Lamenski Ewing v. State of Indiana

CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 12, 2026
Docket26S-CR-00043
StatusPublished
AuthorJustice Molter

This text of Lamenski Ewing v. State of Indiana (Lamenski Ewing v. State of Indiana) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lamenski Ewing v. State of Indiana, (Ind. 2026).

Opinion

FILED Feb 12 2026, 4:03 pm

CLERK Indiana Supreme Court Court of Appeals and Tax Court

IN THE

Indiana Supreme Court Supreme Court Case No. 26S-CR-43

Lamenski Ewing, Appellant/Defendant,

–v–

State of Indiana, Appellee/Plaintiff.

Argued: September 25, 2025 | Decided: February 12, 2026

Appeal from the Vanderburgh Circuit Court No. 82C01-2204-F3-1994 The Honorable Celia Pauli, Magistrate

On Petition to Transfer from the Indiana Court of Appeals No. 24A-CR-1721

Opinion by Justice Molter Chief Justice Rush and Justice Goff concur. Justice Slaughter dissents with separate opinion in which Justice Massa joins. Molter, Justice.

Lamenski Ewing appeals his probation revocation. He argues the community corrections case manager’s petition to revoke his work release did not notify him that the prosecutor was also seeking to revoke his subsequent probation too. We agree, so we grant transfer and reverse his probation revocation.

Facts and Procedural History Ewing pleaded guilty to criminal confinement (Level 3 felony) and interfering with reporting a crime (Class A misdemeanor). As a result, the trial court sentenced him to an aggregate five-year term: two years through time already served and work release, then three years of probation. Ewing’s plea agreement said that if he violated the rules of any “Court-sponsored program”—work release in this case—the violation “will result in revocation of the Defendant’s placement on the Court- sponsored program and execution of the Defendant’s sentence.” App. Vol. 2 at 40.

In August 2023, Ewing failed to return to the work release facility. So, three days after he was supposed to return, his community corrections case manager filed a Petition and Affidavit of Probable Cause for Revocation of Vanderburgh County Therapeutic Work Release Program. The petition requested that the court revoke Ewing’s work release because he was “AWOL” in violation of the program’s rules. Id. at 74. Critical here, it said nothing about revoking his probation and did not request that the court revoke the suspended portion of his sentence.

Several months later, Ewing was arrested and charged with the failure to return to lawful detention (Level 6 felony) based on his failure to return to the work release facility. He pleaded guilty, and the trial court sentenced him to a year in the Department of Correction. At that sentencing hearing, the judge also addressed the community corrections petition to revoke work release. Ewing admitted to violating the terms of his work release, and the State then asked the court to revoke not only his work release privileges but also his probation. Ewing’s attorney objected,

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 26S-CR-43 | February 12, 2026 Page 2 of 13 arguing that revoking his probation would violate his due process rights because the only petition before the court was a petition to revoke work release. There was no petition to revoke probation.

The trial court disagreed. It explained that probation can be revoked even before it begins, and it would be illogical to put Ewing on probation after his noncompliance with work release, which is a more restrictive program than probation. The trial court therefore granted both requests— the case manager’s written request to revoke Ewing’s work release privileges and the prosecutor’s oral request to revoke his probation—and the court ordered the remainder of Ewing’s sentence executed in the Department of Correction.

Ewing appealed, arguing (1) the trial court did not have the statutory authority to revoke his probation because the State had not filed a petition to revoke probation, and (2) the trial court violated his due process rights under the Fourteenth Amendment by revoking his probation without giving him adequate notice. In a unanimous, published opinion, the Court of Appeals affirmed, finding no error. Ewing v. State, 252 N.E.3d 449 (Ind. Ct. App. 2025).

Addressing Ewing’s first argument, the Court of Appeals held that the trial court had the authority to revoke Ewing’s probation under Indiana Code section 35-38-2.6-5(a)(4). Id. at 455. That statute authorizes the court to revoke placement in a community corrections program and to commit the defendant to the county jail or Department of Correction when the defendant violates the terms of the placement.

Addressing Ewing’s second argument, the Court of Appeals held there was no due process violation. It reasoned that the case manager’s petition to revoke work release gave Ewing notice that his probation could be revoked too. This was so, the court said, because Ewing agreed in his plea agreement that violating the work release program’s rules would result in the execution of his sentence. Id. at 454. The trial court also reminded him of that fact during his plea hearing on the failure to return charge. Id. Even setting all that aside, the Court of Appeals concluded it isn’t necessary to advise a defendant that committing a new crime could result in probation

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 26S-CR-43 | February 12, 2026 Page 3 of 13 revocation because that condition of probation is automatically included by operation of law. Id.

Ewing then petitioned for transfer, which we now grant, thus vacating the opinion of the Court of Appeals. Ind. Appellate Rule 58(A).

Standard of Review We review probation revocations for an abuse of discretion, Woods v. State, 892 N.E.2d 637, 639 (Ind. 2008), and one way a trial court exceeds its discretion is by misinterpreting the law, Mitchell v. 10th & The Bypass, LLC, 3 N.E.3d 967, 970 (Ind. 2014). Whether the notice to a defendant that the State seeks to revoke probation satisfies due process is a legal question we consider de novo. Russell v. State, 234 N.E.3d 829, 857 (Ind. 2024).

Discussion and Decision We grant transfer to answer this question: Does a petition to revoke work release provide adequate notice that the State also seeks to revoke probation for the subsequent suspended portion of the sentence when the petition mentions neither probation nor the suspended portion of the sentence? Ewing argues the answer is no, and the State argues the answer is yes. We agree with Ewing, and our analysis proceeds in two steps. First, we explain that a prosecutor cannot seek a sanction for violating the rules of work release or probation that is different than the sanction sought in the revocation petition(s) that is (are) the subject of a final revocation hearing. And second, we explain that the probation revocation here went beyond the work release revocation identified in the petition.

I. Due process precludes the State from seeking a sanction that deviates from the sanction(s) requested in the revocation petition(s). The Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution provides that no State shall “deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 26S-CR-43 | February 12, 2026 Page 4 of 13 process of law.” U.S. Const. amend. XIV, § 1. Due process “requires reasonable notice and a meaningful opportunity to be heard.” Rotert v. Stiles, 174 N.E.3d 1067, 1070 (Ind. 2021).

Ewing argues his due process right to notice was violated because the State sought a different sanction (probation revocation) than the one the community corrections case manager identified in the revocation petition (work release revocation). There was never any petition to revoke Ewing’s probation, the State concedes, but it argues that doesn’t matter.

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Lamenski Ewing v. State of Indiana, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lamenski-ewing-v-state-of-indiana-ind-2026.