Freed v. State

954 N.E.2d 526, 2011 Ind. App. LEXIS 1788, 2011 WL 4543969
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 3, 2011
Docket79A02-1010-CR-1187
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 954 N.E.2d 526 (Freed 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
Freed v. State, 954 N.E.2d 526, 2011 Ind. App. LEXIS 1788, 2011 WL 4543969 (Ind. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

VAIDIK, Judge.

Case Summary

Michael Freed appeals his conviction for Class B felony robbery. Freed argues that the trial court erred by admitting evidence of his uncharged misconduct— specifically, an unrelated burglary, for *528 gery, and solicitation for murder. We conclude that the evidence was properly admitted for the non-character purpose of corroborating Freed’s confession to the instant robbery. We further conclude that the record evidence is sufficient to sustain Freed’s conviction. We affirm.

Facts and Procedural History

On July 6, 2008, at approximately 2:30 a.m., Freed entered a Village Pantry convenience store in Lafayette. The store was located near the intersection of Brady Lane and Concord Avenue. Freed wore a glove on his left hand, a hat on his head, and another article covering the bottom of his face. Employee Cora Taegel was working alone at the store. Freed brandished a knife and demanded that Taegel give him the money from the register. Taegel gave Freed $115 from the drawer. Freed fled. Taegel suffered a panic attack but called 911 right away. Freed headed north to his friend’s apartment, which was in a complex adjacent to the convenience store. He shed his disguise while en route.

Law enforcement responded. Officers located a hat and other clothing items in the vicinity of the Village Pantry, but Freed eluded police for the time being.

The robbery was caught on a surveillance tape. The tape apparently did not capture Freed’s face, though it did record his voice.

Freed was later arrested and jailed in connection with an unrelated burglary/forgery. Freed and an accomplice allegedly broke into the residence of Alice and Men-lo Pridemore and stole a purse containing a checkbook. Freed and his accomplice then went to a bank to cash forged checks.

While in jail for the latter offenses, Freed was concerned that the Pridemores would testify against him at trial. Freed devised a plan to murder them, and he sought assistance from fellow inmate James Scott Littrell. Littrell played along but intended to report Freed to authorities. Littrell falsely told Freed that he knew someone who could perform a murder-for-hire. Littrell asked Freed to put his murder request into writing.

Freed wrote a letter to Littrell’s made-up hit man. The letter stated in part:

I have a case with these people as witness’s and I hear your the man to talk to about taking care of problems for good. So my case will be clean at trial. Im in a bind because Im in jail.... If you help me, Ill make sure you get your money when I get out. Just give me a few days unless Scott can loan me the money right now. I really need your help.... I will do anything to make this problem disappear.

State’s Ex. 16. Freed attached a hand-drawn map of the Pridemores’ home. At the end of the letter, Freed wrote: “Check for an unsolved VP robbery in July of 08 at Concord and brady In.” Id. This statement was the equivalent of a confession to the Village Pantry robbery. The confession functioned as “insurance” or “collateral” for Littrell’s assistance in the murder plot. In other words, if Freed were to tell on Littrell, Littrell would have Freed’s robbery confession to disclose to law enforcement.

Littrell turned Freed’s letter over to authorities, and Detective Daniel Shumaker soon met with Freed to question him about the Village Pantry robbery. Freed denied involvement, though he made various incriminating statements to Detective Shumaker during their interview. For example, Freed indicated that the store clerk was a female. Freed also asked Detective Shumaker how he learned of the robbery, Detective Shumaker said that he found out from Freed’s own mouth, and Freed then asked if Littrell was still in jail. Following *529 the interview, Detective Shumaker obtained from Freed a DNA sample and handwriting exemplar.

Freed was later housed with inmate James Goodman. Freed told Goodman about the Village Pantry robbery and shared details about the crime. Freed said that he robbed a female clerk, wore a disguise and glove, used a knife, stole about $125, and fled to his friend’s apartment. He also discussed with Goodman the letter that he wrote soliciting a hit man and confessing to the robbery. Goodman passed this information on to Detective Shumaker.

Forensic technician Daun Powers analyzed DNA swabs collected from the hat recovered near the Village Pantry. Powers could not exclude Freed as a contributor to a particular DNA sample taken from inside the hat. Or statistically speaking, about five people within the Tippecanoe County population could have contributed to the DNA sample, and Freed’s DNA profile identified him as one of them.

Handwriting expert Courtney King analyzed Freed’s jailhouse letter. King concluded that Freed was the probable author of the first part of the letter, in which Freed requested assistance from the supposed hit man. King was less certain about the confession, as it looked slightly different and was likely written on a different backing surface. However, according to King, indications were that Freed authored the confession as well.

Detective Shumaker reviewed the Village Pantry surveillance tape after interviewing Freed. Detective Shumaker identified Freed as the robber by matching Freed’s voice with the voice recorded on the tape.

The State charged Freed with Class B felony robbery and the lesser-included Class D felony theft. The State alleged that “[o]n or about July 6, 2008, in Tippecanoe County, State of Indiana, Michael G. Freed did knowingly or intentionally take property, to wit: U.S. Currency, from another person or from the presence of another person, to wit: Cora Taegel, by using or threatening the use of force on the said Cora Taegel, or by putting the said Cora Taegel in fear, and Freed committed said offense while armed with a deadly weapon, to wit: a knife.... ” Appellant’s App. p. 10.

The State filed notice of intent to offer at trial Freed’s jailhouse letter. The State sought to introduce the letter “as probative evidence of intent, knowledge, and identity. The letter conveys the defendant’s involvement in the robbery at issue in this case,” and his “request for certain witnesses to be killed identifies the defendant as the letter and map’s author.” Id. at 17. The trial court granted the State’s request following a hearing and over the defense’s motion to exclude. The court explained:

I have tremendous difficulty separating ... the sort of a fragment of a confession of this crime contained in writing from the entire context.... All it says is check for an unsolved crime. Who knows why a person might make that request. It only takes its meaning from the representation that it was offered as a token of good faith in order to persuade the cellmate to help him take care of the other issue.... It initially lacks credibility and so the context is necessary to explain why it’s credible that a person would make this confession. The confession is highly relevant, if he made the confession, and, of course, you have ... problem the State always has in a case ...

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
954 N.E.2d 526, 2011 Ind. App. LEXIS 1788, 2011 WL 4543969, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/freed-v-state-indctapp-2011.