State of Indiana v. J.T.

121 N.E.3d 605
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 2, 2019
DocketCourt of Appeals Case 18A-JV-1491
StatusPublished

This text of 121 N.E.3d 605 (State of Indiana v. J.T.) 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
State of Indiana v. J.T., 121 N.E.3d 605 (Ind. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Sharpnack, Senior Judge.

Statement of the Case

[1] The State filed a petition alleging that twelve-year-old J.T. was a juvenile delinquent for committing an act that would have been murder, a felony, if committed by an adult. The State later moved the juvenile court to waive jurisdiction over J.T. and transfer the case to criminal court. The court denied the State's motion after an evidentiary hearing.

[2] In this discretionary interlocutory appeal, the State asks the Court to reverse the juvenile court's judgment. By contrast, J.T. requests dismissal of the State's appeal. We deny J.T.'s request to dismiss this appeal and affirm the judgment of the juvenile court.

Issues

[3] The State raises one issue, which we restate as: whether the juvenile court abused its discretion in denying the State's request to waive jurisdiction over J.T. On cross-appeal, J.T. argues that the State has no authority to seek discretionary interlocutory review of a juvenile court's refusal to waive jurisdiction over a juvenile.

Facts and Procedural History

[4] As we describe the facts of this case, we keep in mind that the juvenile court has not yet issued a final decision on the merits. In July 2015, twelve-year-old J.T. lived with her father, Edwin Torres; her stepmother, Maria Torres; 1 her half-sister; and her half-brother in an apartment in Elkhart, Indiana. J.T. had displayed symptoms of severe mental illness, and the symptoms intensified in early 2015. She had poor grades at school, and she and Edwin both later stated that she had suffered from headaches, had difficulty sleeping, talked about hearing voices, and had blackouts. J.T. talked less and spent increasing amounts of time alone in her room. Several persons noted that J.T. discussed hearing the voices of people named Star and Anna. Star reportedly told J.T. to hurt people, while Anna told J.T. to ignore Star. J.T. also sometimes told people her name was Anna or Star. J.T. also displayed an obsession with a cartoonish character named Laughing Jack, who was featured in stories on websites. Laughing Jack, who dressed in black and white and whose face was painted like a clown, was frequently depicted using knives to commit murder.

*608 [5] J.T. repeatedly asked her mother, Dishay Hydorn-Patrick, Edwin, and other relatives for help with her symptoms. She also spoke with a school counselor, who urged Edwin to take J.T. to a mental health professional. He instead took J.T. to their family doctor. Later, several appointments were scheduled with a counselor, but J.T. missed the appointments because of insurance issues and because Edwin had undergone back surgery and could not drive her to the counselor's office.

[6] On the night of July 23, 2015, J.T. texted her friend J.P. to arrange to meet at a nearby park at 10:00 p.m. that night. J.T. texted in capital letters that she wanted to leave tonight because she could not "take it anymore." Tr. Vol. II, p. 141. She also said she was "about to snap." Id. at 144. They discussed bringing food, water and clothing. J.P. was aware of J.T.'s alternate personas, and she later concluded she had been texting with Star that night.

[7] After communicating with J.P., J.T. interacted with Edwin and Maria as they ate dinner and watched television. J.T.'s half-sister had gone to bed, and J.T.'s half-brother was not at home that night. Edwin was disturbed because J.T. kept displaying a "big grin" "showing all her teeth." Id. at 74. She also stood in a strange posture, but she repeatedly insisted she was fine.

[8] Later that night, Edwin and Maria heard a loud noise and smelled smoke. Maria opened the door to J.T.'s bedroom, and smoke poured out of the room into the hallway. J.T. was standing in the middle of her room and did not respond to Maria. Edwin entered the bedroom and saw a fire on the floor and a bigger fire in the closet.

[9] Meanwhile, Maria took J.T. out into the hallway. As Edwin tried to put out the fires, he heard his wife scream that J.T. had a knife. He entered the hallway and saw Maria knocking on the door of J.T.'s half-sister's bedroom. When she awoke and opened the door, she saw her mother, Maria, standing there with blood on her clothes. Maria told J.T.'s half-sister, "I'm dying call the police." Id. at 57. She called 911.

[10] Edwin found J.T. near the apartment's front door. She was holding a knife and was standing in an unusual posture. He looked into her eyes and "just didn't recognize her." Id. at 76. Edwin told J.T. they needed to leave, or they would all die in the fire. She told him to stay back and not come closer, speaking in a "clownish" tone of voice. Id. Edwin approached J.T., and she started to swing at him with the knife. He opened the door and struggled with her as they moved into the hallway. Edwin disarmed J.T. and threw the knife away, but J.T. escaped from him and ran out of the apartment building. At that point, he realized he was bleeding heavily from one arm.

[11] Edwin reentered the smoke-filled apartment and found his other daughter. She told him that she thought Maria was dead, and they went outside.

[12] Officer Daniel Mayer of the Elkhart Police Department was dispatched to the apartment building to investigate the 911 call. Upon arriving at the scene, Officer Mayer and another officer entered the building and noticed a large amount of blood in the hallway. They followed a blood trail up a staircase to the third floor. The officers found a knife in the hallway near the door to J.T.'s apartment, from which smoke was emanating. The smoke was so thick that Officer Mayer retrieved a gas mask from his car to enter the apartment. Other officers arrived and interviewed Edwin and J.T.'s half-sister.

[13] Firefighters arrived and searched the apartment. They found Maria lying on the floor in one of the bedrooms and removed her from the apartment. She was *609 taken to a hospital, where she was pronounced dead. The cause of Maria's death was multiple stab wounds to her face and torso, including a three-and three-quarter-inch deep stab wound to her chest.

[14] Meanwhile, J.P. slipped out of her home and met J.T., as previously arranged. J.T. had blood on her hands and clothes. J.T. washed the blood off of her hands in a nearby waterway and told J.P. she had started a fire and stabbed Maria and Edwin. The two girls then walked along a railroad track and left Elkhart. At some point, J.T. changed into clean clothes.

[15] In the early morning hours of July 24, 2015, Zachary Sleeper was awakened by a knock on his door. He encountered two girls, later identified as J.T. and J.P. They asked for something to eat, claiming they had been hiking with their families and got lost. One of the girls was barefoot. Sleeper was suspicious because there were no hiking trails in his area. He offered to call their families, but the girls avoided providing any information. Next, Sleeper asked them to stay on the porch while he cooked something for them. He called the police as he cooked, assuming the girls were runaways. The police arrived and took them into custody.

[16] The girls were carrying backpacks. The police looked in one of the bags and found bloodstained pants.

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Bluebook (online)
121 N.E.3d 605, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-indiana-v-jt-indctapp-2019.