Fredrick D. Gaither v. State of Indiana

CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 26, 2012
Docket49A02-1202-PC-106
StatusUnpublished

This text of Fredrick D. Gaither v. State of Indiana (Fredrick D. Gaither v. State of Indiana) 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
Fredrick D. Gaither v. State of Indiana, (Ind. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Pursuant to Ind.Appellate Rule 65(D), this Memorandum Decision shall not be regarded as precedent or cited before any court except for the purpose of establishing the defense of res judicata, FILED Jul 26 2012, 9:10 am collateral estoppel, or the law of the case. CLERK of the supreme court, court of appeals and tax court

ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:

STEPHEN T. OWENS GREGORY F. ZOELLER Public Defender of Indiana Attorney General of Indiana

JONATHAN O. CHENOWETH MONIKA PREKOPA TALBOT Deputy Public Defender Deputy Attorney General Indianapolis, Indiana Indianapolis, Indiana

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

FREDRICK D. GAITHER, ) ) Appellant-Petitioner, ) ) vs. ) No. 49A02-1202-PC-106 ) STATE OF INDIANA, ) ) Appellee-Respondent. )

APPEAL FROM THE MARION SUPERIOR COURT The Honorable Kurt M. Eisgruber, Judge Cause No. 49G01-9409-PC-118824

July 26, 2012

MEMORANDUM DECISION - NOT FOR PUBLICATION

BARNES, Judge Case Summary

Fredrick Gaither appeals the denial of his successive petition for post-conviction

relief. We affirm.

Issue

Gaither raises one issue, which we restate as whether the crimes he committed

constituted a single episode of criminal conduct.

Facts

The relevant facts recited by the post-conviction court are:

When Betty Jean Davis went to bed on September 15, 1994, her blue 1985 Buick Century was parked in front of her home. Sometime later that evening, her car was stolen. At 8:30 p.m. on that same day, Suzanne Yoder left work and went to dinner with friends. When Yoder arrived home later that night, she put her car in the garage and walked toward her house. As she began to unlock her back door, someone came up the steps behind her, put a gun in her face, and said, “Be quiet or I’ll kill you.” (R. at 347.) The man took her purse and her rings and then rubbed her chest. Yoder asked him not to touch her, and he said, “I’m not trying to feel you, I’m looking for something.” (Id.) Finding nothing else, the man ran away. Yoder entered her house, woke her husband, and called the police to report the robbery.

A few hours later, at 3:30 a.m. on September 16, Alicia Segraves arrived home from work and parked her car on the street across from her house. As she was getting out of her car, a blue or gray four door Buick Century was driving past her. The car stopped, a man got out, put a gun in her face, and told her to lie down on the ground. The man began going through her shirt to check for necklaces, checking her fingers for rings, and feeling her pockets, taking whatever he found. When her wallet did not have any money in it, he threatened to kill her and asked where her money was. Segraves told him her money was in the house. The man placed the gun in Segraves back and walked her to the porch.

2 When Gaither became distracted, Segraves slipped into the house, locked the door, and ran upstairs to call the police.

One hour later, Wilma and Ceolia [G]raves pulled into a driveway and Wilma got out of the car. A blue Buick Century pulled up behind them. As Wilma walked around the back of Ceolia’s car, a man said something to her that she did not understand. When she asked what he said, he knocked her down, pulled out a gun, and stood over her telling her he was going to kill her. Ceolia told Wilma to give the man her purse. Once the man got her purse, he jumped back into the car and drove away. Ceolia tried to follow him, while Wilma called the police.

Fifteen minutes after Wilma was robbed, Indianapolis Police Officer Ronald Hicks, who was on routine patrol and had heard reports of armed robberies involving a blue or gray Buick Century, saw a Buick Century and began following it. The driver sped up and turned the wrong way down a one- way street. Officer Hicks turned on his emergency lights and pursued the Buick. After a high-speed chase, the driver abandoned the car and began running. Officer Hicks was able to apprehend the man, who was Gaither. Either in the car or on Gaither, the police found an unlicensed handgun, a screwdriver used to start the stolen car, and the victims’ property, including the rings stolen from Yoder. The police brought Segraves, Wilma, and Ceolia to the scene, and each identified Gaither as the robber. Davis was brought to the scene and identified her Buick.

The State charged Gaither with three counts of robbery as a class B felony, one count of auto theft as a class D felony, one count of carrying a handgun without a license as a Class A misdemeanor, and one count of resisting law enforcement as a Class A misdemeanor. A jury found Gaither guilty of all charges . . . .

App. pp. 136-137 (quoting Gaither v. State, No. 49A04-0206-PC-282, slip op. at 2-4

(Ind. Ct. App. Feb. 11, 2003) (footnotes omitted)). Gaither was sentenced to twenty

years for each robbery conviction, three years for the auto theft conviction, one year for

3 the resisting law enforcement conviction, and one year for the handgun conviction. The

trial court ordered all of the sentences except one of the robbery convictions to be served

consecutively for a total sentence of forty-five years.

Gaither appealed his convictions and we affirmed in Gaither v. State, No. 49A02-

9606-CR-393 (Ind. Ct. App. April 17, 1997), aff’d on reh’g. Gaither filed a petition for

post-conviction relief challenging his convictions, and this petition was denied. In 2003,

we affirmed the denial of post-conviction relief in Gaither, No. 49A04-0206-PC-282. After

the 2003 decision affirming the denial of post-conviction relief, Gaither filed six

successive petitions for post-conviction relief, which were denied, and at least two

appeals have been dismissed.

However, on October 29, 2010, we allowed Gaither to file a successive petition for

post-conviction relief based on his assertion that, because his conduct was a single

episode of criminal conduct, he was being unlawfully restrained. On January 18, 2012,

following a hearing, the post-conviction court denied Gaither’s petition, concluding in

part:

It is apparent from a reading of the relevant cases that Defendant’s case does not fall within any reasonable concept of a “single episode of criminal conduct.” Certainly Defendant’s various crimes can be related without reference to each other, and each of the crimes occurred separately and distinctly: Defendant first stole a car, then some hours later robbed his first victim, fled this crime scene, traveled to another location and subsequently committed another robbery. Moreover, there is no caselaw for Defendant’s position. In all cases involving separate victims, the offenses have not fallen within the single episode rule unless they happened simultaneously or in the same location. . . .

4 Although Defendant’s crimes were committed within a span of hours and involved the same get-away vehicle, they occurred in different locations against different victims. As such Defendant’s crimes were not part of a single episode of criminal conduct and Defendant has failed to meet his burden of proof.

App. p. 140. Gaither now appeals.

Analysis

Gaither argues that the post-conviction court erroneously denied his petition

because his offenses were a single episode of criminal conduct, requiring the reduction of

his forty-five-year sentence to twenty-five years. Generally, the completion of the direct

appeal process closes the door to a criminal defendant’s claims of error in conviction or

sentencing. Pruitt v. State, 903 N.E.2d 899, 905 (Ind. 2009). However, defendants

whose appeals have been rejected are allowed to raise a narrow set of claims through a

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Pruitt v. State
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