MEMORANDUM DECISION
Nov 25 2015, 8:19 am
Pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 65(D),
this Memorandum Decision shall not be
regarded as precedent or cited before any
court except for the purpose of establishing
the defense of res judicata, collateral
estoppel, or the law of the case.
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
Bruce W. Graham Gregory F. Zoeller
Graham Law Firm P.C. Attorney General of Indiana
Lafayette, Indiana
Paula J. Beller
Deputy Attorney General
Indianapolis, Indiana
IN THE
COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
Tiffany Mounts, November 25, 2015
Appellant-Defendant, Court of Appeals Case No.
79A04-1505-CR-392
v. Appeal from the Tippecanoe
Superior Court
State of Indiana, The Honorable Steven P. Meyer
Appellee-Plaintiff Trial Court Cause No.
79D02-1411-F3-4
Bailey, Judge.
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Case Summary
[1] Tiffany Mounts (“Mounts”) pleaded guilty to Robbery While Armed with a
Deadly Weapon1 and Criminal Confinement While Armed with a Deadly
Weapon,2 both as Level 3 felonies. After accepting her guilty plea, the trial
court sentenced Mounts to thirteen years imprisonment for each offense, with
four years suspended to probation and the sentences run concurrent to one
another. Mounts now appeals and presents a single issue for our review, which
we restate as whether the trial court found an improper aggravating
circumstance at sentencing.
[2] We affirm.
Facts and Procedural History
[3] On November 5, 2014, Mounts, together with Jacob Lumbley (“Lumbley”) and
Miguel Garcia (“Garcia”) robbed a Village Pantry convenience store in
Lafayette. During the commission of the offense, Lumbley was armed with a
shotgun, and Garcia was armed with a knife. Mounts’s role was to take
money, alcohol, and food from the store during the robbery.
[4] The trio entered the store, and Lumbley and Garcia ordered two store
employees to freeze and get on the floor. The employees complied, and
1
Ind. Code § 35-42-5-1.
2
I.C. §§ 35-42-3-3(a) & (b)(2).
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Mounts collected some food, money, cigarettes, and alcohol from the store.
After the trio left the store, they divided up among themselves the items Mounts
had taken.
[5] Officers from the Lafayette Police Department responded to an armed robbery
call from the convenience store. A K9 search led police to a vacant house
where Garcia and Mounts were found, along with a shotgun and items similar
to those reported as having been taken from the store. Mounts and Garcia were
arrested; Lumbley was identified by Mounts and Garcia, and was arrested on
November 6, 2014.
[6] On November 12, 2014, the State charged Mounts with Conspiracy to Commit
Robbery While Armed with a Deadly Weapon, Robbery While Armed with a
Deadly Weapon, and two counts of Criminal Confinement While Armed with
a Deadly Weapon, all as Level 3 felonies; and two counts of Theft, as Class A
misdemeanors.
[7] On April 1, 2015, Mounts and the State entered into a plea agreement, whereby
Mounts agreed to plead guilty to one count each of Robbery While Armed with
a Deadly Weapon and Criminal Confinement While Armed with a Deadly
Weapon, as Level 3 felonies, and to cooperate with the State’s efforts to
prosecute Garcia and Lumbley. In return, the State agreed to dismiss the other
charges against Mounts. Sentencing was left to the discretion of the trial court.
[8] On April 1, 2015, the trial court accepted the plea agreement and entered
judgments of conviction against Mounts. A sentencing hearing was conducted
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on May 1, 2015. At the conclusion of the sentencing hearing, the trial court
sentenced Mounts to thirteen years imprisonment for each of her two
convictions. The court suspended four of these years to probation; two years of
the probationary period were to be served in the Tippecanoe County
Community Corrections, and two years were to be served on supervised
probation.
[9] This appeal ensued.
Discussion and Decision
[10] On appeal, Mounts challenges the trial court’s sentencing decision, arguing that
the trial court abused its discretion in finding aggravating circumstances. Our
supreme court has held:
[T]he imposition of sentence and the review of sentences on
appeal should proceed as follows:
1. The trial court must enter a statement including reasonably
detailed reasons or circumstances for imposing a particular
sentence.
2. The reasons given, and the omission of reasons arguably
supported by the record, are reviewable on appeal for abuse of
discretion.
3. The relative weight or value assignable to reasons properly
found or those which should have been found is not subject to
review for abuse.
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4. Appellate review of the merits of a sentence may be sought on
the grounds outlined in Appellate Rule 7(B).
Anglemyer v. State, 868 N.E.2d 482, 491 (Ind. 2007), clarified on reh’g, 875 N.E.2d
218 (Ind. 2007).
[11] We review sentencing decisions for an abuse of discretion. Id. at 490. While a
trial court may abuse its discretion by issuing a sentencing statement that
“omits reasons that are clearly supported by the record and advanced for
consideration,” a trial court can no longer “be said to have abused its discretion
in failing to ‘properly weigh’ such factors.” Id. (quoting Jackson v. State, 729
N.E.2d 147, 155 (Ind. 2000); Morgan v. State, 675 N.E.2d 1067, 1073-74 (Ind.
1996)). Where the trial court has abused its discretion, we will not reverse a
sentence if it is not inappropriate under Appellate Rule 7(B). Felder v. State, 870
N.E.2d 554, 558 (Ind. Ct. App. 2007) (citing Windhorst v. State, 868 N.E.2d 504,
507 (Ind. 2007)).
[12] Here, Mounts argues that the trial court abused its discretion because it relied
upon the material element of a crime as an aggravating circumstance. As our
supreme court held in Anglemyer, “a trial judge may impose any sentence within
the statutory range without regard to the existence of aggravating or mitigating
factors.” 868 N.E.2d at 489. “[U]nder this scheme trial courts technically do
not ‘enhance’ sentences upon the finding of aggravators; accordingly there is no
impermissible double enhancement where the trial court relies on the material
element of a crime as an aggravating circumstance.” Gomillia v. State, 13
N.E.3d 846, 852 (Ind. 2014). But reliance upon a material element of a crime is
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improper “in some circumstances.” Id. “Where a trial court’s reason for
imposing a sentence greater than the advisory sentence includes material
elements of the offense, absent something unique about the circumstances that
would justify deviating from the advisory sentence, that reason is ‘improper as a
matter of law.’” Id. at 852-53 (quoting Anglemyer, 868 N.E.2d at 491).
[13] Here, Mounts contends that the trial court abused its discretion when it found
as aggravating circumstances:
[I]t’s already a serious offense because it’s a robbery while armed
with a deadly weapon and the seriousness … is that it was [a]
robbery of a local convenience store here and that placed some
victims in fear by the use of the deadly weapon and so that’s the
factor in which I was trying to get at when I, when I used the
seriousness of the offense.
Tr. at 62. Mounts argues that because her convictions for Robbery and
Criminal Confinement, as Level 3 felonies, both required the use of a deadly
weapon and placing someone in fear, the trial court improperly found as an
aggravating circumstance Mounts’s having “placed some victims in fear by the
use of a deadly weapon.”
[14] The statutory elements for the offense of Criminal Confinement do not, by their
terms, require that a victim have been placed in fear. The statute requires only
use of a deadly weapon as a means of imposing the confinement. I.C. § 35-42-
3-3. And while the Robbery statute includes placing someone in fear as an
element, it does so in the alternative: “A person who knowingly or
intentionally takes property from another person or from the presence of
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another person: (1) by using or threatening the use of force on any person; or (2)
by putting any person in fear.” I.C. § 35-42-5-1 (emphasis added). The facts
used to establish Mounts’s guilt for purposes of her guilty plea indicated both
that force was threatened and that the store employees were afraid. Moreover,
the trial court noted the presence of two store employees, which also
distinguishes the offenses Mounts committed from their statutory definitions.
The trial court’s finding of fear as an aggravating circumstance was not an
abuse of discretion.
[15] Mounts also argues that, even if the aggravating circumstances were not
improperly found, nevertheless her sentence is inappropriate in light of the
nature of her offenses and her character. Mounts was convicted of two Level 3
felonies. For each conviction, Mounts faced a sentencing range of between
three and sixteen years imprisonment, with an advisory term of nine years. I.C.
§ 35-50-2-5(b). Mounts was sentenced to terms of thirteen years for each of her
offenses, with the sentences run concurrent with one another, and a total of four
years of the aggregate sentence suspended to probation.
[16] With respect to the nature of the offenses, Mounts, in cooperation with two
other individuals, participated in the robbery of a convenience store. Mounts
did not personally threaten the employees of the store, but nevertheless acted in
confederation with individuals wielding a knife and a shotgun. These actions
placed multiple persons in fear. Mounts and her cohorts took a small amount
of property from the store, consisting of food, alcohol, cigarettes, and some
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money. Elevation of her sentence beyond the statutory advisory is, under these
circumstances, not improper.
[17] Mounts’s character speaks very poorly for her. Mounts was nineteen years of
age when she committed the instant offenses, but her first encounter with the
juvenile justice system occurred in 2001. From 2009 onward, Mounts was in
near-constant contact with the juvenile justice system. In January 2010,
Mounts was adjudicated a juvenile delinquent for conduct that, if committed by
an adult, would have constituted Dealing in a Controlled Substance, as a Class
B felony; Possession of a Controlled Substance, as a Class C felony; and
Intimidation, as a Class A misdemeanor. While on house arrest as a result of
this adjudication, Mounts ran away from her placement and used illegal drugs.
Upon being placed in alternate housing, Mounts committed numerous
disciplinary violations, including smoking, disrespectful behavior, running
away from the home, tampering with the belongings of a fellow resident with
special needs, and planning to feed human waste to an individual with special
needs. Mounts was again adjudicated a juvenile delinquent in January 2013,
for conduct that would constitute Escape, as a Class C felony, if committed by
an adult. As an adult, in September 2013, Mounts was convicted of
misdemeanor driving offenses.
[18] Mounts was homeless at the time of the instant offenses, and had prior mental
health and substance use problems. However, efforts to treat her mental health
issues were frustrated because, by her own admission, she would sell the
prescribed medications.
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[19] Mounts’s conduct after her arrest for the present offenses also does not speak
well of her character. Though she obtained a GED while awaiting trial, she
also committed numerous violations of jail conduct rules, including tattooing,
flooding jail areas, and destroying property. As a result, Mounts had been
placed into a segregation unit in the jail. And while Mounts entered a guilty
plea in this case and cooperated with law enforcement, she benefited from her
plea by having four of the six criminal counts against her dismissed.
[20] In light of the nature of Mounts’s offenses and her character, we do not
consider as inappropriate an aggregate term of imprisonment of thirteen years.
[21] Affirmed.
[22] Baker, J., and Mathias, J., concur.
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