A former police officer and mentor gets probation—not
prison—after pleading guilty to child sex crimes.
Last year, Augusta cop Jerry Ballinger was arrested and charged
with having sex with a 14-year-old girl. He entered a plea agreement and will
serve his punishment outside the walls of prison.
Some are calling and a slap on the wrist.
Ballinger pleaded guilty in February to one count of aggravated
indecent liberties with a child. And just this week, KAKE’s I-Team was the only
TV crew in Butler County when Ballinger was sentenced to five years probation.
When the I-Team heard that sentence, we dug deeper to find out
what the average sentence is for first time sex offenders.
In Kansas, it's is up to eight years behind bars and the convict
will be placed on the state’s sex offender registry for the rest of their life.
Here’s what Judge David Ricke told the 44-year-old former cop in
court:
“Ballinger falls into a category of offender who present a
problem and concern for society,” he said, “and therefore must be watched
closely the rest of his life and supervised.”
Ballinger worked in law enforcement for more that 20 years. He
met his 14-year-old victim at the Augusta public safety office when she was
volunteering as a junior firefighter.
The girl, a middle school student at the time, testified during
a preliminary hearing that the cop befriended her. She said he took her out to
the country several times and the two had sexual intercourse last year.
The victim’s father said he is furious with the probation
sentence. He said what happened to his little girl will scar her for the rest
of her life.
Assistant Butler County Attorney Cheryl Pierce prosecuted the
case. She said that based on the fact that he’s 44-years-old and was a cop at
the time, and the victim was a 14-year-old girl, Ballinger should be in prison
based on that fact alone.
Butler County Attorney Darrin Divinney told the KAKE I-Team he
entered the plea deal with Ballinger, saying, “Some cases have overwhelming
evidence. This one had only circumstantial evidence. Given that fact, there was
a far greater risk of acquittal.”
Divinney told the court he did not join in the defense request
of just probation, but he also didn’t actively oppose the request.
Judge Ricke ruled that Ballinger would be better served for
treatment on probation instead of behind bars, based on a doctor’s report.
“... The strength of doctor Steffan's evaluation report, which
indicated that defendant was a low risk to reoffend, that the defendant was amenable
to treatment, and that he had a favorable prognosis for treatment, and that he
was favorable candidate for probation."
For many in the community, the sentence was a big
disappointment.