Jeffrey Fairbanks v. State of Indiana

108 N.E.3d 357
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 1, 2018
DocketCourt of Appeals Case 49A02-1707-CR-1675
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 108 N.E.3d 357 (Jeffrey Fairbanks 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
Jeffrey Fairbanks v. State of Indiana, 108 N.E.3d 357 (Ind. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Vaidik, Chief Judge.

Case Summary

[1] In May 2015, Jeffrey Fairbanks admitted to police that he disposed of his *361 three-month-old daughter's body in an Indianapolis dumpster. Despite extensive search efforts, her body was never found. The State charged Fairbanks with murder and Level 1 felony neglect of a dependent resulting in death. At trial, the State, in order to prove that Janna's death was not an accident, presented evidence that Fairbanks had placed a pillow on his daughter on at least four prior occasions. The jury found Fairbanks not guilty of the murder charge but guilty of the neglect charge.

[2] Fairbanks now appeals arguing, among other things, that the evidence that he had previously placed a pillow on his daughter was inadmissible pursuant to Indiana Evidence Rule 404(b)'s lack-of-accident purpose because he never claimed that his daughter's death was an accident.

[3] Because accident is a subset of intent-that is, a defendant who claims accident is necessarily claiming that the act was not intentional-we conclude that, similar to intent, defendants must affirmatively claim accident before the State can admit evidence pursuant to Evidence Rule 404(b) that the act was not an accident. However, because we find that Fairbanks claimed accident at trial and that the probative value of the evidence is not substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice, we conclude that the trial court properly admitted the pillow evidence. Finding no merit to the other arguments that Fairbanks raises on appeal, we affirm his conviction for Level 1 felony neglect of a dependent resulting in death.

Facts and Procedural History

[4] Yolanda Rivera and Fairbanks were the parents of Janna, who was born in February 2015. Yolanda, Fairbanks, Janna, and Yolanda's two other daughters-thirteen-year-old A.G. and eleven-year-old E.M.-lived at Maison Gardens, an apartment complex at 42nd Street and Post Road in Indianapolis. In May 2015, they moved to a nearby house on Candy Apple Boulevard. Yolanda, Fairbanks, and Janna slept in the same bedroom, sharing a king bed.

[5] On Thursday, May 28, Yolanda woke up around 3:30 a.m. to get ready for work. Yolanda changed three-month-old Janna's diaper (Janna did not wake up during the diaper change) and went to the kitchen to prepare a bottle for her. 1 Yolanda then left Janna's bottle on the bed for when she woke up. When Yolanda left the house around 4:15 a.m., she told Fairbanks that she had left a bottle ready for Janna. Yolanda also left her cell phone for Fairbanks because he had lost his cell phone.

[6] Fairbanks had an appointment that morning, so A.G. and E.M. had planned to stay home from school that day to watch Janna. However, Fairbanks's appointment was canceled. Around 8:00 a.m., Fairbanks woke up A.G. to let her know that he would be home after all. A.G. heard Janna crying around that time; she described Janna's crying like "a regular baby would cry." Tr. Vol. III p. 166. A.G. went back to sleep and woke up for good around 11:00 a.m. She again heard Janna crying, but this time-unlike the crying she had heard around 8:00 a.m.-the crying sounded "muffled." Id. at 164. A.G. went downstairs, ate breakfast, and watched television with E.M., who had already woken up and gone downstairs. About twenty minutes later, A.G. went upstairs to use the bathroom, at which point she heard Janna's "muffled" crying again. Id. at 166. After using the bathroom, A.G. went back downstairs.

*362 [7] A little later, Fairbanks came downstairs, went into the kitchen, and asked the girls if there were any trash bags in the house. A.G. said she didn't know. After looking around, Fairbanks went back upstairs for about five minutes and then came back downstairs with Janna, telling E.M. that he was going for a ride. Janna was wrapped in a blanket with only her nose and eyes showing. Janna's eyes were closed, and she was not moving or making any sounds. Fairbanks took Janna to his car, but he did not use the car seat, which was still in the house.

[8] In the meantime, Yolanda had been calling Fairbanks several times throughout the day using a co-worker's cell phone, but Fairbanks never answered. When Yolanda got off work at 1:30 p.m., she went straight home, arriving about twenty minutes after Fairbanks had left with Janna. See id. at 49 (Yolanda testifying that she got home "[a]round 2:00" p.m.). Yolanda was "alarmed" because Janna's car seat was at home, and Fairbanks had not taken any diapers or milk for Janna. Id. at 48-49, 171. Yolanda called Fairbanks several more times, but he still did not answer. Yolanda went to Maison Gardens (they still had keys to their old apartment), but he wasn't there either. Yolanda went back home and waited.

[9] Fairbanks finally returned home around 11:30 p.m. Yolanda and her daughters met him at his car. Yolanda asked Fairbanks where Janna was, and he said Janna was in the car. But when Yolanda looked in the car she only found a box of black trash bags. Yolanda thought this was "strange" because they did not use black trash bags at their house. Id. at 54. Yolanda and her daughters followed Fairbanks inside their house, where Yolanda continued to ask him where Janna was. Fairbanks finally said he had buried Janna in a cornfield and left a cross, but he would not tell them where. As they continued asking him more questions about Janna, Fairbanks's only answer was that she was "in a better place now." Id. at 174.

[10] Yolanda did not call 911 that night because she was scared of Fairbanks. Id. at 57, 63 (Fairbanks threatening Yolanda: "Call the police, and you'll see what happens."); see also Tr. Vol. IV p. 88 (E.M. testifying that Fairbanks was "mad" about the possibility of police being called that night). Yolanda, however, called 911 the following morning, Friday, May 29, when she left the house to take A.G. and E.M. to school. Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department officers were dispatched to Candy Apple a little before 9:00 a.m. Upon arrival, officers woke up Fairbanks and asked him-about "20 times"-where Janna was. Tr. Vol. III p. 27. Each time Fairbanks responded that he "didn't know." Id. at 27, 95. According to the officers, Fairbanks's demeanor was "annoyingly calm and monotone." Id. at 95. Officers immediately began searching for Janna in the neighborhood retention pond and nearby woods.

[11] Meanwhile, Fairbanks was taken to the police station, where he was interviewed that afternoon by a homicide detective and a missing-persons detective. For over an hour, Fairbanks, who appeared "nonplussed about the whole situation," maintained that he didn't know where Janna was. Tr. Vol. IV p. 15. Fairbanks claimed that he "never hurt [his] baby." Exs. 25 & 25A. The officers then employed a "minimization" technique, whereby they suggested that Janna died from SIDS or from Fairbanks accidentally rolling onto her while he was sleeping. Tr. Vol. IV pp. 20-21. Eventually, Fairbanks admitted that when he woke up, Janna was "already gone," that he didn't know what happened to her, and that he didn't do anything wrong. Exs. 25 & 25A.

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Bluebook (online)
108 N.E.3d 357, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jeffrey-fairbanks-v-state-of-indiana-indctapp-2018.