State v. Bender

2025 Ohio 760
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 6, 2025
Docket2024CA0019
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2025 Ohio 760 (State v. Bender) 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. Bender, 2025 Ohio 760 (Ohio Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Bender, 2025-Ohio-760.]

COURT OF APPEALS COSHOCTON COUNTY, OHIO FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

STATE OF OHIO JUDGES: Hon. William B. Hoffman, P.J. Plaintiff-Appellee Hon. Kevin W. Popham, J. Hon. David M. Gormley, J. -vs-

DAKOTA G. BENDER Case No. 2024CA0019

Defendant-Appellant OPINION

CHARACTER OF PROCEEDINGS: Appeal from the Coshocton County Court of Common Pleas, Case No. 23 CR 0059

JUDGMENT: Affirmed

DATE OF JUDGMENT ENTRY: March 6, 2025

APPEARANCES:

For Plaintiff-Appellee For Defendant-Appellant

CHRISHANA L. CARROLL CHRISTOPHER BAZELEY Assistant Prosecuting Attorney 9200 Montgomery Road, Suite 8A 318 Chestnut Street Cincinnati, Ohio 45242 Coshocton, Ohio 43812 Hoffman, P.J. {¶1} Defendant-appellant Dakota Bender appeals the judgment entered by the

Coshocton County Common Pleas Court convicting him following his pleas of guilty to

four counts of unlawful sexual conduct with a minor (R.C. 2907.04(A), (B)(1)) and

sentencing him to an aggregate prison term of fifty-four months. Plaintiff-appellee is the

State of Ohio.

STATEMENT OF THE FACTS AND CASE

{¶2} In November of 2020, Appellant, who was eighteen years old, was living in

the same home as the victim, who was thirteen years old. Appellant engaged in a sexual

relationship with the victim from November of 2020, to May of 2022. Appellant was

indicted by the Coshocton County Grand Jury with four counts of unlawful sexual conduct

with a minor.

{¶3} Appellant entered a plea of guilty to all four counts of the indictment. The

trial court convicted Appellant upon his pleas, and sentenced Appellant to an aggregate

term of incarceration of fifty-four months.

{¶4} It is from the July 30, 2024 judgment of the trial court Appellant prosecutes

his appeal, assigning as error:

THE TRIAL COURT COMMITTED REVERSIBLE ERROR WHEN IT

FAILED TO ALLOW BENDER OR HIS ATTORNEY TO RESPOND TO THE

VICTIM IMPACT STATEMENT.

{¶5} Appellant argues he was denied his right to respond to the victim impact

statement, which was read into the record at sentencing. We disagree. {¶6} R.C. 2930.14(B) provides:

(B) The court shall consider a statement made by a victim or victim's

representative under division (A) of this section along with other factors that

the court is required to consider in imposing sentence or in determining the

order of disposition. If the statement includes new material facts, the court

shall not rely on the new material facts unless it continues the sentencing

or dispositional proceeding or takes other appropriate action to allow the

defendant or alleged juvenile offender an adequate opportunity to respond

to the new material facts.

{¶7} Appellant cites State v. Campbell, 2000-Ohio-183, for the proposition if he

was denied his right to respond to the victim impact statement, prejudice is presumed and

we must remand for resentencing. We disagree. Campbell did not address the rights

provided by R.C. 2930.14(B), but rather considered the defendant’s right of allocution

provided by Crim. R. 32(A)(1), which requires the trial court to “address the defendant

personally and ask if he or she wishes to make a statement in his or her own behalf or

present any information in mitigation of punishment.” R.C. 2930.14(B) does not provide

a second absolute “right of allocution” as suggested by Appellant. In contrast to Crim. R.

32, the statute does not require the trial court to ask the defendant personally if he or she

wishes to respond to the victim impact statement. Rather, the statute requires that before

the trial court may rely on new material facts presented in the victim impact statement,

the trial court must give the defendant an opportunity to respond to the new material facts, whether by continuing the hearing or other means. We find Campbell inapplicable to the

instant case.

{¶8} The victim impact statement was read into the record as follows:

Dakota, for the past three and a half years, roughly, I have dealt with

pain, fear, sadness, confusion, but mostly anger. I hate you for what you

did to me. But I hate you more for the fact that you got my trust and you

took it to your advantage. At one point in my life, you were my best friend,

and I trusted you with my life. You were my big brother, the person I trusted

to keep me safe and protected, until you were the one I needed protected

from. Because of you, I was put through hell. Because of you, I was scared

for my life. I had just turned 13 years old when everything started. I was

still a child, and you took something from me that I can never get back.

People have called me names. People have told me that I’m lying. People

have even put me down for speaking up against you, and I can’t blame them

because they don’t know the real you, just like me before everything

happened. I never would have thought that you would do what you did to

me. I never knew why you did it, and I may never know. But I do know –

what I do know is what you did to me has ruined my life. Because of you, I

will forever keep my guard up and watch my surroundings closely. Because

of you, I will never be able to fully trust another person. Because of you,

there will always be this fear that never goes away. You hurt me more than

anyone in my life. I remember the nights I would cry myself to sleep, wondering if it was ever going to end. Wondering why you did it. I can

never truly put into words how bad this has affected my life, but I can say

those years you did those things to me were the worst years I have ever

experienced in my life.

{¶9} Sent. Tr. 5-6.

{¶10} The trial court stated at the sentencing hearing:

In reviewing the pre-sentence investigation report, the Court finds

from the official version of the facts of the offense that the defendant was

living in the same home as the victim, [name omitted], at the time of the

commission of the four offenses. And in that sense, Dakota Bender was

provided with a place to live. The defendant abused that trust in order to

essentially talk [the victim] into a relationship. And it’s clear, not only from

the indictment, from the pre-sentence investigation report, but also from the

victim impact statement, that [the victim] was a child of tender years. She

was only 13 years old.

The Court does note the harmful impact of these types of offenses

on a child of such tender age.

Mr. Bender, after you have completed your first offense here with a

13-year-old girl, you should have known better. Yet, you continued to

perpetrate these crimes against a child of tender years. And the victim

impact statement as set forth from the witness stand and pre-sentence investigation report notes the nature of harm cause to a child in these

situations.

{¶11} Sent. Tr. 6-7, 9.

{¶12} The victim impact statement recounts the mental and emotional effect of

Appellant’s actions on the victim, but does not set forth new material facts which the trial

court relied upon in sentencing Appellant. Compare, State v. Daugherty, 2002-Ohio-1183

(11th Dist.) (victim commented about prior violent conduct by the defendant, despite no

prior convictions of abusing the victim); State v. Ali, 2019-Ohio-3864 (10th Dist.) (victim’s

statement referenced presence of his young child during the robbery); State v. Sturgeon,

138 Ohio App. 3d 882 (1st Dist.

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2025 Ohio 760, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bender-ohioctapp-2025.