Robert E. Quinn v. State of Indiana

45 N.E.3d 39, 2015 Ind. App. LEXIS 670, 2015 WL 5881890
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 8, 2015
Docket20A03-1503-CR-82
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 45 N.E.3d 39 (Robert E. Quinn 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
Robert E. Quinn v. State of Indiana, 45 N.E.3d 39, 2015 Ind. App. LEXIS 670, 2015 WL 5881890 (Ind. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

BARTEAU, Senior Judge.

Statement of the Case

[1] Robert E. Quinn appeals his convictions of child molesting, a Class B felony, 1 and criminal confinement, a Class B felony. 2 We affirm.

Issue

[2] Quinn has preserved one issue for appellate review: whether the charges of child molesting and criminal confinement are barred by the statute of limitations.

Facts and Procedural History

[3] On the night of March 5, 1988, ten-year-old E.F. was asleep on a couch in the living room of her family’s house in Elk-hart County. E.F.’s parents were not at home, and E.F.’s brother was asleep in another room. Suddenly, Quinn forced open the front door, damaging the door frame, and entered the house. As E.F. awoke, he covered her head with a coat, picked her up, and carried her outside. Quinn got into his car with E.F. and drove away, holding her in a headlock.

[4] Later, Quinn stopped the car. E.F. could not see where she was or the face of her kidnapper because the coat was covering her face. Quinn put her on her back on the driver’s side of the front seat. E.F, cried and tried to remove' the coat. Quinn punched her in the face, told her to quit crying, and threatened to kill her and her family “with a knife” if she kept crying or told anyone about the abduction. Tr. p. 298.

[5] Quinn pushed E.F.’s nightgown up to her shoulders and rubbed her chest. He removed her underpants and unsuccessfully attempted to insert his penis in her vagina, inflicting intense pain on E.F. Next, E.F. felt Quinn .smearing a substance on and inside of her vagina with his fingers. It burned. She asked him what the substance was, and Quinn said it was Vaseline. •

[6] After applying the Vaseline, Quinn inserted his penis into E.F.’s vagina. The pain caused E.F. to pass out for a.short time. At one point she gripped the steering wheel and tried to pull away, but Quinn held her in place. Quinn inserted his penis in her vagina a second time, and she passed out again. Eventually, Quinn moved E.F. back to the passenger side of the front seat and told her to keep the coat on her head. He started the car and began driving. E.F. found her underwear and put it back on.

[7] Quinn stopped at a video rental store next to E.F.’s house and told her to get out. She got out as fast as she could and went inside her house. E.F. saw blood in her underwear and used toilet paper and a washcloth to try to clean up. She was still in pain. After E.F. cleaned up as best she could, she hid the washcloth behind the toilet. Next, she sat on her bed. E.F. remembered Quinn’s threat to kill her family if she told anyone. . She did not wake her brother.

[8] When E.F.’s parents returned home at two or three in the morning, they saw that the front door had been broken open. E.F.’s mother found E.F. sitting in bed. E.F., who was afraid that her mother would be angry, told her mother that she had started her period. E.F.’s mother continued questioning her and told E.F.’s father to call the police.

*42 [9]’ Detective Gary Kenawell of the Elkhart County Sheriffs Department was dispatched to E.F.’s house. By the time he arrived, .E.F. had already been taken to the hospital. Several other officers were present at the house and had collected E.F.’s nightgown and underwear, as well as the toilet paper and the washcloth she had used to clean up. The officers stored the items in bags, to'which they affixed evidence tags that stated a casé number, the date, the collecting officers’ names, the house address, and a description of the contents.

[10] At the hospital, a doctor examined E.F.’s injuries and performed a sexual assault examination. Police officers" collected the sexual assault evidence kit, which was marked as State’s Exhibit 8 at trial. Doctors later performed surgery on E.F. to repair severe vaginal lacerations caused by Quinn’s attack.

[11] Detective Kenawell went to the hospital, where he questioned E.F.’s father and brother. At his request, they went to the sheriffs department, where they gave formal statements. He later questioned E.F. while she was still hospitalized, but she was unable to describe her attacker. At that time, Quinn was a stranger to E.F.’s family, but it was discovered years later that he and E.F.’s family had lived in the same neighborhood.

[12] Detective Kenawell and other officers canvassed houses and businesses near E.F.’s house to find out if anyone had seen anything, but their questioning did not yield any results. Another officer told Detective Kenawell to consider Quinn as a suspect. The record does not disclose the reasons for the officer’s suspicion, but Detective Kenawell’s investigation did not tie Quinn or any other person to E.F.’s kidnapping and rape.

[13] E.F. and her family members regularly spoke with the police for several months, but the investigation was hampered by a lack of leads.. In July 1988, the sheriffs department put the case in inactive status, meaning that no further investigation would be undertaken absent new information. In October 1988, E.F.’s father called the police with information about a possible suspect, but the lead did not pan out. E.F.’s father periodically called the police .over the next several years, requesting status updates.

[14] Meanwhile, an officer had delivered'the sexual assault evidence kit, two pairs of E.F.’s underpants, her nightgown, the washcloth, and the toilet tissue to the Indiana State Police Laboratory (the Lab) on March 10, 1988.. At that time, the Lab used “ABO typing” to test blood samples. Id. at 161. It was an accurate but rudimentary analysis that could only exclude a suspect from a blood sample rather than identifying the suspect as the definitive source. Blood testing revealed that the underpants, washcloth, and nightgown contained .blood that was consistent with E.F.’s blood standard, but no further information could be obtained. Several pieces of evidence had seminal fluid or spermatozoa on them, but at that time the Lab had no testing procedures that could link those substances with a specific person.

[15] In 1988, the Lab’s policy was to take clippings known as sub-items from pieces of evidence and test the sub-items rather than the entirety of each item. The Lab returned each item, minus the portion that was removed to create the sub-item, to the appropriate law enforcement agency. The Lab still makes use of sub-items today. Currently, the Lab has a practice of keeping sub-items “in perpetuity.” Id. at 180. In the 1980s, the Lab had no formal retention policy, but an analyst could retain and store a sub-item if he or she wanted.

*43 [16] Prior to 2000, the Elkhart County Sheriffs Department destroyed the evidence in its possession that was related to this case. Kim Epperson, the Lab analyst who performed the blood testing in 1988, chose to store the sub-items. They remained in storage at the Lab’s Indianapolis vault over several decades.

[17] In the early to mid-1990s, the Lab began to use DNA analysis. Over the years, the Lab adopted more advanced DNA analytical methods as they became available.

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45 N.E.3d 39, 2015 Ind. App. LEXIS 670, 2015 WL 5881890, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-e-quinn-v-state-of-indiana-indctapp-2015.