Terry L. Sturgis, Sr. v. State of Indiana

989 N.E.2d 1287, 2013 WL 3230156, 2013 Ind. App. LEXIS 307
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 27, 2013
Docket71A03-1207-CR-330
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 989 N.E.2d 1287 (Terry L. Sturgis, Sr. 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
Terry L. Sturgis, Sr. v. State of Indiana, 989 N.E.2d 1287, 2013 WL 3230156, 2013 Ind. App. LEXIS 307 (Ind. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

BARTEAU, Senior Judge.

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

Terry L. Sturgis, Sr., appeals his convictions of murder, a felony, Ind.Code § 35-42-1-1 (2007); two counts of criminal confinement, both as Class B felonies; Ind. Code § 35-42-3-3 (2006); eight counts of battery, four as Class B felonies, three as Class C felonies, and one as a Class A misdemeanor, Ind.Code § 35-42-2-1 (2009); and two counts of neglect of a dependent, both as Class D felonies, Ind. Code § 35-46-1-4 (2007). We affirm.

ISSUES

Sturgis raises six issues, which we consolidate and restate as:

I. Whether the trial court abused its discretion in limiting Sturgis’s cross-examination of a witness.
II. Whether there is sufficient evidence to sustain Sturgis’s conviction for murder.
III. Whether some of Sturgis’s convictions for battery violate Indiana’s constitutional protection against double jeopardy.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

During the period relevant to this case, Sturgis lived with his mother, Dellia Castile, in the basement of her home in South Bend. Also living in the basement were Sturgis’s children, TS1 (son, age fourteen), TS2 (son, age ten), TS3 (son, age eight), TS4 (daughter, age six), and TS5 (son, age *1289 four). 1 Several of Castile’s other grandchildren lived upstairs.

In the early morning hours of November 4, 2011, police, firefighters, and paramedics went to Castile’s house in response to a report of an unconscious child. They found Sturgis and TS2, the ten-year-old, near the front door of the house. TS2 was unconscious on the floor. He was not breathing and did not respond to CPR. Paramedics took TS2 to the hospital, and en route they observed numerous burns, bruising, and scars. One of the medics in the ambulance had “never seen anything like” it. Tr. p.583.

At the hospital, treatment providers discovered that TS2’s left arm was broken. He did not respond to efforts to revive him and was pronounced dead. A police officer photographed TS2’s body for evidence and observed “in excess of 60 injuries,” including severe burns, bruising, and scars. Id. at 621.

Subsequent investigation revealed that Sturgis frequently beat TS1 and TS2. He punched them with a closed fist and burned them with heated metal objects, such as a screwdriver, or with roach spray that he ignited with a lighter. TS1 and TS2’s cousins heard them screaming in the basement “sometimes every other day.” Id. at 808. On one occasion, Castile told Sturgis to stop beating his children because “he was going to kill one of them.” Id. at 809.

On November 3, 2011, the principal of the school TS1 attended called Sturgis and Castile to report that TS1 had stolen pencils. Sturgis went home that evening with a wooden dowel rod that was one inch in diameter and several feet long. He entered the basement, where TS1, TS2, TS3, and TS5 were waiting. Sturgis wrapped one end of the rod in duct tape and told TS1 he “and his stick [were] gonna have some fun.” Id. at 736. Sturgis ordered TS1 to bend over and pull down his pants. Sturgis hit TSl’s buttocks with the rod for ten minutes, and then he wrapped TSl’s wrists with duct tape and threw him on the floor. Sturgis continued to hit TS1 with the rod, and when TS1 ripped off the duct tape and tried to stand up, Sturgis hit him on the forehead with the rod, drawing blood. TS1 fell to the floor, and Sturgis sat on him and began to choke him.

At that point, trying to divert Sturgis’s attention, TS1 told Sturgis that TS2 had taken one of Sturgis’s bottles of water. TS2 denied it, but Sturgis hit him “a lot of times” on the “back and butt and legs” with the rod. Id. at 743. Sturgis ordered TS1 to clean up the basement as he continued to beat TS2. Sturgis struck TS2 with the rod for ten minutes, and then he used a heated clothes iron to burn TS2 in multiple locations on his torso, legs, and buttocks.

Next, Sturgis turned to TS3 and said, “[Yjou’re not getting away with anything. You’re getting some of this, too.” Id. at 746-47. He had one of the children’s older cousins take TS3 upstairs and hit him on the buttocks with a belt. The cousin stopped when she drew blood and returned TS3 to the basement. When TS3 went back downstairs, Sturgis hit him with the rod, burned him with the iron, and told him to go to bed.

After TS3 went into a sleeping area, Sturgis resumed beating and burning TS2 and TS1, switching from child to child over the course of several hours. Eventually, *1290 TS2 sat down and shivered, and he appeared dizzy to TS1. TS2 threw up, and Sturgis continued to beat him while ordering TS1 to clean up the vomit. Next, Sturgis told TS2 to sit on a crate and hold an ice pack to his head, but TS2 was still dizzy and dropped the ice pack twice. Each time TS2 dropped the ice pack, Stur-gis beat him and burned him with the iron. On the second occasion, Sturgis also choked TS2 and threw him across the basement.

TS2 could not get up, so Sturgis ordered TS1 to go upstairs and fill a pot with water. When TS1 returned, Sturgis poured the water on TS2’s face and told him to get up. He did not respond, so Sturgis stood on TS2’s chest for a short time and ordered TS1 to refill the pot of water. Sturgis again poured water on TS2’s face and told him to get up. When he did not, Sturgis hit him in the stomach several times and told TS1, “[Tjhat’s how it feels to get knocked the f* *k out.” Id. at 752.

Sturgis lay down to watch television. TS2 lay on the floor, and Sturgis had TS1 check TS2 several times to ensure that he was still breathing. Later, while TS1 was upstairs, Sturgis discovered that TS2 had stopped breathing. He tried to administer CPR, but TS2 was nonresponsive. Sturgis carried him upstairs, and Castile called 911. Sturgis told TS1 that if anyone asked about TS2’s burns, he should say TS2 burned himself while cooking.

A pathologist determined that TS2’s death was caused by blunt force trauma, primarily to the head. TS2’s brain was swollen to such an extent that it partly extruded from the bottom of his skull. Furthermore, in addition to a broken left arm, TS2 had a broken rib and a fractured coccyx. The pathologist also determined that TS2 had sustained a broken right arm in the past, but it had healed. In addition, a pediatrician examined TS1 and TS8 two weeks after TS2’s death, and he discovered multiple scars from burns and whippings on each of them.

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Bluebook (online)
989 N.E.2d 1287, 2013 WL 3230156, 2013 Ind. App. LEXIS 307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/terry-l-sturgis-sr-v-state-of-indiana-indctapp-2013.