Price v. State

765 N.E.2d 1245, 2002 Ind. LEXIS 295, 2002 WL 535789
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 10, 2002
Docket49S00-0006-CR-385
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 765 N.E.2d 1245 (Price v. State) 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
Price v. State, 765 N.E.2d 1245, 2002 Ind. LEXIS 295, 2002 WL 535789 (Ind. 2002).

Opinion

SHEPARD, Chief Justice.

Appellant Kerrie Price fatally shot two security guards at an apartment in an Indianapolis neighborhood called the Meadows, and his trial eventually led to a sentence of life without parole. We affirm.

Facts & Procedural History

On the afternoon of February 19, 1997, security guards Robert Black and Bryan Northern heard someone making loud "weird" noises at an apartment complex where they worked on the northeast side of the city. They told the offender to quiet down, but he made the noise again and added an obscenity. The noisemaker and his cousin then ran into an apartment building at 4138 Edgemere Court.

Black and Northern pursued the two young men into the building and began knocking on doors to locate them. The guards asked the occupant of apartment D2 if she had seen anyone wearing a white t-shirt enter the building, but she had not. She heard the guards go next door and knock at William Colquit's apartment.

Price, wanted on an outstanding warrant for failure to appear in court on a probation violation charge, was in that apartment. He later told a friend that two security guards knocked on the door, asked whether he lived there, and requested identification. He went to a closet, purportedly to retrieve his identification, but instead grabbed a gun and fired at the guards. 1

Price hid in a nearby apartment until a friend sneaked him into a car and drove him to another location. In the succeeding days he changed locations three more times, onee in the trunk of a car, to evade the police. On February 22nd, a SWAT team forced Price out of hiding with tear gas after a five-hour effort to persuade him to voluntarily release a hostage and surrender. During the standoff Price told a police negotiator that he was not present *1248 at the shootings, although he later changed his story and claimed he shot Black and Northern in self-defense. 2

Black died from multiple gunshot wounds. Northern died after several weeks in the hospital of infection caused by multiple gunshot wounds.

The State charged Price with two counts of murder and sought the death penalty. The jury found Price guilty on both counts and recommended a sentence of life without parole, which the court imposed.

I. Evidentiary Challenges

Decisions to admit or exelude evidence are matters for the trial court's discretion. See Minnick v. State, 544 N.E.2d 471 (Ind.1989). We afford these decisions great deference on appeal, reversing only when a manifest abuse of discretion denies the defendant a fair trial. Id.

A. The Photographs of Price. At trial the State introduced two photographs found at the crime seene. Each showed Price at a club with four companions. He was gesturing in a manner that could be interpreted as a gang sign.

The defense argued that the photographs were prejudicial and irrelevant because identification was not an issue. The State acknowledged that the defense was not contesting Price's presence at the shooting, but argued that the photographs were relevant "to show the guilty knowledge of the defendant" by demonstrating that he had changed his hairstyle and had gold caps removed from his teeth. 3 (R. at 5589-40.)

Defense counsel took responsibility for advising Price to change his appearance "to look proper and dignified here in a court of law, in a death penalty case." (R. at 5540.) Nonetheless, the court admitted the photographs as "minimally relevant," saying, "[OJbviously his looks have dramatically changed. I think it's fair for the ... jurors on their own to observe what he looked like at that time." (R. at 5541.)

We agree with Price that the court erred in admitting the photographs. There is no contention here that Price changed his appearance as part of his efforts to evade capture, or to otherwise foil identification before or during trial.

Because identification was not at issue, the photographs were irrelevant. See Ind. Evidence Rule 402. Mostly, they seemed designed as character evidence inadmissible under Ind. Evid. R. 404(a) ("Evidence of a person's character or a trait of character is not admissible for the purpose of proving action in conformity therewith on a particular occasion, exeept: (1) Character of accused. Evidence of a pertinent trait of character offered by an accused, or by the prosecution to rebut the same;...."}.

A defendant does not open the door to otherwise inadmissible character evidence *1249 merely by dressing and grooming in a manner appropriate for court. Tailoring one's appearance to that occasion may indicate consciousness of social stereotypes as easily as consciousness of guilt, because "[flor unnumbered ages the external appearance has been deemed to be an index to the internal man." Henry Hardwicke, The Art of Winning Cases or Modern Advocacy 153 (1894) (quoted in Richard H. Underwood, Truth Verifiers From the Hot Iron to the Lie Detector, 84 Ky. L.J. 597, 622 (1995)).

Photographs showing how a defendant looked at the time of the crime are frequently probative. Here, however, they largely invited jurors to evaluate guilt based on whether the defendant looked like the type of person who would commit this sort of crime. This is what Rule 404(a) prohibits.

Nevertheless, "[wle disregard error in the admission of evidence unless it affects the substantial rights of a party." Willey v. State, 712 N.E.2d 434, 444 (Ind.1999) (citing, inter alia, Ind. Trial Rule 61). In light of other evidence that Price shot the two security guards multiple times while receiving no injuries himself and later confessed to two friends that he fired first and without provocation, the erroncous admission of the two photographs was harmless.

B. The Autopsy Photographs. The State introduced seven photographs from Black's autopsy to illustrate a pathologist's testimony concerning the number and location of Black's gunshot wounds. The defense objected to two photographs that showed wounds caused by surgical procedures performed on Black during lifesaving efforts, and one that showed an autopsy wound to Black's head.

The court allowed all the photographs because each of the seven uniquely illustrated Black's wounds. The pathologist identified and explained the wounds that resulted from surgical and autopsy procedures.

One of the challenged photographs illustrated, in perspective, a gunshot wound that struck Black in his back. Another illustrated a chest wound Black suffered when "bent forward, if he was on his feet; or ... already on the ground." (R. at 6701, 6759.) Both were relevant to Price's claim of self-defense.

The defense also objected to all three autopsy photographs of Northern that were offered as evidence, arguing that they were irrelevant because the pathologist could not distinguish bullet entry wounds from surgical wounds.

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765 N.E.2d 1245, 2002 Ind. LEXIS 295, 2002 WL 535789, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/price-v-state-ind-2002.