Robert Warner v. State of Indiana

CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 17, 2014
Docket29A05-1402-PC-52
StatusUnpublished

This text of Robert Warner v. State of Indiana (Robert Warner 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 Warner v. State of Indiana, (Ind. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Pursuant to Ind.Appellate Rule 65(D), this Memorandum Decision shall not be Dec 17 2014, 10:17 am regarded as precedent or cited before any court except for the purpose of establishing the defense of res judicata, collateral estoppel, or the law of the case.

ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:

JOSEPH M. CLEARY GREGORY F. ZOELLER Indianapolis, Indiana Attorney General of Indiana

IAN McLEAN Deputy Attorney General Indianapolis, Indiana

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

ROBERT WARNER, ) ) Appellant-Defendant, ) ) vs. ) No. 29A05-1402-PC-52 ) STATE OF INDIANA, ) ) Appellee-Plaintiff. )

APPEAL FROM THE HAMILTON SUPERIOR COURT The Honorable Steven R. Nation, Judge Cause No. 29D01-1108-PC-12552 & 29D01-0508-PC-130

December 17, 2014

MEMORANDUM DECISION – NOT FOR PUBLICATION

RILEY, Judge STATEMENT OF THE CASE

Appellant-Petitioner, Robert Warner (Warner), appeals the post-conviction

court’s denial of his petition for post-conviction relief.

We affirm.

ISSUE

Warner raises one issue on appeal which we restate as: Whether Warner was

denied effective assistance of counsel.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

We adopt this court’s statement of facts as set forth in our memorandum opinion

issued in Warner’s direct appeal, Warner v. State, No. 29A04-0907-CR-420 (Ind. Ct.

App. Dec. 11, 2009), trans. denied:

On January 18, 2005, Warner spoke to M.N. on the telephone about a mutual friend. Warner told M.N. that he was sixteen years old and a high school sophomore. He was actually seventeen and a senior. Warner asked to meet M.N., and she agreed. She took her dogs for a walk in her neighborhood, and Warner met her. Warner told M.N. that she looked “innocent” and asked if she was a virgin. She told him that she was only thirteen and that she was a virgin. Warner asked her if she would be his girlfriend, and she agreed.

On January 21, 2005, Warner and M.N. met at an ice-skating rink. M.N. believed that they were going to go to the mall and have dinner. Instead, after they got in Warner’s car, he called his home and learned that his mother was out. Warner took M.N. to his house. He left her in the living room and went upstairs. Then he called M.N. She went upstairs and found him lying naked on the bed. M.N. “freaked out and went into the bathroom” and locked the door. Warner told her to come out, and that “it was going to be okay.” M.N. unlocked the bathroom door and came out. Warner was still naked. He asked her if she “was ready.” M.N. started crying and said “no.” Warner said, “[E]ither you’re ready or I’m going to make you be ready.” Warner told M.N. to take her pants off and get on top of him, and she obeyed. When she “got on top of him, he pushed [her] down on him.” She

2 was in pain and told him that it hurt. He told her to “shut up.” Afterward, Warner took her back to the skating rink and told her “not to tell anyone or he was going to kill [her].”

Warner called M.N. the following day and asked to see her again. M.N. told him that she was scared of him. Warner apologized and said that “it would not happen again.” M.N. agreed to see him. In the following months, Warner fondled M.N., put his penis in her mouth, and Warner and M.N. had sexual intercourse multiple times. M.N. was “scared to say no to him” because “he made [her] the first time.”

Warner also had anal sex with M.N. twice. The first time, she told him she did not want to do it, but he disregarded her refusal and penetrated her anus, causing her to scream in pain and ask him to stop. He did not. As a result, M.N. suffered pain and discomfort for months. While at dinner with her parents for her fourteenth birthday, M.N. began crying due to the pain. She explained to her parents that she was in pain, but did not explain the cause. Her father gave her some medicinal cream for the pain.

On the second occasion, Warner was at M.N.’s house. They were watching television with M.N.’s father, and he fell asleep on the floor. Warner told M.N. that he wanted to have sex with her. She got on her knees on the couch and he pulled her pants off and penetrated her anus again. M.N. was in pain and wanted to scream out, but her head was pushed down in a pillow. Her father remained asleep.

In April 2005, M.N. and her family went to Florida on vacation. Warner gained entrance to M.N.’s home and took a pair of her underwear and a photograph of her from the home. That summer, Warner told M.N. to make “videos of [herself] in the bathtub fingering herself and he wanted [her] to moan a lot.” M.N. did not want to make a video, but she did because she “didn’t want him to get mad at [her].”

Slip op. at 1-2 (internal citations omitted). On August 2, 2005, the State filed an

Information, charging Warner with two Counts of sexual misconduct, Class C felonies,

and one Count of possession of child pornography, a Class D felony. On June 30, 2006,

Warner waived juvenile court jurisdiction. Subsequently, on October 27, 2006, the State

amended the Information by adding the following charges: eight Counts of child

3 molesting, Class B felonies, one Count of criminal deviate conduct, a Class B felony, one

Count of sexual misconduct with a minor, a Class C felony, one Count of residential

entry, a Class D felony, and one Count of conversion, a Class A misdemeanor.

A four-day jury trial was conducted from December 8 through December 11,

2008. At the close of the evidence, the jury found Warner guilty of child pornography,

criminal deviate conduct, and conversion. Since the jury was hung on the remaining

charges, the trial court declared a mistrial and set a jury trial for April 13, 2009. On

March 26, 2009, the trial court sentenced Warner to one-and-one-half years for

possession of child pornography, and ten years for criminal deviate conduct—with two

years suspended, and eight years executed. Of the eight years, Warner was ordered to

serve four years in the Indiana Department of Correction, four years in a Work Release

Program, and two years on probation. Both sentences were to run concurrently. As for

the conversion charge, the trial court ordered Warner to 365 days in the Hamilton County

Jail.

On direct appeal, Warner only challenged the jury instructions tendered for his

criminal deviate charge. Specifically, Warner argued that the trial court committed a

fundamental error in instructing the jury that a child under the age of sixteen years could

not consent to deviate sexual conduct or sexual intercourse. On December 11, 2009, we

affirmed Warner’s conviction. See id.

According to the Chronological Case Summary (CCS), on June 2, 2009, trial

counsel Carolyn Rader (Attorney Rader) withdrew her appearance on representing

Warner in the remaining charges, and thereafter, Warner hired his own counsel on June

4 29, 2009. Once again, the State amended the Information by renumbering the remaining

Counts, dismissing one Count, and deleting the adjudicated Counts. On September 14,

2009, Warner filed a Notice of Alibi in relation to the remaining Counts and a Second

Notice of Alibi on October 13, 2009. Following this court’s affirmation of Warner’s

conviction in December 2009, the State moved to dismiss the remaining charges on

January 22, 2010, stating:

The State does not wish to retry the remaining counts given that (a) [Warner’s] conviction has been upheld, (b) [Warner] has [not] petitioned for [] rehearing or transfer on the Court of Appeals’ opinion, and (c) the State is satisfied with the sentence of the court.

(Appellant’s App. p. 36). On February 2, 2010, the trial court granted the State’s motion.

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Robert Warner v. State of Indiana, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-warner-v-state-of-indiana-indctapp-2014.