Sanders v. State

840 N.E.2d 319, 2006 Ind. LEXIS 24, 2006 WL 60815
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 12, 2006
Docket02S03-0505-CR-222
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 840 N.E.2d 319 (Sanders 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
Sanders v. State, 840 N.E.2d 319, 2006 Ind. LEXIS 24, 2006 WL 60815 (Ind. 2006).

Opinion

SULLIVAN, Justice.

Defendant George Sanders wrote a letter of confession that was used against him at his trial for child molesting. The letter he wrote contained a reference to the fact that the victim had been molested previously but this reference was redacted when the letter was presented to the jury. The Court of Appeals held that the redacted material was necessary for the jury to understand the letter's context. But we find that the letter as used did not present the letter out of context in a way that misled the jury.

Background

In May, 2008, J.R., a 12-year-old girl, spent the night at the home of her friend A.S. and AS.'s father, George Sanders. J.R., A.S., and Sanders were lying on a bed in the basement watching television; Sanders lay between the girls. Sanders began rubbing J.R.'s back underneath her clothes. J.R. began to fall asleep, but woke up as Sanders rubbed her feet and continued up her leg with his hand. Sanders continued until he reached J.R.'s vagina, where he inserted two of his fingers.

J.R. and A.S. eventually left the basement and slept in room. J.R. did not tell her mother or A.S.'s mother what had happened because she was scared. But the next day, A.S. went home with J.R. and told J.R.'s mother. The following day, J.R. spoke with the police about the incident and was examined by a nurse. The nurse testified that during an examination of J.R.'s genitals, she found two abrasions or scratches indicative of some type of penetrating trauma.

The State charged Sanders with Class A felony child molesting and Class C felony child molesting. A few months later, *321 Sanders sent the following letter directly to the trial judge:

Dear Judge Gull,
My name is George Sanders, I am a common man, and I have never written to a Judge before.
I pray, you will accept this, I humbly, wish to apologize to the court, and to [J.R.'s] family, and to God the Father in heaven, for any action, I or my family has done, to cause any trials or heart aches for them in any way. (Proverbs 14:14) says[,] "you harvest what you plant." My stupidity has! I have never had a felony in the 50 years of my life, a beer or even a cigarette.
I have no criminal record in Canada for 80 years, when I was asked to move here on a H1 visa. (Proverbs 19:8) "We are ruined by our own stupidity and that, a good reputation and respect, are worth more than silver and gold (Prov.22:1).
I can honestly say I never had any desire or did I make any attempt to have sex with the girl. But I did touch someone else's child.
I just found out, from my attorney, that my 9 year old daughter also admitted to touching her accidentally and that she had been molested by her father and her mother's boy friend.
I feel awlful [sic]. I have to accept this plea, because, I did touch her and I have 9 children of my own including 8 step children. -
I do not wish to cause this family, any more pain or suffering, than what, they
I have cried hours, about the hardship I caused them and am truly sorry! I was told they also, lost a family member, in an accident, some years ago.... I have lost my good reputation, and all that we have owned, my job, all our vehicles and had to file Bankruptcy.
(Proverbs 17:10) says, "a sensible person accepts correction, but you can't beat sense into a fool." I asked God the Father to forgive me as well.
"If we truly love God, our sins will be forgiven, if we show him respect, and we will keep away from sin.
I promise you, that something like this, will never happen again, as long as I live. .
God is a God of Judgment, but he is also a God of Mercy and a God of Reconciliation. As I am the only child, I will need to bury my mother, who is 93 in Canada soon.
I ask for your merey and consideration in this matter.
Thank you!
George Sanders
P.S. Please forgive me, if I have done wrong, by writing this letter of apology.
Thank you!

App. at 424-26 (emphases in original). At trial, the State admitted over Sanders's objection a version of this letter that was redacted. In the redacted version of the letter, the following language was omitted from the fifth paragraph: "and that she had been molested by her father and her mother's boy friend." 1 App. at 428. The *322 jury found Sanders guilty as charged, and the trial court sentenced him to 80 years for Class A child molesting.

On appeal, Sanders argued, among other things, that the trial court erred in admitting the redacted version of his letter. 2 Finding that the trial court abused its discretion in admitting into evidence the redacted version of the letter and that it had an unduly prejudicial effect on the jury, the Court of Appeals reversed Sanders's convictions. Sanders v. State, 823 N.E.2d 313, 319 (Ind.Ct.App.2005). The State petitioned to, and we granted, transfer. 2005 Ind. LEXIS 443 (Ind. May 12, 2005).

Discussion

According to Sanders and the Court of Appeals, the redacted letter had a prejudicial impact on the jury, "especially considering that the State characterized it as the 'best evidence of this case."" Sanders, 828 N.E.2d at 318 (quoting Tr. at 477.). Sanders objected to the admission of the letter altogether at trial, but argued in the alternative that if any part of the letter was to have been admitted, then the entire letter should have been admitted. The crux of his argument is grounded in the so-called the "doctrine of completeness," as embodied in Indiana Evidence Rule 106, that "prevents the factfinder from being misled by statements that were taken out of context." Br. in Response to Pet. to Transfer at 2 3 Sanders reasons that without the reference to J.R.'s prior molestations, the letter "impermissibly took his statements to the judge grossly out of context while precluding his counsel from presenting a full reading of the correspondence." Id. at 3.

Sanders admits that his letter contains "[dJamning and difficult inferences ... to potentially explain away," but argues that the redacted letter precludes the argument that the letter was not a confession but only an expression by Sanders that he "was 'sorry' for a child's horrendous past experience and that he wished to avoid seeing her put through the stress of a child molest proceeding again, whether the allegations were real or imagined." Br. of Appellant at 9-10. The Court of Appeals agreed: '

Nowhere in the letter does Sanders admit he molested J.R. Instead, Sanders contends that the statements he made in the letter about feeling awful and not wanting to cause J.R.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
840 N.E.2d 319, 2006 Ind. LEXIS 24, 2006 WL 60815, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanders-v-state-ind-2006.