Edgecomb v. State

673 N.E.2d 1185, 1996 Ind. LEXIS 147, 1996 WL 633731
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 1, 1996
Docket46S00-9412-CR-1308
StatusPublished
Cited by98 cases

This text of 673 N.E.2d 1185 (Edgecomb 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
Edgecomb v. State, 673 N.E.2d 1185, 1996 Ind. LEXIS 147, 1996 WL 633731 (Ind. 1996).

Opinion

SHEPARD, Chief Justice.

A jury found appellant Lawanna D. Edge-comb guilty of aiding Laurida Arion in the April 12, 1994, felony murder of Anna Moty-lewsM. 1 The trial court sentenced Edge-comb to the forty-year presumptive sentence plus an additional twenty years more for aggravating circumstances.

Edgecomb raises a substantial issue on direct appeal concerning sufficiency of the evidence. Upon careful examination, we resolve it against her. Her other allegations of error likewise do not point to reversal. Accordingly, we affirm.

I. Facts

The facts most favorable to the verdict are that sometime on or before Sunday, April 10, 1994, Lawanna Edgecomb told Laurida Ar-ion, the sister of Edgecomb’s boyfriend, how she stole money from Anna Motylewski in December 1993. While visiting Anna Moty-lewski’s to use the phone, Edgecomb had stolen about $150 from a box in Motylewski’s bedroom closet when the ninety-two year old woman was not looking. Soon after, Moty-lewski confronted Edgecomb at Edgecomb’s home about the missing money. Edgecomb denied taking it. Although Motylewski told Edgecomb never to visit her again, the elderly woman did not report the incident to the police.

When Arion learned of this easy theft, she showed great interest in trying to take more money from Motylewski. The two women discussed Motylewski and her money that Sunday afternoon in Edgeeomb’s kitchen. Arion’s nineteen year old son Christopher Griffin was also at Edgecomb’s, and he overheard part of the conversation. Arion spent that night at Edgeeomb’s, and the two further discussed Edgeeomb’s theft late that night in the privacy of Edgecomb’s bathroom while the others in the house slept.

On Monday, April 11, Edgecomb provided Arion with information about the elderly woman’s money, whether she had any more, where exactly it was kept, the layout of her house, and her daily routine regarding visitors and nurses, etc. Arion asked Edgecomb to help her gain entrance to Motylewski’s home by asking to use the phone, so that Arion could use the opportunity to search for money in the house. Edgecomb refused, stating that Motylewski would no longer allow her to use the phone because of the previous theft.

On Tuesday, April 12, Arion again visited Edgecomb’s, arriving around 10 a.m. Arion stood at the window and watched Motylew-ski’s residence with a pair of binoculars while Edgecomb told her more about Motylewski’s house, including whether there was a basement or an attic. Arion asked whether Mo-tylewski’s basement had a door leading to it, and whether Motylewski kept it open or shut. She also made statements to Edgecomb about the difficulty Motylewski must have in getting up and down the basement stairs. From this conversation Edgecomb understood Arion to be considering pushing Moty-lewski down the stairs to make it look like an *1189 accident if something went wrong. Arion again asked Edgeeomb to accompany her to MotylewsM’s, and offered to split any money she was able to find with Edgeeomb. Again Edgeeomb refused, stating that MotylewsM would never let Edgeeomb in to use the phone.

Edgeeomb then left her home to call her doctor for an appointment from the residence of Verna Bailey, two doors down. She reached the doctor’s answering machine which said to call back after 1 p.m. She chatted awhile with Bailey, then went back home. Arion was still there. At around 1 p.m. Edgeeomb watched Arion go out to her car and stay there while watching Motylew-sM working in her yard. When MotylewsM went back inside her home, Arion proceeded across the street and up onto her porch. Arion knocked on MotylewsM’s door, and told the elderly woman that she was the sister of a neighbor and needed to use her phone. Arion pointed to her red Ford Escort parked in Edgecomb’s driveway across the street as verification. MotylewsM knew that the Propes/Edgecomb residence did not have a phone, so she allowed Arion into her home.

Shortly thereafter, Christopher Griffin arrived at Edgecomb’s. He knocked on the door, but Edgeeomb would not answer. In fact, she went into her bathroom so Griffin would not see her, hoping he would go away. He persisted in his knocking, thinking Ms mother must be there because her car was parked in front of the house.

Edgeeomb finally let him in. When Griffin asked Edgeeomb where Ms mother was, she informed him that Arion had gone to Moty-lewsM’s to try to sneak some money out of her house, and that Arion had offered to share any money she got with Edgeeomb. Edgeeomb soon asked Griffin to go over to MotylewsM’s with her to see what was going on, but Griffin would not go. Edgeeomb walked over to MotylewsM’s by herself, going up onto the porch. She heard noises that sounded like shuffling or someone going through tMngs. Upon peering through the storm door, she saw MotylewsM at the bottom of her basement stairs, with Arion standing behind her demanding to know where her money was. She returned to her home about five mmutes after she left, telling Griffin that she thought something was going wrong and asking him to return to MotylewsM’s with her. When Griffin again refused, Edgeeomb went to Bailey’s again to call her doctor, as well as to call MotylewsM’s to see what was going on.

The evidence concerning what occurred inside MotylewsM’s home suggests that after Arion finished using the phone, she asked MotylewsM for her money and where it was located. When MotylewsM replied that she did not have any, Arion forced MotylewsM into the basement and began to beat her severely while continuing to demand money. (TMs is the scene Edgeeomb observed by peering through the porch door.) After the beating, Arion went back upstairs and found some money, papers, and a telephone. She then fled the house.

Arion ran back across the street to Edge-comb’s. She found Griffin there alone (by this time, Edgeeomb had gone a second time to Bailey’s to call the doctor and Motylew-sM’s). Arion was carrying a bag in her arms; she asked Griffin to tell Edgeeomb that she needed to meet her at Arion’s parent’s home in LaPorte later that day. Meanwhile, the battered MotylewsM slowly made her way up the stairs and eventually out into the yard to seek help.

After making her doctor’s .appointment and then receiving no answer at Motylew-sM’s, Edgeeomb left Bailey’s at around 1:20 p.m. and returned home. As she passed MotylewsM’s, Edgeeomb noticed the elderly woman in her front yard calling to her for help. Edgeeomb assisted her back to her front steps and helped her sit down. Moty-lewsM was bleeding severely from her eyes and from abrasions on her arms and head. Her face, neck, chest, and back were severely bruised. When asked what had happened, MotylewsM told Edgeeomb that a woman claiming to be Edgecomb’s sister had asked to use her phone, and then had beaten her after demanding money and not getting any. After seating the woman, Edgeeomb ran across the street to her home and procured the assistance of Griffin — Arion was already gone. The two helped MotylewsM back into *1190 her Mtchen and got bandages and towels for her wounds. Not finding Motylewski’s phone, Edgecomb went across the street to another neighbor’s home and called 9-1-1.

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673 N.E.2d 1185, 1996 Ind. LEXIS 147, 1996 WL 633731, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edgecomb-v-state-ind-1996.