MEMORANDUM DECISION
Pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 65(D), FILED
this Memorandum Decision shall not be Jul 29 2020, 11:30 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
Kristin A. Mulholland Curtis T. Hill, Jr.
Appellate Public Defender Attorney General of Indiana
Crown Point, Indiana Megan M. Smith
Deputy Attorney General
Indianapolis, Indiana
IN THE
COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
Dwight Caprice Cross, July 29, 2020
Appellant-Defendant, Court of Appeals Case No.
20A-CR-23
v. Appeal from the Lake Superior
Court
State of Indiana, The Honorable Samuel L. Cappas,
Appellee-Plaintiff. Judge
Trial Court Cause No.
45G04-1603-F2-3
Brown, Judge.
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-CR-23 | July 29, 2020 Page 1 of 11
[1] Dwight Caprice Cross appeals his convictions for robbery resulting in bodily
injury and burglary and raises one issue: whether the trial court abused its
discretion in admitting certain evidence. We affirm.
Facts and Procedural History
[2] On March 17, 2016, at about 8:15 a.m., Carole Bloom dropped off groceries at
the house of her daughter and granddaughter, Jennifer and Jasmine Bloom. As
she left to start work at 8:30 a.m., she saw a gray vehicle with two black men
she did not recognize as being from the neighborhood driving very slowly in
front of the house.
[3] That morning, as she was on a couch in her basement room watching
television, Jasmine heard a “really loud banging on the door,” the back door
was broken open, “someone ripped [her] bedroom door off” its hinge, and a
“dark-skinned black guy,” a bit taller than her, with short buzzed hair and dark
grey clothes, stood in the doorway. Transcript Volume II at 201-203. He
shouted something that she did not understand, left, and returned with a
second, short, lighter-skinned man with blond twists at the end of his hair. The
two men began “going through [her] room” and screamed, “Don’t look at me”
and “Get down on the ground.” Id. at 203-204. Jasmine “kept looking at
them,” and the men hit her on the top of her head, causing a “small contusion,
bumps and bruises.” Id. at 204. She observed the men “kind of have a knife
between them,” which was “big – like a combat knife” and which the men held
and pointed at her while instructing her not to move or look at them. Id. at 206-
207. They looked through her drawers, closet, clothes, cabinets and dressers,
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and they stole her television, Xbox, computer, and iPhone, which they had
Jasmine unlock and “turn off . . . all the tracking stuff . . . so that it couldn’t be
traced.” Id. at 205.
[4] The lighter-skinned man went upstairs, Jennifer opened her bedroom door and
screamed, and he stood “right in front of [her] face” and screamed at her to get
down on the floor, which she did, and about “a safe, saying that [she] was on a
list of people that had safes.” Id. at 149-150. He asked her the location of the
safe and money, and Jennifer replied they did not have a safe and she did not
have money. During this exchange, the man “kind of t[ore] up the room,” went
through several “purses, looking for money,” took her MacBook Pro and her
iPhone, and had Jennifer “turn off ‘Find my iPhone’” on the phone. Id. at 151.
At some point, she rose from the ground, he punched her head with his fist, and
she fell back down. The darker-skinned man entered the room, the two men
spoke in the hallway briefly about cutting the women’s throats before returning to
Jennifer’s bedroom, and one of the men held out the knife and threatened her.
The men then left the house, taking a television from the living room.
[5] The following day, Jennifer and Jasmine examined a photo array of suspects at
the police station, and Jennifer “wrote, ‘Due to my limited vision – I’m blind in
my right eye and have limited vision in my left – I cannot identify anyone at
this time’” on the photo array and noted that the individual in Photograph No.
5 “looked like [the individual in her bedroom] because he had the same skin
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coloring.” 1 Id. at 173-174. Jasmine identified Cross as the “lighter-skinned,
shorter male” 2 and, when shown a second, different photo array, identified the
other assailant. Id. at 217.
[6] The State charged Cross as amended with three counts of burglary as level 2, 3,
and 4 felonies, robbery resulting in bodily injury as a level 3 felony, two counts
of criminal confinement as level 3 felonies, two counts of armed robbery as
level 3 felonies, and residential entry as a level 6 felony. The State indicated in
a response to a discovery order that it had provided Cross with a vehicle search
warrant and, in a supplemental discovery response, that it had provided a
“Search Warrant Affidavit, Return for Infiniti Vehicle.” Appellant’s Appendix
Volume II at 103.
[7] At Cross’s jury trial, the State presented the testimony of Carole, Jennifer, and
Jasmine, as well as the testimony of an Indiana State Police forensic analyst
who investigated the area around Jennifer and Jasmine’s house for security
video and who indicated that Cross and the other assailant were involved in a
traffic stop together on the same day as the incident. The State also presented a
surveillance photograph taken six or seven blocks away bearing a date and time
stamp of “3-17-2016 . . . 08:41:47” of a vehicle that matched the description of
1
State’s Exhibit 17 is a photo array signed by Jennifer and contains a separate sheet that states, “Position . . .
5. . . . Cross, Dwight Caprice.” Exhibits Volume II at 25.
2
State’s Exhibit 25 is a photo array with a circle around a photograph in the third position, which depicts the
same individual that appeared in the fifth position of the array signed by Jennifer. On a separate sheet, the
exhibit also states, “Position . . . 3 . . . Cross, Dwight Caprice.” Exhibits Volume II at 34.
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Cross’s vehicle. State’s Exhibit 116. See also State’s Exhibit 117 (second
photograph). The State also presented photographs of latent fingerprints
discovered on the bottom of the interior-side of the door to the house, which
appeared “as if somebody had tried to pry the door open or got their hands
underneath it to break the door open”; the ten-print card documenting Cross’s
fingerprints; and the testimony of a law enforcement fingerprint examiner who
compared them and testified that he was able to identify Cross as a match.
Transcript Volume III at 30.
[8] Hammond Police Detective Daniel Young testified without objection that he
was working the day shift at the office on March 17, 2016, when he learned
from another detective about a home invasion that happened earlier in the
morning, he started to “ask around to see if there’s anything [he] [could] do to
assist,” and that, while he assisted, Cross developed as a person of interest. Id.
at 67. He testified he learned Cross drove a “silver passenger car,” “an
Infiniti,” and that he spotted a silver Infiniti sometime later in the Merrillville
area and discovered during a subsequent traffic stop that Cross’s mother was
driving the vehicle. Id. He indicated he detained and transported the vehicle in
preparation for a search warrant and Cross’s mother took another officer “to a
residence where there was an individual of interest in another case.” Id. at 70.
[9] During cross-examination, the following exchange occurred between Cross’s
counsel and Detective Young:
Q. . . . . What about that that [sic] caught your attention, the
home invasion or the silver vehicle?
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A. Both.
Q. Okay. Tell us why.
A. I currently had been investigating a burglary where the person
of interest was driving a silver vehicle.
Q. How many burglaries?
A. For the silver vehicle, at that time just one.
Q. And you thought that []Cross was involved in that other
burglary?
A. Yes. I’d actually developed a probable cause and had filed
charged [sic].
Q. You had filed charges?
A. Correct.
Q. For burglary?
A. I believe it was for theft.
Q. That’s not a burglary.
A. No. I was investigating a burglary. I presented the case to
the prosecutor’s office, and they signed off. I believe it was theft.
I don’t know if it was burglary.
Q. The police reports in this matter indicate that there were
multiple home invasions and multiple burglaries –
A. That could be.
Q. – that []Cross could have been involved in.
A. I was investigating one.
Q. Do you know of any others?
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A. I do not.
Q. Do you know of any other criminal charges dealing with
home invasions where Mr. Cross was charged –
A. There was –
Q. – other than this one?
A. Charged?
Q. Charged.
A. No.
Q. As of March 17, 2016, had []Cross been charged in that theft
case?
A. I would have to check the date. If that was the same date
where I was trailing that vehicle, then the probable cause
affidavit had been signed by the prosecutor’s office.
Q. Well, when you say on the date that you were following the
vehicle, is that when you had seen that silver vehicle in
Merrillville?
A. Correct.
Q. And that was the – later in the day is when []Cross was taken
into custody?
A. Correct.
Q. That’s when the theft charge was filed?
A. Prior to that.
*****
Q. Okay. Do you know whether or not the date of that theft was
before or after March 17, 2016?
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A. It was before.
Id. at 72-75. The prosecutor approached the bench and argued Cross’s counsel
opened the door to ask about how the witness knew Cross and recognized the
vehicle, the court asked Cross’s counsel to respond, and Cross’s counsel
answered: “I asked if he was charged in any other cases, and I said that the police
report involving this matter indicated as such. I mean, if the State wants to go
through the door – .” Id. at 76. The prosecutor indicated: the purpose of the
putative inquiry was to show the witness “knows him,” “[t]here’s no lack of
mistaken identity,” Cross “was familiar with the burglaries he did,” and that they
“were similar in nature”; the State was going to ask how Cross became a person
of interest and if the witness was aware that this is the vehicle he used; and that
the State “wasn’t going to go into any facts about [Cross’s] uncharged
burglaries.” Id. at 78, 80. On redirect-examination, Detective Young was asked
how he was familiar with Cross, he responded “[t]hrough an investigation on an
unrelated offense” and indicated he was the lead investigator on that unrelated
offense and thus familiar with Cross, and the following exchange occurred:
Q. What type of unrelated offense were you investigating him
for?
A. Burglary.
Q. And were you aware that []Cross drove a silver Infiniti from
that unrelated burglary that you were investigating?
A. Yes.
Q. And that was prior to this one?
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A. Correct.
Id. at 81.
[10] The jury found Cross guilty of two counts of burglary as level 3 and 4 felonies,
robbery resulting in bodily injury as a level 3 felony, and residential entry as a
level 6 felony. The court merged the convictions for burglary as a level 3 felony
and residential entry into the conviction for burglary as a level 4 felony,
sentenced Cross to fifteen years for the robbery resulting in bodily injury and
eleven years for burglary as a level 4 felony, and ordered the sentences to be
served consecutively with the final two years served on community corrections.
Discussion
[11] The issue is whether the trial court abused its discretion in admitting certain
evidence. The trial court has broad discretion to rule on the admissibility of
evidence. Bradley v. State, 54 N.E.3d 996, 999 (Ind. 2016). A trial court’s ruling
on the admission of evidence is generally accorded a great deal of deference on
appeal. Hall v. State, 36 N.E.3d 459, 466 (Ind. 2015), reh’g denied. We will not
reverse an error in the admission of evidence if the error was harmless. Turner
v. State, 953 N.E.2d 1039, 1058 (Ind. 2011). Errors in the admission of evidence
are to be disregarded unless they affect the defendant’s substantial rights. Id. at
1059. In determining the effect of the evidentiary ruling on a defendant’s
substantial rights, we look to the probable effect on the fact-finder. Id.
[12] Cross argues that the State introduced impermissible evidence of his prior bad
acts, and that the jury made the forbidden inference that he probably committed
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the charged crimes due to a criminal propensity. He contends the State did not
prove the admissibility of the testimony under an express exception to Ind.
Evidence Rule 404(b), that he was prejudiced by its admission as it likely led the
jury to assume he was a serial burglar, and that it was of minimal probative
value. The State maintains that Cross first elicited the evidence regarding the
prior investigation on cross-examination and that the minimal testimony could
not have prejudiced the jury.
[13] We observe that Cross’s defense counsel elicited testimony from Detective
Young that he “had been investigating a burglary” in which the person of interest
was driving a silver vehicle, asked for additional explanation after Detective
Young indicated that “[b]oth” the home invasion and the silver vehicle caught
his attention, and elicited Detective Young’s statement that he “was investigating
one” of multiple home invasions and burglaries in which Cross could have been
involved. Transcript Volume III at 72-73. The invited error doctrine forbids a
party to take advantage of an error that the party “commits, invites, or which is
the natural consequence of [the party’s] own neglect or misconduct,” Durden v.
State, 99 N.E.3d 645, 651 (Ind. 2018) (quoting Wright v. State, 828 N.E.2d 904,
907 (Ind. 2005)), given some evidence that the error resulted from an “appellant’s
affirmative actions as part of a deliberate, ‘well-informed’ trial strategy.”
Batchelor v. State, 119 N.E.3d 550, 558 (Ind. 2019) (quoting Brewington v. State, 7
N.E.3d 946, 954 (Ind. 2014), reh’g denied, cert. denied, 574 U.S. 1077, 135 S. Ct.
970 (2015)). In light of the record, we conclude that Cross invited any error with
respect to the challenged testimony.
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[14] Further, we find that any error with respect to allowing the State to ask
questions on redirect and Detective Young’s responses was harmless. Upon
being questioned by Cross’s defense counsel, Detective Young testified he was
investigating a burglary. The implication of Detective Young’s statement is that
he had believed Cross to be involved in an unrelated burglary he was
investigating, and we conclude that his subsequent statements on redirect
examination did not impact Cross’s substantial rights. See Pritchard v. State, 810
N.E.2d 758, 761 (Ind. Ct. App. 2004) (holding that, even if it could be
concluded that it was error for the trial court to admit certain testimony, the
error would have been harmless and the defendant was not prejudiced by the
admission of the testimony). Any error is also harmless given the substantial
independent evidence set forth above and in the record. See Turner, 953 N.E.2d
at 1059 (“The improper admission is harmless error if the conviction is
supported by substantial independent evidence of guilt satisfying the reviewing
court there is no substantial likelihood the challenged evidence contributed to
the conviction.”) (citing Lafayette v. State, 917 N.E.2d 660, 666 (Ind. 2009)); Cole
v. State, 970 N.E.2d 779, 784 (Ind. Ct. App. 2012) (holding that an error in the
admission of evidence does not justify reversal if the evidence is cumulative of
other evidence presented at trial).
[15] For the foregoing reasons, we affirm Cross’s convictions.
[16] Affirmed.
Najam, J., and Kirsch, J., concur.
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