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this Memorandum Decision shall not be FILED
Jan 25 2012, 9:26 am
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ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:
MICHAEL P. QUIRK GREGORY F. ZOELLER
Muncie, Indiana Attorney General of Indiana
JODI KATHRYN STEIN
Deputy Attorney General
Indianapolis, Indiana
IN THE
COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
RYAN N. MYERS, )
)
Appellant-Defendant, )
)
vs. ) No. 18A02-1104-CR-378
)
STATE OF INDIANA, )
)
Appellee-Plaintiff. )
APPEAL FROM THE DELAWARE CIRCUIT COURT
The Honorable Thomas A. Cannon, Jr., Judge
Cause No. 18C05-1002-FA-7
January 25, 2012
MEMORANDUM DECISION - NOT FOR PUBLICATION
FRIEDLANDER, Judge
Ryan Myers appeals from the denial of his motion to withdraw his guilty plea to Child
Molesting1 as a class A felony. Myers presents the following issue for our review: Did the
trial court abuse its discretion by denying Myers’s request to withdraw his guilty plea?
We affirm.
The factual basis supporting Myers’s guilty plea reveals that in January of 2010,
Myers, who was thirty-one years old, had sexual intercourse with the thirteen-year-old
daughter of his girlfriend. The State charged Myers with three counts of class A felony child
molesting, one count of class D felony dissemination of matter harmful to a minor, and an
habitual offender count. In May of 2010, the State extended a plea agreement to Myers. The
terms of the plea agreement were that in exchange for Myers pleading guilty to one count of
child molesting as a class A felony, the State agreed to dismiss the remaining charges under
that cause number and all pending charges under another cause number. Sentencing was left
to the discretion of the trial court.
Myers and the State were in plea negotiations for the next six months. On November
30, 2010, the State extended the same plea offer to Myers, with the additional provision that
the executed portion of his sentence would be capped at thirty years. The plea offer was
good through noon that day because the jury venire was set for December 3, 2010, with the
jury trial date set for January 6, 2011. The State also disclosed a statement given by Myers’s
fellow jail mate, Terry Shaw, which included admissions by Myers that he had sexual
intercourse with his girlfriend’s daughter, that he had tried to persuade her to change her
testimony, and that he attempted to physically hurt his girlfriend. Myers, who had his GED,
1
Ind. Code § 35-42-4-3 (West, Westlaw current through 2011 1st Reg. Sess.).
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had an extensive juvenile history, and prior adult criminal convictions, discussed the plea
offer with his attorney and also discussed the State’s disclosure of Shaw’s statement. Myers
consulted with his father by telephone about the plea agreement, and they discussed Shaw’s
written statement, which Myers’s father had seen the previous evening. Myers signed the
plea agreement and it was filed with the trial court the same day.
The trial court held a guilty plea hearing on December 2, 2010. During that hearing,
Myers signed two additional plea agreements to finalize the terms of the plea. Myers
indicated that he understood his constitutional rights, that he was not being forced or
threatened to plead guilty, that his decision to plead guilty was his alone, and that he was
satisfied with the representation of counsel. Myers then admitted that he had sexual
intercourse with his girlfriend’s daughter and that he knew she was thirteen years old. The
trial court took Myers’s plea under advisement. At some point after the guilty plea, the
prosecutor told Myers’s counsel that he probably would not have used Shaw’s testimony at
trial.
In late February, Myers filed a verified motion to withdraw his guilty plea, and
asserted that he signed the plea under duress because of the short deadline. During the
hearing on Myers’s motion, he testified that he was influenced by the existence of Shaw’s
statement and felt pressured to sign the plea agreement because his attorney told him that he
was facing a sentencing exposure of 180 years. The trial court denied Myers’s motion,
finding that Myers pleaded guilty knowingly and voluntarily, that there was no evidence that
Shaw would not have testified at trial, and that Myers’s counsel did not over-state Myers’s
potential sentence, the maximum of which was 180 years.
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At Myers’s sentencing hearing, Myers once again tried to convince the trial court to
reject his guilty plea, this time by protesting his innocence. The trial court repeated for the
record that Myers’s guilty plea was knowingly and voluntarily made, Myers knew what he
was doing, Myers was thirty-one years old with experience in the criminal justice system, the
State does not always call all of the witnesses disclosed on its witness list, and that the terms
of the plea agreement were quite favorable to Myers. The trial court then accepted the plea
agreement and sentenced Myers to a term of thirty years executed. Myers now appeals.
Myers claims that the trial court abused its discretion by denying his motion to
withdraw his guilty plea. After a guilty plea is entered, but before a sentence is imposed, a
defendant may move to withdraw his guilty plea for any fair and just reasons unless the State
has been substantially prejudiced by its reliance upon the plea. Ind. Code Ann. § 35-35-1-
4(b) (West, Westlaw current through 2011 1st Reg. Sess.); Brightman v. State, 758 N.E.2d 41
(Ind. 2001). A defendant must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the withdrawal
is necessary to correct a manifest injustice. I.C. § 35-35-1-4(b).
The trial court’s ruling on a motion to withdraw guilty plea “arrives in this Court with
a presumption in favor of the ruling.” Coomer v. State, 652 N.E.2d 60, 62 (Ind. 1995). We
will reverse the trial court’s ruling where the trial court has abused its discretion. Coomer v.
State, 652 N.E.2d 60. In conducting our analysis we examine the statements made by the
defendant at his guilty plea hearing to determine whether the plea was offered freely and
knowingly. Id. A trial court cannot accept a guilty plea from a defendant who pleads guilty
and maintains his innocence at the same time. Johnson v. State, 734 N.E.2d 242 (Ind. 2000).
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On the other hand, a trial court may accept a guilty plea from a defendant who pleads guilty
in open court, but later protests his innocence. Id.
Myers was thirty-one years old at the time of his guilty plea, had obtained his GED,
and had accumulated vast criminal-justice experience. Eight criminal proceedings were
pursued against Myers and resulted in four felony convictions and five misdemeanor
convictions. Myers entered pleas of guilty in all eight prior criminal proceedings. Myers
was informed of his constitutional rights and indicated that he understood those rights.
Myers confirmed his signature on the terms of his guilty plea and on all three versions of the
plea agreement, and indicated that he had consulted with counsel. During the plea hearing,
Myers stated that he was not forced or threatened to plead guilty and was not doing so out of
fear. Myers claimed that his decision to plead guilty was his decision alone and that he was
satisfied by the representation of his trial counsel. Myers then established a factual basis for
class A felony child molesting by testifying under oath that he had engaged in sexual
intercourse with his girlfriend’s thirteen-year-old daughter. At no time during the guilty plea
hearing did Myers express reluctance to pleading guilty per the terms of the plea agreement.
Myers asserts that the trial court abused its discretion by disallowing him to withdraw
his guilty plea arguing that he was pressured into pleading guilty by time constraints and the
threat of the use of Shaw’s statement as evidence against him. The record establishes,
however, that the base plea involving one count of child molesting had been pending for six
months. Myers’s counsel successfully negotiated a sentencing cap of thirty years on any time
ordered to be served. That provision was in the final offer, an offer Myers discussed with his
attorney and Myers’s father, who was familiar with the evidence against Myers. Myers
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signed the plea offer and two days later signed two more versions of the plea agreement. The
record supports the trial court’s conclusion that Myers’s decision to plead guilty was made
knowingly and voluntarily and was not a product of the alleged time constraint.
Shaw’s testimony, had the State chosen to call him as a witness, was admissible in that
it contained a statement by a party opponent under Ind. Evid. Rule 801(d)(2)(A). Myers
admitted to Shaw that he had engaged in sexual intercourse with his girlfriend’s thirteen-
year-old daughter. There was no allegation below or here on appeal that the State committed
a discovery violation. Further, the State is free to choose which witnesses it will call and
what evidence it will use. Myers’s allegation of error in this regard fails.
Myers did not protest his innocence until the date of the sentencing hearing, three
months after his guilty plea. Myers failed to advance that argument in either of his motions
to withdraw his guilty plea prior to that hearing. The trial court did not abuse its discretion
by rejecting Myers’s argument.
Myers argues that the trial court abused its discretion by failing to allow him to
withdraw his guilty plea because there was no “objective evidence” against him. Appellant’s
Brief at 18. In other words, he argues that the State’s case rested solely on the testimony of
the victim. “A victim’s testimony, even if uncorroborated, is ordinarily sufficient to sustain a
conviction for child molesting.” Bowles v. State, 737 N.E.2d 1150, 1152 (Ind. 2000). That
said, Myers was aware that there was no physical evidence to corroborate the victim’s
testimony, yet he nonetheless chose to plead guilty. The relevant inquiry here on review is
not the sufficiency of the State’s case, but whether the defendant has met his burden of
proving that his plea was not knowing or voluntary, and that the plea must be withdrawn for
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fair and just reasons to prevent a manifest injustice. Myers has failed to meet his burden.
The trial court did not abuse its discretion by deciding not to allow Myers to withdraw his
guilty plea.
Judgment affirmed.
RILEY, J., and MATHIAS, J., concur.
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