Ashworth v. State

901 N.E.2d 567, 2009 Ind. App. LEXIS 228, 2009 WL 441625
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 20, 2009
Docket49A02-0805-CR-448
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 901 N.E.2d 567 (Ashworth v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ashworth v. State, 901 N.E.2d 567, 2009 Ind. App. LEXIS 228, 2009 WL 441625 (Ind. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

ROBB, Judge.

Case Summary and Issues

Following a jury trial, David Ashworth appeals his conviction and sentence for murder, a felony. On appeal, Ashworth raises three issues, which we restate as 1) *569 whether the trial court properly admitted opinion evidence from an investigating detective regarding the detective's elimination of two individuals as suspects; 2) whether sufficient evidence supports Ash-worth's conviction; and 3) whether the trial court abused its discretion in sentencing Ashworth. Concluding that any error in admitting opinion testimony from the detective was harmless and that sufficient evidence supports the jury's guilty verdict, we affirm Ashworth's murder conviction. We also conclude, however, that the trial court abused its discretion in sentencing Ashworth because the sole aggravating circumstance of Ashworth's criminal history is insufficient to sustain his statutory maximum sentence of sixty years. As such, we affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand with instructions for the trial court to revise Ashworth's sentence to an enhanced term of fifty years. 1

Facts and Procedural History

Lisa Summers was last seen riding her bicycle home around 12:30 a.m. on June 15, 1989, having finished her work shift at an Indianapolis Wendy's restaurant approximately one mile east of the I-465/38th Street interchange. Around that time, Shannon Pharis and Michelle Mason were in a vehicle at the intersection of 38th Street and High School Road several hundred feet east of the interchange, when they observed a woman in a Wendy's uniform riding toward the interchange on a bicycle. As the woman approached the interchange, Pharis and Mason observed a man walking quickly toward her. The man caught up with the woman after she dismounted from the bicycle (apparently due to a steep incline), and Pharis and Mason eventually lost sight of the two as they walked over the 38th street bridge to the west end of the interchange. Pharis described the man as Caucasian, in his early to mid twenties, having shoulder-length, "dishwater" blond hair, transcript at 180, and walking with a "very significant" limp in his right leg, id. at 180, 187. Mason's description was similar, though she described the man's hair color as "dirty blond," id. at 208, and added that the man's limp "sticks out in my mind more than anything," id. at 207.

On June 19, 1989, while walking through a field southwest of the interchange, Ash-worth and his friend, Michael McKinney, discovered a nude, partially decomposed body near a stand of brush. The body was later identified as that of Summers. Detective Earl Cooper of the Marion County Sheriffs Department began focusing his investigation on Ashworth after receiving Pharis's and Mason's description of the man they saw on June 15th and after observing Ashworth-particularly his limp-during an interview on June 20, 1989. Detective Cooper spoke with Ash-worth again the following day, this time in the company of his wife, Diana. Although Ashworth's explanation of his whereabouts in the early morning hours of June 15th varied-he initially told Detective Cooper he had been drinking at a bar near the intersection of 34th Street and High School Road until approximately 12:30 a.m., but later in the interview said he was there until 2:80 a.m.-Diana told Detective Cooper that Ashworth was at home with her. The record is not clear whether Diana provided an alibi for Ashworth for the period after 12:80 a.m. or for the period after 2:80 am. only, but her explanation apparently satisfied Detective Cooper be *570 cause his interest in Ashworth as a suspect waned.

Several years later, however, Detective Cooper refocused his investigation on Ash-worth in light of two developments. First, in May 1991, Charlotte Ledbetter, whose husband was a friend of Ashworth's, told Detective Cooper she was driving eastbound on 34th Street on the morning of June 15, 1989, when she saw Ashworth walking in the same direction and offered him a ride home. Ashworth accepted and, during the ride, Ledbetter noticed that Ashworth had seratches on his face and that he "(looked like he'd been rolling around in the dirt with somebody." Id. at 426. Ashworth told Ledbetter he got in a fight and had spent the night in jail. Led-better also told Detective Cooper that several days after Summers's body was discovered, Ashworth told her "not to tell anybody [about the ride home] because he didn't want me to get involved. ..." Id. at 430.

Second, at some point in 1992, Diana, having been divorced from Ashworth in December 1990, told Detective Cooper she lied to him about Ashworth's whereabouts on June 15, 1989. Diana stated that Ash-worth came home around 6:30 a.m., immediately removed his dirty clothes, and placed them in the washing machine. According to Diana, this was unusual because she had never seen Ashworth do laundry before. Diana noticed marks on Ash-worth's face, as well as several eight-inch scratches along his back that appeared to have been made by someone's fingernails. Diana did not observe these scratches when Ashworth left the house on the evening of June 14th. When questioned about them, Ashworth stated he was drunk and fell in some bushes. Regarding his whereabouts, Ashworth told Diana he had fallen asleep in a port-o-let on 34th Street. Diana also told Detective Cooper that she lied to him because Ashworth told her to do so and that she was afraid of Ashworth.

These developments culminated in Detective Cooper obtaining a search warrant to retrieve a blood sample from Ashworth and also presumably comparing that sample with evidence recovered from the crime seene (the record is not entirely clear on this point), but no arrest followed. By December 2004, however, Detective Bill Rogers of the Marion County Sheriff's Department recommenced the investigation, which included obtaining a blood and saliva sample from Ashworth and submitting a bra and a cigarette recovered from the crime seene for DNA testing. The testing indicated that Summers's DNA was on the bra and that Ashworth's DNA was on both items.

On September 14, 2006, the State charged Ashworth with murder, a felony. From March 24 to 26, 2008, the trial court presided over a jury trial. Pharis, Mason, Ledbetter, Diana, McKinney, and Detectives Cooper and Rogers testified in their respective parts to the events described above, with McKinney adding that when he and Ashworth discovered the body, they were heading to Eagle Creek Park and that the route through the field-a route Ashworth chose-was indirect and required them to traverse through knee-high grass. McKinney also testified that his father offered to give the two a ride to the park, but McKinney declined because Ashworth insisted on walking. Finally, McKinney added that when he and Ash-worth were walking through the field they saw a cireling hawk, at which point Ash-worth remarked, "The only time a hawk circles is when something's dead," id. at 371, and suggested that he and McKinney go to the area it was circling. The jury found Ashworth guilty, and the trial court entered a judgment of conviction based on the jury's finding.

*571 On April 16, 2008, the trial court conducted a sentencing hearing, at which it found that Ashworth's criminal history was an aggravating circumstance and that there were no mitigating circumstances.

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Bluebook (online)
901 N.E.2d 567, 2009 Ind. App. LEXIS 228, 2009 WL 441625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ashworth-v-state-indctapp-2009.