Corn v. State

659 N.E.2d 554, 1995 Ind. LEXIS 219, 1995 WL 764271
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 29, 1995
Docket21S00-9405-CR-462
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 659 N.E.2d 554 (Corn v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Corn v. State, 659 N.E.2d 554, 1995 Ind. LEXIS 219, 1995 WL 764271 (Ind. 1995).

Opinion

SHEPARD, Chief Justice.

After Fayette County Jail inmates John Purcell and William P. Corn carried out an armed takeover of the jail, a jury found Corn guilty of five counts of kidnapping, a class A felony, 1 two counts of criminal confinement as a class B felony, 2 one count of criminal confinement as a class D felony, id., and three counts of criminal recklessness as a class D felony. The court sentenced him to concurrent 50-year prison terms for each kidnapping conviction and added thirty years to each because of a habitual offender finding. 3 The total 80-year sentence is to run consecutively to sentences in two unrelated convictions. The trial court gave Corn no jail time credit for his time in custody awaiting trial.

The conduct that led to Corn's convictions began at about 10:30 p.m. on June 5, 1992. Corn and fellow inmate trustee John Purcell entered the control center of the jail where Corn pointed a .357 handgun at Officer Mark Steele. He handcuffed Steele and locked him in a bathroom.

At the same time, Connersville Police Officer Frank Jackson, unaware of the takeover, was attempting to enter the jail,. Corn detained Jackson in a small entryway between two electronically controlled doors. After about 20 minutes, Sheriff Harold Steele released him through the outside door.

Meanwhile, in a nearby part of the jail Purcell told Officer Brett Briscoe that Corn had a gun on Steele and then forced Briscoe into the control room. Purcell also told Jail Officer Ron Zimmerman that Corn had Steele at gunpoint and then locked Zimmerman into a padded cell with an inmate. At trial, Zimmerman testified he had heard Corn say he and Purcell had taken hostages. Zimmerman also testified he had heard Corn say that if Jail Commander Rich Young did not come in, somebody "was gonna die." (R. at 291.)

While the takeover was underway, Beth King, the Sheriff's secretary, had been giving medications to female inmates. She walked into the control room and was about to open *556 the door for Jackson but stopped when she saw Corn point the gun at her. He put both King and Briscoe into the bathroom with Steele, though King was set free after about 90 minutes.

During the takeover, Corn and Purcell also released three inmates from their cells. Inmate Damona Garrison said she first learned of the takeover when she heard Corn or Purcell announce over the loudspeaker they were running the jail. She also testified that Purcell said one inmate, Sherry MeCain, was very upset. He asked Garrison to sit with McCain to calm her down and then locked both women in a cell.

After two hours, Purcell said he would return them to the women's cellblock but then told them: "We're taking you guys hostage, too." (R. at 878.) The women were handcuffed together and put on the control room floor.

As they sat there, Purcell or Corn brought inmate Danny Hornberger out from a cell-block in shackles. Corn and Purcell released Garrison so she and Hornberger could prepare breakfast in the kitchen, where the two also had "intimate" relations. (R. at 386.) After they finished making breakfast, Horn-berger (who remained in shackles the entire time) and Garrison came back to the control room where Corn and Purcell re-handeuffed her.

Following negotiations with the State Police, the three jail officers were released between 9 a.m. and 1 p.m. on the following day. Corn and Purcell surrendered about two hours later, after Corn unloaded the revolver and gave the bullets and gun to Sheriff's Col. Claude Trent.

After charges were filed concerning these events, Corn asked the trial court to appoint a special prosecutor because Fayette County Deputy Prosecutor Allen Demkovich had represented him on the charge for which he was serving his sentence when he carried out the takeover. He alleged he had discussed his criminal history with Demkovich and that this information was now being used against him to support the habitual offender charge. Demkovich said the prosecutor's office intentionally did not use that conviction as one of the felonies needed for a habitual offender sentencing. He also pointed out that Corn's criminal history was a public record and he had not obtained it from Corn. The trial court denied Corn's request. At trial, Corn did not present any evidence.

I. Appointment of a Special Prosecutor

We turn first to Corn's claim the trial court erred in denying his motion for appointment of a special prosecutor.

-As Corn correctly notes, we have held that professional ethics prohibit a lawyer from prosecuting a criminal case "if by reason of his professional relation with the accused, he has acquired a knowledge of facts upon which the prosecution is predicated or which are closely interwoven." State ex rel. Meyers v. Tippecanoe County Court (1982), Ind., 432 N.E.2d 1377, 1378. Alternatively, a lawyer must be disqualified if the pending case "is substantially related to a matter in which the lawyer previously represented another client." Id.

In Meyers, Prosecutor John Meyers had represented a defendant in the appeal of a 1974 burglary conviction and at trial for, a 1977 theft conviction. Later, Meyers prosecuted the same defendant for theft and being a habitual criminal, alleging the 1974 and 1977 cases as two of the three underlying felonies needed for the habitual offender determination. We concluded his earlier participation as the defendant's public defender bore a "substantial relationship" to the pending case and held the trial court properly disqualified both Meyers and the entire staff of the prosecutor's office. Id. at 1879.

Corn's situation can be readily distinguished. The case in which Demkovich represented Corn was not even one of the three felony convictions the State used for the habitual offender prosecution. Moreover, Demkovich had only a minimal role at the pre-trial hearing in the current case and did not prosecute him.

The deputy prosecutor's involvement in the earlier and unrelated case was not "substantially related" to the present habitual offender conviction. In light of these factors, the *557 trial court was correct to deny Corn's request for a special prosecutor.

II. Criminal Confinement as a B Felony

Corn next asserts the trial court erred when it instructed the jury that if the State did not prove each element of the kidnapping counts, it could conviet Corn on the lesser included offense of criminal confinement as a class D felony or as a class B felony if the offense were committed while armed with a deadly weapon. Ind.Code § 35-42-3-8(1). Defense counsel objected to that instruction, noting that neither the charging information on the seven kidnap ping counts nor the kidnapping statute mentioned "deadly weapon."

Our Court of Appeals examined a similar question in Correll v. State (1994), Ind.App., 639 N.E.2d 677.

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Bluebook (online)
659 N.E.2d 554, 1995 Ind. LEXIS 219, 1995 WL 764271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corn-v-state-ind-1995.