Tywan A. James v. State of Indiana (mem. dec.)

CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 11, 2020
Docket18A-CR-2703
StatusPublished

This text of Tywan A. James v. State of Indiana (mem. dec.) (Tywan A. James v. State of Indiana (mem. dec.)) 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.

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Tywan A. James v. State of Indiana (mem. dec.), (Ind. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION Pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 65(D), FILED this Memorandum Decision shall not be Feb 11 2020, 8:04 am regarded as precedent or cited before any CLERK court except for the purpose of establishing Indiana Supreme Court Court of Appeals the defense of res judicata, collateral and Tax Court

estoppel, or the law of the case.

ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE Jonathan D. Harwell Curtis T. Hill, Jr. Harwell Legal Counsel LLC Attorney General of Indiana Indianapolis, Indiana Justin F. Roebel Supervising Deputy Attorney General Indianapolis, Indiana

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

Tywan A. James, February 11, 2020 Appellant-Defendant, Court of Appeals Case No. 18A-CR-2703 v. Appeal from the Marion Superior Court State of Indiana, The Honorable Mark D. Stoner, Appellee-Plaintiff. Judge Trial Court Cause No. 49G06-1710-MR-39787

Shepard, Senior Judge.

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 18A-CR-2703 | February 11, 2020 Page 1 of 19 [1] Tywan James appeals his convictions of two counts of murder by claiming error

in the admission of certain evidence and insufficiency. He also asserts that his

sentence is inappropriate. We affirm.

Facts and Procedural History [2] On September 29, 2017, twenty-three-year-old Martina Webb and twenty-one-

year-old Aliyah Igartua drove from Gary to Indianapolis to pick up Jason

Ballard. Ballard lived in Gary but was in Indianapolis for a family gathering at

his aunt’s house. Webb and Ballard had known each other since middle school

and were seeing one another at the time of this incident. At some point that

evening, Webb and Igartua were present with Ballard at Ballard’s aunt’s home

on Winfield Avenue in Indianapolis.

[3] At 9:03 p.m., officers responded to a dispatch of shots fired on Winfield

Avenue, but they were unable to locate a suspect. Around midnight, officers

were dispatched to a vehicle fire at an address about four blocks from the

Winfield Avenue location to which they had been dispatched earlier. Inside the

vehicle, police found the bodies of two women who were later identified as

Webb and Igartua. Webb had suffered a gunshot wound to her head, and

Igartua had suffered a wound to her hand as well as her head. It was later

determined that both women had died before the fire because neither of them

had soot in their airways. The fire investigator determined that gasoline had

been applied to the passenger compartment and portions of the car’s exterior.

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 18A-CR-2703 | February 11, 2020 Page 2 of 19 [4] Detective Jones, a homicide detective with the Indianapolis Metropolitan

Police Department (IMPD), contacted Webb’s mother and learned that Webb

had come to Indianapolis to pick up Ballard. The detective then spoke to

Ballard on September 30 and took a recorded statement from him.

[5] That same day, police found a pool of dried blood on the sidewalk and two .40

caliber shell casings in the same area of Winfield Avenue where shots had been

fired the previous night. Testing revealed that the blood was Igartua’s, and the

bullet recovered from her head during her autopsy was a .40 caliber.

[6] The following day, October 1, Michael Smith, appellant’s cousin, appeared at a

police roll call location and spoke with Detective Jones. As he spoke, Smith

was shaking, crying, and pacing, and he identified “Tywan” as the person who

shot Webb. Tr. Vol. III, p. 56. Based on this information and further

investigation by Detective Jones, officers prepared a photo array and showed it

to Smith. Smith identified James in the array and signed his name indicating 1 so. The State charged James with two counts of murder.

[7] During her investigation, Detective Jones had obtained the name of Martell

Marshall from Smith and Ballard. In March 2018, she visited Marshall and

obtained a statement in which he identified “Tywan” as the shooter. Id. at 65.

1 Ind. Code § 35-42-1-1 (2017).

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 18A-CR-2703 | February 11, 2020 Page 3 of 19 [8] The case went to trial in September 2018, and Ballard, Smith, and Marshall all

testified. Ballard testified he was at his aunt’s house on Winfield Avenue with

Smith and Marshall on September 29, 2017. He denied James’ presence at his

aunt’s house that night, and he denied being present when the shots were fired;

he testified that he had gone out in Broad Ripple that evening.

[9] Smith testified that he is a childhood friend of Webb’s, that he has known

Ballard his whole life, and that he has known Marshall for several years. He

denied being in Indianapolis on September 29, 2017, and stated that he did not

recall giving a statement to Detective Jones on October 1, that he did not

recognize the photo array, and that the signature on the array was not his. The

State then used Smith’s statement to impeach him, and the trial court gave a

limiting instruction advising the jury of such. In his statement, Smith had told

Detective Jones that he had been with Ballard and Marshall on September 29,

that he saw Webb get shot once in the head as she sat in the front passenger seat

of her vehicle, and that James pulled the trigger. He also said that after James

shot Webb, Igartua exited the vehicle and tried to run. The lone portion of

Smith’s statement the trial court allowed the jury to consider as substantive

evidence against James was Smith’s identification of “Tywan” as the shooter.

Id. at 56.

[10] The State also called Marshall, who testified that he is from Gary and that he

knew Webb and knows Ballard and Smith. He acknowledged that he was in

Indianapolis on September 29 with Ballard and Smith at Ballard’s aunt’s house.

He confirmed that he heard gun shots but said he did not see the person who

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 18A-CR-2703 | February 11, 2020 Page 4 of 19 fired the gun. For impeachment purposes only, the State was allowed to

question him about his statement to Detective Jones. He testified that he

remembered talking to the detective but did not recall telling her he saw the

perpetrator shoot Webb in the head or naming James as the shooter. As it had

done previously with Smith, the trial court admitted as substantive evidence

Marshall’s identification of the shooter as “Tywan.” Id. at 65.

[11] A jury convicted James as charged. He was subsequently sentenced to sixty

years on each count of murder, to be served consecutively.

Issues [12] James presents five issues, which we consolidate and restate as:

I. Whether the court erred by admitting certain evidence;

II. Whether there was sufficient evidence to support James’ convictions; and

III. Whether James’ sentence is inappropriate.

Discussion and Decision I. Admission of Evidence [13] The trial court’s ruling on the admission or exclusion of evidence is reviewed

for abuse of discretion. Cherry v. State, 57 N.E.3d 867 (Ind. Ct. App. 2016),

trans. denied. An abuse of discretion occurs when a decision is clearly against

the logic and effect of the facts and circumstances before the court. Paul v. State,

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