Lakisha Jordan v. State of Indiana

37 N.E.3d 525, 2015 Ind. App. LEXIS 481, 2015 WL 3903633
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 25, 2015
Docket49A04-1410-CR-467
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 37 N.E.3d 525 (Lakisha Jordan 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
Lakisha Jordan v. State of Indiana, 37 N.E.3d 525, 2015 Ind. App. LEXIS 481, 2015 WL 3903633 (Ind. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

BROWN, Judge.

[1] Lakisha Jordan appeals her convictions for resisting law enforcement as a class A misdemeanor and disorderly conduct as a class B misdemeanor. Jordan raises two issues which we consolidate and restate as whether the evidence is sufficient to sustain her convictions. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.

Facts and Procedural History

[2] On January 31, 2014, Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Officer Christopher Nieves was wearing his police uniform and driving his marked police car in the mi-dafternoon. Officer Nieves frequently runs plates “just to check registrations and what not” and determined that the vehicle he was following was a Grand Am but the license plate was registered to a Buick. Transcript at 8. Officer Nieves then activated his lights and initiated a traffic stop of the vehicle driven by Jordan in the 3000 block of Michigan. He approached the driver’s side window and aslpd Jordan to roll down her windows because “she had dark tinted windows.” Id. Jordan said that the windows were broken, and Officer *528 Nieves asked her to open her door so he could speak with' her, and Jordan opened the door.

[3] Officer Nieves told Jordan why he stopped her and asked for her license and registration. Jordan gave him her license but did not have the registration or the title in the vehicle. He then asked her if she had any weapons in the car which was standard procedure for him, and Jordan immediately became belligerent. Jordan asked “very belligerently’’ why he asked her if she had a weapon, and Officer' Nieves told her it was standard procedure. Id. at 10. Jordan started yelling at him and told him he “was just asking because she was Black. Why would She have a weapon, so on and so forth.” Id. Officer Nieves asked her to lower her voice or stop yelling, but she continued to yell. Id.

[4] Officer Nieves collected her information and went back to his vehicle to issue a citation. Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Officer Adrian Aurs arrived at the scene when Officer Nieves was writing the citations. At some point a tow truck was called because Jordan had a suspended license, she did not have ⅛ title to the vehicle, the license plate did not belong to the vehicle, and “the VIN was also expired.” Id. at 22.

[5] When Officer Nieves returned to Jordan’s vehicle to give her the citations and inform her that she could retrieve anything out'of the vehicle because he was going to impound it, Jordan was “very angry,” yelled “at him, and was “talking over [him] to the point where [he] could not even describe the citation to her, what [he] was giving her, etc.”- Id. at 11. Officer Nieves and Officer Aurs asked Jordan to stop yelling multiple times. Jordan continued to yell, yelled expletives, screamed over Officer Nieves, and called him a motherf--on several occasions. She cursed at the officers, used vulgarities, and said the officers “just stopped her because she was Black, and [they] needed religion,” and that they “couldn’t handle a Black woman.” Id. at 25. Jordan said: “Ya’ll think you run this place, and you’re giving me a citation because I’m Black.” Id. at 12. Officer Nieves “could never give her the citation, explain what it was, how long she had to pay it, etc.” Id. However, he eventually gave her the citations and confirmed that she had her property out of the car.

[6] There was a liquor store in the vicinity and a convenience store on the corner directly west of the location and it was “mostly residential right there.” Id. at' 17. “People in the liquor store lot and across the street came out to see what the commotion was.” Id at 26, Jordan was “being very loud and causing a scene there.” Id. at 25-26.

[7] Officer Nieves asked Jordan if she had everything out of the vehicle, and Jordan said that she did. She stood five or ten feet from the wrecker driver trying to hook up her vehicle and continued to scream and yell expletives at Officer Nieves and Officer Aurs. Officer Nieves kept telling her to stop, that she was free to leave, that she needed to go, and to be quiet, and Jordan said that she did not need to go.

[8] At some point, after Jordan refused to be quiet, Officer Nieves told her that she was under arrest and made a movement toward her to put her in handcuffs, and as soon as he stepped toward her, Jordan did “an immediate 180 and turn[ed] the other direction.” Id. at 13. She “attempted to run the other direction away from” Officer Nieves. Id. She had “a hard time getting some traction on the concrete” due to the ice and snow, and Officer Nieves followed behind her and “had to basically run after her” and was' able to grab her shoulder after about four or five *529 steps and pull her into him. Id, at 13, 27. As soon as he grabbed her right shoulder, Jordan yanked her shoulder away, twisted and turned, and started “firing her arms and .pulling her body away from. [him] so that [he] could not get control of her.” Id. at 14. He pulled her in toward him, and swept her legs out from under her to “get her on the ground.” Id. Jordan fell “face forward on some snow that was right next to the concrete that she was running on.” Id. at 14-15. Officer Nieves then tried to put her in handcuffs, and she kept trying to slip her wrists out of his hands. Officer Nieves finally was able to handcuff her.

[9] On February 1, 2014, the State-charged Jordan with Count I, resisting law enforcement as a class A misdemeanor; Count II,- resisting law enforcement as a class A misdemeanor; and Count III, disorderly conduct as a class B misdemean- or. 1

[10] On September- 8, 2014, the court held a bench trial. Officers Nieves and Aurs testified to the foregoing. During cross-examination, defense counsel 'asked Officer Nieves if Jordan mentioned any other documents that were forgotten in the car while it was being raised on the tow truck, and Officer Nieves said: “No.” Id. at 16. At one point, Officer Aurs testified that Jordan tried to pull her arm away when Officer Nieves was trying to put a handcuff on her, that she was trying to jerk away, that she was still yelling, and that he remembered “her purse was still caught up in her arms when [Officer Nieves] was cuffing her up.” Id. at 27.

[11] After the close of the State’s evidence, Jordan moved to dismiss all three counts. Her counsel argued that Jordan’s statements regarding her race and her perception of police treatment toward her reflected nationwide political discourse. After some discussion, the court granted the motion to. dismiss as to Count I because it did not think Jordan “was able to get very far, nor was there enough time for him to like ⅛11 her to stop,” and “her actions go more towards intentionally, forcibly resisting, not necessarily fleeing.” Id. at 40. The court denied the motion with respect to the other counts.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 N.E.3d 525, 2015 Ind. App. LEXIS 481, 2015 WL 3903633, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lakisha-jordan-v-state-of-indiana-indctapp-2015.