Kenneth Meer v. State of Indiana

CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 14, 2012
Docket18A04-1204-CR-193
StatusUnpublished

This text of Kenneth Meer v. State of Indiana (Kenneth Meer 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
Kenneth Meer 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 FILED any court except for the purpose of Dec 14 2012, 8:46 am establishing the defense of res judicata, collateral estoppel, or the law of the case. CLERK of the supreme court, court of appeals and tax court

ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:

MARK SMALL GREGORY F. ZOELLER Indianapolis, Indiana Attorney General of Indiana

J.T. WHITEHEAD Deputy Attorney General Indianapolis, Indiana

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

KENNETH MEER, ) ) Appellant-Defendant, ) ) vs. ) No. 18A04-1204-CR-193 ) STATE OF INDIANA, ) ) Appellee-Plaintiff. )

APPEAL FROM THE DELAWARE CIRCUIT COURT The Honorable Thomas A. Cannon, Jr., Judge Cause No. 18C05-1105-FA-4

December 14, 2012

MEMORANDUM DECISION - NOT FOR PUBLICATION

NAJAM, Judge STATEMENT OF THE CASE

Kenneth Meer appeals his convictions for rape, as a Class A felony, and criminal

deviate conduct, as a Class A felony, following a jury trial. He presents the following

issues for our review:

1. Whether the prosecutor committed misconduct during final argument and whether that alleged misconduct constitutes fundamental error.

2. Whether his convictions violate double jeopardy.

3. Whether the State presented sufficient evidence to support his convictions.

We affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

At approximately 4:30 a.m. on April 24, 2011, K.S. was home alone when she

heard a knock on the front door to her apartment. When she opened the door, a man

subsequently identified as Meer, whom K.S. did not know, asked whether someone other

than K.S.1 was in the apartment, and K.S. responded no. Meer then pushed K.S. and

forced his way into her apartment.

Meer forced K.S. onto a couch in her living room, put a knife to her throat, and

struggled to remove her shorts. K.S. was able to grab her cell phone and attempted to call

someone, but she was unsuccessful before Meer knocked the phone out of her hands.

K.S. then found the knife, which Meer had dropped, and she stabbed him. Meer then

began choking K.S. K.S. stabbed Meer again, and Meer choked her again. After K.S.

had stabbed Meer a third time, Meer choked K.S. until she lost consciousness. 1 Meer appeared to be looking for two people, by name, who did not live in K.S.’s apartment. K.S. testified that she initially believed that Meer had merely chosen the wrong apartment. 2 K.S. regained consciousness and found that she was lying on the floor next to the

couch. Meer was performing oral sex on her, and he told her that she could “friend” him

on Facebook. Transcript at 170. K.S. asked Meer whether he was going to kill her, and

he responded, “No.” Id. K.S. asked Meer whether he was going to rape her, and he

responded, “No.” Id. at 170-71. Meer then proceeded to rape K.S. K.S. was crying and

stomping on the floor, trying to get the attention of someone in the downstairs apartment.

K.S. then told Meer that she would not tell anyone about the rape if he stopped. Meer

then stopped, stood up, and started to get dressed. Before he put his white t-shirt on, he

gestured to his abdomen, where he had been stabbed, and said, “Look what you did to

me.” Id. at 172.

Before he left, Meer asked K.S. whether she had a landline telephone. K.S.

replied in the negative. Meer then asked K.S. to describe her car, and he took her cell

phone, left the apartment, and left K.S.’s cell phone on her car outside. K.S. waited for

Meer to walk out of sight before she left her apartment to retrieve her cell phone. She

called a friend who came over and accompanied her to the hospital.

At the hospital, K.S. underwent an examination by a Sexual Assault Nurse

Examiner, which included obtaining vaginal and cervical swabs to perform DNA testing.

K.S. reported that she had lost consciousness during the attack after Meer had choked

her, and she had stab wounds on her knee and left hand. The nurse observed blood on

K.S.’s shirt, as well as various areas of her body, including her genitals. An emergency

room physician prescribed medications for the prevention of sexually transmitted

diseases, as well as an emergency contraception medication.

3 K.S. had also reported to Muncie Police Officer Ron Miller that she had stabbed

her assailant. Officer Miller then learned that Meer had been admitted to the same

hospital with stab wounds. Officer Miller found Meer in the trauma unit and asked him

what had happened to him. Meer reported that he had been attacked and stabbed by two

or three black males.

Muncie Police Detective Robert Scaife arrived and interviewed Meer and K.S.

separately. Because Meer fit K.S.’s description of her assailant, Detective Scaife told

Meer that he knew he was lying about how he had been stabbed. After Detective Scaife

told Meer that he was investigating a sexual assault and asked Meer for a DNA sample,

Meer became loud and belligerent. Detective Scaife collected Meer’s clothing and

belongings, including a knife, and he obtained a search warrant for a blood sample from

Meer. Finally, K.S. identified Meer as her assailant from a photo array.

The State charged Meer with rape, as a Class A felony; burglary, as a Class A

felony; and criminal deviate conduct, as a Class A felony. Following trial, a jury found

Meer guilty of rape, as a Class A felony, and criminal deviate conduct, as a Class A

felony, but acquitted him of burglary. The trial court entered judgment accordingly and

issued a thorough sentencing statement explaining the rationale for Meer’s aggregate

forty-year sentence. This appeal ensued.

DISCUSSION AND DECISION

Issue One: Prosecutorial Misconduct

Meer first contends that the prosecutor committed misconduct during closing

argument when he made the following remarks:

4 In looking at the forensic evidence, I just want to go over a brief summary of it. The State Police found blood in this case, not surprisingly because the defendant was stabbed, stabbed severely. There was blood on the . . . vaginal cervical swabs, external genital swabs, . . . [and] labia minora and majora swabs. . . .

***

The evidence shows us clearly the defendant was stabbed not after [2] sex, not by the TV stand, but that the defendant was stabbed before sex. That’s what the forensic [evidence] shows and I’ll tell you why. . . . ISP lab found blood on the external genital area, . . . on her labia majora and minora, which are the inner folds of the female vagina, probably most importantly, on the vaginal cervical swab. The swab of the interior of the vagina which (indiscernible) the cervix. That swab proves the defendant’s story is a lie. Because the only way to get blood on her inner thighs on her folds of her vagina, the skin folds, labia minora and majora, and, more importantly, in her vagina on her cervix is if they are struggling on the couch, she stabs him and he pulls her to the floor and he inserts his penis and as he is raping her the blood is dripping down and gets pushed in[to] her vagina.

Transcript at 633, 670-71. Meer did not object to those remarks at trial. On appeal, he

contends that the prosecutor “misstated the evidence” with regard to the presence of

blood in K.S.’s “vaginal area.” Brief of Appellant at 13. Meer maintains that the

prosecutor committed misconduct and that that misconduct constituted fundamental error.

We cannot agree.

In Cooper v.

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