Curtis F. Sample, Jr. v. State of Indiana

CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 19, 2013
Docket45A03-1302-CR-52
StatusUnpublished

This text of Curtis F. Sample, Jr. v. State of Indiana (Curtis F. Sample, Jr. 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
Curtis F. Sample, Jr. v. State of Indiana, (Ind. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Pursuant to Ind.Appellate Rule 65(D), this Memorandum Decision shall not be Sep 19 2013, 5:38 am regarded as precedent or cited before any court except for the purpose of establishing the defense of res judicata, collateral estoppel, or the law of the case.

ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:

MARK A. BATES GREGORY F. ZOELLER Lake County Public Defender Attorney General of Indiana Crown Point, Indiana IAN MCLEAN Deputy Attorney General Indianapolis, Indiana

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

CURTIS F. SAMPLE, JR., ) ) Appellant-Defendant, ) ) vs. ) No. 45A03-1302-CR-52 ) STATE OF INDIANA, ) ) Appellee-Plaintiff. )

APPEAL FROM THE LAKE SUPERIOR COURT The Honorable Clarence D. Murray, Judge Cause No. 45G02-0602-FA-10

September 19, 2013

MEMORANDUM DECISION - NOT FOR PUBLICATION

FRIEDLANDER, Judge Curtis F. Sample, Jr. was convicted of attempted murder as a class A felony and

criminal confinement as a class B felony, found to be a habitual offender, and sentenced to an

executed term of ninety-five years in prison. Our Supreme Court later affirmed the

convictions but reversed the habitual offender finding and remanded to the trial court for a

new habitual offender hearing. See Sample v. State, 932 N.E.2d 1230 (Ind. 2010). In the

present appeal, Sample appeals the finding upon remand that he is a habitual offender,

presenting the following restated issue for review: Did the trial court commit reversible error

in permitting prosecution witnesses to testify that the victim of two predicate offenses was

mentally infirm?

We affirm.

The underlying facts were set out by this court in Sample’s direct appeal, as follows:

In the summer of 2005, C.W. began taking care of her daughter’s Gary apartment while her daughter worked in another state. By January of 2006, C.W. had vacated her own apartment and moved into her daughter’s apartment. During that time, Sample, who was known to C.W. by his nickname, B.C., possessed a key to the apartment. C.W.’s daughter, who had been dating Sample, had given him the key before she moved.

Before moving into the apartment, C.W. had met Sample on several occasions while visiting her daughter. After moving into her daughter’s apartment, C.W. twice encountered him. The first time, he let her into the apartment after she had locked herself out. The second time, she came home and discovered him with a woman in one of the bedrooms. C.W. made Sample leave the apartment. Although she later asked her daughter and son to get the key back from Sample, he never returned it.

During the early morning of January 9, 2006, C.W. “was awakened by the presence of BC in the apartment.” When asked what he was doing there, he replied that he needed somewhere to stay. C.W. informed him that he could not stay there and began following him down the hallway to the living room, “thinking he’s going to go on out the door.” He, however, turned and “back

2 handed” her, cutting her face with his ring. He then pulled out a large pocket knife and ordered her to go in the living room and lie down on the floor. She did as she was ordered, lying near the front door. Sample then went into the kitchen and retrieved a butcher knife.

As Sample was examining the knife, running “his thumb and forefinger ... up and down the blade as if to examine how sharp it was,” C.W. fled the apartment. As she fled down a common hallway, C.W. “could feel the knife going in [her] back....” She fell outside a neighbor’s door and started screaming. After she fell, Sample “went to jab at [her] with the knife.” C.W., however, grabbed the blade. As she was still holding onto the blade, Sample “pulled [her] hair back, took the knife, and went around [one] ear ... and tried to go to the other side of [her] ear” with the knife. After the knife’s blade broke, Sample began hitting C.W.’s head with his fist. He then pulled the pocket knife out of his pocket and began cutting her with it. During the attack, C.W. was screaming “and fighting with him[.]”

At approximately 1:30 a.m., Gary Police Officer Anthony Hawkins received a dispatch for “a rape and stabbing in progress.” When he arrived at the main entrance to the apartment building, he “saw two people inside, one person ran towards the back, the other one was a black female. She was standing there, completely naked, covered in blood, huddled in the corner of the hallway.”

Sample v. State, 910 N.E.2d 1290 (Ind. Ct. App. 2009) vacated, 932 N.E.2d 1230. As

indicated above, our Supreme Court granted transfer, affirming the convictions but vacating

the habitual offender finding and remanding to the trial court with instructions to conduct a

new habitual offender hearing. The facts relevant to this appeal center upon the second

habitual offender hearing.

In addition to proof of the present offenses, the State offered evidence of two

predicate offenses in support of the habitual offender allegation. The first involved an April

27, 1993 conviction for criminal recklessness. The second was a February 6, 1997

conviction for robbery and battery. With respect to each offense, the State offered certified

3 documentation detailing the date each offense was committed, the date conviction was

entered, and the date Sample was sentenced. In addition, with respect to each offense, the

State called witnesses identifying Sample as the subject of those convictions. The alleged

error that Sample cites in the present appeal stems from the testimony of two of the

witnesses. Thomas Papadakis was a captain in the Gary Police Department Bureau of

Investigations when he was called to testify at the second habitual offender hearing. He had

participated in the investigation of the incident that led to Sample’s 1993 conviction. He

testified that the victim in that case knew Sample and identified Sample as the perpetrator.

Papadakis was asked, “[D]id you have a recollection about the victim?” Record at 44. Over

a defense objection, Papadakis described the victim as follows: “The victim was a little slow,

like what you would call like a special, you know, I guess like special-education type of

student, I believe – – I know he was in his late teens at the time and stuff.” Id. at 45-46.

The second witness was Mary Ryan, who worked in the Lake County Prosecutor’s

Office at the time of the incident that led to Sample’s second predicate conviction. She was

asked whether she remembered prosecuting Sample’s second conviction, and she responded

that she did. When asked why she remembered it, she responded there had been legal issues

that she had never encountered prior to that point in time. She explained:

There was [sic] several legal issues that I never encountered before in going to trial, one of which involved mental health issues, and the other one involved what’s called 404 (B) evidence, which means if you try and use evidence of a separate crime in your case, you have to go through a series of hearings to get permission from the Court to do that. And as a trial deputy, I’d never encountered that before, and actually had to make those arguments before. So it was something that was something that I remembered only because – – especially since it was the first time I ever had to deal with mental health

4 issues in front of the jury.

Id. at 55-56. She was asked whether those mental health issues were relevant to the case.

She responded:

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