Edelen v. State

947 N.E.2d 1024, 2011 Ind. App. LEXIS 814, 2011 WL 1733534
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 6, 2011
Docket26A01-1007-CR-362
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 947 N.E.2d 1024 (Edelen 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
Edelen v. State, 947 N.E.2d 1024, 2011 Ind. App. LEXIS 814, 2011 WL 1733534 (Ind. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

NAJAM, Judge.

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

Gayle D. Edelen appeals her convictions for perjury and official misconduct, each a Class D felony, following a jury trial. Edelen raises two issues for our review:

1. Whether the transcript of the closed juvenile proceeding in which Edelen perjured herself is confidential and therefore inadmissible during her perjury trial; and
2. Whether the State presented sufficient evidence to support her convictions.

We hold that the transcript is not confidential because it involves an adult charged with a crime. We also hold that the State presented sufficient evidence to support Edelen’s convictions. As such, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In September of 2008, Edelen worked as a caseworker for the Indiana Department of Child Services (“DCS”) in Gibson County. One of her clients, M.D., whom the Gibson Circuit Court had declared a child in need of services (“CHINS”) and placed at Life Choices 1 in Evansville, ran away from her placement facility. Edelen called Judge Meade of the Gibson Circuit Court and informed him that M.D. had left Life Choices. Judge Meade told Edelen to place M.D. at the Southwest Indiana Regional Youth Village of Vincennes (“SI-RYV”), an emergency shelter, once she had been found. SIRYV is a secured facility with a fence and is locked at night. Juveniles placed at SIRYV are not free to go to work and are transported to and from court in handcuffs. It was Judge Meade’s policy, consistent with Indiana Code Section 31-84-5-1, that emergency placement for a child would not last more than forty-eight hours without a hearing on the child’s placement.

On October 9, local law enforcement found M.D. and transported her to SIRYV. Edelen was promptly informed of M.D.’s placement at SIRYV, but she took no action to schedule a hearing on M.D.’s placement with the Gibson Circuit Court. On October 17, Edelen asked fellow caseworker Amy Ellis to check on M.D. while Ellis was at SIRYV, which Ellis did. M.D. repeatedly asked Ellis when the next court hearing date was scheduled, and Ellis replied that she would have to check with Edelen. On November 5, M.D. contacted her attorney, Lisa Moody, to inform her that she was at SIRYV. Moody e-mailed Edelen the next day and asked her when she had learned of M.D.’s placement and how long M.D. had been placed there. On November 7, Edelen responded by e-mail, “I told you in court one day in[-]between hearings that she had been located, and *1026 Judge [Meade] allowed me to move her to SIRVY.” Transcript at 144.

That same day, Moody filed a motion in the Gibson Circuit Court for a change in placement. Moody informed the court that M.D. had been held at SIRYV for a month without a hearing. Judge Meade granted Moody’s motion later that day.

On November 26, 2008, Judge Meade held a closed hearing 2 to determine why M.D. had been “locked up in Vincennes for thirty days when the most [she was] supposed to be there is forty-eight hours, [because] the parents ha[ve] a right to know who dropped the ball.” Id. at 42. Moody called Edelen as a witness, and she was duly sworn in. The following colloquy occurred:

Q [by Moody] Did you tell [M.D.] that the court knew that she was at [SI-RYV]?
A [by Edelen] Well, I told her I had — I don’t know if I exactly said the court knew. I said — she asked me when she was going to have a hearing, and I said that I had not been informed that one had been set.
Q But you never informed the court after she was found; is that correct? A Yes. On the 9th we had other hearings, and Judge [Meade] was coming out of chambers and walking out here. And in passing I told him that we had found her.
Q But you didn’t follow up at that time ... to get a court order?
A I informed our attorney [Brenda Worman] that I needed a court order. Q But you informed her a second time then?
A I informed her that the child had eloped and then when she was discovered, I told her that she had been discovered.
Q I thought you just said you told the attorney you needed a court order.
A I told the attorney that she had been discovered.
Q You didn’t know whether you needed a court order?
A I told — I talked about a verbal— yeah, I had a verbal order from Judge on the 4th.
Q You didn’t know whether you needed a written order; is that correct?
A Yes, I knew I needed a written order.
Q So why did you not follow up to get that written order?
A I have never questioned the attorneys about whether they have done their job or not.
Q But you did a lot of things yourself. I mean, you’re the one who called the court and asked that she be locked up when you found her. Then you said you mentioned to the [J]udge that she had been found. I mean, you were actively involved directly with the court. Why would you not follow up to get the court order?
A I can’t get a court order. All I can do is inform our legal staff.
Q How many times did you ask Brenda to get the court order?
A Once.
Q Once? And you never asked her again? You never followed up with that?
A I asked her once.
Q But you didn’t think that was important [enough] that you should ask again?
*1027 A It’s not my experience that I ask what — if the attorneys have done what they’re supposed to do.
Q Well, is it possible that you never asked her at all and you went through and entered these entries in [M.D.’s contact log] later to cover yourself?
A No, I don’t do things like that.

State’s Exh. 1A at 44-46. Edelen also testified that she had orally informed Moody of when M.D. was found and that she had made entries in M.D.’s contact log to reflect that communication. And Ede-len acknowledged that she had made several log entries long after the fact and even after she had received a subpoena to testify. Judge Meade concluded the hearing by dismissing the CHINS petition against M.D., who had turned eighteen shortly before the hearing.

Thereafter, the Indiana Office of the Inspector General began investigating the circumstances of M.D.’s thirty-day stay at SIRYV. Special Agent Michael Mischler, a retired Indiana State Trooper, conducted approximately twenty interviews, including an interview of Judge Meade.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
947 N.E.2d 1024, 2011 Ind. App. LEXIS 814, 2011 WL 1733534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edelen-v-state-indctapp-2011.