Savane Williams v. State of Indiana

CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 23, 2012
Docket20A04-1106-CR-428
StatusUnpublished

This text of Savane Williams v. State of Indiana (Savane Williams 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
Savane Williams v. State of Indiana, (Ind. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 65(D), this Memorandum Decision shall not be regarded as precedent or cited before any court except for the purpose of FILED establishing the defense of res judicata, Jul 23 2012, 8:53 am collateral estoppel, or the law of the case. CLERK of the supreme court, court of appeals and tax court

ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: DONALD R. SHULER GREGORY F. ZOELLER Barkes, Kolbus, Rife & Shuler, LLP Attorney General of Indiana Goshen, Indiana JODI KATHRYN STEIN Deputy Attorney General Indianapolis, Indiana

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

SAVANE E. WILLIAMS, ) ) Appellant-Defendant, ) ) vs. ) No. 20A04-1106-CR-428 ) STATE OF INDIANA, ) ) Appellee-Plaintiff. )

APPEAL FROM THE ELKHART CIRCUIT COURT The Honorable Gene R. Duffin, Judge Cause No. 20C01-9808-CF-40

July 23, 2012

MEMORANDUM DECISION – NOT FOR PUBLICATION

MATHIAS, Judge Following a jury trial in 2000, Savane E. Williams (“Williams”) was convicted in

Elkhart Circuit Court of two counts of Class A felony dealing in cocaine. In this belated

appeal, Williams presents six issues for our review, which we restate as:

I. Whether the trial court erred in denying Williams’s motion for a change of judge;

II. Whether the trial court’s admission of evidence regarding a confidential informant’s conduct constituted impermissible hearsay and violated Williams’s right to confront witnesses;

III. Whether the State presented sufficient evidence to support Williams’s convictions;

IV. Whether Indiana Code section 35-48-4-16 should be retroactively applied to Williams’s convictions, thereby reducing his convictions from Class A to a Class B felonies;

V. Whether Williams’s habitual offender enhancement constituted an improper double enhancement; and

VI. Whether the trial court erred in sentencing Williams to an aggregate term of eighty years incarceration.

The State concedes that the trial court improperly ordered that Williams serve a separate,

consecutive sentence as a result of his habitual offender adjudication. We agree with the

State that the trial court erred in the manner in which it imposed the habitual offender

enhancement, but we otherwise affirm Williams’s convictions and sentence.

Facts and Procedural History

In the summer of 1998, Detective Mark Dagy (“Detective Dagy”) of the Elkhart

Drug Task Force received information that Williams was selling cocaine. Dagy decided

to use the services of a confidential informant, Chris Thomas (“Thomas”), in his

2 investigation of Williams’s suspected drug dealing. Thomas and Williams had been

friends since childhood, and Thomas was a reliable, experienced confidential informant.1

On July 17, 1998, Detective Dagy met Thomas in a motel room where Thomas

was living. This motel room is 700 feet from Hayden Park in Elkhart, Indiana. Dagy

instructed Thomas to contact Williams and set up a meeting where Thomas could

purchase cocaine from Williams. Shortly before the controlled buy, Detective Dagy

searched Thomas’s motel room, searched Thomas, placed a microphone on Thomas, and

gave him $60 in cash that had been photocopied. Detective Dagy then left the motel

room and met with another officer to observe the scheduled buy. Other officers were also

nearby listening to the audio transmissions coming from the microphone Detective Dagy

had placed on Thomas.

Shortly thereafter, Williams drove into the motel parking lot in a large, green car

and parked in front of Thomas’s motel room. Also inside the car was Williams’s adult

niece, Ella Davis. Thomas came out of his motel room, approached the driver’s side

window of Williams’s car, and gave Williams $40 in cash. Williams reached into the

waistband of his pants, removed a small bag, took two rocks of crack cocaine out of the

bag, and handed them to Thomas. 2 After speaking with Williams briefly, Thomas

stepped away from the car. Williams then drove away from the motel. Minutes later,

Thomas approached Detective Dagy’s vehicle and handed him the two rocks of cocaine

1 Thomas had motivation to work with the police; he was facing a Class A felony drug charge and was also paid $40 to $50 by the police for each drug transaction in which he acted as a confidential informant. 2 These two rocks of cocaine weighed 0.317 grams in total.

3 he had purchased from Williams and the remaining $20 in cash. Detective Dagy again

searched Thomas and his motel room and found nothing.

Detective Dagy later contacted Thomas and set up another controlled buy to take

place on July 23, 1998. Detective Dagy photocopied another $60 in cash, then met

Thomas at a nearby restaurant parking lot, searched Thomas, placed a microphone on

him, and gave him the photocopied cash. Thomas then walked across the street to the

motel parking lot, while Detective Dagy went to a parking lot west of Thomas’s motel

room. This time, however, another detective was in a car approximately twenty feet

away from Thomas’s motel room and videotaped the transaction.

Williams arrived in his large, green car shortly before 7:00 p.m. This time, he was

accompanied by his friend Jeffrey Fletcher (“Fletcher”), who knew that he and Williams

were going to the motel to sell cocaine to Thomas, an acquaintance of Fletcher’s.

Williams again parked his car in front of Thomas’s motel room, and Thomas again

approached the driver’s side of the car. Thomas handed Williams the buy money, and

Williams reached into his pants and removed several rocks of crack cocaine. This time,

Williams gave Thomas three rocks of cocaine. After speaking with Thomas, Williams

got out of his car and spoke to others nearby. Afterward, Thomas met with Detective

Dagy and handed him the cocaine. Dagy then searched Thomas and found no other

contraband or money.

As a result of these controlled buys, the State charged Williams with two counts of

Class A felony dealing in cocaine within 1,000 feet of a park. The State also alleged that

Williams was a habitual offender based on his 1988 conviction for Class D felony

4 criminal recklessness and his 1993 conviction for Class D felony possession of a handgun

by a felon.

On February 10, 2000, Williams filed a motion for change of judge, claiming that

the trial court judge was biased against him and had previously recused himself in other

cases involving Williams. After a pre-trial conference held on February 15, 2000, the

trial court denied Williams’s motion for change of judge. Sometime before Williams’s

February 2000 trial, Thomas died. Williams then filed a motion in limine seeking to

exclude evidence the State learned from Thomas. The trial court granted this motion “as

to hearsay from [Thomas].” Appellant’s App. p. 49.

Williams’s jury trial was held on February 22 to February 24, 2000. Williams

testified on his own behalf and claimed that he only came to the motel to “hang out” with

Thomas. Tr. pp. 319, 327. Ultimately, the jury found Williams guilty as charged and

also determined that he was a habitual offender. The trial court sentenced Williams to

concurrent terms of fifty years on each Class A felony conviction and imposed a

consecutive thirty-year sentence as a result of the habitual offender adjudication.

Williams did not file a notice of appeal within thirty days of the trial court’s

sentencing order. Instead, he filed a petition for permission to file a belated notice of

appeal on February 22, 2001, almost a year after his sentencing.

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