John Brooke v. State of Indiana

CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 17, 2012
Docket75A05-1106-CR-297
StatusUnpublished

This text of John Brooke v. State of Indiana (John Brooke 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
John Brooke v. State of Indiana, (Ind. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 65(D), this Memorandum Decision shall not be regarded as precedent or cited before any court except for the purpose of establishing the defense of res judicata, collateral estoppel, or the law of the case.

ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:

JUNE E. BULES GREGORY F. ZOELLER Plymouth, Indiana Attorney General of Indiana

ERIC P. BABBS Deputy Attorney General Indianapolis, Indiana

FILED Apr 17 2012, 9:18 am

CLERK IN THE of the supreme court, court of appeals and tax court

COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

JOHN BROOKE, ) ) Appellant-Defendant, ) ) vs. ) No. 75A05-1106-CR-297 ) STATE OF INDIANA, ) ) Appellee-Plaintiff. )

APPEAL FROM THE STARKE CIRCUIT COURT The Honorable Kim Hall, Judge Cause No. 75C01-1002-FC-6

April 17, 2012

MEMORANDUM DECISION - NOT FOR PUBLICATION

CRONE, Judge Case Summary

John Brooke and his girlfriend harbored a wanted fugitive in their home and learned

that the authorities were on his trail. The trio and one of Brooke’s friends concocted a plan

to use homemade explosives and Brooke’s firearms against any authorities who came to

arrest the fugitive, after which they would simultaneously rob two banks and flee to Canada.

Brooke was at work when his friend notified him that police officers had arrived to arrest the

fugitive. Brooke left work and parked his truck a block away from his home. Equipped with

a reinforced bulletproof vest, a handgun, and a semiautomatic assault rifle, he advanced

toward one of the officers stationed near his home. Another officer saw Brooke approaching

and ordered him to drop his rifle. Brooke did not comply, so the officers tackled and

disarmed him, cuffed his hands behind his back, and placed him in a police car.

The fugitive inside Brooke’s home fired at the officers with an automatic rifle, and the

officers returned fire. During the melee, Brooke managed to get his hands in front of him,

escaped from the police car, and ran into his backyard. He returned with one of his dogs in

his arms and asked the officers not to shoot. An officer took the dog and again placed

Brooke in custody. The standoff ended after a SWAT team flushed the fugitive from

Brooke’s home with tear gas. Inside the home, police found over a dozen Molotov cocktails,

numerous firearms and ammunition, a pipe bomb attached to a propane tank, and a notepad

with plans for the breakout and bank robberies.

The State charged Brooke with conspiracy to commit armed robbery, intimidation,

possession/manufacturing of a destructive device (a Molotov cocktail), possession of a

2 destructive device (a pipe bomb), resisting law enforcement, unlawful use of body armor, and

assisting a criminal. A jury found him guilty on all counts except the count relating to the

pipe bomb. The trial court sentenced Brooke to twenty-two years of imprisonment. On

appeal, Brooke challenges his conspiracy conviction and his sentence. We affirm.

Facts and Procedural History

The facts most favorable to the jury’s verdict are that around the beginning of

February 2010, Michael Drogosz called Brooke, a childhood friend, and asked for a place to

stay. Brooke drove to Chicago to pick up Drogosz, and they returned to the home that

Brooke shared with his girlfriend Kimberly Hitchens in Knox, Indiana. Drogosz stayed with

Brooke and Hitchens for a couple weeks. At some point, Brooke learned that Drogosz was

wanted on an Illinois burglary warrant and that law enforcement authorities were closing in.

During the Valentine’s Day weekend, Drogosz, Brooke, Hitchens, and James Reed,

another friend who was staying with Brooke, devised a plan to escape if police officers came

to arrest Drogosz. Brooke and Drogosz wrote and sketched out parts of the plan on a

notepad. Brooke was a gun enthusiast and had numerous firearms and thousands of rounds

of ammunition in his home, as well as some bulletproof vests that had been reinforced with

steel plates. If Brooke was away from the house when the officers arrived, Reed would send

him a “911” text, and he would park his truck at the end of the street and shoot the officers

with a sniper rifle. Homemade Molotov cocktails would also be used to repel the officers.

After the foursome escaped, they would simultaneously rob two local banks at gunpoint and

use the money to flee to Canada. At Brooke’s request, Hitchens and Reed purchased some

3 diesel fuel and dish soap to make the Molotov cocktails, as well as two propane tanks and a

first-aid kit. Brooke and Reed made over a dozen Molotov cocktails using diesel fuel, dish

soap, and canning jars.1 A pipe bomb and some screws and bolts were taped to one of the

propane tanks.

On Monday, February 15, 2010, the Starke County Sheriff’s Department received a

request from Illinois authorities to arrest Drogosz on the outstanding warrant. The

department had received a tip that Drogosz was staying at Brooke’s house, so Deputies Don

Ferguson and Bill Dulin went there to arrest him. Brooke was at work, and Hitchens was

inside the house with Drogosz and Reed. Deputy Ferguson knocked on the front door, and

Deputy Dulin went to the back of the house. Hitchens answered the door and initially denied

that Drogosz was there, but eventually she admitted that he was and that there were weapons

inside the house. Deputy Ferguson escorted Hitchens to his police car and called for backup.

Reed sent Brooke the “911” text and called to let him know that the police had arrived.

Detective Kenny Pfost, Deputy Todd Keen, and Sergeant Fred Baker responded to

Deputy Ferguson’s request for backup. Deputy Ferguson used a loudspeaker to ask Drogosz

1 According to ATF agent Katherine Newby,

The functioning of a Molotov cocktail is that you light the wick, throw it. The Molotov cocktail is necessarily in a frangible container, so you throw it against a hard object, such as a brick wall, concrete wall, something like that. It breaks the container. It spreads the flammable liquid. And you have lit the wick prior to throwing of it [sic], and it ignites all of the flammable liquid. A thickener [such as dish soap] would make it stick to whatever surface you were trying to get started on fire.

Tr. at 434.

4 to surrender. Reed walked out the front door and was taken into custody. Deputy Ferguson

then telephoned Drogosz and attempted to negotiate his surrender.

Meanwhile, Brooke drove into his neighborhood and saw several police vehicles

parked near his home. He parked his truck a block away and donned a reinforced bulletproof

vest. He then armed himself with a loaded .50 caliber handgun, a loaded semiautomatic

assault rifle (with two magazines taped together military-style to facilitate rapid reloading),

and extra ammunition and walked through a wooded area toward his home.

During a break in the negotiations, Deputy Ferguson saw Brooke approach Sergeant

Baker, who was stationed behind one of the police vehicles. Deputy Ferguson alerted

Sergeant Baker, and both men ordered Brooke to drop his rifle and hit the ground. Brooke

did not comply and told the officers that they “needed to get the f**k off of his property.”

Tr. at 59.2 Sergeant Baker knocked the rifle out of Brooke’s hands and struggled to subdue

Brooke, who kept reaching inside his jacket pocket. Detective Pfost cuffed Brooke’s hands

behind his back and reached into his pocket, where he found the handgun. Brooke was taken

into custody and placed in a police car.

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