Glenn Patrick Bradford v. State of Indiana

988 N.E.2d 1192, 2013 WL 2349824, 2013 Ind. App. LEXIS 252
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 29, 2013
Docket82A01-1203-PC-129
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 988 N.E.2d 1192 (Glenn Patrick Bradford 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
Glenn Patrick Bradford v. State of Indiana, 988 N.E.2d 1192, 2013 WL 2349824, 2013 Ind. App. LEXIS 252 (Ind. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

SHEPARD, Senior Judge.

Glenn Patrick Bradford was convicted of murder and arson in connection with the 1992 death of Tammy Lohr. His convictions were affirmed on appeal. Bradford now appeals the denial of his petition for post-conviction relief. We affirm. 1

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The nature of Bradford’s claims makes it necessary to discuss the facts in some detail.

During the period relevant to this case, Bradford was an officer with the Evansville Police Department. He worked the night shift from 10:30 p.m. to 6:30 a.m. Trial Tr. p. 2394. 2

Bradford had an extramarital affair with Lohr during the four years prior to her death. Id. at 2219. Hoping to force a split between Bradford and his wife Dawn, Lohr sent Dawn several anonymous notes in 1990 informing her of the affair. Id. at 2146-49. Lohr dictated the notes to male friends to disguise their origin. Id. at 2146. The notes caused problems in the Bradfords’ marriage. Bradford promised Dawn he would end the affair, but he continued to see Lohr, regularly stopping by her house before and after his shift.

In June 1992, Dawn discovered that Bradford and Lohr’s affair was ongoing. As a result, Bradford told Lohr their affair had to end and returned his copy of her house key. Id. at 3307. During that same month, Lohr sent Bradford seven angry emails about his attempt to end their affair. Id. at 2065-71. She said that if Dawn ever asked her if she and Bradford were continuing their relationship, she would “tell [Dawn] we are ... I don’t care how long we’ve been separated.” Id. at 2069. Lohr reminded Bradford that the two of them had gone to a photographer to have their portrait taken, and she threatened to show the photographs to Dawn. Id. at 2068. Two to three weeks before Lohr’s death, Bradford told his partner Officer Brian Hildenbrant that he and Lohr were having problems. Id. at 2220. Bradford continued to stop by Lohr’s house before and after his shift on occasion.

*1196 On the evening of August 1, 1992, Lohr was at her house in Evansville. She spoke with her father on the telephone from 10:25 p.m. until shortly before 11 p.m. Id. at 2050. At 6:35 a.m. the next morning, Bradford reported a fee at Lohr’s house. Id. at 833. He told the dispatcher he was at the scene and there was a fatality. Id. When the first responders arrived, Bradford met them and said, “Tammy’s inside.” Id. at 981. He also said, “She’s dead, she’s dead, she’s got to be dead.” Id. at 984. Bradford told one officer he had not been able to get inside due to fee and smoke, id. at 960, but he told another officer Lohr “was on the bed and the bed was on fire,” id. at 1002. He told yet another responder, “I couldn’t get her out.” Id. at 1039. Bradford later said during questioning by detectives that he crawled into the house, saw that the fee was in the bedroom, and crawled back out. Id. at 2476-77.

By coincidence, one of the firefighters who went to the scene, Randy Baugh, had driven by Lohr’s home at 6:30 a.m. on his way to a nearby fee station. Id. at 1059. He did not see any signs of fee at that time. Id. Bradford’s report of a fee was received shortly after Baugh arrived at the fire station, and he returned to Lohr’s house. Id. at 1060. Thick black smoke was pouring out of the home’s roof vents and front door. Id. at 1094. Baugh entered the house, found the fee in a bedroom, and extinguished it. Id. at 1070. He found Lohr’s body on a bed in the bedroom. Id. at 1071. Baugh estimated that the fee could not have been burning for more than a few minutes. Id. at 1087. Brian Owen, another firefighter who reported to the scene, agreed with Baugh’s estimate. Id. at 1134.

After the fire, a detective drove Bradford back to police headquarters. The detective saw Bradford sitting at a computer at around 8 a.m. Id. at 2389. Later, after Bradford learned that it was possible to retrieve deleted e-mails from the police department’s system, Bradford admitted to a detective that he had deleted the seven angry e-mails from Lohr on the morning of the fire because “he was trying to remember her in a good light.” Id. at 2508-09.

Evansville Police Department crime scene investigators discovered an empty gasoline can in the bedroom. Id. at 1301. The Evansville Fire Department’s fire investigators determined that the fire was intentional; the arsonist had poured gasoline on the mattress where Lohr’s body lay and on the floor leading to the bedroom door and then ignited the gasoline while standing in the doorway. Id. at 1985. Furthermore, fee investigators concluded that an outside observer could have seen smoke coming out of the house’s attic vents within a minute of the fire igniting because the bedroom door was partially open and a “scuttle hole” to the attic was open in the hallway outside the bedroom. Id. at 1988. Finally, an investigator concluded that the fire had not been burning for more than seven to ten minutes when Baugh extinguished it. Id. at 1995-96.

The medical examiner determined that Lohr had been stabbed or slashed twenty-one times on the back, right shoulder, neck, and cheek. Id. at 1886. One of the wounds penetrated her heart, another was in her left lung, and another penetrated her right lung. Id. at 1893, 1894, 1895. Lohr’s carotid artery was also slashed, possibly several times. Id. at 1898. Her body was burned after death. Id. at 1903. The examiner was unable to provide a precise time of death because the fire destroyed many of the indicators that he generally considered in making that determination.

Crime scene investigators found the body of Lohr’s dog, a small poodle, in the *1197 front room of the house. It had been stabbed to death. They also noted signs of an apparent break-in, including a kitchen window with the screen cut out, an open gate in Lohr’s backyard, and a telephone line that had someone had manipulated. Id. at 964, 1321,1326, 1559. These actions were executed in somewhat unusual ways. The screen appeared to have been cut from the inside. Id. at 1343. And the telephone lines had been stripped and then twisted together such that Lohr would have been unable to call out but anyone calling her number would have received a busy signal. Id. at 2991.

One of the investigators tried to enter the house through the kitchen window, but he could not do it by himself because he needed a ladder to reach the window, and the ladder was too unstable. Id. at 1395.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
988 N.E.2d 1192, 2013 WL 2349824, 2013 Ind. App. LEXIS 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glenn-patrick-bradford-v-state-of-indiana-indctapp-2013.