Marlon L. Pendleton v. State of Indiana

CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 10, 2012
Docket45A04-1110-CR-544
StatusUnpublished

This text of Marlon L. Pendleton v. State of Indiana (Marlon L. Pendleton 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
Marlon L. Pendleton v. State of Indiana, (Ind. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Pursuant to Ind.Appellate Rule 65(D),

FILED this Memorandum Decision shall not be regarded as precedent or cited before any court except for the purpose of Jul 10 2012, 9:33 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:

THOMAS W. VANES GREGORY F. ZOELLER Crown Point, Indiana Attorney General of Indiana

MICHAEL GENE WORDEN Deputy Attorney General Indianapolis, Indiana

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

MARLON L. PENDLETON, ) ) Appellant-Defendant, ) ) vs. ) No. 45A04-1110-CR-544 ) STATE OF INDIANA, ) ) Appellee-Plaintiff. )

APPEAL FROM THE LAKE CIRCUIT COURT The Honorable Salvador Vasquez, Judge Cause No. 45G01-0812-MR-9

July 10, 2012

MEMORANDUM DECISION - NOT FOR PUBLICATION

BAILEY, Judge Case Summary

Marlon L. Pendleton (“Pendleton”) appeals his conviction of Voluntary Manslaughter

as a Class B felony.1

We affirm.

Issue

The sole issue raised on appeal is whether the State presented sufficient evidence to

prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Pendleton knowingly or intentionally killed the victim.

Facts and Procedural History

Pendleton and Dannette Adkins (“Adkins”) were involved romantically. At times,

Pendleton lived with Adkins in her father’s home in Hammond; at other times he lived down

the street with his sister, Jacqueline Pendleton (“Jacqueline”). Pendleton and Adkins had a

tempestuous relationship characterized by many arguments. They had been observed

swinging at each other in the middle of the street and pulling and shoving each other on some

stairs. Pendleton had also hit Adkins with his fist.

On the evening of December 17, 2008, Pendleton and Adkins were arguing loudly as

they sat in a gray Saturn automobile owned by Jacqueline but driven by both Pendleton and

Adkins. At 12:33 a.m. on December 18, 2008, police received a 911 call from Adkins

regarding a domestic disturbance at her residence. Investigating police found Adkins in the

front yard and Pendleton in the back. When officers escorted Pendleton around the house,

Pendleton and Adkins began arguing again. Both appeared to have been drinking; Adkins

1 Ind. Code § 35-42-1-3.

2 seemed intoxicated. Police asked Pendleton about blood on his face and he accused Adkins

of stabbing him. Adkins had minor bruising below her right eye, which she claimed

Pendleton caused two days earlier. Neither Pendleton nor Adkins wanted to press charges;

however, Adkins stated that Pendleton was threatening to kill her father, and she wanted him

to leave. Pendleton took some of his belongings and walked toward his sister’s house.

Police left at approximately 1:00 a.m.

Sometime soon thereafter, neighbors heard Adkins screaming for help. One neighbor

saw Pendleton and Adkins arguing in the Saturn, which was parked in the backyard of the

Thompson house. Pendleton was in the driver’s seat and Adkins was in the passenger seat.

No one called the police, as the couple had been arguing “all summer long.” (Tr. at 547.)

At some point that morning, Jacqueline was awakened by Adkins and Pendleton

knocking on her front door. She allowed them onto the porch of her home but, about twenty

minutes later, asked them to leave because of their loud arguing over the police visit earlier

that morning. The couple left and Jacqueline thought she heard the Saturn drive away.

When Jacqueline left for work around 6:00 a.m., neither Pendleton nor Adkins was there.

But after Jacqueline’s son dressed for high school, Pendleton returned with Adkins, who had

swollen eyes and dried blood on her bruised and swollen face. Adkins fell while walking to

the bathroom. Pendleton asked for towels, claiming that he found Adkins in that condition.

At 8:44 a.m., after seeing Adkins, another resident of the house called 911. Pendleton began

performing CPR on Adkins.

Paramedics found Adkins unconscious and nonresponsive. She had no pulse, no heart

3 activity, and was not breathing. She was cold to the touch. Her head, neck and face were

“very swollen,” her eyes were swollen shut, and blood was coming from her nose and ear.

(Tr. at 863.) During intubation, dark-colored blood was discovered in the back of her throat.

Adkins was taken to the hospital where she was briefly revived; however, at 9:37 a.m., she

died from what was determined to be blunt force trauma to the head.

An autopsy later revealed various injuries on Adkins’ face, head, neck, and body, with

a dominant left-sided injury pattern. Several fingernails were broken. Approximately

seventy to eighty percent of Adkins’ head was injured from multiple blows. She had also

suffered a rib fracture. Most injuries were consistent with the use of a fist and were inflicted

within four to twelve hours before death, with midnight to 2:00 a.m. being the most likely

time frame.

Investigators discovered that the back of Pendleton’s hands were swollen, red and

bruised. An unknown milky-white film covered most windows of the Saturn. Inside the

vehicle, described as a “crime scene,” police found a broken dome light, a broken cassette

tape, a broken ice scraper and what looked like fresh cuts in the roof liner. (Tr. at 625.)

Adkins’ blood was found on the broken ice scraper, on the seat and other items in the Saturn,

and on Pendleton’s clothing. Some blood was transferred by contact, some was expirated,

i.e., blown from an airway, and some occurred from “heavy passive dripping.” (Tr. at 835.)

On December 20, 2008, the State charged Pendleton with murder and voluntary

manslaughter as a Class A felony. The voluntary manslaughter charge was later reduced to a

Class B felony. Pendleton’s first trial ended with a deadlocked jury and, on September 20,

4 2010, the trial court declared a mistrial. A second trial commenced on August 8, 2011. Two

lesser offenses, involuntary manslaughter and reckless homicide, were added for

consideration. The second jury found Pendleton not guilty of murder but guilty of voluntary

manslaughter, for which the trial court imposed a seventeen-year sentence. Pendleton now

appeals.

Discussion and Decision

Standard of Review

The standard of review for sufficiency-of-evidence claims is well-settled. We neither

reweigh evidence nor judge witness credibility, and we respect the jury’s exclusive province

to weigh conflicting evidence. Delarosa v. State, 938 N.E.2d 690, 697 (Ind. 2010). We

consider only the probative evidence and reasonable inferences that support the verdict. Id.

We affirm if the probative evidence and reasonable inferences drawn therefrom could have

permitted a reasonable jury to find the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. Id.

Analysis

Indiana Code Section 35-42-1-3, in pertinent part, provides:

(a) A person who knowingly or intentionally: (1) kills another human being; . . . while acting under sudden heat commits voluntary manslaughter, a Class B felony. . . .

(b) The existence of sudden heat is a mitigating factor that reduces what otherwise would be murder under section 1(1) of this chapter to voluntary manslaughter.

Here, Pendleton insists that the State did not establish that he knowingly or

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Related

Delarosa v. State
938 N.E.2d 690 (Indiana Supreme Court, 2010)
Book v. State
880 N.E.2d 1240 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 2008)
Whatley v. State
908 N.E.2d 276 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 2009)
Blanchard v. State
802 N.E.2d 14 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 2004)
M.Q.M. v. State
840 N.E.2d 441 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 2006)

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