Crime | pacemakers Man's Pacemaker Data May Sink Him in Court Judge rules it can be present in Ohio arson case By Newser Editors and Wire Services Posted Jul 12, 2017 8:28 AM CDT Copied File photo of pacemakers. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy) A judge in Ohio has decided that data from the pacemaker of a man accused of setting his Ohio house on fire in 2016 can be presented as evidence at his trial, reports the AP. The Hamilton-Middletown Journal News reports that the judge ruled Tuesday in Ross Compton's case. The 59-year-old Middletown man has pleaded not guilty to aggravated arson and insurance fraud charges. Police say Compton described packing belongings when he saw the fire, throwing them out of a window and carrying them to his car. Investigators say a cardiologist reviewed Compton's cardiac device and concluded his medical condition made the actions he described "highly improbable." Ross's attorney had argued that the data should be thrown out because searching the device violated Compton's constitutional rights, but the judge disagreed. Read These Next White House isn't happy about the pick for the Nobel Peace Prize. Multiple people are dead or missing after an explosion in Tennessee. Trump's public plea to Bondi was reportedly meant to be private. Trump administration begins federal layoffs amid shutdown. Report an error