Harold Bishop v. State of Indiana , 40 N.E.3d 935 ( 2015 )


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  •                                                                    Jul 31 2015, 9:41 am
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT                                     ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
    Matthew D. Anglemeyer                                      Gregory F. Zoeller
    Marion County Public Defender                              Attorney General of Indiana
    Appellate Division
    J.T. Whitehead
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    Deputy Attorney General
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    IN THE
    COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
    Harold Bishop,                                             July 31, 2015
    Appellant-Defendant,                                       Court of Appeals Case No.
    49A02-1409-CR-622
    v.                                                 Appeal from the Marion Superior
    Court
    State of Indiana,                                          The Honorable Mark D. Stoner,
    Judge
    Appellee-Plaintiff.                                        Cause No. 49G06-1209-MR-61990
    Brown, Judge.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A02-1409-CR-622 | July 31, 2015                   Page 1 of 33
    [1]   Harold Bishop appeals his conviction for murder. Bishop raises four issues,
    which we consolidate and restate as whether the trial court abused its discretion
    in admitting certain evidence. We affirm.
    Facts and Procedural History
    [2]   On the morning of Saturday, September 1, 2012, at about 8:00 a.m., Pamela
    Dunlap and her neighbor Michael Armbruster were biking near the State
    Fairgrounds heading toward the Monon Trail in Indianapolis. As they
    approached the intersection at 38th Street and Winthrop Avenue, they observed
    a man, later identified as Khalfani Shabazz, on a porch sitting down, halfway in
    the doorway with his body propping open the front door, yelling “[o]h my God,
    oh my God,” and “help.” Transcript at 283. Armbruster and Dunlap dialed
    911 and told Shabazz help was on the way.
    [3]   Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department (“IMPD”) Officer Haskell
    Shaffer received the run to the scene and arrived about three to four minutes
    later. Armbruster and Dunlap flagged down Officer Shaffer and directed him to
    the porch, and Officer Shaffer approached Shabazz, observed that Shabazz had
    suffered trauma to his chest and stomach area and was bleeding, and asked him
    who he was and who had shot him. Shabazz did not respond and stared at
    Officer Shaffer with a blank stare, and Officer Shaffer could not determine
    whether Shabazz was aware of his surroundings. Soon after, other officers
    arrived and “cleared” the home to make sure others were not inside, and
    paramedics Kimberly Johnson and Adrian Foster arrived and approached
    Shabazz on the porch and found a driver’s license in his pocket. Id. at 299. The
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A02-1409-CR-622 | July 31, 2015   Page 2 of 33
    paramedics observed that Shabazz had suffered five gunshot wounds including
    shots to the chest, the left shoulder, the left arm, the third right finger, which
    was almost amputated by a bullet that was still lodged within it, and a graze
    wound to the top of the head. The paramedics administered oxygen using a
    nano-breather to Shabazz, who was sweating profusely. Johnson observed that
    Shabazz was trying to catch his breath and unable to speak in complete
    sentences, and she believed he was in shock. Johnson believed that, based on
    Shabazz’s physical state, he required immediate transport to Wishard Hospital,
    and the paramedics loaded him into the ambulance for transport.
    [4]   In the ambulance, the paramedics noticed that Shabazz was starting to
    “compensate,” which meant that his blood was collecting in and around the
    areas of his major organs in order to keep him alive. Id. at 418. Shabazz had
    no blood pressure, and the paramedics administered two IVs using “the largest
    angio” that they could “so that a lot of fluid can get in the veins quickly” in an
    attempt to raise his blood pressure. Id. at 419. However, even after the IVs
    were provided, Shabazz’s blood pressure “was only 80 which is pretty low.” Id.
    at 421. Shabazz asked multiple times while in the ambulance if he was going to
    die, and although Johnson believed he would not live, she told him “he was
    going to be okay” to try and comfort him. Id. at 420.
    [5]   When the ambulance arrived at the hospital, Shabazz was taken to a shock
    room for immediate medical attention. While he was awaiting surgery, IMPD
    Sergeant and Investigator John Maloney, with the aggravated assault division,
    as well as IMPD Homicide Detective Mark Prater, arrived, and each spoke
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A02-1409-CR-622 | July 31, 2015     Page 3 of 33
    with Shabazz separately. Detective Prater first spoke with him, asked who shot
    him, and Shabazz responded: “Zimbabwe.” Id. at 363. Shabazz also told him
    that Zimbabwe drove a grey car and that the shooting “was over a job they
    were doing on South Meridian Street.” Id. at 364. The conversation lasted for
    about ten or fifteen seconds. Sergeant Maloney then met with Shabazz and
    asked who shot him, and at first he could not understand Shabazz’s response
    “[b]ecause [Shabazz] was speaking very low and he had the oxygen mask on,”
    and he noticed that Shabazz was having trouble breathing. Id. at 346. After
    removing the oxygen mask, Sergeant Maloney asked again and Shabazz
    responded: “Zimbabwe.” Id. Shabazz told him that Zimbabwe was black, that
    he had a grey vehicle, and that Shabazz and Zimbabwe “had worked together
    on a job on the south side on Meridian Street” and that a dispute over money
    from that job had arisen. Id. at 346-347. Sergeant Maloney was able to speak
    with Shabazz for about a minute before he was wheeled off to surgery.
    [6]   Shabazz died in surgery at 1:41 p.m. that day. Upon his death, IMPD
    Homicide Detective Charles Benner was assigned as lead detective, and he met
    with the officers who had taken part in the investigation, as well as friends and
    family of Shabazz including his fiancée Shelinda Kerr. During Detective
    Benner’s interview with Kerr, she identified the man she knew as Zimbabwe
    from a photo array, and the person she identified was Bishop. Kerr had known
    Zimbabwe since July of 1998 as a friend and partner in construction work with
    Shabazz. Detective Benner also met with a man named Carl Alsum, who was
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A02-1409-CR-622 | July 31, 2015   Page 4 of 33
    referred to him by Kerr, and who also identified Bishop as Zimbabwe from a
    photo array.
    [7]   Also, on September 1, 2012, IMPD Crime Lab Investigator Michael Hasty
    went to Shabazz’s home to collect evidence which included, among other
    things, three spent shell casings, and he transported the evidence to the Crime
    Lab. On September 2, 2012, Dr. Joyce Carter conducted an autopsy of
    Shabazz’s body and noted that he suffered gunshot wounds including an
    abrasion to the top of his head, a wound in his left arm, a wound in the back of
    his left shoulder, a wound to the right side of his chest, and a wound to his third
    right finger that nearly amputated the finger. The shot to his chest caused
    serious damage to his body, including fracturing two ribs, a huge tear to his
    liver of approximately eight inches in length, holes in his diaphragm, damage to
    his hepatic vein, a hole in his right lung, as well as tremendous bleeding. She
    noted that the doctors during surgery applied eleven gauze sponges to the
    wound, each of which is capable of holding a cup to a cup and a half of blood,
    which, combined with the blood found in the abdomen and right chest cavity,
    amounted to about four and a half liters of blood loss.
    [8]   On September 7, 2012, the State charged Bishop with the murder of Shabazz.
    On September 12, 2012, Boone County Sheriff Deputies Bradley Dunn and
    Jesse Boggs were dispatched to the area of 600 South 650 West, which was a
    rural location surrounded by corn fields, farm land, and some woods to
    investigate a suspicious person. When the deputies arrived on the scene, they
    observed a black male sitting on a phone utility box near the northwest corner
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A02-1409-CR-622 | July 31, 2015   Page 5 of 33
    of the intersection. Deputy Dunn approached the man, later identified as
    Bishop, and asked him what he was doing, and Bishop responded that “he has
    warrants.” Id. at 454. Deputy Dunn asked what the warrants were for, and
    Bishop said “for shooting people.” Id. Bishop spelled his name for the
    deputies, and Deputy Dunn then realized that he was the person they “were
    supposed to be looking for.”1 Id. The deputies confirmed that there were
    warrants out for Bishop, and Bishop told them that “[h]is car was in the
    woods.” Id. at 455. Deputy Dunn arrested Bishop and took him to jail where
    he was handed off to IMPD. Other Boone County Sheriff’s Deputies later
    discovered Bishop’s car, a grey Mazda which had been smeared with mud to
    act as camouflage, about two to three hundred feet from the road in a wooded
    area.
    [9]   On December 11, 2012, the State filed a motion for joinder of offenses for the
    purposes of trial under the instant cause number as well as under cause numbers
    49G06-1209-FA-061989 (“Cause No. 61989”) and 49G06-1209-FA-061225
    (“Cause No. 61225”). In its motion, the State noted that the conduct
    underlying Cause No. 61989 involved “the attempted murder and aggravated
    battery of Shana Ford-Gogoua and Zackery Joseph that took place on
    September 1, 2012 (at around 6:44 am),” and that Cause No. 61225 involved
    “the attempted murder and aggravated battery of William Cullens that took
    1
    Deputy Dunn testified that Bishop stated his name was “Balagoon Sankofa,” which is a known alias of
    Bishop and which appears on the charging information. Transcript at 454.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A02-1409-CR-622 | July 31, 2015                      Page 6 of 33
    place on August 31, 2012 (at around 10:50 pm) . . . .” Appellant’s Appendix at
    54. The State argued that “.45 caliber shell casings [were] recovered from each
    scene” and Firearms and Toolmarks Examiner Timothy Spears determined that
    they “were in fact fired from the same weapon” and “of the same manufactured
    brand . . . .” Id. at 55. The State further argued that the three separate shooting
    incidents were committed over a ten-hour period, were of the same or similar
    character, and were geographically close in proximity. On January 7, 2013,
    Bishop filed a notice of objection to the State’s request for joinder, and the court
    denied the State’s motion the following day.
    [10]   On November 8, 2013, in Cause No. 61989, the case involving the shootings of
    Shana Ford-Gogoua and Zackery Joseph, the State filed a Notice of Intent to
    Offer Evidence Pursuant to Ind. Evidence Rule 404(b) and Request for Hearing
    to Address Admissibility of Evidence (the “Rule 404(b) Motion”) in which it
    stated that it intended to present evidence regarding the murder of Shabazz and
    the attempted murder of Cullens using “the same .45 caliber handgun” and that
    such evidence is “essential and relevant to proving the identity of [Bishop] as
    the same person who attempted to murder Ms. Ford-Gogua and Mr. Joseph . . .
    .” Id. at 250-251. On November 19, 2013, Bishop filed his response arguing
    that the crimes were not sufficiently similar to earmark them as one person’s
    handiwork. The Rule 404(b) Motion was incorporated into the record in the
    instant case.
    [11]   On February 11, 2014, Bishop filed a motion to suppress the statements of
    Shabazz identifying him as the person that shot him and argued that the
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    statements were inadmissible because they did not qualify as dying declarations
    and were testimonial and therefore admission would violate his Sixth
    Amendment right of confrontation. Also, on February 27, 2014, Bishop filed a
    Motion to Dismiss Due to Destruction of Evidence or in the Alternative for
    Exclusion of Evidence stating that he had been notified by the State on January
    30, 2014, that the shell casings recovered from the scene of the attempted
    murder of Cullens were mistakenly destroyed by order of the responding officer
    following the completion of the firearms report prepared by Spears. The State
    filed its response to the motion to dismiss on March 4, 2014, and its response to
    the motion to suppress on March 7, 2014. Following evidentiary hearings on
    the three motions, on May 5, 2014, the court entered an order denying Bishop’s
    motion to suppress, and granting the State’s motion “to allow 404(b) evidence .
    . . as it relates to the identification of [Bishop] and the recovery of ballistics
    information . . . .” Id. at 160.
    [12]   The court commenced a jury trial on August 4, 2014, in which evidence
    consistent with the foregoing was presented. During the trial, Bishop renewed
    his objection to testimony relating to statements made by Shabazz to Sergeant
    Maloney and Detective Prater that he was shot by Zimbabwe on the same
    grounds as raised in his motion to suppress, and the court overruled each of his
    objections and admitted the statements as dying declarations.
    [13]   The State called Angela Allen, a friend of Bishop’s for about twenty years, who
    testified that on August 31, 2012, she and Bishop went to the bank and that
    Bishop wanted her to keep some money for him, which is something she had
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A02-1409-CR-622 | July 31, 2015       Page 8 of 33
    previously done for him, and that Bishop gave her $300 and stated that “he was
    going to, uh, go find Will or talk to Will . . . .” Transcript at 513. She testified
    that she had previously met a person known as “Big Will” through Bishop. Id.
    at 511. She further testified that Bishop “just showed up” at her house on
    September 1, 2012, at about 8:00 a.m., which she thought was unusual because
    he had never come without calling beforehand. Id. at 514. At this time, Bishop
    objected and renewed his argument that evidence relating to the Cullens
    shooting should not be admitted under Ind. Evidence Rule 404(b), and the
    court overruled the objection. Allen then testified that she had been trying to
    reach Bishop and asked where he had been, and he responded: “You don’t
    want to know.” Id. at 524. She indicated that she gave him his money and he
    left.
    [14]   The State also called William Cullens, again Bishop renewed his objection
    under Ind. Evidence Rule 404(b), and the court overruled his objection.
    Cullens testified that he had been a friend of Bishop for five years and they
    would see each other a few times a month. He testified that earlier in the
    summer of 2012 he borrowed $500 from Bishop, that they had agreed he would
    repay Bishop after receiving proceeds from an annuity settlement which was
    being structured in court, and that the payment had been delayed because the
    court had granted multiple continuances.
    [15]   Cullens indicated that, as of August 31, 2012, he had not received the payment
    and had not paid Bishop back on the loan, and on that evening he was at his
    home on Wind Drift Drive in Indianapolis with his girlfriend Yvonne Johnson.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A02-1409-CR-622 | July 31, 2015     Page 9 of 33
    That night, Yvonne asked him to drive her to a night club not far from their
    house because she did not want to drive herself, and around 11:00 p.m. they left
    to do so. Cullens testified that as the two were leaving the house and walking
    towards his vehicle, he heard a voice say: “Will, where’s my money?” Id. at
    634. He stated that he turned toward the sound of the voice and observed
    Bishop standing fifteen feet away and holding a gun, that he saw Bishop raise
    the gun at him, and Cullen turned and ran in the opposite direction. Cullens
    heard a gunshot and felt the shot enter his back under the shoulder blade, but he
    was able to keep running. He testified that he ran past the entrance to the
    apartments, stopped to dial 911, and told the operator that Zimbabwe, referring
    to Bishop, had shot him. He also stated that he told a responding officer and a
    detective at the hospital that Zimbabwe shot him. In response to a juror’s
    question, Cullen also testified that he did not know Khalfani Shabazz.
    [16]   The State next called IMPD Detective Harry Dunn, the lead investigator into
    the Cullens shooting. Detective Dunn testified that he interviewed Cullens at
    the hospital, that Cullens told him he had been shot by a man named
    Zimbabwe, and that upon researching the name he found one person who used
    Zimbabwe as an alias and that person was Bishop. He indicated that based
    thereon, he put together a photo array which contained a picture of Bishop
    taken in 1991, and that Cullens identified the picture of Bishop as Zimbabwe.
    At this point, Bishop again renewed his objection on Rule 404(b) grounds, and
    the court overruled his objection and admitted the photo array as State’s
    Exhibit 49. On cross-examination, Detective Dunn stated that at one point he
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A02-1409-CR-622 | July 31, 2015   Page 10 of 33
    became aware that the shell casings from the Cullens shooting had been
    destroyed.
    [17]   Bishop also renewed his objection to the testimony of IMPD Evidence
    Technician Christopher Clouse, who testified that he collected the shell casings
    at the Cullens crime scene, on both Rule 404(b) grounds and on grounds that
    the evidence had been lost or destroyed, and the court overruled the objections
    and admitted the evidence of the shell casings. Bishop objected to the
    testimony of Spears, and again the court overruled the objection and admitted
    Spears’s testimony, as well as photographs of the spent bullets. Spears testified
    consistent with his earlier report that he analyzed the shell casings and bullets
    recovered from both the Shabazz and Cullens crime scenes and that his tests
    concluded the casings and bullets were 45 caliber, were fired by the same gun,
    and were the same brand of bullet.
    [18]   On three different occasions, the court gave the jury a limiting instruction
    regarding the evidence related to the Cullens shooting that such evidence was
    admitted for the limited purpose of proving motive, knowledge, intent, or
    identity. During the court’s first instance of giving this instruction, it
    specifically instructed the jury that “[y]ou may use the evidence on August 31st,
    if you wish, to determine the issue of the defendant’s motive, his knowledge, his
    intent, and/or his identity for the issue on September 1,” that “that is the only
    way you may use the information from the August 31st incident,” that “you
    may not [] in any way [] determine that this is a character trait of the
    defendant,” and that “the August 31st incident is for another jury, another court,
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A02-1409-CR-622 | July 31, 2015      Page 11 of 33
    another day.” Id. at 575-576. The court instructed the jury to consider State’s
    Exhibit 49 “for the limited purpose of motive, identity, knowledge or intent.”
    Id. at 665. Also, in Final Juror Instruction No. 5, the court instructed the jury:
    Sometimes evidence is admitted for a limited purpose. You have
    heard testimony from multiple complaining witnesses. You may
    consider the testimony of such witnesses as it relates to the other
    incidents for the limited purpose of determining the defendant’s
    motive, intent, knowledge, and on the issue of identity.
    You may not consider such testimony for any other purpose.
    Specifically, you may not consider the evidence as proof of the
    defendant’s character. You may not draw any inference that, because
    the defendant acted in a certain way on one occasion, he must have
    acted the same way on a different occasion because of that character
    trait. Each incident must be viewed and considered on its own
    individual facts.
    Appellant’s Appendix at 222.
    [19]   On August 6, 2014, the jury found Bishop guilty as charged. On August 12,
    2014, the court held a sentencing hearing and sentenced him to sixty-five years
    in the Department of Correction.
    Discussion
    [20]   The issue is whether the court abused its discretion in admitting certain
    evidence. Generally, we review the trial court’s ruling on the admission or
    exclusion of evidence for an abuse of discretion. Noojin v. State, 
    730 N.E.2d 672
    , 676 (Ind. 2000). We reverse only where the decision is clearly against the
    logic and effect of the facts and circumstances. Joyner v. State, 
    678 N.E.2d 386
    ,
    390 (Ind. 1997), reh’g denied. Even if the trial court’s decision was an abuse of
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A02-1409-CR-622 | July 31, 2015       Page 12 of 33
    discretion, we will not reverse if the admission constituted harmless error. Fox
    v. State, 
    717 N.E.2d 957
    , 966 (Ind. Ct. App. 1999), reh’g denied, trans. denied.
    [21]   Bishop challenges the court’s decision to admit three separate pieces of
    evidence: (A) Shabazz’s identification of Bishop as the person who shot him;
    (B) evidence of the similarity between the fired cartridge casings recovered from
    the Shabazz shooting crime scene and the Cullens shooting crime scene; and
    (C) the circumstances of the Cullens shooting pursuant to Ind. Evidence Rule
    404(b). We address each of Bishop’s challenges separately.
    A. Shabazz’s Identification of Bishop
    [22]   Bishop challenges the court’s decision to admit certain statements made by
    Shabazz to Sergeant Maloney and Detective Prater identifying Zimbabwe, later
    determined to be Bishop, as the person who shot him. Bishop asserts in his
    brief that a dying declaration under the hearsay exception in Ind. Evidence Rule
    804(b)(2), which is testimonial in nature, is subject to Confrontation Clause
    scrutiny under Crawford v. Washington, 
    541 U.S. 36
    , 
    124 S. Ct. 1354
     (2004), and
    its progeny, that the statements of Shabazz are testimonial and thus should not
    have been admitted, and that even if Shabazz’s statements are judged to be
    nontestimonial or otherwise not subject to confrontation analysis, such
    statements do not fit within the dying declaration hearsay exception.
    [23]   We first discuss whether the court abused its discretion by admitting the
    statements of Shabazz as dying declarations. Bishop argues that the
    circumstances surrounding the statements of Shabazz reveal that Shabazz did
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A02-1409-CR-622 | July 31, 2015   Page 13 of 33
    not believe his death was imminent and had not abandoned all hope of
    recovery, and accordingly the hearsay exception does not apply. Specifically,
    Bishop asserts that Shabazz was assured by paramedics that he was going to be
    okay, noting that “[p]aramedics are skilled in life-saving, and persons with no
    medical background would rightly give much weight to what they say.”
    Appellant’s Brief at 20. He argues that “[a]lthough Shabazz’s blood pressure
    was low, his heart rate, respiration rate, and oxygen levels were all normal,”
    and that “he scored the maximum on the Glasgow Coma Score, which
    measures alertness to person, place, and thing.” Id. at 19.
    [24]   The State argues that the evidence reveals that Shabazz believed his death to be
    imminent, noting that he asked Paramedic Johnson multiple times if he was
    going to die, which demonstrates “that the prospect of death was at the center
    of his thoughts.” Appellee’s Brief at 21. The State notes that Shabazz exhibited
    shortness of breath and difficulty breathing and that his body began to
    “compensate” in order to survive. Id. It asserts that “Shabazz’s queries were
    perfectly consistent with the objective medical reality” that he had suffered
    multiple gunshot wounds and was bleeding, and it argues that the fact Johnson
    told him he would not die does not refute the conclusion that Shabazz believed
    his death was imminent, underscoring that he made the inquiry multiple times.
    Id.
    [25]   Out-of-court statements offered in court for the truth of the matter asserted are
    generally inadmissible hearsay. Ind. Evidence Rule 802. However, one among
    many exceptions to the inadmissibility of hearsay is an out-of-court statement
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    that is “[a] statement that the declarant, while believing the declarant’s death to
    be imminent, made about its cause or circumstances.” Ind. Evidence Rule
    804(b)(2). The admissibility of such a “dying declaration” is based on “the
    belief that persons making such statements are highly unlikely to lie.” Idaho v.
    Wright, 
    497 U.S. 805
    , 820, 
    110 S. Ct. 3139
    , 3149 (1990).
    [26]   The crux of Bishop’s challenge to the admissibility of Shabazz’s statements as
    dying declarations centers on Paramedic Johnson telling him that “he was
    going to be okay,” which she indicated at trial was not a reflection of her true
    thoughts but was an effort to try and comfort him. Transcript at 420. It is true
    that, to be admissible as a dying declaration, the statement “must be made by a
    person who knew death was imminent and had abandoned all hope of
    recovery,” but
    [i]n order to determine if a declarant made statements with the belief
    that death was imminent while having abandoned all hope of
    recovery, the trial court may consider the general statements, conduct,
    manner, symptoms, and condition of the declarant, which flow as the
    reasonable and natural results from the extent and character of his
    wound, or state of his illness.
    Wright v. State, 
    916 N.E.2d 269
    , 275 (Ind. Ct. App. 2009) (quotations omitted),
    trans. denied.
    [27]   Here, we find that the court acted within its discretion when it concluded that
    Shabazz’s statements were admissible dying declarations. Shabazz had been
    shot five times, inflicting wounds to the top of his head, his left arm, his left
    shoulder, the right side of his chest, and his third right finger, nearly amputating
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A02-1409-CR-622 | July 31, 2015      Page 15 of 33
    the finger. The shot to his chest caused serious damage to his body, including
    two fractured two ribs, a huge tear to his liver approximately eight inches long,
    holes in his diaphragm, damage to his hepatic vein, a hole in his right lung, as
    well as tremendous bleeding. During surgery the doctors applied eleven gauze
    sponges to the wound, each of which is capable of holding a cup to a cup and a
    half of blood, which, combined with the blood found in the abdomen and right
    chest cavity, amounted to about four and a half liters of blood loss. Also, when
    Dunlap and Armbruster came upon Shabazz while riding their bikes, they
    heard him yelling “[o]h my God, oh my God,” and “help.” Transcript at 283.
    Paramedics at the scene observed that Shabazz was sweating profusely and
    administered oxygen using a nano-breather, and he was trying to catch his
    breath and unable to speak in complete sentences. Johnson believed Shabazz
    was in shock and required immediate transport to the hospital. In the
    ambulance, she noticed that Shabazz was starting to “compensate,” which
    meant that his blood was collecting in and around the areas of his major organs
    in order to keep him alive. 
    Id. at 418
    . Shabazz had no blood pressure, and the
    paramedics administered two of their largest IVs in an attempt to raise his blood
    pressure, but they were not very successful at doing so. Shabazz asked
    paramedics on multiple occasions if he was going to die despite assurances that
    “he was going to be okay.” Id. at 420. He died at 1:41 p.m., which was within
    hours of his transport to the hospital. In light of his statements, conduct,
    manner, symptoms, and condition, as well as the reasonable and natural results
    from the extent and character of his extensive wounds, the trial court properly
    concluded that Shabazz’s statements were admissible dying declarations.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A02-1409-CR-622 | July 31, 2015   Page 16 of 33
    [28]   Having determined that statements were properly adjudged to be dying
    declarations and admissible under Ind. Evidence Rule 804(b)(2), we next
    address Bishop’s challenge under the Confrontation Clause of the Sixth
    Amendment. First, we note that in the landmark case of Crawford v.
    Washington, the United States Supreme Court held that “testimonial statements
    of a witness who did not appear at trial” are inadmissible “unless he was
    unavailable to testify, and the defendant had had a prior opportunity for cross-
    examination.” 
    541 U.S. at 53-54
    , 
    124 S. Ct. at 1365
    . In a footnote, the Court
    acknowledged that a historical exception to the right of confrontation “involves
    dying declarations,” specifically noting that “[t]he existence of that exception as
    a general rule of criminal hearsay law cannot be disputed” and that “[a]lthough
    many dying declarations may not be testimonial, there is authority for
    admitting even those that clearly are.” 
    Id.
     at 56 n.6, 
    124 S. Ct. at
    1367 n.6. The
    Court reserved the question of whether the Sixth Amendment incorporated “an
    exception for testimonial dying declarations” and stated that such exception
    would be “sui generis.”2 
    Id.,
     
    124 S. Ct. at
    1367 n.6. Four years later, the Court
    examined the limited exceptions to a defendant’s right of confrontation and
    observed that Crawford stands for the proposition “that the Confrontation
    Clause is ‘most naturally read as a reference to the right of confrontation at
    common law, admitting only those exceptions established at the time of the
    2
    Sui generis is Latin for “of its own kind” and means “[o]f its own kind or class; unique or peculiar.”
    BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 1662 (10th ed. 2014).
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A02-1409-CR-622 | July 31, 2015                            Page 17 of 33
    founding.’” Giles v. California, 
    554 U.S. 353
    , 358, 
    128 S. Ct. 2678
    , 2682 (2008)
    (quoting Crawford, 
    541 U.S. at 54
    , 
    124 S. Ct. at 1354
    ). The Court noted that it
    had “previously acknowledged that two forms of testimonial statements were
    admitted at common law even though they were unconfronted” and that “[t]he
    first of these were declarations made by a speaker who was both on the brink of
    death and aware that he was dying.”3 
    Id.,
     
    128 S. Ct. at 2682
    .
    [29]   The Court’s statements in Giles have been accepted as providing an exception to
    a defendant’s right of confrontation for dying declarations in other jurisdictions.
    Recently, the Court of Appeals of Maryland, its highest court, joined the chorus
    of jurisdictions that have formally held that the Confrontation Clause does not
    apply to dying declarations. Hailes v. State, 
    113 A.3d 608
    , 621 (Md. 2015). The
    Maryland court discussed the relevant provisions of Crawford and Giles
    discussed above and further noted that those cases “were not the first cases in
    which the Supreme Court indicated that the Confrontation Clause does not
    apply to dying declarations,” observing that
    [f]or example, in Maryland v. Craig, 
    497 U.S. 836
    , 847-48, 
    110 S. Ct. 3157
    , 
    111 L.Ed.2d 666
     (1990), the Supreme Court stated:
    We have repeatedly held that the [Confrontation] Clause
    permits, where necessary, the admission of certain hearsay
    statements against a defendant despite the defendant’s inability
    to confront the declarant at trial. See, e.g., Mattox [v. United
    States, 
    156 U.S. 237
    , 243, 
    15 S. Ct. 337
     (1895)] (“[T]here could
    3
    The Court termed the second exception, the scope of which was at issue in the case, as “forfeiture by
    wrongdoing,” which “permitted the introduction of statements of a witness who was ‘detained’ or ‘kept
    away’ by the ‘means or procurement’ of the defendant.” Giles, 
    554 U.S. at 359
    , 
    128 S. Ct. at 2683
    .
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A02-1409-CR-622 | July 31, 2015                       Page 18 of 33
    be nothing more directly contrary to the letter of the
    [Confrontation Clause] than the admission of dying
    declarations”4); Pointer v. Texas, 
    380 U.S. 400
    , 407, 
    85 S. Ct. 1065
    , 
    13 L.Ed.2d 923
     (1965) (noting exceptions to the
    confrontation right for dying declarations and “other analogous
    situations”).
    Similarly, in Snyder v. Massachusetts, 
    291 U.S. 97
    , 107, 
    54 S. Ct. 330
    , 
    78 L.Ed. 674
     (1934), the Supreme Court stated that the Confrontation
    Clause has not
    at any time been without recognized exceptions, as, for
    instance, dying declarations. Dowdell v. United States, 
    221 U.S. 325
    , 330, 
    31 S. Ct. 590
    , 
    55 L.Ed. 753
     (1911) (“Dying
    declarations, although not made in the presence of the accused,
    are uniformly recognized as competent [evidence].” (Citing
    Mattox [], 
    156 U.S. at 243-44
    , 
    15 S. Ct. 337
    )). Cf. Robertson v.
    Baldwin, 
    165 U.S. 275
    , 282 
    17 S. Ct. 326
    , 
    41 L.Ed. 715
     (1897)
    (The Confrontation Clause does not “prevent the admission of
    dying declarations[.]”); Motes v. United States, 
    178 U.S. 458
    , 472,
    473 
    20 S. Ct. 993
    , 
    44 L.Ed. 1150
     (1900)5.
    (Italics added). Likewise, in Kirby v. United States, 
    174 U.S. 47
    , 61, 
    19 S. Ct. 574
    , 
    43 L.Ed. 890
     (1899), the Supreme Court stated: “[T]he
    admission of dying declarations is an exception [to the Confrontation
    Clause] which arises from the necessity of the cause. This exception
    was well established before the adoption of the [C]onstitution, and
    was not intended to be abrogated.” (Emphasis added).
    4
    In Mattox [], 
    156 U.S. at 243-44
    , 
    15 S. Ct. 337
     the Supreme Court continued:
    [Y]et from time immemorial[, dying declarations] have been treated as
    competent [evidence], and no one would have the hardihood at this
    day to question their admissibility. They are admitted, not in
    conformity with any general rule regarding the admission of [evidence],
    but as an exception to such rules, simply from the necessities of the
    case, and to prevent a manifest failure of justice.
    5
    In Motes, 
    178 U.S. at 472
    , 
    20 S. Ct. 993
     the Supreme Court actually referred to
    statements that fall under the “forfeiture by wrongdoing” exception to the rule against
    hearsay, not dying declarations.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A02-1409-CR-622 | July 31, 2015                           Page 19 of 33
    113 A.3d at 619-620 (some brackets omitted). The court stated that, as
    highlighted by the U.S. Supreme Court in Kirby, “the Confrontation Clause
    does not apply to dying declarations” because they “were an exception to the
    common law right of confrontation when the Sixth Amendment was ratified,”
    and further observed that “[t]his accords with Crawford and its progeny, in
    which the Supreme Court has held that the Confrontation Clause applies to
    testimonial statements of types as to which—in contrast to dying declarations—
    there was no exception to the common law right of confrontation when the
    Sixth Amendment was ratified.” Id. at 620-621 (citing Crawford, 
    541 U.S. at 40, 68
    , 
    124 S. Ct. 1354
     (statements against penal interest); Giles, 
    554 U.S. at 357, 359, 377
    , 
    128 S. Ct. 2678
     (“forfeiture by wrongdoing” under California law);
    Davis v. Washington, 
    547 U.S. 813
    , 819, 821, 834, 
    126 S. Ct. 2266
     (2006)
    (excited utterances); Melendez-Diaz v. Massachusetts, 
    557 U.S. 305
    , 324, 
    129 S. Ct. 2527
     (2009) (purported business records and public records). The court held
    that the victim’s identification of defendant Hailes was a dying declaration, that
    “thus, the Confrontation Clause does not apply,” and that accordingly “we
    need not, and do not, address whether [the victim’s] identification of Hailes was
    testimonial or non-testimonial, as the distinction is irrelevant in the context of
    dying declarations.” Id. at 623.
    [30]   In the same matter, the Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, as affirmed by
    the Maryland Court of Appeals, provided a thorough recitation of what it
    termed a “juggernaut of persuasive authority” for excepting dying declarations
    from Crawford as follows:
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A02-1409-CR-622 | July 31, 2015   Page 20 of 33
    Sixteen of our sister states have considered whether the Dying
    Declaration is exempted from the coverage of the Confrontation
    Clause. Sixteen out of sixteen have concluded that it is. In People v.
    Monterroso, 
    34 Cal. 4th 743
    , 765, 
    22 Cal. Rptr. 3d 1
    , 
    101 P.3d 956
    , 972
    (2004), the California Supreme Court addressed the issue squarely:
    Thus, if, as Crawford teaches, the confrontation clause “is most
    naturally read as a reference to the right of confrontation at
    common law, admitting only those exceptions established at
    the time of the founding,” it follows that the common law pedigree
    of the exception for dying declarations poses no conflict with the Sixth
    Amendment.
    (Emphasis supplied). See also Walton v. State, 
    278 Ga. 432
    , 
    603 S.E.2d 263
    , 265-66 (2004); People v. Gilmore, 
    356 Ill. App. 3d 1023
    , 
    293 Ill. Dec. 323
    , 
    828 N.E.2d 293
    , 302 (2005) (“Although the statement just
    quoted [from Crawford] is dicta, we view it as a strong indication that
    the Court does not believe that admitting testimonial dying
    declarations violates the confrontation clause.”); Wallace v. State, 
    836 N.E.2d 985
    , 996 (Ind. [Ct.] App. 2005) (“[W]e are convinced that
    Crawford neither explicitly, nor implicitly, signaled that the dying
    declaration exception to hearsay ran afoul of an accused’s right of
    confrontation under the Sixth Amendment.”)[, trans. denied]; State v.
    Jones, 
    287 Kan. 559
    , 
    197 P.3d 815
    , 822 (2008) (“Accordingly, we are
    confident that, when given the opportunity to do so, the Supreme
    Court would affirm that a dying declaration may be admitted into
    evidence, even when it is testimonial in nature and is unconfronted.”);
    Commonwealth v. Nesbitt, 
    452 Mass. 236
    , 
    892 N.E.2d 299
    , 310-11
    (2008) (“Thus, in the unique instance of dying declarations, we ask
    only whether the statement is admissible as a common-law dying
    declaration, and not whether the statement is testimonial.”); People v.
    Taylor, 
    275 Mich. App. 177
    , 
    737 N.W.2d 790
    , 795 (2007) (“For the
    reasons stated by the Supreme Court of California, we hold that, under
    Crawford, dying declarations are admissible as an historic exception to
    the Confrontation Clause.”); State v. Martin, 
    695 N.W.2d 578
    , 585-86
    (Minn. 2005) (“We hold that the admission into evidence of a dying
    declaration does not violate a defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to
    confrontation within the meaning of Crawford because an exception for
    dying declarations existed at common law and was not repudiated by
    the Sixth Amendment.”); Grindle v. State, 
    134 So.3d 330
    , 341-44 (Miss.
    App. 2013) ( “[W]e are swayed by the United States Supreme Court’s
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A02-1409-CR-622 | July 31, 2015               Page 21 of 33
    commentary in Crawford and Giles that, were the matter properly
    before the Court, the exception would be held to apply.”); Harkins v.
    State, 
    122 Nev. 974
    , 
    143 P.3d 706
    , 711 (2006) (“The Confrontation
    Clause, like other provisions in the Bill of Rights, is subject to
    exceptions, ‘recognized long before the adoption of the Constitution,
    and not interfering at all with its spirit.’ A dying declaration is one
    such exception to the Confrontation Clause.”); People v. Clay, 
    88 A.D.3d 14
    , 26-27, 
    926 N.Y.S.2d 598
     (N.Y. App. Div. 2011) (“Thus,
    we read Crawford to signify that the substance of the right of
    confrontation enshrined in the Constitution is informed by the
    contemporaneous understanding of that right at common law, and is
    not, instead, an abrogation of it. We therefore conclude that the
    Supreme Court, having suggested that the common-law right did not
    encompass dying declarations, would likely determine that the same is
    true of the Sixth Amendment.”); State v. Calhoun, 
    189 N.C. App. 166
    ,
    
    657 S.E.2d 424
    , 428 (2008) (“We ... follow the majority of the states
    that have decided this issue and hold that a dying declaration is a
    ‘special exception’ under Crawford to the Sixth Amendment right to
    confrontation.”); State v. Kennedy, 
    998 N.E.2d 1189
    , 1202 (Ohio Ct.
    App. 2013) (“In light of this case law, we hold that the Sixth
    Amendment incorporates an exception for ‘the common law pedigree’
    of dying declarations, even testimonial ones, and that Crawford did not
    alter the rule.”); State v. Lewis, 
    235 S.W.3d 136
    , 148 (Tenn. 2007)
    (“Because the admissibility of the dying declaration is also deeply
    entrenched in the legal history of this state, it is also our view that the
    single hearsay exception survives the mandate of Crawford regardless of
    its testimonial nature.”); Satterwhite v. Commonwealth, 
    56 Va. App. 557
    ,
    
    695 S.E.2d 555
    , 560 (2010) (“[W]e hold Crawford did not upend the
    traditional view that dying declarations serve as an exception both to
    the common law hearsay rule and the constitutional right of a
    defendant to confront his accusers.”); State v. Beauchamp, 
    333 Wis. 2d 1
    , 
    796 N.W.2d 780
    , 784-85 (2011) (“Those principles compel the
    conclusion that allowing this hearsay exception comports with the
    protections of the Confrontation Clause.”). Contra United States v.
    Mayhew, 
    380 F.Supp.2d 961
    , 964-65 (S.D. Ohio 2005) (Mayhew
    admitted the dying declaration but rationalized the exemption from
    the Confrontation Clause as an instance of forfeiture by wrongdoing.).
    The academic authorities are in solid accord. [2] MCCORMICK ON
    EVIDENCE,[§ 309, at 507-508 (7th ed. 2013)], stated:
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A02-1409-CR-622 | July 31, 2015         Page 22 of 33
    The fact that dying declarations were received at the time the
    Constitution and the Bill of Rights were formed when the
    hearsay rule was not yet settled led the Supreme Court in
    Crawford v. Washington to suggest that even if such a statement is
    testimonial it would be admissible as an exception to the Confrontation
    Clause objection.
    (Emphasis supplied).
    [6A LYNN] MCLAIN, MARYLAND EVIDENCE: STATE AND FEDERAL, §
    804(3):1b, at 771 [(3d ed. 2013)], observed . . . :
    In Crawford v. Washington the U.S. Supreme Court opined that
    although some dying declarations might be “testimonial” for
    purposes of the confrontation clause, they would nonetheless be
    admissible against a criminal accused.
    (Emphasis supplied).
    Professor [Peter Nicholas, “I’m Dying to Tell You What Happened”: The
    Admissibility of Testimonial Dying Declarations Post-Crawford, 37
    HASTINGS CONST. L.Q. 487, 491-492 (2010)], observed in that regard:
    In footnote six, the Court took pains to point out that Crawford
    did not technically decide the issue of the admissibility of dying
    declarations vis-à-vis the Confrontation Clause. But if the post-
    Crawford era to date is any guide, this dictum will, like other dicta
    in Crawford, soon become the Law of the Land. ... In any event, the
    Court’s holding in Giles v. California four years later effectively
    assumes that a dying declaration exception to the Confrontation Clause
    exists. Moreover, lower federal courts and state courts that have
    addressed the issue have, with near unanimity, read footnote
    six of Crawford as creating a dying declaration exception to the
    Confrontation Clause.
    (Emphasis supplied).
    Professors [Tim Donaldson and J. Preston Frederickson, Dying to
    Testify? Confrontation vs. Declaration In Extremis, 22 REGENT U.L. REV.
    35, 77 (2010)], have also noted:
    Crawford acknowledged the existence of authority for admitting
    testimonial dying declarations. The Supreme Court left no doubt in
    Giles about its understanding of the status of the dying declaration
    exception at the time of founding when it confirmed: “We have
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A02-1409-CR-622 | July 31, 2015               Page 23 of 33
    previously acknowledged that two forms of testimonial statements
    were admitted at common law even though they were unconfronted ...
    The first of these were declarations made by a speaker who was both on
    the brink of death and aware that he was dying.” There is no
    foundation for the assertion that the dying declaration
    exception was nonexistent at the time that the Bill of Rights
    was designed.
    ... Whatever construction a court places on the Confrontation
    Clause, it is irrefutable that dying declarations were admitted at
    common law before and after ratification of the Bill of Rights.
    If something must yield when reconciling theory and history in this
    area, the permanence of history should withstand the winds of changing
    thought.
    (Emphasis supplied).
    State v. Hailes, 
    92 A.3d 544
    , 565-567 (Md. Ct. Spec. App. 2014), aff’d, 
    113 A.3d 608
     (2015).
    [31]   The Court of Special Appeals opinion in Hailes cited this court’s decision in
    Wallace v. State, which observed that defendant Wallace cited Crawford without
    further argument and inferred that Wallace was challenging the admissibility of
    statements made by the decedent as dying declarations as a violation of his right
    of confrontation. 
    836 N.E.2d at 996
    . The court disagreed and noted “that
    Crawford neither explicitly, nor impliedly, signaled that the dying declaration
    exception to hearsay ran afoul of an accused right of confrontation under the
    Sixth Amendment.” 
    Id.
     Then, in Wright, defendant Wright conceded, as the
    court noted approvingly, “that the rule in Crawford has a well-recognized
    exception for dying declarations.” 
    916 N.E.2d at 275
    . Today, we formally
    recognize that dying declarations as provided by Ind. Evidence Rule 804(b)(2)
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A02-1409-CR-622 | July 31, 2015              Page 24 of 33
    are excepted from the right of confrontation provided by the Sixth Amendment.
    Accordingly, we need not decide whether the statements of Shabazz were
    testimonial in nature. The court did not abuse its discretion in admitting such
    statements.6
    B. Cartridge Casings
    [32]   Bishop challenges the trial court’s decision to admit the testimony of Spears that
    the casings recovered from the Cullens scene were fired from the same gun as
    was used in the murder of Shabazz because the casings from the Cullens scene
    were mistakenly destroyed by the State. He argues specifically that “there was
    some indication that the casings possessed an exculpatory value that, however
    tenuous, was evident to the State prior to its destruction.” Appellant’s Brief at
    26.
    [33]   A defendant’s due process rights are violated when the State fails to disclose or
    preserve material exculpatory evidence. See United States v. Agurs, 
    427 U.S. 97
    (1976). For evidence to be constitutionally material, it “must both possess an
    exculpatory value that was apparent before the evidence was destroyed, and be
    of such a nature that the defendant would be unable to obtain comparable
    evidence by other reasonably available means.” California v. Trombetta, 
    467 U.S. 479
    , 489 (1984). When the evidence at issue is material exculpatory
    6
    The State also suggests in its brief that the statements of Shabazz were admissible as excited utterances
    under Ind. Evidence Rule 803(2). However, because we conclude that the statements were admissible as
    dying declarations, we need not address the State’s argument.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A02-1409-CR-622 | July 31, 2015                          Page 25 of 33
    evidence, it is irrelevant whether the State’s failure to disclose or preserve the
    evidence was in good or bad faith. Illinois v. Fisher, 
    540 U.S. 544
    , 547 (2004).
    [34]   In contrast, when the evidence at issue is “potentially useful evidence,” as
    opposed to material exculpatory evidence, failure to preserve that evidence does
    not amount to a due process violation “unless a criminal defendant can show
    bad faith” on the State’s behalf. Arizona v. Youngblood, 
    488 U.S. 51
    , 58 (1988),
    reh’g denied. Evidence that is “potentially useful” was described by the Supreme
    Court as “evidentiary material of which no more can be said than that it could
    have been subjected to tests, the results of which might have exonerated the
    defendant.” Id. at 57. At the heart of the Youngblood decision was the Court’s
    unwillingness to impose under the Due Process Clause “an undifferentiated and
    absolute duty to retain and to preserve all material that might be of conceivable
    evidentiary significance in a particular prosecution.” Id. at 58.
    [35]   Here, Bishop does not assert that the State acted in bad faith and argues simply
    that loss of the shell casings is significant because it deprived him of the
    opportunity to test the casings and contradict the State’s expert testimony that
    the casings came from the same firearm. We find, however, that it is clear the
    destroyed shell casings fall under the category of “potentially useful evidence”
    because they did not have “exculpatory value that was apparent before the
    evidence was destroyed.” Trombetta, 
    467 U.S. at 489
    , 
    104 S. Ct. at 2534
    .
    Indeed, Bishop concedes that their significance is contingent upon the chance
    that additional testing would yield a result inconsistent with that of the State’s
    expert (i.e., potentially useful), and therefore his due process argument must fail
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A02-1409-CR-622 | July 31, 2015    Page 26 of 33
    without a showing of bad faith. We conclude that the court did not abuse its
    discretion by allowing the State to present expert testimony regarding the
    casings.
    C. Cullens Shooting
    [36]   Bishop contends that the court abused its discretion in admitting evidence of the
    Cullens shooting under Ind. Evidence Rule 404(b) because the circumstances of
    the Cullens shooting and the Shabazz shooting do not share enough similarity
    for the Cullens shooting to be used as evidence of Bishop’s identity. He argues
    that to qualify under the rule “the crimes must be so strikingly similar that it can
    be said with ‘reasonable certainty’ that the same person committed them” and
    that the circumstances of the two crimes do not meet that threshold.
    Appellant’s Brief at 28. Bishop argues that “[t]he only relevance the Cullens
    case had to the Shabazz case was to show that Bishop shot Cullens, so he
    probably shot Shabazz,” that “[t]his is the ‘forbidden inference’ precluded by
    Evid. Rule. 404(b),” and that even if it had relevance outside of Bishop’s
    propensity to commit crimes the evidence should have been excluded under
    Ind. Evidence Rule 403. Id. at 32. He further asserts that the admission of such
    evidence was not harmless, noting that although the court admonished the jury
    that evidence of the Cullens shooting could only be used on the issue of
    knowledge, intent, identity, and motive, “this admonishment could not remove
    the taint of the facts of the Cullens case. The jury’s apparent decision to believe
    Shabazz’s identification of Bishop as his shooter may have turned on the
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A02-1409-CR-622 | July 31, 2015   Page 27 of 33
    wrongly admitted evidence and caused it to decide the case based on Bishop’s
    propensity to commit crimes.” Id. at 34.
    [37]   The State argues that the evidence of the Cullens shooting demonstrated that
    the same firearm used to shoot Cullens was used to shoot Shabazz. It asserts
    that such evidence was probative as to Bishop’s motive, noting that both
    shootings occurred during the same twenty-four hour period and involved
    financial disputes. The State asserts that it had the burden of proving identity
    and in that regard “had relevant evidence [of] another shooting, in the same 24-
    hour period, involving the same firearm, same caliber weapon, evincing the
    same intent . . . to find people who owed him money, and evidencing the same
    motive for shooting his victims,” and that the probative weight of such evidence
    was greater than its prejudice. Appellee’s Brief at 40. The State further
    contends that, even if admitting such evidence was error, any error was
    harmless at most because the court “insulated the jury from its misuse with
    prophylactic jury instructions” and “the law presumes that the jury will follow
    the trial court’s admonition” which “cures any error in the admission of
    evidence.” Id. at 41.
    [38]   Ind. Evidence Rule 404(b), titled “Crimes, Wrongs, or Other Acts,” states:
    (1) Prohibited Uses. Evidence of a crime, wrong, or other act is not
    admissible to prove a person’s character in order to show that on a
    particular occasion the person acted in accordance with the character.
    (2) Permitted Uses; Notice in a Criminal Case. This evidence may be
    admissible for another purpose, such as proving motive, opportunity,
    intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, identity, absence of mistake, or
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A02-1409-CR-622 | July 31, 2015          Page 28 of 33
    lack of accident. On request by a defendant in a criminal case, the
    prosecutor must:
    (A) provide reasonable notice of the general nature of any such
    evidence that the prosecutor intends to offer at trial; and
    (B) do so before trial—or during trial if the court, for good
    cause, excuses lack of pretrial notice.
    [39]   Rule 404(b) “was designed to assure that ‘the State, relying upon evidence of
    uncharged misconduct, may not punish a person for his character.’” Lee v.
    State, 
    689 N.E.2d 435
    , 439 (Ind. 1997) (quoting Wickizer v. State, 
    626 N.E.2d 795
    , 797 (Ind. 1993) (citing Lannan v. State, 
    600 N.E.2d 1334
    , 1338 (Ind.
    1992))), reh’g denied. The standard for assessing the admissibility of Rule 404(b)
    evidence is: (1) the court must determine that the evidence of other crimes,
    wrongs, or acts is relevant to a matter at issue other than the defendant’s
    propensity to commit the charged act; and (2) the court must balance the
    probative value of the evidence against its prejudicial effect pursuant to Rule
    403. Boone v. State, 
    728 N.E.2d 135
    , 137-138 (Ind. 2000), reh’g denied; Hicks v.
    State, 
    690 N.E.2d 215
    , 221 (Ind. 1997). “To determine whether the trial court
    abused its discretion, we employ the same test.” Wilhelmus v. State, 
    824 N.E.2d 405
    , 414 (Ind. Ct. App. 2005) (quoting Iqbal v. State, 
    805 N.E.2d 401
    , 406 (Ind.
    Ct. App. 2004)).
    [40]   The evidence is inadmissible when the State offers it only to produce the
    “forbidden inference” that the defendant has engaged in other, uncharged
    misconduct and the charged conduct was in conformity with the uncharged
    misconduct. Crain v. State, 
    736 N.E.2d 1223
    , 1235 (Ind. 2000). The trial court
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A02-1409-CR-622 | July 31, 2015          Page 29 of 33
    has wide latitude, however, in weighing the probative value of the evidence
    against the possible prejudice of its admission. 
    Id.
     If evidence has some
    purpose besides behavior in conformity with a character trait and the balancing
    test is favorable, the trial court can elect to admit the evidence. Boone, 728
    N.E.2d at 138.
    [41]   Evidence of other crimes admitted under the identity exception are generally
    evaluated based upon whether such crimes are “‘signature’ crimes with a
    common modus operandi.” Thompson v. State, 
    690 N.E.2d 224
    , 234 (Ind.
    1997). The rationale behind this exception “is that the crimes, or means used to
    commit them, were so similar and unique that it is highly probable that the
    same person committed all of them.” 
    Id.
     (citing Lockhart v. State, 
    609 N.E.2d 1093
    , 1097 (Ind. 1993)). While the “signature crime” test focuses on similarity
    and uniqueness between the charged and uncharged conduct, we note that in
    addition courts have long considered “whether or not the evidence is so
    specifically and significantly related to the charged crime in time, place and
    circumstance as to be logically relevant to one of the particular excepted
    purposes.” Malone v. State, 
    441 N.E.2d 1339
    , 1346 (Ind. 1982) (citing
    Montgomery v. State, 
    274 Ind. 544
    , 548, 
    412 N.E.2d 793
    , 795 (1980), reh’g denied;
    Duvose v. State, 
    257 Ind. 450
    , 451, 
    275 N.E.2d 536
    , 537 (1971)). Both “the
    timing and similarity of the incidents are factors in the larger inquiry into
    whether the incidents were relevant to a matter in issue.” Hicks, 690 N.E.2d at
    222.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A02-1409-CR-622 | July 31, 2015   Page 30 of 33
    [42]   Here, the evidence elicited by the State related to the Cullens shooting included
    that Angela Allen saw Bishop on the evening of August 31, 2012, the night
    before Shabazz was discovered shot at his home, and that Bishop gave her $300
    and stated that “he was going to, uh, go find Will or talk to Will,” whom she
    knew through Bishop. Transcript at 513. Bishop showed up at about 8:00 a.m.
    on the morning of September 1, 2012, and when asked where he had been he
    responded: “You don’t want to know.” Id. at 524. Allen gave Bishop his
    money and he left. Cullens testified that he owed Bishop $500 and on August
    31, 2012, at about 11:00 p.m., he encountered Bishop outside of his home as he
    was walking to his car. Bishop asked “Will, where’s my money?” and Cullens
    observed Bishop holding a gun. Id. at 634. Bishop raised the gun, Cullens ran
    in the opposite direction, Bishop shot Cullens, but Cullens was able to keep
    running and call 911. Cullens told a responding officer that he had been shot by
    Zimbabwe. Detective Dunn testified that Cullens identified Bishop as
    Zimbabwe, the same alias provided by Shabazz to detectives. Spears testified
    that shell casings and bullets recovered from both the Cullens and Shabazz
    crime scenes were fired from the same 45 caliber handgun and were the same
    brand of bullet.
    [43]   We find that this evidence was relevant to the identity and motive of Bishop as
    the person who shot Shabazz, and was not merely evidence supporting the
    “forbidden inference” of Bishop’s propensity to commit the charged act,
    because the time, place, and circumstances of the Cullens shooting are logically
    relevant to those excepted purposes under Ind. Evidence Rule 404(b). The
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A02-1409-CR-622 | July 31, 2015   Page 31 of 33
    Cullens shooting occurred within hours of the shooting of Shabazz during the
    same overnight period. Both shootings occurred in the city of Indianapolis.
    Also, the evidence revealed that both shootings concerned financial disputes
    between Bishop and the victims. Importantly, there is strong circumstantial
    evidence linking the shootings in that shell casings and bullets recovered from
    the Cullens shooting, in which Cullens identified Bishop as the shooter,
    matched shell casings and bullets recovered from the Shabazz crime scene as
    being fired from the same gun and were the same brand of bullet. The
    probative value of such evidence vastly outweighed any prejudicial effect it
    might have had on Bishop.
    [44]   To the extent Bishop suggests that the evidence from the Cullens shooting was
    inadmissible under Ind. Evidence Rule 404(b) because it did not rise to the level
    of a “signature crime,” we note that our precedent takes care to note that “[t]he
    identity exception to the general prohibition on propensity evidence is crafted
    primarily for ‘signature’ crimes with a common modus operandi.” Thompson,
    690 N.E.2d at 234 (emphasis added). The test for whether identity evidence
    constitutes a signature crime does not focus on the timeframe between the
    different criminal episodes. See, e.g., Nicholson v. State, 
    963 N.E.2d 1096
    , 1098-
    1100 (Ind. 2012) (holding that evidence of a prior conviction and surrounding
    circumstances stemming from conduct occurring twenty-two months prior to
    the instant crime was admissible under Ind. Evidence Rule 404(b) as evidence
    of a signature crime). It is for this reason that our precedent has set a high bar
    for admitting signature crime evidence, focusing instead on whether the crimes
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A02-1409-CR-622 | July 31, 2015   Page 32 of 33
    are “so strikingly similar that one can say with reasonable certainty that one
    and the same person committed them.” Davis v. State, 
    598 N.E.2d 1041
    , 1048
    n.2 (Ind. 1992), reh’g denied, cert. denied, 
    510 U.S. 948
    , 
    114 S. Ct. 392
     (1993). In
    this case, the evidence of the Cullens shooting was relevant to show Bishop’s
    identity based upon the closeness in time (during the same evening), place (the
    city of Indianapolis), and circumstance (financial disputes between Bishop and
    both Cullens and Shabazz, and the same firearm was used in each shooting).
    [45]   We conclude that based upon the closeness in time, place, and circumstances,
    of the two shootings, including the forensic evidence showing that the same
    firearm was used at each shooting within hours of each other, the evidence
    presented of the Cullens shooting was relevant, and its probative value
    outweighed any prejudice to Bishop. The court did not abuse its discretion in
    admitting this evidence.
    Conclusion
    [46]   For the foregoing reasons, we affirm Bishop’s conviction for murder.
    [47]   Affirmed.
    Crone, J., and Pyle, J., concur.
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