Eric J. Lairson v. State of Indiana (mem. dec.)

CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 31, 2020
Docket20A-CR-28
StatusPublished

This text of Eric J. Lairson v. State of Indiana (mem. dec.) (Eric J. Lairson v. State of Indiana (mem. dec.)) 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
Eric J. Lairson v. State of Indiana (mem. dec.), (Ind. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION Pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 65(D), this Memorandum Decision shall not be FILED regarded as precedent or cited before any Aug 31 2020, 11:08 am

court except for the purpose of establishing CLERK the defense of res judicata, collateral Indiana Supreme Court Court of Appeals and Tax Court estoppel, or the law of the case.

ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE Adam G. Forrest Curtis T. Hill, Jr. BBFCS Attorneys Attorney General Richmond, Indiana Josiah Swinney Deputy Attorney General Indianapolis, Indiana

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

Eric J. Lairson, August 31, 2020 Appellant-Defendant, Court of Appeals Case No. 20A-CR-28 v. Appeal from the Wayne Superior Court State of Indiana, The Honorable Appellee-Plaintiff Charles K. Todd, Jr., Judge Trial Court Cause No. 89D01-1804-MR-1

Vaidik, Judge.

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-CR-28 | August 31, 2020 Page 1 of 13 Case Summary [1] Eric J. Lairson was convicted of murder for beating his girlfriend to death and

sentenced to sixty years in prison. He now appeals, arguing that the trial court

erred in refusing to instruct the jury on reckless homicide and that his sentence

is inappropriate. We affirm.

Facts and Procedural History [2] Around 2:00 p.m. on December 13, 2017, Lairson called 911 to report he had

just woken up and found his girlfriend of one year, Tylissa Isaacs, lying in a

bathtub with no water and not breathing. Lairson told the 911 operator he and

Tylissa “drank too much last night” and that she might have “alcohol

poisoning.” Tr. Vol. II pp. 215, 217. Lairson also said the two had argued and

he had gotten mad and “hit the walls.” Id. at 214. The 911 operator asked

Lairson if Tylissa was breathing, and he said no. The 911 operator then asked

Lairson if he could attempt CPR on Tylissa, but he said no because she had

been there “too long” and her body was “cold.” Id. at 214, 218. Lairson said

when he went to bed, Tylissa “went to take a shower” and he thought she was

coming to bed right after that. Id. at 216. Lairson added that at some point the

night before, he “fell forward, hit the wall and cut [his] hand”; however, he

“sw[ore] [he] didn’t do anything like that” and Tylissa was “still alive when [he]

went to sleep.” Id. Lairson said he and Tylissa had an “altercation” “two or

three, maybe four days ago” where he slapped her but that “nothing got

physical” the night before. Id. at 218.

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-CR-28 | August 31, 2020 Page 2 of 13 [3] Richmond Police Department Officer Paul Phillips arrived on the scene around

2:15 p.m. and found Tylissa’s naked body in the bathtub with bruises “from her

feet to her upper body, even to her neck.” Id. at 220; Ex. 4. He also saw a “tuft

of hair hanging on the corner of the bathroom sink.” Tr. Vol. II p. 220. Lairson

had a bandage on his left hand, and his blood had dripped throughout the

house. Lairson told Officer Phillips that “he hadn’t hurt [Tylissa], that he hadn’t

killed her, that they had been arguing and drinking the night before, [and] that

there had been some minor physical altercation.” Id. at 221-22. Lairson “kept

repeating over and over that [the police] needed to fix this” because “he had

done nothing.” Id. at 222.

[4] A detective interviewed Lairson later that day and photographed fresh injuries

to his left (dominant) hand. Exs. 28-32, 34. Lairson told the detective Tylissa

had “too much” to drink the night before and they had argued. Tr. Vol. III p.

80. He explained:

Sometimes you gotta put a woman in their place but do it legal. If you can’t hold her down or whatever and she can’t slap you and you slap her, (indiscernible) but we hadn’t been fighting like that. I mean last week, you know, we got into something and I slapped her. That’s the reason why her eye was black . . . .

Id. at 82. Lairson clarified that the earlier incident occurred “four or five days

ago” and that during that incident, he “grabbed” and “mugged” Tylissa, which

meant that he “push[ed] her up off me.” Id. at 99, 128, 135.

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-CR-28 | August 31, 2020 Page 3 of 13 [5] When the detective again asked Lairson what happened the night before,

Lairson said he and Tylissa “had words” but it didn’t get “physical.” Id. at 104.

He added that they both “mugged” or pushed each other before she hopped in

the shower, and he insisted that the injuries to his hand were not related to any

violence toward Tylissa. Rather, he claimed they were due to an old injury,

from “back in the day” when he boxed, and because he punched a door or wall

the night before. Id. at 105. As Lairson explained to the detective:

[When I get angry] I’ll hit a door, I’ll hit a wall, I ain’t gonna hit my girl like that. I ain’t goin’ to knock my girl’s teeth out or bust her upside the head. You know what I mean? I don’t – I don’t rock like that.

Id. at 106.

[6] Later during the interview, Lairson said he “may have slapped” Tylissa but that

he “never punched her.” Id. at 126. Lairson then told the detective he would be

“completely one hundred percent honest” and told the following story:

I got drunk and fell. We had words, we pushed and shoved each other last night, but that’s as bad as it got and then when I had my words, I said listen, what the fu** did you do? Why did you tear the shower curtain down and why the fu** is all this all over the place. . . . And she was mumbling and still moving around the shower, drunk. I said I ain’t dealin’ with this sh** and I walked the fu** out of the bathroom, went and laid down and I went to sleep, I woke up and my girl is dead. That’s what I’m telling you.

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-CR-28 | August 31, 2020 Page 4 of 13 Id. at 127. When the detective told Lairson they needed to figure out what

happened to Tylissa, Lairson speculated that she “fell in the shower” or “drank

too much.” Id.

[7] The detective then asked Lairson about a scream heard around 2:00 a.m., and

Lairson responded that they “yell at each other from time to time” because:

We just an average young couple, we - we mug each other and slap each other. She - she may punch me a couple times, but I’m a man, I take that on the chin, but I slapped her, you know, that’s the reason why her eyes black, I slapped her four or five days ago.

Id. at 131. However, he claimed that Tylissa did not scream around 2:00 a.m.

Id. at 131-32. The detective continued asking Lairson what happened the night

before, but Lairson kept repeating he only “slapped” Tylissa and didn’t punch

her. Id. at 136. He characterized what happened between them as “small stuff”

and said they weren’t “for real” fighting. Id. at 139, 142. He said he “had a

wonderful time with [his] woman” and they were “drunk,” “having fun,” and

“partying.” Id. at 155. He again speculated that Tylissa was “too drunk and

fell,” had alcohol poisoning, or had “cancer.” Id. at 144, 148. He emphasized

that he didn’t push Tylissa down in the shower, that Tylissa was alive when he

last saw her in the shower, and that “[w]hat happened from there, [he didn’t]

know.” Id. at 160, 162. The interview ended shortly thereafter.

[8] An autopsy occurred the next day. According to the forensic pathologist,

Tylissa died from multiple blunt-force injuries to her head, neck, torso, and

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