State v. Kamer

2022 Ohio 2070
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 17, 2022
DocketWD-20-084
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 2022 Ohio 2070 (State v. Kamer) 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. Kamer, 2022 Ohio 2070 (Ohio Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Kamer, 2022-Ohio-2070.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT WOOD COUNTY

State of Ohio Court of Appeals No. WD-20-084

Appellee Trial Court No. 2019CR0515

v.

Gregory Scott Kamer, Jr. DECISION AND JUDGMENT

Appellant Decided: June 17, 2022

*****

Paul A. Dobson, Wood County Prosecuting Attorney, and David T. Harold, Assistant Prosecuting Attorney, for appellee.

Michael H. Stahl, for appellant.

***** MAYLE, J.

{¶ 1} Appellant, Gregory Kamer Jr., appeals the November 6, 2020 judgment of

the Wood County Court of Common Pleas sentencing him to four consecutive sentences

of life in prison without the possibility of parole, plus 30 months. Because Kamer was

prejudiced by the trial court admitting other-acts testimony for a purpose not permitted by

Evid.R. 404(B) and improperly admitting numerous incriminating statements through hearsay testimony—and the state did not prove that these errors were harmless beyond a

reasonable doubt—we reverse.

I. Background and Facts

{¶ 2} In November 2019, Kamer was indicted on 12 charges related to the sexual

abuse of K.K. (“the child”), who was five years old at the time of the offenses. Counts 1,

2, 3, 4, 7, 8, 9, and 10 charged Kamer with rape in violation of R.C. 2907.02(A)(1)(b),

each a first-degree felony; counts 5 and 11 charged him with gross sexual imposition in

violation of R.C. 2907.05(A)(4), each a third-degree felony; and counts 6 and 12 charged

him with disseminating matter harmful to juveniles in violation of R.C. 2907.31(A)(1),

each a fourth-degree felony. The charges in the indictment were divided over two

periods of time; the state alleged that counts 1 through 6 happened “[o]n or about

December 1, 2018 to February 28, 2019[,]” and that counts 7 through 12 happened “[o]n

or about March 1, 2019 to July 29, 2019[.]”

{¶ 3} Kamer’s case was tried to a jury in October 2020. The state presented the

testimony of C.K. (“mother”), the child’s mother; the child; Alison Alstott, a social

worker; detective Matt Simon of the Lake Township Police Department (“LTPD”);

Abigail Grieser, a child abuse investigator from the Wood County Department of Job and

Family Services (“JFS”); Alicia Martinez, a sexual assault nurse examiner (“SANE”);

and G.K., Kamer’s former stepdaughter. Kamer presented the testimony of Dr. Gregory

Forgac, a psychologist, and testified in his own behalf. The following facts were adduced

at trial.

2. A. The state’s case

1. Mother’s testimony

{¶ 4} The state began its case by presenting mother’s testimony. Mother testified

that, at the time of the events alleged in the indictment, she was in a relationship with

Kamer, and they were living at the motel where mother worked. The child, who was

mother’s child from a different relationship, and a younger daughter (“sibling”) that

mother and Kamer shared also lived with them. Mother said that the child and Kamer

had a good relationship; the child “wanted [Kamer] to be her dad * * *” and “liked the

thought of having a dad.” From the time that they moved into the motel in November or

December of 2018 until approximately February or March of 2019, Kamer watched the

children while mother worked her shifts at the motel. After that, mother put the children

in daycare, so Kamer no longer watched them while she worked.

{¶ 5} Altogether, Kamer lived with mother and the children in three different

rooms at the motel. The first room that they lived in was a “single room with one bed”

that was furnished with a king-sized bed, and that mother outfitted with a toddler bed for

the child and a pack ‘n’ play for the sibling. Because of the size of the room, mother said

that it was “a lot harder to box off * * *” the children’s area like she later did in the larger

rooms. Although the children were in the same room as mother and Kamer, mother said

that the child never saw her and Kamer having sex. The adults took preventative

measures to conceal their sexual activity from the children, including waiting until the

girls were asleep to have sex, staying under the covers during sex, leaving the TV on, and

3. stacking four or five king-sized pillows to create a wall between them and the children.

Although mother said that there was a “small chance” that the child might have overheard

Kamer telling mother to relax and watch TV while he was performing oral sex on mother,

mother did not “believe there would be a way [the child] would have heard it.”

{¶ 6} When the family moved into the second, slightly bigger room, mother

purchased a cardboard partition “to go in between [the girls’] space and our space just to

try to keep somewhat of privacy * * *” and block a direct line of sight from the children’s

beds to the adults’ bed. The child eventually put a hole in the partition. Mother also said

that the child had a garbage bag on her mattress that mother could hear when the child

got out of bed. Mother insisted that she and Kamer were very careful to conceal their

sexual activity from the child and said, by way of example, that she heard the child get up

one night while she and Kamer were having sex, and that she and Kamer stopped until

the child went back to bed. However, she conceded that if she could hear the child, it

was likely that the child could hear her and Kamer, and if the child were awake, she

could have heard things that mother and Kamer said. Mother said that the child

“[a]bsolutely” did not see mother and Kamer having sex. On cross, though, she

acknowledged that, when the child first disclosed the sexual abuse, the child said that

“this is what mommy and daddy do” while pantomiming intercourse with naked dolls.

{¶ 7} Regarding the child’s disclosure of the abuse, mother said that in August

2019, after Kamer was arrested on a parole violation and no longer lived at the motel, the

child went to a family party with her maternal grandfather and step-grandmother. When

4. mother picked up the child, grandfather and step-grandmother told mother that the child

“came out about something that had happened to her[,]” which was that “Gregory”—i.e.,

Kamer—”was touching her.” She elaborated that the child did not want to discuss the

allegations “too much” because she did not want to upset mother, but said that Kamer

“was touching her down below and that he had put himself halfway inside of her.”

Mother said that the child referred to the touching as a “secret game” that she and Kamer

played, and when Kamer called from jail that night, mother told him that the child

“couldn’t wait to play their secret game. [Kamer] like kind of chuckled and said, ‘Oh,

she’s so silly.’” After that, mother remembered “going off” on Kamer.

{¶ 8} The day after the child’s disclosure of the abuse, mother took her to the

hospital for an examination. According to mother, someone was going to “open a case

and look into all of it * * *” because the things that the child reported during the exam

were “too alarming to having [sic] just seen anything.”

{¶ 9} As a result of the child’s disclosures, the LTPD and JFS opened

investigations of the matter. Grieser, the JFS worker who conducted the forensic

interview of the child, spoke with mother after the interview and showed mother the

pictures that the child drew. At trial, the state presented the drawings as an exhibit. One

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2022 Ohio 2070, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-kamer-ohioctapp-2022.