Malloch v. Indiana Attorney General

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Indiana
DecidedDecember 3, 2024
Docket1:24-cv-00086
StatusUnknown

This text of Malloch v. Indiana Attorney General (Malloch v. Indiana Attorney General) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Malloch v. Indiana Attorney General, (N.D. Ind. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF INDIANA FORT WAYNE DIVISION

STEVEN MALLOCH,

Petitioner,

v. CAUSE NO.: 1:24-CV-86-HAB-SLC

INDIANA ATTORNEY GENERAL,

Respondent.

OPINION AND ORDER Steven Malloch, a prisoner without a lawyer, filed a habeas corpus petition challenging his 2012 child molestation conviction in DeKalb County under case number 17D02-1001-FA-00002. (ECF 1.) For the reasons stated below, the petition is denied. I. BACKGROUND In deciding the petition, the court must presume the facts set forth by the state courts are correct unless Malloch rebuts this presumption with clear and convincing evidence. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1). On direct appeal, the Indiana Court of Appeals set forth the facts underlying Malloch’s conviction as follows: In 1998, Malloch began living with Anita Malloch and her four-year-old daughter C.P., who was born in 1993. Malloch and Anita married in 1999 and subsequently had three sons. C.P. had regular parenting time with her biological father but primarily lived in the Malloch home. She called Malloch “Dad.”

In 2003 and 2004, when C.P. was in fourth grade, the family lived in Auburn, Indiana, next to a cemetery. C.P. was sometimes scared at night because of the cemetery and would ask Anita or Malloch to lie down with her. On one occasion when Malloch lay with C.P., she awoke with his hand underneath her shirt on her breast. Malloch appeared to be asleep. C.P. removed his hand, rolled over, and went back to sleep. She never talked with him about the incident.

In June 2004, the family moved to a ten-acre property in Garrett, Indiana. They lived in a small apartment in a barn until March 2005, when construction of their house was completed. At some point while they lived in the barn, C.P. watched a werewolf movie and was scared to go to bed. She first asked Anita to lie down with her, but when Anita told her she was busy, she asked Malloch. C.P. fell asleep in her bed with Malloch beside her. When she woke up, Malloch’s hand was in her underwear and his finger was in her vagina. Again, Malloch appeared to be asleep. C.P. pulled his hand out of her pants, crawled over him, and slept with her then-six-year-old brother in his bed. The next morning, Malloch asked C.P. why she ended up in her brother’s bed. C.P. answered, “[B]ecause.” She never asked him to lie down with her again.

At some point while the family still lived in the barn, Anita watched an episode of “Dr. Phil” about child molesting and asked C.P. whether she had ever been touched. C.P. told Anita what had happened with Malloch. When Anita confronted Malloch, he claimed that he did not know what Anita was talking about and that if anything had happened, it had happened while he was asleep.

Roughly five years later, Anita told her counselor about the two incidents. On January 22, 2010, Anita’s counselor reported the matter to Jennifer Hupfer, a caseworker for the Department of Child Services, who in turn notified Detective Donald Lauer of the DeKalb County Sheriff’s Department. Later that day, Hupfer and Detective Lauer went to the Malloch home and informed Malloch of the allegations. Malloch said he was asleep and woke up to find his finger in C.P.’s vagina. He agreed to go to the Sheriff’s Department for a formal interview and drove himself there.

Malloch v. State, 980 N.E.2d 887, 892-93 (Ind. Ct. App. Dec. 21, 2012) (internal citations omitted). Detective Lauer conducted two interviews of Malloch as part of his investigation. Id. He gave him Miranda warnings at both interviews. Id. at 893, 896. During the first interview, Malloch maintained that he was sleeping during this incident. Id. at 893. However, as the interview progressed he admitted to having sexual thoughts about C.P., stating: “I mean, she’s a pretty girl, and, you know—and she walks around in—in

her underwear at times, and stuff like that, but I—I’m always like, ‘Put your clothes’— you know, ‘Get clothes on,’ I—you know, that ‘You don’t need to be doing that.’ ” Id. He stated that he would “suppress the thought” and say to himself, “That’s not right.” Id. at 894. Later in the interview, he admitted to a prior incident in which C.P., then in third or fourth grade, was sleeping next to him and he knowingly put his hand under her

shirt and touched her breast. Id. The following exchange occurred: DETECTIVE: So, what I want to know, I guess, is—is—I mean, I can just keep babbling here, but I need to know what’s going on—what was going on in your head when that happened., And, you were awake, don’t tell me you—because, you—you—

MR. MALLOCH: I—I—the hand in the shirt, yes. . . . I—with the hand thing, it was a—I mean, does she have boobs, kind of a thing, you know, at—at this age, and—

DETECTIVE: So, you were curious if she had breasts, or—

MR. MALLOCH: Yeah.

Id. At another point he made a statement admitting he was awake when he put his finger in C.P.’s vagina: “I laid down with her, and woke up, put my hand down her pants, realized it was wrong, pulled my hand out, and she woke up at that point and kicked me out of bed.” Id. at 896. Later he back-tracked from this statement, again stating that he had been asleep and woke to find his finger in C.P.’s vagina. Id. At the conclusion of the interview, Detective Lauer arrested him and walked him over to the jail, where he was processed by a jail officer and placed in a holding cell. Id. After being in a cell for approximately four hours, he asked to speak with Detective Lauer. Id. Detective Lauer was called and returned to the police station. A

second interview was then held, and Detective Lauer gave Malloch another Miranda warning. Id. As soon as the interview was underway Malloch admitted to having “not good thoughts” about C.P. for several years. Id. He also admitted that he knew what he was doing when he put his finger in her vagina. Id. He stated, “I didn’t want to hurt her, she happened to be asleep, and I failed to control myself.” Id. He expressed remorse for what had happened and stated: “I remember—yeah, laying down—falling asleep,

waking up, and this has come to me as I’m laying out there, put my—curious, or whatever, put my hand down there, she stirred, pulled my hand out, and then had gotten kicked out of the bed.” Id. at 897. Detective Lauer asked him if he wanted to write C.P. an apology letter and he stated that he did. Id. In the letter he wrote: “I am so sorry for what I did to you. At the wedding I promised to protect you, and I failed at

those times. . . I will seek professional help for what has happened and make sure it never happens again.” (ECF 7-4 at 163.) The State charged him with child molesting. Malloch, 980 N.E.2d at 897. The case proceeded to trial in June 2011, but the jury deadlocked. Id. The court declared a mistrial and scheduled a second jury trial for September 2011. Id. At the second trial,

Malloch’s defense was that he suffered from “sexsomnia,” a disorder that caused him to engage in sexual behavior while he was asleep; he claimed he was asleep when he put his finger in C.P.’s vagina and that his inculpatory statements to Detective Lauer had been coerced. Id. The jury found him guilty, and the trial court sentenced him to 28 years in prison with a portion of that time suspended to probation.1 Id.

On direct appeal, Malloch raised the following arguments: (1) the court abused its discretion in denying his motion for a continuance of the second trial so that he could present testimony from an expert on sexsomnia; (2) the court erred in admitting his inculpatory statements to Detective Lauer because the Miranda warnings he received were inadequate and his statements were involuntary; (3) the court erred in admitting his apology letter to C.P.

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