State of Indiana v. Harley Perkins ( 2013 )


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  • Pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 65(D), this
    Memorandum Decision shall not be
    regarded as precedent or cited before any
    court except for the purpose of establishing              Jun 28 2013, 7:13 am
    the defense of res judicata, collateral
    estoppel, or the law of the case.
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT:                            ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE:
    GREGORY F. ZOELLER                                  THOMAS G. GODFREY
    Attorney General of Indiana                         Anderson, Indiana
    GEORGE P. SHERMAN
    Deputy Attorney General
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    IN THE
    COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
    STATE OF INDIANA,                                   )
    )
    Appellant-Plaintiff,                         )
    )
    vs.                                  )     No. 48A02-1210-CR-823
    )
    HARLEY PERKINS,                                     )
    )
    Appellee-Defendant.                          )
    APPEAL FROM THE MADISON CIRCUIT COURT
    The Honorable Dennis D. Carroll, Judge
    Cause No. 48C06-1208-FD-1471
    June 28, 2013
    MEMORANDUM DECISION - NOT FOR PUBLICATION
    KIRSCH, Judge
    The State appeals the trial court’s order granting a mistrial and dismissing the charges
    against Harley Perkins (“Perkins”), and it raises the following issue: whether the trial court
    erred when it dismissed the charges against Perkins after granting his motion for mistrial.
    We affirm.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    On June 21, 2012, Perkins began his placement at the Madison County Work Release
    Center (“Work Release”), after serving a portion of a misdemeanor sentence at the Madison
    County Jail. As part of his Work Release placement, he signed a contract, which included a
    term that he could never be out of the Work Release facility for sixteen hours or more in a
    twenty-four-hour period. He understood that a failure to return to the Work Release center
    would constitute a violation of the rules.
    On that same date, Correctional Officer Thomas Buckner gave Perkins a two-hour
    “intake pass,” which is permitted to all new residents and allows them to leave the facility
    and obtain clothing and personal belongings. Tr. at 28. Perkins left and never returned to the
    facility. Later, the State charged Perkins with Class D felony failure to return to lawful
    detention,1 and it alleged Perkins was an habitual offender.2 A jury trial was held in
    September 2012.
    Perkins testified at trial, explaining that upon getting the intake pass, he got a ride
    from the Work Release facility to the home of his friends Amy Stewart and Jimmy Jones,
    1
    See 
    Ind. Code § 35-44-3-5
    (c).
    2
    See 
    Ind. Code § 35-50-2-8
    .
    2
    where his fiancée Destiny Dudley (“Dudley”) and their infant child were temporarily
    residing. He visited with Dudley and the baby for forty-five minutes or so, and then he left
    on his bicycle with plans to go to his father’s house. He was riding his bike doing “tricks”
    through an intersection when he fell over the handlebars and sprained his ankle. Tr. at 84.
    He obtained medical attention for the ankle injury at a hospital. Perkins testified that, while
    there, he called Work Release at approximately 6:30 p.m. and spoke to Officer “Shuler,” who
    advised Perkins that being late to return is a violation of Work Release rules.
    Perkins testified that he realized a rules violation likely meant that he would be
    required to return to the County Jail to serve an additional six months to a year. Rather than
    face that possible consequence, Perkins chose not return to Work Release and “spent a []
    month out with [his] family.” 
    Id. at 83
    . Specifically, he stayed with Dudley and their
    daughter. During the time he was with them, Dudley underwent gall bladder surgery, and
    Perkins took care of her and the child. He also testified that he attempted to find suitable
    housing for Dudley and the child. Dudley testified that Perkins “was going to make an
    arrangement” to turn himself in to authorities. 
    Id. at 74
    . Similarly, Perkins testified that he
    was planning to turn himself in and that he had arranged for his family to contact police
    because he did not have any available minutes on his cell phone to make the phone call.
    After learning that Perkins was staying with Stewart and Jones, Elwood Police
    Detective Scott Bertram and other officers went to that home with a warrant and spoke with
    Stewart, who reported that she did not know in what room Perkins was located in the house.
    3
    Detective Bertram prepared to enter the home with a K-9 partner, when Perkins appeared and
    was arrested without incident.
    In rebuttal to the proposition that Perkins had made arrangements to turn himself in,
    the State called as a witness Detective Bertram, who had located Perkins and served the
    warrant. Detective Bertram explained that he learned of Perkins’s whereabouts by talking
    with Perkins’s father. When he was asked how he came in contact with Perkins’s father,
    Detective Bertram explained that the contact was at the father’s home, stating, “We went to
    his father’s house for two reasons. One was to look for Mr. Perkins and two was to look for
    a methamphetamine lab.” 
    Id. at 110
    . Perkins objected, the parties approached the bench, and
    Perkins moved for a mistrial, which the trial court took under advisement.
    The trial continued, and the State then called as a witness Work Release Officer Ryan
    Sheler, the officer with whom Perkins allegedly had spoken with when he telephoned Work
    Release from the hospital on June 21, 2012. Officer Sheler stated he was at work that day,
    but did not take a call from Perkins and had never had a conversation with him.
    After the State rested, the trial court held a hearing on Perkins’s motion for a mistrial.
    The trial court found that Detective Bertram’s statement about a methamphetamine lab was
    highly prejudicial because it was suspected at Perkins’s father’s house, where evidently
    authorities believed Perkins might be, since that is where they were going to look for him.
    The prosecutor offered admonitions and suggestions to address any prejudice; however, the
    trial court determined that there was no way to adequately cure the effect of the statement on
    4
    the jury. It granted the mistrial at the conclusion of the hearing, and it dismissed the failure
    to return to lawful detention and habitual offender charges. The State now appeals.
    DISCUSSION AND DECISION
    The decision to grant a motion for mistrial lies within the sound discretion of the trial
    court. Pavey v. State, 
    764 N.E.2d 692
    , 698 (Ind. Ct. App. 2002) (citing Palmer v. State, 
    486 N.E.2d 477
    , 483 (Ind. 1985)), trans. denied. The trial court’s decision is afforded great
    deference on appeal because the trial court is in the best position to gauge the surrounding
    circumstances of the event and its impact on the jury. 
    Id.
     (citing Mack v. State, 
    736 N.E.2d 801
    , 803 (Ind. Ct. App. 2000), trans. denied). The declaration of a mistrial is an extreme
    action which is warranted only when no other recourse could remedy the perilous situation.
    
    Id.
     (citing Palmer, 486 N.E.2d at 483).
    Where, as here, a defendant makes a motion for a mistrial, the defendant forfeits the
    right to raise any objection to a new trial on the basis of double jeopardy unless the motion is
    necessitated by governmental conduct that was “intended to ‘goad’ the defendant into
    moving for a mistrial.” Willoughby v. State, 
    660 N.E.2d 570
    , 576 (Ind. 1996). As has been
    stated by our Supreme Court in Willoughby:
    To determine whether a second trial is barred after a defendant’s motion for a
    mistrial, we must examine whether the prosecutor brought about the mistrial
    with the intent to cause termination of the trial. If the State acted with intent to
    force the defendant into moving for a mistrial, the prohibition against double
    jeopardy bars a second prosecution.
    Id.; see also 
    Ind. Code § 35-41-4-3
     (another prosecution is barred if prosecuting authority
    acted with intent to cause termination of trial).
    5
    Here, the State appeals the trial court’s decision to dismiss the criminal charges, and
    thus preclude a second trial, following its granting of his motion for a mistrial. We review a
    trial court’s decision to dismiss a charging information for an abuse of discretion. State v.
    Jones, 
    918 N.E.2d 436
    , 438 (Ind. Ct. App. 2009). We will reverse the trial court only when
    the decision is clearly against the logic and effect of the facts and circumstances. 
    Id.
     Trial
    courts “have the inherent authority to dismiss criminal charges where the prosecution of such
    charges would violate a defendant’s constitutional rights.” 
    Id.
    In its appeal, the State argues that it was error for the trial court to dismiss the charges
    because the State did not intend to force Perkins into moving for a mistrial. However, we
    conclude that the trial court acted properly. A review of the transcript of the hearing on the
    motion for mistrial establishes that, while the State may not have introduced the testimony of
    Detective Bertram specifically so that Perkins would request a mistrial, the State did in fact
    intend that the testimony come into evidence. That is, there is no indication that Detective
    Bertram’s comment about the methamphetamine lab was an utter surprise, a slip out, or was
    otherwise unintended. Rather, the record reflects that the State knew when it called
    Detective Bertram to testify that he was going to testify to the two reasons that the police
    went to Perkins’s father’s home, one of which was to investigate a methamphetamine lab. In
    opposing Perkins’s motion for a mistrial, the prosecutor’s position was that the statement
    possessed some probative value, was not overly prejudicial, and any prejudice could be cured
    by court admonition. Specifically, the prosecutor suggested that the trial court clarify to the
    jury that the statement concerning a methamphetamine lab concerned Perkins’s father only,
    6
    not Perkins. The trial court, however, was unpersuaded that the prejudice could be cured
    because the Detective’s statement clearly tied defendant to his father, and in turn his father to
    a meth lab, which the trial court determined was significantly damaging.
    We find this case to be distinguishable from Willoughby, where the prosecutor
    questioned a police officer about the officer’s investigation of the murder charges and asked
    the officer where the interview with an accomplice had taken place. 660 N.E.2d at 575. The
    officer answered that he had gone to the defendant’s house to talk with the defendant about
    taking a polygraph test, and at the mention of a polygraph test, Willoughby moved for a
    mistrial, which the trial court granted. Id. When the charges were thereafter scheduled for a
    new trial, Willoughby moved to dismiss, asserting double jeopardy violations. The trial court
    denied the motion and stated that the reference to the polygraph test was inadvertent and not
    the result of any intentional misconduct on the part of the prosecutor and the officer. Id. at
    575-76. Following Willoughby’s conviction in a second trial, he appealed and argued,
    among other things, that the second trial after a mistrial constituted double jeopardy. The
    Indiana Supreme Court affirmed the trial court’s decision that the Officer’s comment
    concerning the polygraph test was “not a response that the prosecutor likely anticipated” and
    a subsequent trial was not thus barred. Id. at 576.
    In contrast to the reference to the polygraph test in Willoughby, the record in the
    present case indicates that the reference to the meth lab was not inadvertent or a surprise to
    the prosecutor. Rather, the prosecutor suggested the Detective’s statement was proper
    because Perkins had “opened up” his criminal history and that its probative value outweighed
    7
    its prejudicial effect. Tr. at 116, 120. Although the trial court did not make any express
    finding as to whether the Detective’s comment was intended to goad Perkins into moving for
    a mistrial, we find that the trial court’s comments at the hearing sufficiently reflect its
    determination that Perkins had no other choice but to move for a mistrial, i.e., he was
    effectively forced into it. Accordingly, the trial court did not err when it dismissed the
    charges.
    The State also claims that a mistrial was unwarranted. The trial court’s decision to
    grant or deny a motion for a mistrial is within the discretion of the trial court, and its ruling is
    reviewed solely for an abuse of discretion. Jackson v. State, 
    925 N.E.2d 369
    , 373 (Ind.
    2010). “‘We accord great deference to the trial court’s decision, as it is in the best position to
    gauge the circumstances and the probable impact on the jury.’” Evans v. State, 
    855 N.E.2d 378
    , 387 (Ind. Ct. App. 2006) (quoting Kirby v. State, 
    774 N.E.2d 523
    , 533-34 (Ind. Ct. App.
    2002), trans. denied), trans. denied. In determining whether a mistrial is warranted, the
    relevant inquiry is whether the defendant was placed in a position of grave peril to which he
    should not have been subjected; the gravity of the peril is determined by the probable
    persuasive effect on the jury’s decision. 
    Id.
     (quotations omitted).
    As stated above, the trial court determined that the Detective’s statement that he went
    to Perkins’s father’s house (1) to look for Perkins and (2) to look for a methamphetamine lab
    was very prejudicial. The court illustrated its position:
    Don’t you get how prejudicial it is to say by the way we were also at his house
    investigating him for child molesting? . . . Or we were also at his house
    investigating him for operating a meth lab. . . . And I am having a lot of
    trouble seeing why that would come in to a prosecution for a failure to return
    8
    to lawful detention. . . . [T]he jury is going to think oh my goodness. All of
    this stuff we hear about meth labs and here is a guy who is, he’s probably
    really a very dangerous desperado who is operating a meth lab and all they’re
    able to get him on is failure to return to lawful detention but what he really is is
    a meth producer.
    Tr. at 118-19. We agree with the trial court. As Perkins argued, the Detective’s statement
    was “powerful and inflammatory in our present culture because it tied [Perkins] to a meth
    lab.” Appellee’s Br. at 4. As the trial court observed,
    It isn’t that we went to his father’s house to investigate his father for meth
    production[;] we went to his father’s house to look for Mr. Perkins. . . . And
    they believed there was meth production going on there where they expected to
    find Mr. Perkins.
    Tr. at 123. The trial court considered alternatives to a mistrial, but remained concerned that
    the jury would not be focused on the evidence relating to failure to return to lawful detention.
    Ultimately, the trial concluded that none of the suggested admonitions would adequately cure
    the damaging remark.
    The State urges that the probable persuasive effect of the methamphetamine remark on
    the jury was insignificant considering the other evidence of guilt, including that Perkins had
    received a two-hour pass, but elected not return to the Work Release facility as the contract
    required him to do. We recognize the evidence of guilt that already had been presented to the
    jury by the time of the comment at issue, but keeping in mind that the trial court was in the
    best position to assess the probable impact on the jury of the Detective’s remark about the
    methamphetamine lab, and based on the record before us, we find that the trial court did not
    9
    abuse its discretion3 when it granted Perkins’s motion for a mistrial and thereafter dismissed
    the charges against him.
    Affirmed.
    VAIDIK, J., and PYLE, J., concur.
    3
    The State cites to Oregon v. Kennedy, 
    456 N.E.2d 667
    , 675-79 (1982), for the proposition that when
    a defendant’s motion for mistrial has been granted, the trial court should make a finding of fact concerning
    whether the prosecutor intended to provoke the defendant into moving for a mistrial, and if a trial court does
    not make finding of fact on an issue for which findings are ordinarily required, then the trial court’s decision is
    reviewed de novo. Appellant’s Reply Br. at 2-3. Even under a de novo review, our conclusion is the same,
    namely that the trial court did not commit error when it dismissed the pending charges against Perkins.
    10
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 48A02-1210-CR-823

Filed Date: 6/28/2013

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 10/30/2014