Indiana State Ethics Commission, Office of Inspector General, an agency of the State of Indiana, and David Thomas, in his official capacity as Inspector General v. Patricia Sanchez

CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 8, 2013
Docket49A02-1301-PL-12
StatusPublished

This text of Indiana State Ethics Commission, Office of Inspector General, an agency of the State of Indiana, and David Thomas, in his official capacity as Inspector General v. Patricia Sanchez (Indiana State Ethics Commission, Office of Inspector General, an agency of the State of Indiana, and David Thomas, in his official capacity as Inspector General v. Patricia Sanchez) 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.

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Indiana State Ethics Commission, Office of Inspector General, an agency of the State of Indiana, and David Thomas, in his official capacity as Inspector General v. Patricia Sanchez, (Ind. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Oct 08 2013, 5:21 am FOR PUBLICATION

ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS: ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: GREGORY F. ZOELLER SARA R. BLEVINS Attorney General of Indiana MATTHEW S. TARKINGTON Lewis & Kappes, P.C. STEPHEN R. CREASON Indianapolis, Indiana Chief Counsel Indianapolis, Indiana

ELIZABETH ROGERS Deputy Attorney General Indianapolis, Indiana

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA INDIANA STATE ETHICS COMMISSION, an agency of ) the State of Indiana, OFFICE OF INSPECTOR GENERAL, ) an agency of the State of Indiana, and DAVID THOMAS, ) in his official capacity as Inspector General, ) ) Appellants-Respondents, ) ) vs. ) No. 49A02-1301-PL-12 ) PATRICIA SANCHEZ, ) ) Appellee-Petitioner. )

APPEAL FROM THE MARION SUPERIOR COURT The Honorable Patrick L. McCarty, Judge Cause No. 49D03-1206-PL-23262

October 8, 2013

OPINION - FOR PUBLICATION

NAJAM, Judge STATEMENT OF THE CASE

The Indiana State Ethics Commission (“the Ethics Commission”), the Office of

Inspector General (“OIG”), and David Thomas, in his official capacity as Indiana’s

Inspector General (collectively referred to as “the Appellants”), appeal the trial court’s

reversal of the Ethics Commission’s Final Report against Patricia Sanchez. The

Appellants raise four issues for our review, but we need address only the following two

issues:

1. Whether the Ethics Commission was prohibited by the doctrine of res judicata from reconsidering the trial court’s prior decision that the State’s evidence against Sanchez had been seized without probable cause.

2. Whether the trial court erroneously determined that remanding to the Ethics Commission would be futile.

We affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

From April 2008 to January 2010, Sanchez worked as the Director of the Indiana

Commission of Hispanic/Latino Affairs for the Indiana Department of Workforce

Development (“DWD”). In January of 2010, the DWD terminated Sanchez’s

employment. Following her termination, three items belonging to the DWD were

reported to the OIG as missing: a 26-inch Toshiba television-DVD combo; a luggage

cart; and a label maker. The total value of the three missing items was slightly more than

$400. Andrea Simmons, Chelsea Stauch, and Kristin Garvey, other DWD employees,

each last saw the missing items in Sanchez’s possession.

2 OIG Special Agent Charles Coffin interviewed Simmons, Stauch, and Garvey.

Based on those interviews, on March 24, 2010, more than three months after Sanchez’s

dismissal, Special Agent Coffin sought and procured a search warrant for Sanchez’s

residence and automobile in an attempt to locate the missing items. He found the

television plugged into a wall in Sanchez’s living room and connected to her son’s

computer as a monitor. He found the label maker in Sanchez’s bedroom, and he found

the luggage cart in her automobile. Sanchez also voluntarily relinquished a power cord

for her State-issued Blackberry phone.

Thereafter, the State, through the Marion County Prosecutor’s Office, filed felony

theft charges against Sanchez for her failure to remit to the DWD its property upon her

termination. Sanchez filed a motion to suppress the State’s evidence. The trial court

concluded that the OIG had obtained and executed its search warrant based on stale

information, and it granted Sanchez’s motion to suppress in February of 2011 (“the

suppression order”). In particular, the trial court ordered “all evidence seized as a result

of this warrant, including statements in relation to [the] seizure and evidence of any

nature connected to the execution of this warrant[,] is hereby excluded.” Appellants’

App. at 98.1 The State did not appeal the suppression order, and the prosecutor dismissed

the charges against Sanchez.

On May 12, 2011, the State, through the OIG, filed a complaint with the Ethics

Commission. According to the complaint, Sanchez had violated the Indiana

Administrative Code when she “ma[d]e use of [S]tate property for purposes other than

1 Some of the pages of the Appellants’ Appendix are out of order.

3 official [S]tate business[,] which was not otherwise permitted . . . .” Id. at 55. Special

Agent Coffin attached a probable cause affidavit to the complaint, in which he noted only

the following: that Sanchez’s employment was terminated in January of 2010; that the

missing items were last seen in her possession; and that, in March of 2010, he had

obtained a search warrant for Sanchez’s residence and car,2 in which he had discovered

the missing property. See id. at 102-03. Special Agent Coffin did not inform the Ethics

Commission of the suppression order and he did not specifically reference his interviews

with Simmons, Stauch, or Garvey. That same day, pursuant to Indiana Code Section 4-2-

6-4(b)(2)(C) the Ethics Commission concluded that the complaint was supported by

probable cause and scheduled the complaint for a public hearing.

On April 12, the day of the public hearing, the Ethics Commission held a

preliminary hearing on a motion to suppress the evidence filed by Sanchez. In particular,

Sanchez sought to have the evidence seized pursuant to the March 2010 warrant

suppressed for having been seized without probable cause. Sanchez also argued that the

Ethics Commission lacked the authority to reconsider the suppression order. The Ethics

Commission denied Sanchez’s motion to suppress the evidence.

Thereafter, the Ethics Commission held its hearing on the complaint. At the

hearing, the Ethics Commission received testimony from Simmons and Special Agent

Coffin along with the physical evidence. On May 10, the Ethics Commission issued its

Final Report, in which it found that Sanchez had violated the Indiana Administrative

2 On appeal, the Appellants assert that the automobile belonged to Sanchez’s son and, as such, she lacks standing to challenge the admissibility of the evidence seized from it. But this argument is merely a roundabout way for the Appellants to ignore the trial court’s earlier suppression order, which, as explained below, they may not do. 4 Code’s prohibition on the personal use of State property. The Ethics Commission then

sanctioned Sanchez by barring her from future employment with the State.

On June 8, Sanchez filed her petition for judicial review in the trial court. On

December 7, 2012, the trial court entered findings of fact and conclusions thereon and

reversed the Final Report of the Ethics Commission. In particular, the trial court

concluded that the suppression order constituted a binding decision on the question of

probable cause and that the Ethics Commission had no discretion to ignore that order

either in its determination that the OIG’s complaint was supported by probable cause or

in its decision on Sanchez’s motion to suppress; that the Administrative Orders and

Procedures Act required application of the exclusionary rule to the inadmissible

evidence; that the Ethics Commission’s conclusions were not supported by substantial,

admissible evidence; that the proceedings before the Ethics Commission violated

Sanchez’s right to be free from double jeopardy3; that her sanction was “excessive and

unconstitutional,” id. at 243; and that remanding the matter to the Ethics Commission for

further consideration “would be futile in this case” since “[t]his is an action that should

never have been,” id. at 246. This appeal ensued.

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