Jarrard v. Warden

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Indiana
DecidedMay 15, 2023
Docket3:22-cv-00724
StatusUnknown

This text of Jarrard v. Warden (Jarrard v. Warden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jarrard v. Warden, (N.D. Ind. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF INDIANA SOUTH BEND DIVISION

PAYTON THOMAS JARRARD,

Petitioner,

v. CAUSE NO.: 3:22-CV-724-DRL-MGG

WARDEN,

Respondent.

OPINION AND ORDER Payton Thomas Jarrard, a prisoner without a lawyer, filed a habeas corpus petition challenging his 2015 child molestation conviction in Tippecanoe County under case number 79D01-1401-F1-1. (ECF 2.) For the following reasons, the court denies his petition. BACKGROUND In deciding the petition, the court must presume the facts set forth by the state court are correct, unless Mr. Jarrard rebuts this presumption with clear and convincing evidence. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1). On post-conviction review, the Indiana Court of Appeals set forth the facts underlying Mr. Jarrard’s conviction as follows: In August 2014, Jarrard was in a relationship with eleven-year-old T.C.’s mother. One night, T.C. was home with her two older brothers while her mother was gone. Although Jarrard lived elsewhere, he was at the home with T.C. and her brothers. After T.C. went to bed, she was awoken by Jarrard shaking her bed as he touched her “bottom area” on the front, in the area she used to urinate. T.C. described feeling Jarrard touch inside her and it hurting. T.C. immediately reported the incident to her brother, who called their mother. Their mother told the children to go to a friend’s house, and the incident was reported to the police. T.C.’s Mother (“Mother”) talked to the police, but T.C. did not. T.C. went to Hartford House for a forensic interview and told the interviewer what had happened to her. T.C. also went to Riley Hospital, where sexual assault nurse examiner Anna Gordon (“Nurse Gordon”) examined her. T.C. had taken a shower before the examination. Nurse Gordon spoke only to Mother about the offense, and T.C. was not present when they spoke.

In September 2014, the State charged Jarrard with Level 1 felony child molesting. Specifically, the State alleged that twenty-nine-year-old Jarrard had used his hand to engage in “other sexual conduct” with eleven-year- old T.C. The State also alleged that Jarrard was an habitual offender.

The trial court held a two-day jury trial in January 2015. Public defenders Thomas O’Brien (“Trial Counsel O’Brien”) and Matthew Harris (“Trial Counsel Harris”) represented Jarrard at trial. Jarrard’s theory of defense was that the State could not meet its burden of proof. Jarrard’s counsel challenged the credibility of T.C.’s testimony by focusing on the fact that T.C. did not see Jarrard touch her and by attempting to portray T.C. as being confused about what had happened. Counsel[] also relied on the fact that the limited DNA evidence did not specifically identify Jarrard.

During trial, T.C. testified that she had been asleep and awoke to Jarrard on the side of her bed. She noticed that her pajama pants and underwear had been pulled down. She testified that Jarrard had touched her “bottom area” and explained that he had touched “[t]he front” of that area that she used “[t]o urinate.” T.C. further testified that she had felt Jarrard touching her on the “inside” and that it “hurt.” Additionally, T.C. testified that the pain she felt inside the area where she urinated was a greater level of pain than she had experienced when she had broken her arm.

Mother testified that, after she had found out what Jarrard had done to T.C., she had contacted the police and talked to Child Protective Services. Mother also testified that she had taken T.C. to Hartford House for a forensic interview and to Riley Hospital for a medical examination. Additionally, Mother testified that T.C. had already taken a shower before she had her medical exam and that she had given T.C.’s pajama pants and underwear to an officer a few days after the offense.

The State introduced DNA evidence that showed no conclusive results. The certificates of analysis from forensic DNA analyst Shawn Stur (“Forensic Analyst Stur”) and forensic biologist Nicole Keeling (“Forensic Biologist Keeling”) indicated that three swabs (vaginal/cervical swabs, external genital swabs, and anal swabs) taken from T.C during her medical exam had “failed to demonstrate a sufficient quantity of male DNA” for “autosomal STR analysis” and for “further Y-STR DNA analysis.” Forensic Analyst Stur also testified that the three swabs “[ha]d not give[n] ... enough male DNA to continue with [an] analysis.” Forensic Biologist Keeling testified that the anal swabs did not have male DNA and that vaginal/cervical swabs and external genital swabs had a “slight” amount of male DNA but not enough to perform a Y-STR analysis. Forensic Biologist Keeling also testified that the Y-STR DNA result from the swab from T.C.’s underwear showed the presence of a mixture of at least four males and that the swab from T.C.’s pajama pants showed the presence of a mixture of at least five males, resulting in no conclusions that could be drawn. The prosecutor set forth a hypothetical regarding a person living in a house with multiple brothers, as T.C. did, and asked whether it was surprising to have the presence of multiple male contributors on those items. Forensic Biologist Keeling testified that there was “the potential for multiple male contributors to be present on those samples” because she was looking at skins cells that could be on the surface.1

When Trial Counsel O’Brien cross-examined Forensic Analyst Stur and Forensic Biologist Keeling, counsel had them confirm that none of the DNA testing swabs had specifically identified Jarrard. Forensic Analyst Stur responded that she had not done any comparison testing, and Forensic Biologist Keeling responded that she had not identified him because the samples had not had enough male DNA to develop a Y-STR profile.

Nurse Gordon testified during direct examination that the physical examination of T.C. could neither confirm nor deny whether any sexual abuse had occurred. On cross-examination of Nurse Gordon, Trial Counsel Harris attempted to question Nurse Gordon about a section of her medical report in which she had written down statements from her conversation with Mother. Specifically, Trial Counsel Harris sought to have Nurse Gordon testify about a statement from Mother regarding what she had said that T.C. had reported to Mother. The State objected based on hearsay and pointed out that Jarrard’s counsel had had the opportunity but had not cross-examined Mother about her statement. Trial Counsel Harris indicated that he was asking the question for impeachment purposes. After noting

1 At trial, T.C.’s mother testified that upon being directed by police to obtain T.C.’s pajama bottoms and underwear from that night, she called home and told T.C.’s older brother to take the clothes out the hamper and put them under her mattress “so nobody else [could] get a hold of them.” (ECF 16-2 at 64.) She further testified her children sometimes slept on that mattress, and that T.C.’s brothers and two other males had helped her move the mattress. (Id. at 66.) T.C. also described that she had been wearing the pajama bottoms in various areas of the house prior to going to bed, including sitting on the floor while watching television. (Id. at 125.) that trial counsel could have cross-examined Mother about her statement or cross-examined T.C. about whether she had made such a statement to Mother, the trial court sustained the State's objection.

At the conclusion of Nurse Gordon’s testimony, a juror submitted a question, asking Nurse Gordon to relate what Mother had told her. The trial court declined to ask the question. Trial Counsel Harris then made an offer of proof as to the testimony that he sought from Nurse Gordon.

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