Athena Y. Collins v. State of Indiana

CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 23, 2012
Docket45A03-1104-CR-168
StatusPublished

This text of Athena Y. Collins v. State of Indiana (Athena Y. Collins v. State of Indiana) 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
Athena Y. Collins v. State of Indiana, (Ind. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION

ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:

MARCE GONZALEZ, JR. GREGORY F. ZOELLER Dyer, Indiana Attorney General of Indiana

KARL M. SCHARNBERG Deputy Attorney General

FILED Indianapolis, Indiana

Mar 23 2012, 8:37 am

CLERK IN THE of the supreme court, court of appeals and tax court

COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

ATHENA Y. COLLINS, ) ) Appellant-Defendant, ) ) vs. ) No. 45A03-1104-CR-168 ) STATE OF INDIANA, ) ) Appellee-Plaintiff. )

APPEAL FROM THE LAKE SUPERIOR COURT The Honorable Clarence D. Murray, Judge Cause No. 45G02-0905-MR-3

March 23, 2012

OPINION - FOR PUBLICATION

KIRSCH, Judge Athena Y. Collins (“Collins”) appeals from her conviction after a jury trial for

voluntary manslaughter,1 a Class A felony. Collins presents the following restated issues for

our review:

I. Whether the trial court erred in instructing the jury;

II. Whether the trial court erred by admitting evidence of a prior out-of- state battery conviction from 1979; and

III. Whether the prosecutor committed fundamental error by engaging in prosecutorial misconduct during closing arguments.

We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On the morning of August 5, 2008, Collins and her husband, McKinley Collins

(“McKinley”), received a telephone call from an automobile repair shop. McKinley had

previously arranged to have Collins’s car towed to have it repaired. The estimated cost of the

repairs was between $500.00 and $700.00. After receiving the estimate, Collins and

McKinley began to argue about their financial matters. The argument escalated and became

physical. Next, either Collins hit McKinley with a clothes iron, or McKinley hit Collins with

it, or both. At some point during the fracas in the hallway, Collins tore the control panel for

the house alarm system from the wall and set off the alarm. The two continued to fight in the

kitchen where McKinley grabbed a knife. McKinley used the knife to slash at Collins,

cutting her several times on the arm and on her chest below her right breast.

Collins was able to break away from him and ran upstairs to retrieve a gun she had

1 See Ind. Code § 35-42-1-3.

2 purchased a few days after having obtained a protective order against McKinley in 2006.

Collins ran back downstairs with the gun and found McKinley standing near the bathroom.

Collins then shot McKinley five times, killing him.

After Collins set off the alarm, ADT, the alarm company, was notified of the alarm. A

person working for ADT twice unsuccessfully attempted to reach Collins or McKinley on

their telephone line. ADT then notified the Hammond Police Department and reported the

alarm. After notifying the local police, ADT called Collins’s son, who then spoke to his

sister about the alarm.

Sergeant John Muta was dispatched to Collins’s house in response to the residential

alarm call. Sergeant Ray Finley also responded to the dispatch, and the two arrived at about

the same time. Collins’s daughter, Natasha Collins (“Natasha”), also arrived at the house at

approximately the same time. The officers checked the exterior of the house for signs of

forced entry because ADT had received an alert for broken glass, but found no such signs.

Natasha, who was carrying a baby in her arms, approached the officers and asked what was

happening. The three then proceeded to the front door of the house, and Natasha knocked on

the door. Collins yelled from inside the house, “Go away. Everything is okay.” Tr. at 365.

Natasha opened the front door, which was unlocked. As she opened it, Collins told her,

“[G]et the baby out of here.” Id. at 428.

The officers went inside the home and found Collins sitting on a couch to the right of

the front door, wearing a bloody house dress. Collins had a blank, expressionless look on her

face, often described by officers as “a thousand-yard stare.” Id. at 430. One of the officers

3 asked Collins if anyone else was in the house, to which Collins replied yes. She told them

that she had a fight with her husband and shot him. She pointed to the rear of the house and

said, “[O]ver there by the bathroom in the hallway.” Id. at 368. Sergeant Muta turned and

walked down the hallway where he found McKinley, nude and lying face down. McKinley,

who was unresponsive and breathing shallowly, was lying halfway in the hallway and

halfway in the bathroom, with a knife under his right hand. Sergeant Muta then called for

backup and for an ambulance.

Sergeant Muta returned to the living room area and asked Collins for the location of

the gun. Collins told him she had placed the gun on the table in the kitchen. Additional

officers arrived and conducted a protective sweep of the remainder of the house. They found

no one else inside the home. There were massive amounts of blood leading from the kitchen

area to the bathroom area. The officers observed that Collins had a slashing-type wound on

her lower arm and a few smaller wounds on her upper arm. Collins was also bleeding from

her head above the left eye. McKinley was taken to a local hospital where he died a short

time later of multiple gunshot wounds.

The State charged Collins with murder, a felony. At trial, the State advanced a theory

that Collins had killed McKinley and then cut herself and pulled braids out of her head to

make it appear as if she were the victim of domestic violence. Collins advanced the theory

that she was the victim of more than twenty years of domestic violence at the hands of

McKinley and that, on the morning of his death, she just snapped. In support of her

argument, Collins presented evidence of Battered Woman Syndrome. She offered the

4 testimony of multiple witnesses that there had been numerous calls to the police over the

years and complaints of domestic violence involving McKinley as the aggressor and Collins

as the victim. Family members also testified that McKinley was the aggressor between the

two. Over Collins’s objection, the State presented rebuttal evidence that Collins had been

arrested and charged in a battery incident in 1979 involving an alleged attack of a co-worker

with a butcher knife, cutting the co-worker several times. At the conclusion of the jury trial,

Collins was found guilty of voluntary manslaughter, and the trial court sentenced her to

twenty-two years executed with two years suspended to probation. Collins now appeals.

Additional facts will be supplied as needed.

DISCUSSION AND DECISION

I. Jury Instructions

Collins contends that the trial court erred in instructing the jury. She claims that the

trial court erred by instructing the jury on voluntary manslaughter and by denying her

tendered instruction on involuntary manslaughter.

The manner of instructing a jury lies largely within the sound discretion of the trial

court, and we review the trial court’s decision only for an abuse of that discretion. Stringer v.

State, 853 N.E.2d 543, 548 (Ind. Ct. App. 2006). An abuse of the trial court’s discretion

occurs “when ‘the instructions as a whole mislead the jury as to the law in the case.’” Ham v.

State, 826 N.E.2d 640, 641 (Ind. 2005) (quoting Carter v.

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