Mathew J Cramer, II v. State of Indiana

CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 5, 2024
Docket23S-LW-00019
StatusPublished

This text of Mathew J Cramer, II v. State of Indiana (Mathew J Cramer, II 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.

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Mathew J Cramer, II v. State of Indiana, (Ind. 2024).

Opinion

FILED Sep 05 2024, 2:57 pm

CLERK Indiana Supreme Court Court of Appeals and Tax Court

IN THE

Indiana Supreme Court Supreme Court Case No. 23S-LW-19

Mathew J. Cramer, II, Appellant (Defendant below),

–v–

State of Indiana, Appellee (Plaintiff below).

Argued: April 25, 2024 | Decided: September 5, 2024

Appeal from the Allen Superior Court 6 No. 02D06-2104-MR-000007 The Honorable David M. Zent

Opinion by Justice Massa Chief Justice Rush and Justices Slaughter, Goff, and Molter concur. Massa, Justice.

A jury found Mathew Cramer guilty of murdering and dismembering Shane Nguyen and recommended a sentence of life imprisonment without parole (“LWOP”), which the trial court accordingly imposed. On direct appeal, Cramer asks this Court to revise his sentence to a term of years under Appellate Rule 7(B). Because Cramer’s acts and character fail to satisfy Appellate Rule 7(B)’s requirements, we reject that request and affirm.

Facts and Procedural History Mathew Cramer lived in a storage unit in Fort Wayne. One day, as Cramer was walking to the mall, Shane Nguyen pulled his minivan beside him and asked if he wanted a ride. Cramer accepted.

Nguyen and Cramer stopped for food and then went to Goshen to collect Cramer’s paycheck. Upon arriving back at the storage shed, Nguyen told Cramer that Cramer “owed” him for the ride, so Cramer allowed Nguyen to perform oral sex. Tr. Vol. III at 206. Afterward, the two exchanged phone numbers to talk again in the future.

A few weeks later, Cramer texted Nguyen for another ride. Nguyen explained he was out of town and was unsure whether he had time to drive Cramer. Cramer then promised to give Nguyen a “surprise” that Nguyen would like if he agreed to help. Id. at 210. After receiving a sexually explicit photograph of Cramer, Nguyen agreed to pick Cramer up in Elkhart and drive him back to Fort Wayne. As they drove from Elkhart, Cramer decided he wanted to kill Nguyen and hatched a plan to murder him.

Once at the storage unit, Cramer and Nguyen climbed into the back seats of the minivan, and Cramer asked Nguyen to remove his shirt. As Nguyen turned around, Cramer put him in a choke hold, and increased pressure as Nguyen’s body shook. Cramer then exited the minivan and dragged Nguyen’s body into the storage unit causing Nguyen’s head to hit the concrete floor. Once inside the storage unit, Cramer noticed

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 23S-LW-19 | September 5, 2024 Page 2 of 9 Nguyen was still alive and punched him in the back of his head and stomped on his chest.

Meanwhile, Nguyen’s wife became worried because her husband had not yet arrived home and tried to call and track Nguyen’s phone multiple times to no avail. Eventually, she reported her husband missing, and a Silver Alert was issued for information on his whereabouts.

The next day, Cramer drove Nguyen’s van to a friend’s house and informed his friends that he had killed Nguyen. The group of friends went to two stores to buy tarps, bungie cords, a machete, shovels, a bucket, a plastic tub, a tarp, a large sheet of all-purpose plastic, trash bags, a hacksaw, and extra hacksaw blades.

Once back in the storage unit, Cramer and his friend Jacob Carreon- Hamilton recorded their actions on a cell phone. Prior to decapitating Nguyen, Cramer manipulated Nguyen’s mouth like a puppet, making him appear to ask, “Am I dead?” and forced Nguyen’s head to nod up and down as if answering “yes.” St. Ex. 77 at 53:28–54:00. Then Cramer and Carreon-Hamilton began to dismember Nguyen’s arms and legs. At one point, Cramer used Nguyen’s severed arm to give himself a high-five. Cramer and Carreon-Hamilton placed Nguyen’s head, arms, and legs into six separate trash bags, while his torso was put into another trash bag and then into the plastic tub. Nguyen’s dismembered body was moved into the minivan and Cramer and Carreon-Hamilton searched for a place to bury the body, eventually stopping at a vacant building near the storage facility.

While on patrol that evening, a Fort Wayne police sergeant spotted the minivan’s tail lights behind the vacant building. The sergeant pulled up behind the minivan, searched the license plate, discovered it was linked to the Silver Alert for Nguyen, and initiated a stop. Once the driver, Carreon- Hamilton, pulled over, the sergeant approached the driver’s-side door. As he looked into the minivan, Carreon-Hamilton looked back at him and sped off.

The sergeant followed the minivan for five blocks before Carreon- Hamilton opened the minivan’s door, jumped out, and ran. Cramer, who

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 23S-LW-19 | September 5, 2024 Page 3 of 9 was in the passenger seat, moved over to the driver’s side and continued driving. Cramer swerved through a gas station parking lot, hit a light pole, and crashed through a privacy fence. After coming to a stop, Cramer jumped out of the minivan and fled the scene. Shortly after, officers found the minivan, obtained a search warrant, and traced evidence to Cramer and his friends. The police then located Cramer in Lakeville and transported him back to Fort Wayne to await trial.

The State charged Cramer with murder, Level 6 felony abuse of a corpse, and Level 6 felony resisting law enforcement. Listing the dismemberment as a qualifying aggravator, the State requested—and the trial court granted—permission to seek an LWOP sentence. Cramer moved for a pretrial determination of intellectual disability, explaining that Indiana law required a “court ordered evaluative report.” Ind. Code § 35-36-9-2. The trial court granted the motion and appointed Dr. Ned P. Masbaum. Dr. Masbaum reported that Cramer was diagnosed with 15q13.3 microdeletion syndrome, which generates a predisposition to “cognitive impairment, autism spectrum disorder, hyperactivity, attention problems, withdrawal, [and] aggressive and antisocial behavior.” Appellant’s App. Vol. II, p. 88. The report also revealed Cramer was diagnosed with conduct disorder, persistent depressive disorder, and attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder in the past. Even so, Dr. Masbaum reported Cramer was “alert, cooperative, and had no disorganized speech[.]” Id. at 89. Dr. Masbaum estimated Cramer’s IQ to be between 71 and 84 and determined Cramer had borderline intellectual functioning. After a hearing, the trial court found Cramer “did not prove by clear and convincing evidence that [he] is an individual with an intellectual disability.” Id. at 94.

A jury found Cramer guilty of Count I, murder; Count II, abuse of a corpse, a Level 6 felony; and Count III, resisting law enforcement, a Level 6 felony. The jury recommended LWOP. The trial court imposed the recommended sentence and found Cramer’s prior criminal history, failed attempts at rehabilitation, and the nature and circumstances of the crime in aggravation and did not find any mitigating factors. The trial court sentenced Cramer to LWOP and concurrent two-year sentences for the remaining Level 6 felony convictions.

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 23S-LW-19 | September 5, 2024 Page 4 of 9 Cramer directly appealed to this Court. See Ind. Appellate Rule 4(A)(1)(a).

Standard of Review When a defendant is found guilty of murder by a jury and the State pursues an LWOP sentence, the jury will reconvene for a sentencing hearing. I.C. § 35-50-2-9(d). If the jury provides a sentencing recommendation of LWOP, the court is required to follow it. Id. § -9(e). When an appellant seeks revision of that sentence, the Indiana Constitution grants this Court the authority for independent appellate review to alter a sentence imposed by the trial court. Ind. Const. art.

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