 41} Eckenrode then returned to Johnson’s vehicle and removed him. He advised

Johnson about the recordings made by Jane Doe that he had just heard. Johnson

acknowledged that Jane Doe had told him that she was afraid and that he had told the

children that he could harm them “in whichever way I want to whenever I want to” but that

he would never do so. When Eckenrode asked Johnson if he had said, “If I wanted to kill

you, I could kill all of you, but I’m not,” Johnson admitted doing so. After further conversation,

Eckenrode patted Johnson down and walked him to his cruiser.

Jane Doe and John Doe

{¶ 42} The record reflects that Jane and John Doe were critical witnesses in the

State’s case to establish Johnson’s guilt. They testified regarding Johnson’s conduct, and

they identified Johnson’s voice on the recordings Jane Doe made on her watch. We must

determine if their testimony was prejudicial. This leads us first to K.J.’s testimony

authenticating the text message exchange between her and the children.

{¶ 43} “Authentication is governed by Evid.R. 901.” State v. Goings, 2025-Ohio-485,

¶ 31 (2d Dist.). “Evid.R. 901(B) provides examples of several ways that the authentication

requirement may be satisfied. The most common method is oral testimony that a matter is

what it is claimed to be under Evid.R. 901(B)(1).” Id. at ¶ 32, citing State v. Quarles, 2015-

Ohio-3050, ¶ 34 (2d Dist.), and State v. Renner, 2013-Ohio-5463, ¶ 30 (2d Dist.). Generally,

“‘in most cases involving electronic print media, i.e., texts, instant messaging, and e-mails,

the photographs taken of the print media or the printouts of those conversations are

authenticated, introduced, and received into evidence through the testimony of the recipient

of the messages.’” Id., quoting State v. Irwin, 2015-Ohio-195, ¶ 21 (2d Dist.), quoting State

v. Roseberry, 2011-Ohio-5921, ¶ 75 (8th Dist.) Here, K.J. authenticated the text messages

exchanged between her and Jane Doe.

21
{¶ 44} An authenticated document, however, “may be inadmissible if its contents

violate the hearsay rules.” Quarles at ¶ 36. Hearsay “‘is defined as ‘a statement, other than

one made by the declarant while testifying at the trial or hearing, offered in evidence to prove

the truth of the matter asserted.’” Id., quoting Evid.R. 801(C). “In general, hearsay is not

admissible.” Id., citing Evid.R. 802. While Ohio does provide exceptions to the hearsay rule

through specifically enumerated categories in Evidence Rules 803, 804, 807, and 801(D),

those exceptions are not applicable here. Put differently, Jane Doe’s statements to K.J. in

the text message exchange regarding Johnson’s conduct, while authenticated by K.J., were

inadmissible hearsay.

{¶ 45} We are then left to consider the testimony and body camera video of Officer

Eckenrode. As discussed above, Eckenrode testified and the body camera video reflected

that Johnson admitted making the threatening statements that served as the basis of his

charges. In other words, the only evidence against Johnson consisted of his admissions.

{¶ 46} “The ‘corpus delicti’ of a crime means the body or substance of the crime, and

it consists of two elements: (1) the act, and (2) the criminal agency of the act.” State v.

Flucas, 2018-Ohio-3340, ¶ 14 (12th Dist.), citing State v. Maranda, 94 Ohio St. 364,

paragraph one of the syllabus (1916). “It has long been established as a general rule in Ohio

that there must be some evidence outside of a confession, tending to establish the corpus

delicti, before such confession is admissible.” Maranda at paragraph two of the syllabus.

“‘The doctrine * * * was born out of great caution by the courts, in consideration

of certain cases of homicide wherein’” a defendant’s confession was used to

convict him of a crime that never occurred. [State v. Morgan, 2014-Ohio-250,

¶ 16 (12th Dist.), quoting Maranda at 370 ]. However, given the procedural

safeguards afforded defendants in modern criminal practice, “the practicality

22
of the rule has come into serious question.” [State v. Gray, 2012-Ohio-4769,

¶ 27 (12th Dist.)]. Consequently, the Ohio Supreme Court has indicated that

although the corpus delicti rule remains applicable, it need not be applied with

a “dogmatic vengeance.” Morgan at ¶ 16. The burden on the state to provide

some evidence of the corpus delicti is minimal and it is sufficient if there is

some evidence outside of the confession that tends to prove some material

element of the crime charged. [State v. Sturgill, 2004-Ohio-6481, ¶ 9-10

(12th Dist.)].

Flucas at ¶ 15.

{¶ 47} Given our determination regarding the nature of the remaining evidence

against him, Johnson’s admissions to threatening his children were the only evidence

against him. Put differently, the trial court’s error was not harmless as to Johnson’s

convictions for aggravated menacing as to Jane and John Doe and for domestic violence

(threats) as to Jane Doe.

{¶ 48} Having so concluded, Johnson’s first assignment of error is sustained as to

Jane and John Doe, and we accordingly need not address Johnson’s second assignment of

error as to the children.

K.J.

{¶ 49} We must separately address Johnson’s second assignment of error with

respect to K.J. Johnson argues that the trial court erred in overruling his Crim.R. 29 motion.

{¶ 50} Under Crim.R. 29(A), a court, on motion of a defendant or on its own motion,

“shall order the entry of a judgment of acquittal of one or more offenses charged in the

indictment, information, or complaint, if the evidence is insufficient to sustain a conviction of

such offense or offenses.” “Because a Crim.R. 29 motion tests the sufficiency of the

23
evidence presented at trial, rulings on Crim.R. 29 motions are reviewed under the same

standards that apply to a review for sufficiency of the evidence.” State v. Kennard, 2022-

Ohio-2055, ¶ 17 (2d Dist.) (citing cases).

{¶ 51} “‘A sufficiency of the evidence argument disputes whether the State has

presented adequate evidence on each element of the offense to allow the case to go to the

jury or sustain the verdict as a matter of law.’” Kennard at ¶ 18, quoting State v. Wilson,

2009-Ohio-525, ¶ 10 (2d Dist.), citing State v. Thompkins, 78 Ohio St.3d 380 (1997). “‘When

reviewing a claim as to sufficiency of evidence, the relevant inquiry is whether any rational

factfinder viewing the evidence in a light most favorable to the state could have found the

essential elements of the crime proven beyond a reasonable doubt.’” (Citations omitted.) Id.,

quoting State v. Dennis, 79 Ohio St.3d 421, 430 (1997). “‘An appellate court undertakes de

novo review of the trial court’s decision on a Crim.R. 29(A) motion and will not reverse the

trial court’s judgment unless reasonable minds could only reach the conclusion that the

evidence failed to prove all the elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.’” (Citation

omitted.) State v. Sparks, 2011-Ohio-3868, ¶ 32 (2d Dist.), quoting State v. Turner, 2002 WL

10491, *4 (2d Dist. Jan. 4, 2002).

{¶ 52} R.C. 2903.21(A) proscribes aggravated menacing as follows: “No person shall

knowingly cause another to believe that the offender will cause serious physical harm to the

person or property of the other person . . . or a member of the other person’s immediate

family.”

Ohio courts have found that the offense of aggravated menacing does not

require the state to demonstrate the “‘offender is able to carry out his threat or

that he intends to carry it out or believes himself capable of carrying it out,’ nor

does it ‘require proof that the offender threatened imminent serious physical

24
harm.’” (Emphasis sic.) State v. March-Natali, [2022-Ohio-4061, ¶ 37 (11th

Dist.)], quoting State v. McDonald, [2018-Ohio-3845, ¶ 34 (11th Dist.)]. The

state is required to demonstrate that the victim’s subjective belief is that the

defendant will cause serious physical harm. McDonald at ¶ 34, citing State v.

Gardner, [2017-Ohio-7241, ¶ 21 (8th Dist.)]; State v. Perkins, [2006-Ohio-

3678, ¶ 14 (8th Dist.)]. “[A] person can be convicted of aggravated menacing

even though the person has not made any movement toward carrying out the

threat.” (Further citation omitted.) March-Natali at ¶ 37.

State v. Thomas, 2024-Ohio-5662, ¶ 20 (10th Dist.)

{¶ 53} First, K.J. was not in Johnson’s vehicle during the call she placed to the

children, which was admittedly in a direct and repeated violation of a domestic relations court

order. She characterized Johnson as rageful in that call, but her testimony, which was

consistent with her statements in the body camera video, exclusively expressed concern

about Johnson’s subsequent recorded statements and the “banana issue.” Most

significantly, K.J. acknowledged that she did not learn of the content of those statements

until she was at the police station, and the children were both in her vehicle. At that time,

according to her testimony, she felt safe in the presence of law enforcement, and she was

permitted to remove the children from the scene. K.J. did not have any interaction with

Johnson before he was arrested. Under these circumstances, K.J.’s testimony negates the

elements of aggravated menacing. In other words, the State failed to demonstrate K.J.’s

subjective belief that Johnson would cause serious physical harm to her or the children, and

his conviction for aggravated menacing is not supported by sufficient evidence. The trial

court erred in overruling Johnson’s Crim.R. 29 motion as to the aggravated menacing charge

25
involving K.J., and his second assignment of error is sustained with respect to that

conviction.

Conclusion

{¶ 54} Having sustained Johnson’s first assignment of error, his convictions for

aggravated menacing and domestic violence (threats) as to Jane Doe and his conviction for

aggravated menacing as to John Doe are reversed, and this matter is remanded for a new

trial on those charges. Having sustained Johnson’s second assignment of error with respect

to his conviction for aggravated menacing as to K.J., the conviction is vacated.

.............

LEWIS, P.J., and TUCKER, J., concur.

26

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
Federal and State Courts
Filed
March 6th, 2026
Instrument
Enforcement
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Courts Legal professionals
Geographic scope
National (US)

Taxonomy

Primary area
Criminal Justice
Operational domain
Legal
Topics
Child Testimony Right to Confrontation Appellate Review

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