Sipple v. State

788 N.E.2d 473, 2003 Ind. App. LEXIS 827, 2003 WL 21100668
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 15, 2003
Docket79A04-0211-CR-572
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 788 N.E.2d 473 (Sipple v. State) 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
Sipple v. State, 788 N.E.2d 473, 2003 Ind. App. LEXIS 827, 2003 WL 21100668 (Ind. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

BAILEY, Judge.

Case Summary

Christopher Sipple (Sipple) appeals the maximum eight-year sentence he received *477 after pleading guilty to Involuntary Manslaughter. 1 We affirm.

Issue

The issue here is whether the trial court properly sentenced Sipple to the maximum eight years for his crime.

Facts and Procedural History

Shortly after midnight on January 24, 2001, members of the Tippecanoe County Sheriff's Department arrived at Sipple's parents' residence in response to a call regarding a shooting. They found Sipple's pregnant twenty-one-year-old wife Christina on the floor near the doorway between the bedroom and living area of the basement suite in which the couple lived. Her feet were apparently in the living area, and her head was in the bedroom. Ripple and his father Wes were standing by Christina, who had a gunshot wound to her abdomen. Police officers did not observe any blood around the room other than that which was coming from Christina's wound. The officers found a loaded shotgun on the bed inside the bedroom. - Paramedics soon arrived, but Christina was pronounced dead shortly thereafter.

Sipple was taken by police officers to a police vehicle and was questioned about the incident. After speaking with officers in the vehicle, Sipple was taken to the police station where he provided additional details about the shooting. Both conversations were recorded. Sipple stated that he and a friend began hunting coyotes behind the residence that Sipple and Christina shared with Sipple's parents at some point before 11:00 pm. The pair hunted for around twenty minutes, and then returned to the residence. The two men and their wives played cards in the living area of the basement until around 11:30 p.m., when Sipple's hunting partner and his wife left. Sipple and Christina went to bed. At some point, Sipple walked upstairs from the basement to use the restroom. The lights in the basement were off, and the area was dark. Despite the darkness, Sip-ple noticed as he came back down the stairs that he had left the 12-gauge shotgun used on the coyote hunt against or near the wall next to the bedroom door. Sipple stated that he realized he had forgotten to unload the weapon, so he evidently decided to bring it into the lightless bedroom where his wife was sleeping to remove the shells from the gun. He stated that he was carrying the gun with his left hand on or near the fore-stock pump mechanism, his right hand on the hand-grip area of the stock near the trigger and the barrel up and across his body to the left in a port arms position. Sipple was adamant that his right index finger was not inside the trigger guard. Sipple told the officers that as he was walking with the loaded shotgun in the darkness toward the doorway to the bedroom, he tripped over a piece of furniture and fell to the ground while still holding the weapon. According to Sipple, his finger was not on the trigger, and the gun's safety was on. Sip-ple fell on top of the weapon and it discharged a single shot in the direction of the doorway. Sipple heard a seream, looked up from the floor, and even though it was too dark to see the piece of furniture on which he tripped, he was able to see his wife lying on the ground with a wound to her abdomen. He then turned on the lights to the bedroom and threw his gun on the bed. His parents came down the stairs to the basement and turned on the lights to the living area. Sipple said that his parents handed him a towel that he used to slow the bleeding from Christina's wound until the ambulance arrived.

*478 In the early morning hours of January 25, 2001, Dr. Donna Smith performed an autopsy on Christina. The autopsy indicated that Christina had been struck by a shotgun blast coming from above her head rather than from below her waist, as Sip-ple's version of events suggested. The muzzle of the gun was between three and six feet from Christina at the time of the shooting.

Police officers returned to Sipple's residence after the autopsy to look for any evidence of splattered blood consistent with the kind of wound Christina sustained. They found none. The officers also took various measurements of the basement and of Sipple's gun. Taking these measurements, as well as information obtained during the autopsy regarding the path of the shotgun blast and the distance between the muzzle of the gun and Christina's body, police officers concluded that Christina was most likely shot while lying on the ground by someone standing above her head and behind her.

Police officers spoke with Sipple again during the afternoon of January 25, 2001 to discuss the discrepancies between his story and the pathology evidence. As before, Sipple stated that he was walking with the gun, but this time told the officers that his right index finger was inside the trigger guard. He repeated his claim that he tripped over a piece of furniture on the way to the bedroom, but now said that the gun went off as he tripped, and that he fell over after the shot was fired. He heard his wife say that she couldn't move, so he turned on the lights in the bedroom and saw his wife on the ground in the doorway. Sipple did not explain how he was able to step over his wife's body without tripping over her in the total darkness to get into the bedroom to turn the lights on.

On January 26, 2001, police officers returned to the residence with a search warrant, and performed testing to reveal the presence of blood evidence in the basement. They found evidence of blood on the wall of the bedroom near where Christina's body was found, as well as evidence of blood on a nearby CD rack. Blood on both areas appeared to have been wiped off. In addition, the testing indicated that some amount of blood had been wiped from the carpet before paramedics arrived. Members of the Sipple family denied cleaning the area.

On January 29, 2001, Sipple gave yet another statement to the police in which he changed key points of his story. Sipple again said that he came down the stairs to the pitch-black basement after visiting the restroom and somehow sensed the presence of his loaded shotgun leaning against the wall. He picked up the weapon and proceeded toward the equally darkened bedroom to unload it when he bumped into his wife as she was walking out through the doorway. According to Sipple, he knocked Christina down. Sipple generally stated that he was carrying his gun as described above, with the fore-stock in his left hand, his right hand on the stock near the trigger, and the barrel generally pointed ahead. This time, however, Sipple stated that the barrel of the gun was pointed down rather than up. Sipple claimed that he felt his wife startle as he ran into her. He did not explain how his body contacted his wife before the protruding barrel of the shotgun did. After knocking his wife to the ground, Sipple evidently continued through the doorway in complete darkness, stepping over but not on his wife's prone body. He then turned around, swinging the barrel of the downward-pointed shotgun in his wife's direction. Just as the barrel of the gun was centered on Christina's abdomen, it mysteriously discharged. Sipple, who never brought loaded guns into his house and who always *479 used a gun's safety trigger lock, did not explain how the weapon fired.

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Bluebook (online)
788 N.E.2d 473, 2003 Ind. App. LEXIS 827, 2003 WL 21100668, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sipple-v-state-indctapp-2003.