Arraignment shall be conducted in open court, and shall consist of reading the indictment, information or complaint to the defendant, or stating to the defendant the substance of the charge, and calling on the defendant to plead thereto. The defendant may in open court waive the reading of the indictment, information, or complaint. The defendant shall be given a copy of the indictment, information, or complaint, or shall acknowledge receipt thereof, before being called upon to plead.
When a defendant not represented by counsel is brought before a court and called upon to plead, the judge or magistrate shall cause the defendant to be informed and shall determine that the defendant understands all of the following:
If there are multiple defendants to be arraigned, the judge or magistrate may by general announcement advise them of their rights as prescribed in this rule.
Ohio. Crim. R. 10
Staff Note (July 1, 2008 Amendment)
In 1995 the Ohio Supreme Court authorized video teleconferencing for arraignments as long as it was "functionally equivalent to live, in-person arraignment" (State v. Phillips, 1995 Ohio 171). This amendment will codify Philips by explicitly giving a court the option of using video teleconferencing at arraignments, and will clarify that if video teleconferencing is used, the procedure must conform to the requirements of Rule 43.