Glendal Rhoton v. State of Indiana

CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 8, 2014
Docket49A05-1311-PC-563
StatusUnpublished

This text of Glendal Rhoton v. State of Indiana (Glendal Rhoton 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
Glendal Rhoton v. State of Indiana, (Ind. Ct. App. 2014).

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, collateral estoppel, or the law of the case.

APPELLANT PRO SE: ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:

GLENDAL RHOTON GREGORY F. ZOELLER Carlisle, Indiana Attorney General of Indiana

BRIAN REITZ Deputy Attorney General Indianapolis, Indiana

Oct 08 2014, 8:47 am

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

GLENDAL RHOTON, ) ) Appellant-Defendant, ) ) vs. ) No. 49A05-1311-PC-563 ) STATE OF INDIANA, ) ) Appellee-Plaintiff. )

APPEAL FROM THE MARION SUPERIOR COURT The Honorable Grant W. Hawkins, Judge Cause No. 49G05-0809-PC-204910

October 8, 2014

MEMORANDUM DECISION - NOT FOR PUBLICATION

ROBB, Judge Case Summary and Issues

Glendal Rhoton, pro se, appeals the post-conviction court’s denial of his petition

for post-conviction relief, raising the following issues for review: (1) whether Rhoton

was denied the right to a fair post-conviction hearing; (2) whether Rhoton received

ineffective assistance of trial counsel; and (3) whether Rhoton received ineffective

assistance of appellate counsel. Concluding Rhoton’s post-conviction proceedings were

not fundamentally unfair and that the post-conviction court did not err in denying

Rhoton’s petition, we affirm.

Facts and Procedural History

Many of the facts relevant to Rhoton’s underlying convictions were previously set

out by this court on direct appeal:

Late in the evening of September 2, 2008, Kimberly Philpot drove Rhoton, her ex-husband, to the Road Dog Saloon in Indianapolis. Rhoton told her to leave, so she drove to a nearby strip mall to wait. The saloon was closed, but Rhoton walked to the back of the building with a pickax and flathead screwdriver. When Philpot returned about ten minutes later, Rhoton threw the pickax in the back of the truck and screwdriver in the cab and said, “I smashed the dicksucker’s brains in.”

At Rhoton’s request, Philpot left again and then returned fifteen minutes later. She saw Rhoton in a shed behind the saloon, left again, and returned a few minutes later to find Rhoton waiting for her by the street. He instructed her to pull around back. There Rhoton and Philpot loaded two barrels full of frozen meat and other food into the back of the truck. As they left the saloon, Rhoton told Philpot that he needed to get rid of the pickax. Philpot drove back to the strip mall, where Rhoton placed the pickax next to a green recycling bin.

Shortly before eleven o’clock on the evening of September 2, 2008, Officer Frank Vanek of the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department (“IMPD”) was dispatched to investigate an alarm at the Road Dog Saloon on the southeast side of Indianapolis. When Officer Vanek arrived, he

2 found that the doors to the saloon were secure. However, in the rear of the building, he found Martin Wilburn wrapped in a blanket and lying facedown on a row of chairs that had been pushed together. Wilburn had suffered several severe injuries to his head and was bleeding profusely. The officers called for medics, who arrived within ten minutes and transported Wilburn to the hospital. Officers on the scene discovered that the shed in back of the saloon was not secure and that frozen food was missing from the shed’s freezer.

Wilburn died a short time later as a result of his injuries. He had suffered three large lacerations around and below his left ear. Each laceration was approximately one and one-half inches long, and the one below the left earlobe penetrated “approximately one inch into the tissues of the lower portion of the skull.” In one of the skull fractures Wilburn had sustained, “a piece of bone was literally pushed in causing a punched out effect[,]” and his brain was lacerated.

At the same time that evening, IMPD Officer Craig Wildauer was assisting another officer with an arrest for possession of marijuana on the east side of Indianapolis. When the arrestee’s cell phone rang, Officer Wildauer answered and pretended to be the arrestee. In a very brief conversation, the caller, a male, asked to meet. Subsequently a female called the arrestee’s cell phone, and then a male got on the phone. Officer Wildauer agreed to meet the caller at the intersection of East Washington Street and Sherman. Shortly after Officer Wildauer drove to that intersection, he saw a pickup truck pull in to a parking lot on the southwest corner without using a turn signal, and the truck’s driver was not wearing a seatbelt. Officer Wildauer initiated a traffic stop of the truck.

In the traffic stop, the officer learned that Kimberly Philpot was the driver, and Rhoton was her passenger. Philpot and Rhoton appeared nervous. Officer Wildauer noticed that the bed of the truck contained large barrels filled with frozen meat and frozen breaded mushrooms. Officer Brady Ball arrived as backup. Officer Wildauer had Rhoton wait on the truck’s open tailgate while he took Philpot to the front of the truck. Once at the front of the truck, Philpot told the officer that she thought someone at the Road Dog Saloon needed help. When the officers inquired through IMPD about a problem at the Road Dog Saloon, they learned of the break- in and Wilburn’s injuries. Philpot then told Officer Ball that Rhoton had left a pickax by the recycling bin behind a strip mall. Later testing disclosed the presence of Wilburn’s blood and DNA on the pickax.

3 Rhoton v. State, 938 N.E.2d 1240, 1242-43 (Ind. Ct. App. 2010) (citations omitted),

trans. denied. Rhoton was charged with murder, a felony, and burglary, a Class A felony.

The State subsequently charged Rhoton as an habitual offender. A jury found Rhoton

guilty of both counts, and he admitted to being an habitual offender. Rhoton was

sentenced to eighty-one years imprisonment.

On June 29, 2011, Rhoton, pro se, filed his petition for post-conviction relief,

alleging ineffective assistance of trial counsel and appellate counsel. On July 25, 2012,

an evidentiary hearing was held, at which Dominic Martin, Rhoton’s trial attorney, and

Dara Goodrich, an investigative paralegal with the public defender agency, gave

testimony. Subpoenas were issued for additional witnesses—Barbara Sherman, Dave

Ezelle, Kelly Voils, and Jennifer Hix—who did not appear at the hearing. On October

23, 2013, the post-conviction court denied Rhoton’s petition for relief. This appeal

followed. Additional facts will be provided as necessary.

Discussion and Decision

I. Standard of Review

A petitioner seeking post-conviction relief bears the burden of establishing

grounds for relief by a preponderance of the evidence. Ind. Post-Conviction Rule 1(5).

A petitioner who is denied post-conviction relief appeals from a negative judgment,

which may be reversed only if “the evidence as a whole leads unerringly and

unmistakably to a decision opposite that reached by the post-conviction court.” Stevens

v. State, 770 N.E.2d 739, 745 (Ind. 2002), cert. denied, 540 U.S. 830 (2003). We defer to

the post-conviction court’s factual findings, unless they are clearly erroneous. Id. at 746.

4 II. Rhoton’s Post-Conviction Hearing

Rhoton argues he has been denied due process and the right to a fair post-

conviction hearing. His contentions on this point are twofold. First, he asserts that

Indiana’s entire post-conviction relief system is fundamentally unfair to pro se litigants

and denies them due process.

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