State v. Balinski

2022 Ohio 3227
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 15, 2022
Docket110929
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2022 Ohio 3227 (State v. Balinski) 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
State v. Balinski, 2022 Ohio 3227 (Ohio Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Balinski, 2022-Ohio-3227.]

COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO

EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA

STATE OF OHIO, :

Plaintiff-Appellee, : No. 110929 v. :

RAYMOND BALINSKI, :

Defendant-Appellant. :

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION

JUDGMENT: AFFIRMED RELEASED AND JOURNALIZED: September 15, 2022

Criminal Appeal from the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas Case No. CR-19-643692-A

Appearances:

Michael C. O’Malley, Cuyahoga County Prosecuting Attorney, and Carl J. Mazzone, Assistant Prosecuting Attorney, for appellee.

Law Office of John T. Forristal and John T. Forristal, for appellant.

EILEEN A. GALLAGHER, P.J.:

Defendant-appellant Raymond Balinski appeals his conviction for

domestic violence after a bench trial before the Cuyahoga County Court of Common

Pleas. He contends that his conviction was not supported by sufficient evidence and was against the manifest weight of the evidence. For the reasons that follow, we

affirm the conviction.

I. Factual Background and Procedural History

On December 11, 2019, a Cuyahoga County Grand Jury indicted

Raymond Balinski for three counts of rape, one count of attempted rape, one count

of felonious assault and one count of domestic violence. Each of the rape,

attempted-rape and felonious-assault charges carried a notice of prior conviction

and a repeat-violent-offender specification. The domestic-violence charge also

carried a notice of prior conviction. The charges all related to alleged conduct with

a woman named K.K. between April 27, 2019 and July 30, 2019.

At the time the indictment was filed, Balinski was in federal custody.

After lengthy pretrial proceedings, the case proceeded to a bench trial on July 8,

2021.

The State’s Case

The state presented one witness at trial — K.K.

K.K. testified that she has lived at the same address in Cleveland for

“pretty much” her entire life, including from April through August 2019. She said

she lived on the bottom floor of a duplex. She said her parents lived on the upper

floor of the home and she had a lot of contact with them.

K.K. testified that during the spring and summer of 2019, she worked

as a caregiver in a nursing home. She said she did not have a driver’s license, so her

father drove her to work every day. K.K. said that in February or March 2019, she met Raymond Balinski

on the social-media platform Facebook. She said that they communicated through

Facebook and they also spoke over the phone. She testified that she told Balinski

where she lived and they both expressed romantic interest in each other. K.K.

testified that Balinski came to her house in April 2019 after “a couple weeks” of

talking with him, and she invited him in. K.K. said they talked and had consensual

sex that evening and Balinski stayed the night.

K.K. testified that Balinski stayed at her house the next day, too. She

said Balinski told her that “he had no place to go and he was going to work real close

to my house so he was just going to stay at my house.” K.K. said that she and Balinski

slept on the same futon that night without engaging in any sexual activities.

K.K. testified that in the morning of the next day, she told Balinski he

could not stay with her and he had to leave. She said she told him that he could not

live with her “unless you live here and pay rent.” She said Balinski responded, “Oh,

I’ll pay rent.” She testified that this statement did not change her opinion about

Balinski staying in her home. K.K. testified that Balinski then went to work. She

admitted that her parents were home while Balinski was at work but she did not go

upstairs and tell her parents that a man intended to live with her against her wishes.

K.K. testified that she allowed Balinski back into her home when he

returned that day. She said that she did so “[b]ecause I was scared of him, just the

way he was. * * * Because of the way he would call me and talk to me and he was

very moody.” K.K. also said that she was aware that Balinski had left some items in her home, “so I figured he had to come back and pick up his tools and his bag.” K.K.

testified that she told Balinski to leave but he did not leave.

K.K. described the next several months with Balinski as “87 days of

hell.” She testified that while Balinski was living with her, she “pretended like

everything was okay, but it was awful.” Specifically, she described the following:

So he would jump on top of me and he would look at porn on his phone and then he would have sex with me, and I mean hard. I’m saying two, three, four times a day. I would go to work, he would call me and I’d have to take [a] picture of me at work, send him pictures of when I would be going to and from work. I would leave every day with my dad because he drove me and we’d go to Marc’s and get a bite to eat, maybe stop at the ATM, maybe stop and get something, get to work a few minutes early just to have that 10, 15 minutes for myself.

So I would be at work and he was constantly texting and calling me, accusing me of cheating on him, sleeping with people at my work. I would come home; he would jump on top of me. I would come home and sometimes he would inject his finger up inside my vagina and twirl it to see if I had sex with anyone else while I was at work. He did that multiple times. And then he would make me — he would have a bath drawn for me and force me to go in the bathtub and do other things to him, too.

He also wouldn’t let me smoke cigarettes and when he would light them, he would smoke my cigarettes and throw them at me when they were lit.

He also had me buy him drugs at 2, 3, 4 in the morning, use my money and go buy him drugs. When I’d return home, he would check me for his crack cocaine on my whole body, in my hair and everywhere on my whole body, and then he would say I took some of the drugs and he would jump on top of me and put his hand over my mouth and I couldn’t breathe and then beat me so bad in my stomach that I had broken ribs about three weeks after he was staying with me. I never went to the hospital because, one, I didn’t have insurance; and two, I was scared that he would kill me or my family.

He also threw me against the fridge, locked me in the bathroom. I would have to put a towel down. I’d turn on the bathtub and I would sit there crying for help. Nobody could hear me. It’s 2, 3 in the morning. I would try to run away; he would follow me.

He threw me in the closet in the extra bedroom. He would throw me in there. I had to sit in there and he was — I don’t know if he was crazy or what — but he was not normal where he heard noises in the house and he thought someone was coming after me. Hallucinating. That’s the word I’m looking for. But he would take it out on me and just beat me and punch me and hit me. I had a black eye; he hit my back. I couldn’t even leave the house. Every time I left the house, he would run after me, grab me by my hair. I don’t know how many times my hair was falling out. Just the bruises and the throwing.

I made phone calls for him — he would have me call to see if his urine was clean or dirty — and if I didn’t make the right phone call, he would get crazy and pick me up and throw me and beat me up. But the sex was at least three to four times a day, daily, for 87 days when he was in my life.

K.K. testified on direct examination that Balinski never used any

physical violence to induce a sexual encounter with her but she said that no sexual

encounters after the first couple times were consensual.

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Bluebook (online)
2022 Ohio 3227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-balinski-ohioctapp-2022.