MEMORANDUM DECISION
Pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 65(D),
FILED
this Memorandum Decision shall not be Jun 29 2018, 8:32 am
regarded as precedent or cited before any CLERK
Indiana Supreme Court
court except for the purpose of establishing Court of Appeals
and Tax Court
the defense of res judicata, collateral
estoppel, or the law of the case.
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
Laura Sorge Fattouch Curtis T. Hill, Jr.
Lawrenceburg, Indiana Attorney General of Indiana
Lee M. Stoy, Jr.
Deputy Attorney General
Indianapolis, Indiana
IN THE
COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
Cameron Schmidt, June 29, 2018
Appellant-Defendant, Court of Appeals Case No.
18A-CR-119
v. Appeal from the Ripley Superior
Court
State of Indiana, The Honorable Jeffrey Sharp,
Appellee-Plaintiff. Special Judge
Trial Court Cause No.
69C01-1301-FB-2
Pyle, Judge.
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 18A-CR-119 | June 29, 2018 Page 1 of 7
Statement of the Case
[1] Cameron Schmidt (“Schmidt”) appeals the revocation of his probation, arguing
that the trial court abused its discretion by ordering him to serve three years of
his previously suspended ten-year sentence. Finding no error, we affirm the
trial court’s judgment.
[2] We affirm.
Issue
Whether the trial court abused its discretion by ordering Schmidt
to serve part of his previously suspended sentence.
Facts
[3] In January 2013, the State charged eighteen-year-old Schmidt with three counts
of Class B felony arson. In June 2014, Schmidt entered into a plea agreement
and pled guilty to one count of Class B felony arson in exchange for the State’s
dismissal of the remaining two counts and agreement that Schmidt would be
sentenced to twenty years in the Indiana Department of Correction (“DOC”)
and have ten years suspended to probation. The trial court accepted Schmidt’s
guilty plea and, pursuant to the plea agreement, imposed a twenty (20) year
sentence, with ten (10) years executed at the DOC and ten (10) years suspended
to probation. Schmidt was required to report monthly to probation.
[4] Schmidt was released from incarceration in May 2017. A few months later, on
December 4, 2017, the State filed a notice of probation violation, alleging that
Schmidt had violated his probation by failing to report for scheduled probation
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appointments as directed on November 21 and November 30, 2017. Thereafter,
the trial court held a probation revocation hearing. During the hearing, the
State presented testimony from Schmidt’s probation officer, Cody Tillison
(“Probation Officer Tillison”), who was responsible for supervising moderate to
high-risk probationers. Probation Officer Tillison testified that Schmidt was
scheduled to appear at his probation appointment on November 21, 2017, but
he failed to appear. On November 22, Probation Officer Tillison mailed
Schmidt a letter at the P.O. box address that Schmidt had provided to the
probation department. The letter notified Schmidt that he had failed to report
and that his next scheduled appointment was set for November 30. Probation
Officer Tillison testified that Schmidt, however, did not report for the
November 30th appointment. Additionally, Probation Officer Tillison testified
that Schmidt had also failed to report for an appointment in August but that no
violation was filed for this August appointment.
[5] Schmidt testified and offered reasons why he had missed the appointments. He
testified that he knew he had an appointment on November 21 and stated that
he did not attend it because he went the funeral of his grandmother who had
died on November 17. He testified that he called Probation Officer Tillison on
the day of the funeral, November 21, and left a voicemail for the probation
officer. As for the November 30 appointment, Schmidt testified that he did not
have a key to access the P.O. box and did not regularly check it and that, as a
result, he did not get the letter until after the appointment had passed. Schmidt
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also called his father as a witness, and his father tried to take the blame for
Schmidt’s failure to report.
[6] The trial court determined that Schmidt had violated his probation by failing to
report to probation. The trial court revoked a portion of Schmidt’s probation
and ordered him to serve three years of his previously suspended ten-year
sentence. When making this determination, the trial court stated the following:
Mr. Schmidt was on a monthly reporting basis . . . [when] he
failed to report to his probation on November 21st. The Court is
not unsympathetic to the fact that he was at a funeral for his
grandmother. If it was left just to that, then this might be a little
more complicated from an adjudication stand point, however he
was given another date for November 30th[,] and he failed to
report to that. So the Court does find that the State has proven
by a preponderance of the evidence that he has violated his
probation. With regards to [the] post office box, him not having
a key, he is on probation for a major felony, I mean that you are
going to give an address to probation, it better be one that you
are going to be able to get mail at. So, one can only assume that
he was either anticipating receiving mail there or would make the
necessary arrangements to receive mail there, if that was not
done, it is on Mr. Schmidt. Probation, Mr. Tillison probably has
over two hundred and fifty people he is supervising, he can’t hold
their hand. He can only take the information that is given to him
and that is the information he as to go with. That is the of [sic]
Mr. Schmidt to provide him with a good address, so therefore the
Court does find the State has proven beyond a preponderance of
the evidence that he has violated his probation. As to the
disposition, the Court looks to Mr. Schmidt’s prior criminal
history as an aggravating factor and [he] has a juvenile
delinquency for three separate Auto Thefts, which he spent ten
months at the boys school, he has a Theft from Rush County,
a[n] Auto Theft from Franklin County. He was on probation for
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Arson, as a major felony, as a Class B felony. In looking at the
probable cause affidavit, there w[ere] two separate fires set in this
matter intentionally, one to a garage, one to what seems to be, it
says a trailer and I’m assuming a mobile home, those were
intentional. Mr. Schmidt pled guilty to the Arson, once again it
is a major, major felony, when you talk about the locations of the
fires, it’s a residential area and you are putting many individuals
at risk. This was a very serious offense. The Court does consider
the fact that Mr. Schmidt was employed. The Court also
considers the fact [that] Mr. Schmidt has not taken responsibility
for it . . . He is twenty-three years old, this is his fault. Basing all
of the aggravators and mitigating factors, based on the fact that
this is a major felony, the Court does find a reasonable sentence
to be to revoke[] three years of his suspended sentence . . . And
just for the record, . . . the other thing the Court did consider as
an aggravating factor, he failed to report in August as well and
there was no violation filed, but this would be his second missed
appointment in six months, so just in a six-month time period, he
has missed one[-]third of his probation appointments.
(Tr. 18-19). Schmidt now appeals.
Decision
[7] Schmidt does not challenge the trial court’s determination that he violated
probation. Instead, he argues that the trial court abused its discretion by
ordering him to serve three years of his previously suspended ten-year sentence.
We disagree.
[8] “Probation is a matter of grace left to trial court discretion, not a right to which
a criminal defendant is entitled.” Prewitt v. State, 878 N.E.2d 184, 188 (Ind.
2007). The trial court determines the conditions of probation and may revoke
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probation if the conditions are violated. Id.; see also IND. CODE § 35-38-2-3(a).
Indeed, violation of a single condition of probation is sufficient to revoke
probation. Gosha v. State, 873 N.E.2d 660, 663 (Ind. Ct. App. 2007). Upon
determining that a probationer has violated a condition of probation, the trial
court may “[o]rder execution of all or part of the sentence that was suspended
at the time of initial sentencing.” IND. CODE § 35-38-2-3(h)(3). “Once a trial
court has exercised its grace by ordering probation rather than incarceration,
the judge should have considerable leeway in deciding how to proceed.”
Prewitt, 878 N.E.2d at 188. “If this discretion were not given to trial courts and
sentences were scrutinized too severely on appeal, trial judges might be less
inclined to order probation to future defendants.” Id. As a result, we review a
trial court’s sentencing decision from a probation revocation for an abuse of
discretion. Id. (citing Sanders v. State, 825 N.E.2d 952, 956 (Ind. Ct. App. 2005),
trans. denied). An abuse of discretion occurs where the decision is clearly
against the logic and effect of the facts and circumstances. Id.
[9] While grace and leniency are a part of the administration of justice, Schmidt’s
argument would carry more weight if this conviction involved a less serious
offense. However, the record reveals that the trial court had a sufficient basis
for its decision to order Schmidt to serve three years of his previously suspended
ten-year sentence in the DOC. Most significantly, Schmidt received
tremendous leniency when the trial court accepted his guilty plea to the one
count of Class B felony arson and imposed a sentence according to his plea
agreement that allowed him to serve half of his twenty-year sentence on
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probation. Schmidt, however, squandered this opportunity when he failed to
comply with the requirements of probation within the first few months of
probation. Based on the record before us, we conclude that the trial court did
not abuse its discretion by ordering Schmidt to serve less than one-third of his
previously suspended sentence. For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the trial
court’s revocation of Schmidt’s probation.
[10] Affirmed.1
Vaidik, C.J., and Barnes, Sr.J., concur.
1
We reject Schmidt’s reliance on Johnson v. State, 62 N.E.3d 1224 (Ind. Ct. App. 2016), as support for his
argument that the trial court abused its discretion when it ordered him to serve of a portion of his suspended
sentence. In Johnson, the defendant received a seven-year executed sentence on home detention through
community corrections and a four-year suspended sentence to probation. The defendant had limited
intellectual ability, difficulty understanding the conditions of his community corrections placement, limited
resources, and had previously been successful on work release. Based on the defendant’s failure to fully pay
fees and failure to follow instructions about where and when to be outside his apartment unit, the trial court
revoked the defendant’s entire executed sentence and ordered him to serve it in the DOC. Citing to the
various factors in the record, including the defendant’s mental limitations, limited resources, previous success
on work release, nature of the violation, and severity of the revocation sentence, our Court held that the trial
court had abused its discretion by finding that the defendant’s violation “warranted serving the entirety of the
remaining portion of his executed sentence in the DOC.” Johnson, 62 N.E.3d at 1231. Here, unlike Johnson,
the trial court did not order Schmidt to serve the entirety of his suspended ten-year-sentence, and Schmidt
does not point to anything in the record to indicate that he has limited intellectual ability or that he had
difficulty understanding that the terms of his probation for his Class B felony arson conviction.
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