In re A.E.

2023 Ohio 4217
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 22, 2023
Docket112615
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2023 Ohio 4217 (In re A.E.) 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
In re A.E., 2023 Ohio 4217 (Ohio Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

[Cite as In re A.E., 2023-Ohio-4217.]

COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO

EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA

IN RE A.E. : No. 112615 :

:

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION

JUDGMENT: AFFIRMED RELEASED AND JOURNALIZED: November 22, 2023

Civil Appeal from the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas Juvenile Division Case No. DL22105013

Appearances:

Edward F. Borkowski, Jr., for appellant.

Michael C. O’Malley, Cuyahoga County Prosecuting Attorney, and Danielle Muster, Assistant Prosecuting Attorney, for appellee.

MICHAEL JOHN RYAN, J.:

Defendant-appellant, A.E., appeals his adjudication of delinquency on

one count of gross sexual imposition. For the reasons that follow, we affirm. A.E. was charged with two counts of gross sexual imposition. Count 1

alleged gross sexual imposition, a felony of the third degree, in violation of

R.C. 2907.05(A)(4). Count 2 alleged gross sexual imposition, a felony of the fourth

degree, in violation of R.C. 2907.05(A)(1).

The state gave notice that it intended to introduce statements of the

child victim through other witnesses, pursuant to Evid.R. 807. Before trial, the court

held an in camera hearing and found that the victim, age four, was not competent to

testify. The court also heard arguments from the parties regarding the state’s

Evid.R. 807 motion. The court held the motion in abeyance, and the matter

proceeded to trial. During trial, the court granted the state’s motion.

K.B., the child victim’s mother, testified that she and A.E.’s mother

were very close and A.E. or his sister often babysat her two young girls. One Tuesday

in March, K.B. dropped her children off at A.E.’s house; A.E.’s sister was supposed

to babysit. K.B. picked them up the next morning, Wednesday, and took them to

school. That night she gave both girls a bath.

The next day, Thursday, K.B. was getting her daughters ready for a

bath, when her four-year-old daughter said “mommy, [A.E.] did like this to my no-

no spot.” K.B. explained that her daughter made a “flicking motion” with her two

fingers and referred to her vagina as her “no-no spot.” According to K.B., the child

told her that A.E. pulled her pants down. K.B. asked her daughter if A.E. had taken

out his no-no spot and she said no. K.B. asked where A.E.’s mother was when this

happened, and the child said A.E.’s mother was in her bedroom. The child told her mother that this occurred in A.E.’s bedroom while the child’s sister was sleeping.

According to K.B., the child told A.E. to stop, but he did not. A.E. then said, “this

isn’t me,” and left the room. K.B. took her daughter to the hospital immediately after

her disclosure.

K.B. testified that after the disclosure, the child’s daycare teacher told

K.B. that the child had been “down,” whiny, and refusing to use the bathroom. Soon

after the disclosure, the child was removed from the daycare due to behavioral

issues.

Nia Long, a sexual assault nurse examiner (“SANE”), performed the

examination on the child. According to Long, the child victim told her that she was

at A.E.’s house when he took her to his room and “started playing on her no-no

place” and that she told him to stop but he did not. The child told Long that A.E.

stated “this isn’t me” and then left. Long performed an age-appropriate examination

and found some redness on the labia majora and vestibule area. Because of her age,

the child was not able to give a numerical value to any pain she was having, but she

told Long she was in pain, and Long noted that the child indicated that the pain was

in the same location where Long observed redness. Long testified that redness is

not a “normal finding”; “it’s not consistent with [the child’s] skin color.”

Long testified that the child’s demeanor during the exam was normal,

other than the child being sleepy. Long acknowledged that the redness could have

been caused by something other than a sexual assault. Re’Gine Wells was the Cuyahoga County Division of Children and

Family Services (“CCDCFS” or “agency”) social worker assigned to the case. During

her brief interview with the child, she asked the child if anyone touched her “no-no”

spot or her “booty.” At first the child said no, but then disclosed that A.E. had

touched her “no-no” spot. The child told Wells that this happened in A.E.’s bedroom

and it was just the two of them. She also told the social worker that she felt sad and

that her “no-no” spot felt “hurtful.” Wells testified that the child told her that A.E.

had stated that “it wasn’t him.” Wells testified that when the child told her what had

happened to her she became very soft spoken, “shut down,” and walked out of the

interview room. On cross-examination, Wells testified that the child initially

answered “no” when she asked if anyone touched her and then mentioned A.E.

The child’s preschool teacher testified that the child’s father died in

February; since then, the child had been “very clingy” and that “[s]he wanted her

mom a lot, didn’t want to use the bathroom, and she cried a lot.” The child had “been

doing this for a while after her father passed away.”

The investigating detective, Detective James Seawright, testified that

he spoke with the child’s mother, A.E., and A.E.’s mother. Seawright also performed

a buccal swab on A.E. and sent it for analysis.

Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigations analyst Andrea Dennis

explained the steps for generating traditional and Y-STR DNA analysis. She testified

that she tested skin swabs of the child’s external genitalia and inner thigh. Dennis

testified that there was not enough DNA to be able to create a profile for identification. She testified that there was a Y-STR profile from a male, but there

was not enough to identify a person.1

A.E.’s 19-year-old sister, I.E., testified that she would babysit the child

and her sister, often overnight. I.E. would take the children to her room, where they

would watch television and fall asleep. According to I.E., she last babysat for the

victim in February, not March, when this was said to have occurred. I.E. explained

that her room was on the first floor of the house and that the victim would never go

upstairs because there was nothing up there besides A.E.’s room, which no one went

into because it was dirty. The last time I.E. babysat the children, A.E. was at home,

but he spent the night in his room. I.E. testified she was with the children the entire

time except when she was in the shower.

The trial court adjudicated A.E. delinquent of both counts of gross

sexual imposition and imposed a consecutive suspended Ohio Department of Youth

Services (“ODYS) commitment. The court also placed A.E. on a single term of

community-control sanctions.

A.E. filed a notice of appeal.

In June 2023, after the parties filed their appellate briefs, this court

sua sponte ordered the parties to brief the issue of whether the trial court’s

delinquency adjudication and disposition, which imposed a single term of a

community-control sanctions, was a final, appealable order. The parties submitted

1 Dennis’s testimony was during a time in the trial that the audio recording was not

working. The trial court summarized Dennis’s testimony on the record. briefs, and this court dismissed the appeal for lack of a final appealable order,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2023 Ohio 4217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-ae-ohioctapp-2023.