Jewell v. State

938 N.E.2d 1283, 2010 Ind. App. LEXIS 2499, 2010 WL 5402519
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 30, 2010
Docket32A04-1003-CR-187
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 938 N.E.2d 1283 (Jewell v. State) 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
Jewell v. State, 938 N.E.2d 1283, 2010 Ind. App. LEXIS 2499, 2010 WL 5402519 (Ind. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

VAIDIK, Judge.

Case Summary

Christopher Jewell appeals his convictions and aggregate forty-year term for six counts of sexual misconduct and child molesting. Jewell was arrested and charged for another alleged offense not at issue here. He posted bond and secured counsel. While that charge was pending, law enforcement enlisted the victim in this case to call Jewell and elicit incriminating statements relating to his sexual misconduct. The calls were recorded. Jewell was charged thereafter with the instant sex offenses, and Jewell's recorded statements were introduced against him at trial. Jewell argues that the statements were procured and admitted in violation of his federal and state constitutional rights to counsel. We conclude that Jewell's statements were not obtained unconstitutionally. The right to counsel is offense-specific and attaches only after adversarial judicial proceedings have commenced. Although Jewell had been charged and had hired counsel in an unrelated case, he had not been charged with the present crimes when the subject phone calls took place. Accordingly, Jewell's right to counsel for this proceeding had not attached, and the investigatory phone calls were permissible. We also find that Jewell's aggregate sentence is not inappropriate in light of the nature of his offenses or his character. We affirm the judgment and sentence of the trial court.

Facts and Procedural History

The evidence most favorable to the verdict reveals that Jewell engaged in sexual activity with his stepdaughter, T.S., on at least six occasions when T.S. was between the ages of thirteen and sixteen. The activity included fondling, oral sex, and sexual intercourse.

In August 2008, Jewell was arrested and charged with aiding or abetting the tattooing of a minor. Jewell allegedly helped T.S. get a tattoo. Detective Terry Judy of the Hendricks County Sheriffs Department initiated the filing. Jewell posted bond and retained counsel in connection with that case. *

About one week later, T.S. revealed to her boyfriend and mother that Jewell sexually abused her. The disclosures were relayed to authorities Detective Judy was assigned to investigate T.S's sexual misconduct allegations as well.

Detective Judy asked T.S. to participate in recorded phone calls to Jewell to elicit incriminating statements from him pertaining to his sexual misconduct. T.S. agreed. T.S. placed two phone calls to Jewell on August 19 and 20. During the phone calls, Detective Judy prompted T.S. with notes on what to say and what questions to ask. Jewell and T.S. discussed their relationship. Jewell made several references to their sexual involvement and instructed T.S. not to let anyone know about it. Exeerpts from the conversations include:

[JEWELL]: Everything is okay. There is one hundred percent, absolutely zero, zero way anybody could ever know anything unless you say something or I say something, period. I know that for a doubt. I know that without a doubt, period. I don't care what anybody says or what anybody tries to seare you into. It just needs to stay no.
[TS.]: And if you ever said anything to anybody ever, you would tell me?
*1286 [JEWELL]: [T.S.], I am 41 years old and would possibly go to prison the rest of my life. I would never say a thing to a living soul.
* * * * * *
[JEWELL]: Well, you ... you did ... yeah, I know you cried once like in the beginning and ... and sometimes you even took my hand and went ... took me upstairs and, you know, said, come on, and I just ... like I said, I got mixed feelings too. When you and I actually discussed things not long ago, I finally ... I ... guess just I understand that you just wanted me to be your dad and that's what I made a vow to do is just be your dad.
[T.S8.]: (inaudible).
[JEWELL]: But I ... I was so close with you and I loved you. I was so close with you because we talked, we were friends, and that's what happens a lot of times when you get close with somebody. You know that with anybody. I didn't look at you at quote who you were legally, like you know, my step-daughter or anything. I looked at you as just somebody that was close, that I relied on, that I depended on, that helped me through life. And I don't know that that's what you ... I don't think that's what you understand of how I looked at you.
[T.S.]: (inaudible).
[JEWELL]: No, Honey. I'm asking. I ... want you to talk to me because I gotta know what to expect here. I mean, if you're tired of lying and you're gonna go tell your mom that, yeah, then I need to start preparing some things in my life, I guess. If you're gonna let me continue to try to be a father as you grow up and redeem myself in a proper way, I need to know that so I can quit being sick and having thoughts that I'm having and everything else and ... and start getting back to just caring about you and loving you the way that I'm supposed to.

State's Ex. 7.

The State charged Jewell with several offenses, namely two counts of Class B felony sexual misconduct with a minor, one count of Class C felony child molesting, one count of Class C felony sexual miscon-duet with a minor, and two counts of Class D felony child seduction.

Jewell's sex offense charges proceeded to trial. The tattooing charge ultimately was dismissed.

Before trial, Jewell moved to suppress the statements obtained from him during his recorded phone calls with T.S. Jewell argued that the statements were procured in violation of his federal and state constitutional rights to counsel. The trial court denied Jewell's motion following a suppression hearing.

A jury found Jewell guilty on all six counts.

The trial court sentenced Jewell to consecutive twenty-year terms for each Class B felony, eight years for each Class C felony to run concurrently to each other and all other counts, and three years for each Class D felony also to run concurrently to each other and all other counts, for an aggregate term of forty years. The trial court found in part:

Number one, the harm caused to the victim by the Defendant is significant. She's undergoing mental health counseling, is likely to continue to do so for many years. Number two, the Defendant was in a position of trust having the care, custody and control of the vie-tim. He was the victim's stepfather. He was in a position of a surrogate *1287 parent. The evidence revealed that the victim never knew her biological father and that she and her brother were adopted when she was three years old.... Shortly thereafter her adoptive parents were divorced and she lived with her adoptive mother.... After her adoptive mother married the Defendant when she was seven or eight years old the victim looked upon the defendant as her father and trusted him. The victim testified that the defendant, quote "took my virginity", end of quote. The Court finds that these were heinous violations of trust. Aggravator number three, the Defendant has a history of criminal activity. He has a conviction for Battery as a misdemeanor in 1998.

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Related

Jewell v. State
957 N.E.2d 625 (Indiana Supreme Court, 2011)

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Bluebook (online)
938 N.E.2d 1283, 2010 Ind. App. LEXIS 2499, 2010 WL 5402519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jewell-v-state-indctapp-2010.