Terrence T. Walker v. State of Indiana

988 N.E.2d 341, 2013 WL 1966441, 2013 Ind. App. LEXIS 225
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 14, 2013
Docket45A04-1208-CR-441
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 988 N.E.2d 341 (Terrence T. Walker 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
Terrence T. Walker v. State of Indiana, 988 N.E.2d 341, 2013 WL 1966441, 2013 Ind. App. LEXIS 225 (Ind. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

CRONE, Judge.

Case Summary

Terrence T. Walker appeals his conviction for class C felony child molesting involving fondling or touching. He argues that the victim’s father made several inadmissible statements concerning Walker’s guilt, resulting in fundamental error. He also argues that the trial court erred in failing to instruct the jury on class D felony sexual battery because it is a lesser-included offense. Finally, he argues that the trial court abused its discretion in replacing a juror because that juror was the only African-American juror.

We conclude that fundamental error did not occur as a result of any inadmissible testimony. We also conclude that the trial court did not err in failing to instruct the jury on class D felony sexual battery because it is not an inherently or factually included offense of class C felony child molesting as charged here. We further conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in replacing the juror. Therefore, we affirm.

Facts and Procedural History

In July 2010, thirty-eight-year-old Walker lived in Crown Point with his wife, Crystal King, and two step-daughters, A.K. and M.K. Walker’s stepdaughters sometimes played with thirteen-year-old A.B., who lived nearby with her mother (“Mother”), her step-father (“Father”), and her brother.

On the evening of July 14, 2010, A.B. was riding her bike and playing with Walker’s stepdaughters. As twilight fell, A.B.’s parents went to Walker’s residence to bring A.B. home. Walker was going to set off fireworks, and the girls wanted to watch. Walker told AB.’s parents that he and his stepdaughters would walk A.B. home. A.B.’s parents gave her permission to stay and watch the fireworks, and they returned to their home.

At 11:30 p.m., A.B. was still outside playing with Walker’s stepdaughters. Walker was sitting outside and drinking beer with Keith Woods, who lived across the street. Walker was intoxicated. Eventually, Walker told A.B. to go home but to “come back around.” Tr. at 336. Walker told his stepdaughters to walk A.B. home. A.B. rode her bike, and the girls walked behind her. Walker watched from the front of his house. When A.B. was about halfway home, Walker called his stepdaughters to return home. They came home and went to bed. A.B. waited until Walker was alone outside, and she rode her bike back to Walker’s residence. A.B. set her bicycle down in the front yard. Walker told her to put the bike in the back yard behind the shed. Walker took A.B. inside his house, and they sat on the couch *344 and watched TV. Walker touched A.B. on the shoulder and said that she was pretty. Walker asked A.B. to come with him. A.B. followed Walker into the kitchen, through the laundry room, and then into the garage.

Walker’s car was in the garage. Walker opened the driver’s side door, lifted up the driver’s seat, and pushed A.B. into the back seat. A.B. asked Walker what he was doing. She told him to stop. A.B. tried to scream, but Walker covered her mouth with his hand. Walker pulled down A.B.’s leggings. He pulled the left leg of her leggings completely off. He got on top of her. He kissed her neck and told her that she was pretty. 1 A.B. heard someone trying to lift the garage door. Walker got up, told A.B. to stay there, and left. Three or four minutes later, A.B. pulled up her leggings, noticed that her underwear was missing, and went into the house through the laundry room door.

Meanwhile, Mother and Father had fallen asleep at home. They woke up and realized that A.B. was not home. They went to Walker’s house. Father knocked on the doors and windows, but nobody answered. Father went across the Street to Woods’s house for help. Woods knocked on the door to Walker’s house. Woods used his cell phone to call Walker. Walker’s wife, King, was in bed alone. She answered the phone. King said that Walker was not at home and that A.B. was not there. Father called the police.

The police arrived in approximately five minutes. Two officers knocked on Walker’s front door. A third officer went to the back of the house, observed an empty deck, and returned to the front of the house. King answered the front door in her nightgown. She told the officers that A.B. was not there and that her husband was not home. Walker emerged from the kitchen area and came to the door clothed and wearing tennis shoes. Police asked him to come forward, and Walker stepped outside. He told police that he had been outside on the back deck and that he did not know where A.B. was. Police saw A.B. emerge from the kitchen. A.B. then exited the house through the front door. Mother described A.B. as “disheveled” and “a complete wreck.” Id. at 151. A.B. felt “scared,” “confused,” “like everything was [her] fault that if [she] said something [she] would be in trouble.” Id. at 348.

The police took A.B. to the side of the house to talk to her. The officers located A.B.’s bike behind Walker’s shed. A.B. did not reveal to the police that anything inappropriate had occurred between her and Walker. The officers told A.B.’s parents to take her to the hospital. The police took Walker to the police station for questioning.

A.B.’s parents took her to the hospital. A.B. denied that she had been raped and would not agree to submit to a sexual assault evidence collection kit or “rape kit” because she was “scared” and “uncomfortable” “because all [her] family was in the room” and she “didn’t know if they would leave or not.” Id. at 350. The doctor on staff did not order a rape kit for A.B. because she did not “verbally tell him that she had been raped.” Id. at 155.

A.B. and her parents returned home. Mother stayed in the car with A.B., who *345 started crying. A.B. went into the house. Mother followed A.B. to the bathroom and noticed that she was not wearing her underwear. Mother had watched A.B. dress that morning and knew that she was wearing underwear when she went out that day. Mother asked A.B. what had happened to her underwear. A.B. began crying again and told Mother that Walker had taken her into his ear and sexually assaulted her. Mother called the police. They instructed her to bag up A.B.’s clothing and bring it to the police station. 2 Mother decided not to take A.B. back to the hospital because A.B. was having an “emotional breakdown.” Id. at 184.

The police obtained DNA samples from Walker, A.B., A.B.’s leggings, the back seat of Walker’s car, and items recovered from the car. Two samples taken from A.B.’s leggings contained DNA from which Walker could not be excluded as a contributor. One sample was from Area 16, which is located on the inside of the right leg of the leggings. State’s Ex. 14. The probability that a random person in the African-American population contributed to the DNA mixture in the sample from which Walker could not be excluded was 1 in 2.9 billion. Tr. at 616-17. The DNA expert testified that such a low probability indicated that it would be “somewhat rare to find another individual to be [a] possible contributor.” Id. at 617-18. The other sample was from Area 18, which is located on the outside front of the leggings somewhat below the waistband. State’s Ex.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
988 N.E.2d 341, 2013 WL 1966441, 2013 Ind. App. LEXIS 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/terrence-t-walker-v-state-of-indiana-indctapp-2013.