Brooklyn v. Qasem

2025 Ohio 1659
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 8, 2025
Docket114204
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Ohio 1659 (Brooklyn v. Qasem) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brooklyn v. Qasem, 2025 Ohio 1659 (Ohio Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

[Cite as Brooklyn v. Qasem, 2025-Ohio-1659.]

COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO

EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA

CITY OF BROOKLYN, :

Plaintiff-Appellee, : No. 114204 v. :

HADDI H. QASEM, :

Defendant-Appellant. :

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION

JUDGMENT: VACATED RELEASED AND JOURNALIZED: May 8, 2025

Criminal Appeal from the Parma Municipal Court Case No. 23CRB02684

Appearances:

James J. McDonnell, Prosecutor for City of Brooklyn, for appellee.

Anthony & Zomoida, LLC and David S. Anthony, for appellant.

EILEEN A. GALLAGHER, A.J.:

Haddi H. Qasem (“Qasem”) appeals his conviction for domestic

violence. After reviewing the evidence and relevant case law, we vacate Qasem’s

conviction and sentence. I. Facts and Procedural History

On July 25, 2023, Qasem was charged in Parma Municipal Court by

the City of Brooklyn with one count of domestic violence in violation of R.C.

2919.25(A), a first-degree misdemeanor, against his oldest son, M.Q.

On January 22, 2024, the case proceeded to a bench trial before a

magistrate. The magistrate found Qasem guilty of domestic violence in violation of

R.C. 2919.25(A), issued a judgment entry journalizing the guilty finding and referred

Qasem to the probation department for a presentence investigation and report.

On January 26, 2024, the magistrate issued findings of fact and

conclusions of law. The magistrate found that

(1) M.Q. and Qasem are family or household members. (2) That Qasem caused physical harm to M.Q. (3) This conduct occurred in Brooklyn, Ohio.

The magistrate also determined that Qasem failed to prove any affirmative defenses.

On February 12, 2024, Qasem filed two objections to the magistrate’s

decision. First, the State failed to prove that the offense occurred on July 17, 2023,

as charged. Second, the magistrate’s finding that Qasem failed to prove any

affirmative defenses was against the manifest weight of the evidence.

On March 1, 2024, the trial court overruled Qasem’s objections and

adopted the recommendation of the magistrate.

On April 1, 2024, the magistrate held a sentencing hearing and issued

a recommendation on April 2, 2024, in which he stated that, after reviewing the

evidence, the presentence report, and the guidelines of R.C. 2929.22, he recommended the following sentence: “180 days in jail: 177 suspended and three

days to be served; $1,000 fine with $750 suspended and 18 months of community

control.”

On April 8, 2024, the trial court adopted the magistrate’s April 2,

2024 sentencing recommendation in its entirety.

On May 3, 2024, Qasem filed a motion to stay the judgment, which

was granted by the trial court on May 6, 2024.

Also on May 6, 2024, Qasem filed his first notice of appeal that this

court, sua sponte, dismissed for lack of a final, appealable order. Brooklyn v.

Qasem, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 113899 (May 7, 2024) (motion no. 574277). We

found the trial court’s judgment merely adopted the magistrate’s decision and that,

to be a final, appealable order the sentencing entry must have the fact of conviction,

the sentence, the clerk’s file stamp, and the signature of the judge. We emphasized

that the magistrate only has power to recommend the sentence, not impose the

sentence.

On June 5, 2024, Qasem filed a motion to correct the record

requesting the trial court issue a final appealable order.

On June 20, 2024, the trial court issued a judgment entry adopting

the magistrate’s findings including the conviction, findings of fact and conclusions

of law and the sentencing recommendation, found Qasem guilty of domestic

violence in violation of R.C. 2929.25(A) and then imposed the sentence previously given: 180 days in jail: 177 suspended and three days to be served; $1,000 fine with

$750 suspended and 18 months of community control.

Qasem filed his notice of appeal of the trial court’s June 20, 2024

judgment entry. On appeal, Qasem raises one assignment of error for our review:

Qasem’s domestic violence conviction is not supported by the manifest weight of

evidence.

II. Trial Testimony

The following testimony was elicited at trial.

A. Sarah Andrews

Sarah Andrews (“Andrews”) is the mother of the ten-year-old child

victim, M.Q. Qasem and Andrews married in 2014. Three boys were born of that

union including the victim, M.Q. Qasem filed for divorce in June 2021.

Andrews testified that in May 2021, she obtained a protection order

after Qasem was arrested for domestic violence. At that time Qasem permanently

left the marital home.

As of June 2023, Qasem and Andrews had a court-ordered shared

parenting plan for their children. Part of the plan required the children to be

exchanged at the Brooklyn Police Station. Andrews would wait with the children

inside the station and, when Qasem pulled up, the children would go outside and get

into his car. Andrews and Qasem had no contact.

On July 17, 2023, Andrews was with the children at the Brooklyn

Police Station and, after the children left with Qasem, she went home and started to receive distressing phone calls from all three children using Qasem’s phone and with

Qasem heard in the background. Andrews heard Qasem “yelling, calling my son a

liar” and telling Andrews she needs to parent the children and fix the problems he is

having with them at his house. She heard swearing and name calling and “a lot of

yelling” from the children as well as Qasem. Everybody was crying and screaming.

It was “just chaos.” Andrews was worried about the boys after five or six calls. She

then began recording the calls but did not call the police, nor did she go to Qasem’s

house, because of a protective order and “for [her] own safety [she] won’t go there.”

On July 18, 2023, Andrews received more phone calls in the morning

from their middle child.

Andrews, unsure what to do, reached out to professionals in the

domestic relations court asking for help and provided some of the recordings she

had made.

On July 19, 2023, Andrews waited at the Brooklyn Police Station for

the boys to be brought there by Qasem. According to Andrews, all three boys rushed

into the lobby after Qasem made the exchange. They were all crying but M.Q. was

crying the hardest. M.Q. was visibly upset, hyperventilating and panicking and “he

couldn’t even talk.” The other boys were trying to explain what happened.

On the way home, M.Q. began telling her what happened and, at that

time, she saw “the visible injury.” M.Q. told her that Qasem had bit him in the face,

pulled his hair, grabbed him by the back of his neck, punched him in his leg and

“smacked” him. Upon arriving home, Andrews noticed that M.Q. had urinated in his

pants and defecated himself.

Andrews did a full body examination of M.Q. when they got home.

She noted that there were black-and-blue, raised, welted fingerprints on M.Q.’s

“right butt cheek” and an oval shaped mark on his left cheek with scratching on the

cheek as well. Andrews photographed both areas that day.

After seeing and photographing these marks on M.Q.’s body,

Andrews called Brooklyn police who advised her to take her child to Fairview

Hospital’s pediatric emergency room where M.Q. was interviewed by a sexual

assault nurse examiner (“SANE nurse”).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2025 Ohio 1659, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooklyn-v-qasem-ohioctapp-2025.