Bruce Mendenhall v. State of Indiana

CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 13, 2026
Docket25A-CR-00775
StatusPublished
AuthorJudge Vaidik

This text of Bruce Mendenhall v. State of Indiana (Bruce Mendenhall 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
Bruce Mendenhall v. State of Indiana, (Ind. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE

Court of Appeals of Indiana Bruce Mendenhall, FILED Mar 13 2026, 8:31 am Appellant-Defendant CLERK Indiana Supreme Court Court of Appeals and Tax Court v.

State of Indiana, Appellee-Plaintiff

March 12, 2026 Court of Appeals Case No. 25A-CR-775 Appeal from the Marion Superior Court The Honorable Angela Dow Davis, Judge Trial Court Cause No. 49D27-0804-MR-77498

Opinion by Judge Vaidik Judges Bradford and Altice concur.

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 25A-CR-775 | March 12, 2026 Page 1 of 18 Case Summary [1] In 2007, Bruce Mendenhall was stopped by a Tennessee police officer at a truck

stop in Nashville and consented to a search of his semi-truck. The officer found

bloody women’s clothes and transported Mendenhall to a police station, where

he admitted that he had picked up a woman at an Indianapolis truck stop the

night before and that she had been shot in the head with his rifle. Mendenhall

also admitted that he had driven south on I-65 from Indianapolis to Nashville.

The woman was eventually identified as Carma Purpura from Indianapolis. In

2008, the State of Indiana charged Mendenhall with Purpura’s murder in

Marion County. The case was still pending when, several years later, Purpura’s

remains were found in southern Kentucky near I-65.

[2] The State paused its prosecution of Mendenhall in Indiana while he was tried in

Tennessee for the deaths of two additional women and sentenced to two life

sentences. In 2021, the State resumed its prosecution, and Mendenhall was

convicted of murder. Mendenhall now appeals, arguing that (1) the evidence is

insufficient to establish that Indiana has territorial jurisdiction (i.e., that the

murder occurred in Indiana) and (2) the trial court erred in admitting evidence

stemming from the search of his semi-truck in Tennessee because he was in

custody but not advised of his right to consult with an attorney before

consenting to the search, which Pirtle v. State, 323 N.E.2d 634 (Ind. 1975),

requires.

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 25A-CR-775 | March 12, 2026 Page 2 of 18 [3] We conclude that the evidence is sufficient to prove territorial jurisdiction

because a reasonable inference from the evidence is that Mendenhall killed

Purpura at the truck stop in Indianapolis and didn’t keep her captive and alive

as he drove south on I-65. In addition, we conclude that the trial court did not

err in admitting evidence stemming from the Tennessee search. Accordingly,

we affirm the trial court.

Facts and Procedural History [4] In July 2007, Detective Sergeant Pat Postiglione, a homicide detective with the

Metropolitan Nashville Police Department in Nashville, Tennessee, was

investigating a matter involving Truck Stops of America on North 1st Street in

Nashville. As part of his investigation, he had been reviewing security-camera

footage of semi-trucks coming and going from that location. A semi-truck with

a yellow tractor caught his attention as “a suspect or a witness.” Tr. Vol. 3 p.

137.

[5] Around 10:00 a.m. on July 12, Sergeant Postiglione went to Truck Stops of

America “to get on the street and see what [he was] seeing” on the video. Id.

While there, he saw a semi-truck with a yellow tractor that “looked similar to

the tractor that [he] had observed on the video” pull in. Id. Sergeant Postiglione

watched as the semi-truck parked “nose first,” even though semi-trucks

normally back in. Id. at 138. Sergeant Postiglione “pulled up behind” the semi-

truck, exited his car, and walked up to the truck. Id. at 173. As he did, the

person inside, later identified as Mendenhall, “pulled the curtain [to the sleeper

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 25A-CR-775 | March 12, 2026 Page 3 of 18 compartment] shut.” Id. at 138. Sergeant Postiglione “banged” on the door,

identified himself, and asked Mendenhall to step outside to speak to him. Id.

Ten seconds later, the curtain opened, and Mendenhall exited his semi-truck.

Id. Mendenhall’s shirt was open, he wasn’t wearing any shoes, and he was

stretching as if he had just been woken up. At that point, Sergeant Postiglione

observed “several drops that appeared . . . to be blood” on the inside of the

open driver’s door. Id. at 139. Sergeant Postiglione asked Mendenhall if he

could “look in his truck.” Id. at 140. Mendenhall agreed and signed a consent-

to-search form.

[6] Sergeant Postiglione started the search in the sleeper compartment of

Mendenhall’s semi-truck and “immediately noticed a large bag.” Id. at 141. He

opened it and saw women’s clothes, women’s shoes, and rags, “all blood

soaked” with “fresh” blood. Id. at 141-42. Sergeant Postiglione picked up the

bag, which was “fairly heavy” from the blood. Id. at 142. He asked Mendenhall

about the blood, and Mendenhall said it was from cutting his leg getting in and

out of his truck. Sergeant Postiglione asked Mendenhall to show him his leg,

and when he did, there was “nothing there.” Id. at 143. Sergeant Postiglione

then asked him about the clothes, and he said they belonged to his wife or

daughter. Sergeant Postiglione transported Mendenhall to the homicide office

for an interview.

[7] Mendenhall signed a waiver of Miranda rights and spoke to Sergeant

Postiglione. He said a woman had entered his semi-truck the night before, July

11, at the Flying J truck stop in Indianapolis sometime between 8:00 and 9:30

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 25A-CR-775 | March 12, 2026 Page 4 of 18 p.m. The Flying J is near Harding Street and I-465 on the south side of

Indianapolis in Marion County. Although the record doesn’t say that

Mendenhall expressly admitted shooting the woman, he did admit that she

“was shot” in the head and that “there was a plastic bag over her head” and

“[b]lack tape around [her] neck.” Id. at 144. Sergeant Postiglione asked

Mendenhall what the woman was shot with, and he said “his rifle,” which was

a .22 caliber rifle that was later recovered from his semi-truck. Id. Sergeant

Postiglione then asked if there would be blood on the rifle, and Mendenhall said

there “should be” and that it “would be from the girl from Indianapolis.” Id. at

145. Sergeant Postiglione also asked Mendenhall if his fingerprints would be on

the rifle, and he said “they should be” and that nobody else’s fingerprints would

be on it. Id.

[8] During the interview, Sergeant Postiglione noticed blood under Mendenhall’s

fingernails, which Mendenhall said was “from cleaning up from the girl from

Indianapolis.” Id. at 153. Contrary to his earlier statements, Mendenhall

admitted that the bloody clothes did not belong to his wife or daughter but “the

victim from Indianapolis.” Id. at 153-54. Mendenhall said he used the rags to

“wipe down the mattress and the floor” and then put them in the bag with the

bloody clothes. Id. at 153. He also admitted that he had driven south on I-65

from Indianapolis to Nashville.

[9] The Tennessee police obtained a search warrant for Mendenhall’s semi-truck.

Inside the truck they recovered a spent shell casing from a .22 caliber rifle, the

.22 caliber rifle Mendenhall told police was used in the shooting, an ATM card

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 25A-CR-775 | March 12, 2026 Page 5 of 18 belonging to Carma Purpura, who lived in Indianapolis, and ATM receipts

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