Firestone v. State

774 N.E.2d 109, 2002 Ind. App. LEXIS 1408, 2002 WL 1978824
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 28, 2002
Docket49A02-0201-CR-39
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 774 N.E.2d 109 (Firestone 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
Firestone v. State, 774 N.E.2d 109, 2002 Ind. App. LEXIS 1408, 2002 WL 1978824 (Ind. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION

BARNES, Judge.

Case Summary

Brian Firestone appeals his convictions and sentences for sexual battery, a Class C felony, conspiracy to commit murder, a Class A felony, kidnapping, a Class A felony, and criminal confinement, a Class B felony. We affirm.

*111 Issues
The restated issues are:
I. whether there is sufficient evidence to support the kidnapping and criminal confinement convictions;
II. whether Firestone’s convictions for conspiracy to commit murder and kidnapping violate the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Indiana Constitution; and
III. whether the trial court abused its discretion in sentencing Firestone to an aggregate sentence of eighty-eight years.

Facts

The evidence most favorable to the convictions reveals that Firestone and his friend and co-worker Jamie Robinson wanted to take a vacation in the mountains of the western United States, but lacked an adequate vehicle to make such a trip. Firestone and Robinson conceived a plan to steal the car of a seventeen-year-old coworker, A.G., so they could make the trip. On the evening of December 9, 2000, Firestone asked A.G. to give him a ride home from work and offered to show A.G. around his new house. Robinson, who had been given permission to leave work early, was lying in wait for A.G. at Firestone’s house. When A.G. entered the house, Robinson tackled her and threw her down onto a bed while holding a knife she recognized as belonging to Firestone. A.G. managed to take the knife away from Robinson, but Firestone talked her into giving it to him and he placed it on a dresser near the bed. Firestone then held A.G. down while Robinson tied her arms and legs to the bed and put duct-tape over her mouth. Firestone and Robinson removed A.G.’s clothes and Robinson cut off her bra with the knife.

Firestone began fondling A.G.’s breasts and vagina, removing- her tampon because it was bothering him. He also rubbed A.G.’s thighs and genital area with a mas-sager. Afterwards, Firestone began packing A.G.’s car for his and Robinson’s trip. When he returned to the bedroom, he found Robinson attempting to have intercourse with A.G. Firestone chastised Robinson for this because he was eager to leave on their trip. Firestone agreed, however, to a plan to take A.G. on the trip and use her as a “sex slave” in the mountains. He also agreed to eventually kill her when they were done with her so she could not incriminate them, possibly with a .22 rifle found in the car’s trunk, and to chop up her body with an axe. Tr. p. 393.

Firestone and Robinson then untied A.G., gave her some clothes, and took her to the car, where she was placed in the back seat. The back seat of the car had been deliberately packed full and the child safety locks had been activated to make it difficult for A.G. to escape. The knife that had previously been used against her was on the car’s center console. Firestone drove the car west on Interstate 70 until experiencing a mechanical problem after accidentally driving off the road just west of St. Louis. Firestone and Robinson contacted a tow truck, whose driver refused to tow the car because the pair had no money. Shortly thereafter, an officer of the St. Peters, Missouri, Police Department happened upon the vehicle while on patrol and stopped to see if he could be of assistance. Firestone and Robinson had told A.G. to sit in the car’s driver’s seat because neither of them had a valid driver’s license. The officer became suspicious after noting A.G.’s youth and her responses to some of his questions. He asked to speak with A.G. at the front of the car, and she then told the officer what had happened. Noticing marks on A.G.’s wrists consistent with her having been bound, the *112 officer called for assistance and held Firestone and Robinson at gunpoint until another officer arrived and they were placed under arrest. Firestone and Robinson both later confessed their involvement in A.G.’s abduction to local police and the FBI, although each attempted to label the other as the prime instigator of the plan.

The State charged Firestone with sexual battery, conspiracy to commit murder, kidnapping, criminal confinement, auto theft, and robbery. After a jury trial conducted on October 29-November 1, 2001, Firestone was acquitted of robbery but convicted of all the other counts. The trial court entered judgment of convictions for all five of those counts, but merged the auto theft and confinement convictions with the kidnapping conviction for sentencing purposes. It imposed sentences of eight years for sexual battery, thirty years for conspiracy to commit murder, and fifty years for kidnapping, all to run consecutively for an aggregate sentence of eighty-eight years. Firestone now appeals. 1

Analysis

I. Sufficiency of the Evidence

First, Firestone asserts there is insufficient evidence to support his convictions for kidnapping and criminal confinement as a Class B felony. In reviewing a sufficiency of the evidence claim, we neither reweigh the evidence nor assess the credibility of the witnesses. Love v. State, 761 N.E.2d 806, 810 (Ind.2002). We look to the evidence most favorable to the verdict and reasonable inferences drawn therefrom. Id. We will affirm the conviction if there is probative evidence from which a reasonable jury could have found the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. Id.

The State charged Firestone with kidnapping under Indiana Code Section 35^42-3-2(a)(2), which defines the crime as knowingly or intentionally confining another person while hijacking a vehicle. Firestone contends there is insufficient evidence he “hijacked” A.G.’s car within the meaning of the kidnapping statute because “no one was in the [car] when the ear was taken,” but rather A.G. was forced into the car. Appellant’s Br. p. 19. We disagree. Our supreme court has stated:

We discern that the legislature had it in mind in enacting this part of the kidnapping statute to prevent persons from being exposed to that special danger, that increased probability of injury or death, which results when one is seized and confined or transported in a commandeered vehicle. The message intended for the would-be wrong doer, is that if you are going to steal or commandeer a vehicle, let the people in it go and don’t force people into it against their will.

Wilson v. State, 468 N.E.2d 1375, 1378 (Ind.1984) (emphasis added). Firestone argues that the highlighted portion of this quote is dicta and, essentially, that we are not bound by it. We conclude the statement was essential to resolution of the case and thus was not dicta. In Wilson, the victim was returning to his car when the defendant forced him into it against his will. Id. at 1376-77.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
774 N.E.2d 109, 2002 Ind. App. LEXIS 1408, 2002 WL 1978824, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/firestone-v-state-indctapp-2002.