Fernbach v. State

954 N.E.2d 1080, 2011 Ind. App. LEXIS 1802, 2011 WL 4688564
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 7, 2011
Docket69A01-1103-CR-151
StatusPublished
Cited by97 cases

This text of 954 N.E.2d 1080 (Fernbach 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
Fernbach v. State, 954 N.E.2d 1080, 2011 Ind. App. LEXIS 1802, 2011 WL 4688564 (Ind. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

MATHIAS, Judge.

James Fernbach was convicted in Ripley Circuit Court of two counts of Class A felony attempted murder and sentenced to a total of sixty years incarceration. Fern-bach appeals and presents two issues, which we restate as: (1) whether the jury clearly erred in finding Fernbach guilty but mentally ill instead of not guilty by reason of insanity; and (2) whether the sentence imposed by the trial court is inappropriate.

We affirm.

Facts and Procedural History

Fernbach has a long history of mental illness. He has struggled with depression since elementary school, was committed to an institution when he was a teenager, and attempted suicide when he was sixteen years old. Fernbach has also had some history of violent behavior. When he was a young man, he fathered a child with a girlfriend, with whom he had a volatile relationship. Fernbach was arrested several times, for domestic -violence, for threatening his girlfriend with an axe, for trying to strangle her, and for destroying items in their residence.

Fernbach later married his wife, Susan. In the fall of 2008, Fernbach began to have paranoid delusions. At one point, he fired a shotgun into the woods near his home, claiming that he was shooting at intruders. After this incident, his family members removed firearms from his home. Fern-bach still displayed symptoms of his paranoia, including barricading the sliding door and windows of his home and putting nails in his gutters to prevent anyone from getting on his roof.

On a family vacation in September of that year, Fernbach thought his car was being followed. His family took him to an emergency room at a hospital in North Carolina, where he was prescribed anti-anxiety medication and told to see a mental health professional. Fernbach’s symptoms did not improve, and he even went so far as to have family members taste his food to assure that it had not been poisoned. After Fernbach returned from vacation with family, he was taken to the emergency room at the Decatur County hospital. He was again treated for anxiety and released.

In October of 2008, Fernbach’s family had him involuntarily committed at the University of Cincinnati hospital for seventy-two hours. There, Fernbach was diagnosed with bipolar disorder with psychotic tendencies. Nevertheless, he was released from the hospital after the seventy-two hour hold and continued to have delusions that people were talking about him and threatening his family.

Shortly after being released from the hospital in Cincinnati, Fernbach overdosed on Tylenol pills and was taken to the *1083 emergency room. Fernbach’s wife therefore took him to Quinco, a mental health facility in Batesville. Quinco personnel diagnosed Fernbach with bipolar disorder and also stated he possibly suffered from schizophrenia. Quinco monitored Fern-bach and attempted to treat his problems with medication. Still, Fernbach continued to suffer from paranoid delusions, and eventually, he illegally purchased a handgun in Cincinnati.

On April 4, 2009, Fernbach went to a gas station and convenience store in Bates-ville. After talking to the cashier, he walked back out into the parking lot. There, he approached a vehicle belonging to Philip and Roberta Cruser, who had stopped at the station on their way to Cincinnati. When Mrs. Cruser entered the car after paying for fuel, Fernbach raised his two-shot derringer pistol to Mr. Cruser’s head and shot him behind the ear. Fernbach then turned and saw Benjamin Dick. Fernbach walked toward Dick and raised the gun toward Dick’s head. Dick grabbed Fernbach’s arm in an attempt to defend himself. Fernbach was able to break free from Dick’s grip and fired at Dick’s head. The shot instead passed through Dick’s hand and narrowly missed his head. As Dick lay on the ground, Fernbach tried to kick him in the head. Fernbach then started to reload the pistol with ammunition he had in his pocket. Dick tried to persuade Fernbach not to shoot him, saying, “man, ... I’ve got kids ... the cops are coming ... you need to get the hell out of here.” Tr. p. 488. Fernbach then got in his vehicle and fled. A bystander followed Fernbach, who sped away at a high rate. Once Fernbach got home, he told his wife that he “thought [he] killed somebody on accident.” Tr. p. 986. Fernbach then called the police. 1

The police responded and apprehended Fernbach. Fernbach initially told the police that he had little recollection of what had occurred, claiming that he was in a “daze” but could remember “squeezing the trigger.” Tr. pp. 798-99. Fernbach later claimed that Dick had attacked him and that he was merely defending himself. Specifically, Fernbach claimed that he fired his gun in the air and that Dick was “coming at [Fernbach].” Tr. p. 802. Fernbach also stated that “the only thing I remember is swinging and hitting [Dick] and then him hitting the ground.” Id.

Even later, Fernbach told the police that he acted in response to threats:

The whole thing, I talked to this guy one day and this ... I was talking with him and I was speaking to him and we were joking around and I thought he was kidding about people getting hurt or harmed but I was talking to him and he was like, oh well, who do you want killed. I was like I don’t want nobody killed. I said it eight times then finally said who do you want killed I said, ah, screw it the Indians 2 1 guess, maybe my *1084 ex-girl, maybe this and that. I didn’t put nobody out there and meaning to have anybody killed. From then on is when it, I don’t know what the hell has happened it’s went crazy. People come up [and] threaten me.

Tr. pp. 805-06. Fernbach also asked one of the officers if he could get the death penalty for his crimes. The officer told Fernbach that that was a decision for a judge, not the police.

Fortunately, neither of Fernbach’s victims died. Mr. Cruser was gravely injured and suffers from severe disabilities as a result of the gunshot wound to his head. Although Dick was not shot in the head, his hand was also severely injured and he remains disabled.

As a result of the shootings, the State charged Fernbach on April 6, 2009, with two counts of attempted murder. Fern-bach pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity. A jury trial commenced on January 11, 2011 and concluded on January 18, 2011. The jury rejected Fernbach’s insanity defense and instead found him guilty but mentally ill. At the conclusion of a sentencing hearing held on February 17, 2011, the trial court imposed the advisory sentence of thirty years on both of Fern-bach’s convictions and ordered the sentences to be served consecutively, for an aggregate term of sixty years. Fernbach now appeals.

I. Rejection of Insanity Defense

Fernbach first claims that the jury’s finding that he was guilty but mentally ill, as opposed to not guilty by reason of insanity, is clearly erroneous. To sustain a conviction, the State must prove each element of the charged offense — here attempted murder — beyond a reasonable doubt. See Galloway v. State, 938 N.E.2d 699, 708 (Ind.2010),

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
954 N.E.2d 1080, 2011 Ind. App. LEXIS 1802, 2011 WL 4688564, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fernbach-v-state-indctapp-2011.