FILED
Nov 13 2020, 8:38 am
CLERK
Indiana Supreme Court
Court of Appeals
and Tax Court
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE
Walter J. Alvarez Anna Maria Hearn
Steven J. Alvarez Law Office of Anna M. Hearn,
Andreas T. Kyres LLC
Crown Point, Indiana Valparaiso, Indiana
Kenneth B. Elwood
Christopher D. Stidham
Portage, Indiana
IN THE
COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
R. W., November 13, 2020
Appellant-Respondent, Court of Appeals Case No.
19A-PO-2697
v. Appeal from the Porter Superior
Court
J. W., The Honorable Brian Hurley,
Appellee-Petitioner. Judge Pro Tempore
Trial Court Cause No.
64D05-1909-PO-8995
Friedlander, Senior Judge.
[1] R.W. appeals from the entry of a permanent protective order against him,
contending that the trial court erred by denying his motion to dismiss the
petition for an order of protection filed by J.W., a woman with whom he was in
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-PO-2697 | November 13, 2020 Page 1 of 24
a romantic relationship, and by finding that there was sufficient evidence to
support the legal conclusion to issue the order. We affirm.
[2] R.W. raises the following issues for our review:
1. Did the existence of an emergency order of protection issued
in Illinois in favor of R.W. require the trial court to transfer
J.W.’s Indiana petition for protective order to Illinois under Ind.
Code § 34-26-5-6(4) (2003)?
2. Was there sufficient evidence to sustain the trial court’s
findings of fact supporting its conclusion of law to enter the order
of protection in favor of J.W. and against R.W.?
[3] J.W. is married and the mother of four boys. R.W. is a divorced father and was
an anchorman at a Chicago news station. In March of 2019, R.W. contacted
J.W. by private message, commenting “nice picture” through Instagram about
a photo she had posted. Tr. Vol. I, p. 45. J.W. did not respond to the
comment. He reached out to her again, inquiring if she knew two women with
whom he was friends after noticing that they had two Instagram friends in
common; one from St. Louis, and one from Virginia. She knew one of those
friends, K.B., a resident of Virginia and flight attendant employed by United
Airlines, through social media. R.W. told J.W. that he had recently broken up
with K.B., who he described as “very jealous” and “cruel.” Id. 45-46. J.W.
responded that there are always two sides to a story while she also expressed
sympathy toward R.W. J.W. also informed him that K.B. had blocked her
from social media.
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[4] On June 23, 2019, R.W. contacted J.W. stating, “You seem really wonderful. I
know you’re married. . . . I promise I can be trusted with your number. (smile
emoji).” Id. at 47; Ex. 1, p. 9. J.W. gave her phone number to R.W.
[5] Within two days of receiving J.W.’s phone number, he began texting her,
expressing a romantic and sexual interest in her, and he began quoting
scripture. He stated “You’re an amazing woman. There’s something truly
special about you. I want to find out more about you. . . . I adore you.” Id. at
47-48; Ex. 1, p. 14.
[6] The following is a sample of his overtures to J.W.:
I wish I could take you out. Give you the affection you’re
probably sorely missing. Physical, emotional, tell you how
beautiful you are all the time. You have such a huge heart and
have so much to give. Would you like that?
****
I am going to mercilessly flirt with you until you tell me yo[sic]
stop! (devil emoji).
****
Since my last breath up, I’ve been taking time and praying for
God to bring someone into my life that would match my
frequency and be able to go to new heights. . .in God’s time of
course. I hope you are that person, but I know I will have to be
patient. In the meantime, I hope we can spend time getting to
know one another. Having a relationship I’ve always dreamed of
is worth waiting for. Heck, I’ve waited this long! (laughing
emoji).
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****
You deserve to be happy. God wants us to be happy. Let me
try. I believe there’s a reason God connected us. If I got to hold
you in my arms, you’d know what it feels like to be adored and
wanted.
****
I need you [J.W.].
Id. at 48-49; Ex. 2, pp. 19-23.
[7] In July, R.W. continued to quote scripture, but also sent to her a picture text of
his genital area. He then made a request texting, “Now since I’ve been a good
boy go take pics of that sexy body of yours later and send them to me so I can
imagine you’re with me where you belong[.]” Id. at 224; Ex. 25, p. 217. J.W.
sent intimate nude and semi-nude pictures to R.W. after his assurances.
[8] On July 12, 2019, the two met at a hotel in Chesterton, Indiana for a sexual
encounter. Within a few days of the encounter with J.W., R.W. went on
vacation with another woman, M.E., a television anchor working out of St.
Louis. J.W. became aware of this and was upset. R.W. later explained to her
that the vacation was taken for the purpose of breaking things off with M.E. so
that he could be with J.W. At the end of July after J.W. and R.W. reconciled,
they met again in Indiana for lunch. They later met at R.W.’s home in Chicago
on August 22, 2019 for a sexual encounter.
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[9] Meanwhile, on August 3, 2019, the relationship began to break down yet again.
Starting then through August 6th, R.W. expressed concern about whether third
parties knew about his relationship with J.W. They had disagreements about
other women with whom R.W. was involved.
[10] Next, J.W. resumed communicating with K.B. The two discussed R.W. and
his involvement with J.W., K.B., and other women. Around that time, on
August 10, 2019, R.W. wanted to send a video he had of K.B., who was nude
in the video, to a surgeon she was dating. He asked J.W., “Do me a favor and
go to [K.B.’s] page and screen grab the plastic surgeon. K.B. hooked me in
sending my naked videos and pics . . . she crossed the line but I followed. I
think her guy needs to know.” Ex. 4, p. 101.
[11] Although J.W. advised him against that, R.W. suggested setting up another
Instagram account to contact the surgeon through his office. R.W. threatened
K.B. by email stating, “Keep in mind [K.B.] I still have all the texts you sent me
and the naked video of you and I know the name of the plastic surgeon you’re
dating.” Ex. 5, p. 108. Preemptively, K.B. sent emails to her friends telling
them that her Facebook account had been hacked and not to open a video
attachment if they received a post from her. K.B.’s YouTube and Facebook
accounts were hacked, and the video of K.B., who was nude in it, was posted
and sent to all of K.B.’s friends.
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[12] J.W. and K.B. exchanged emails on August 11, 2019 about K.B. reaching out
to a man, B.O., with whom J.W. previously had a sexual relationship. J.W.
then sent an email to R.W. accusing him of causing K.B. to reach out to B.O.
J.W. also argued with R.W. about blocking her from social media. J.W. texted
R.W. about text conversations between K.B. and R.W. In those conversations,
K.B. claimed that R.W. blocked J.W. from social media because she was too
forward and had stalked him. K.B. sent the text conversations to J.W. R.W.
claimed to J.W. that he was referring to another woman with the same first
name and was talking about blocking her. By that time, it was apparent that
K.B. and R.W. had renewed their relationship.
[13] J.W. told R.W. on August 12, 2019 to stay away from her and that she was
going to report his behavior to the police. The two had exchanged and
continued to exchange heated emails about each other, K.B., B.O. and others,
arguing about hacking into or creating fake accounts on social media and
reaching out to other persons about various relationships. J.W. confronted
R.W. about having to change her “mommyof4boys” email account because
R.W. had told K.B. that J.W., using that email account, was stalking him. Ex.
5, p. 103.
[14] J.W. shared some text exchanges between her and R.W. to K.B. R.W. learned
about it and became upset. At one point, R.W. threatened J.W. that she would
go to jail and lose her four sons. J.W.’s continued response to the repeated
exchanges was to ask that R.W. and K.B. leave her alone and, if they did not,
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she would contact the police. An example of J.W.’s request was her email on
August 17, 2019,
I want this behavior to stop . . . . You know involving [K.B.]
would be traumatic for me and she would be evil. You let it
happen. Now, B.O. and K.B. are attacking me at every angle to
make themselves look better and feel better. . . The verbal abuse
and lies are so painful nobody should feel this. I don’t want you
to reply, you lost all your chances to fix this and be my friend. . .
. If you mention my name to [K.B.], [B.O.] or anyone for that
matter or continue to harass me and slander my name; it will be
used against you.
Ex. 6, p. 118.
[15] On August 23, 2019, R.W. left a voicemail message stating,
You’re sharing our text messages, our private conversations with
other people. This is illegal. I’m not [f**king] around with you
anymore, [J.W.]. I am not saying a word about you to anyone. I
am not talking to anyone about you. You, you are trying to on
[sic] my reputation, and I have proof of that. Stand the [f**k]
down now. Delete every one of those [f**king] text messages.
And if you–and I swear to [f**king] God I will sue you for
everything for [f**king] with my reputation, sharing personal–
personal conversations with other people. You are a sick [f**k],
[J.W.] and you deserve to go to jail. And, I’m going to make
sure that happens. How dare you.
Tr. Vol. I, p. 73. J.W. felt threatened and terrified by the message in the
voicemail. R.W. then immediately made multiple attempts in a short period of
time to contact J.W.’s husband by email and Instagram, indicating that he
needed to talk with him about J.W.
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[16] On August 24, 2019, R.W. sent an email to J.W. stating that K.B. “somehow
was able to access my phone, she knew my old password and download[ed] all
of the naked photos of you that you sent me. She’s very upset that you
contacted [a man] and [I] don’t know what she’s going to do with them.
Sorry.” Ex. 7, p. 122. K.B. posted photographs of herself dated August 21,
2019 to August 28, 2019 in Chicago where R.W. worked and lived, depicting
her at R.W.’s condo and at the Art Institute. R.W. was pictured by himself at
the Art Institute during that same time period in a photograph he posted on
social media.
[17] During this time, K.B. then began sending texts to J.W. stating,
Hi [J.W.]. I just heard someone say that they were sending these
photos to your children’s school. I’m very worried about you.
Are you OK? Be more careful when you send these photos out!!!
I don’t want your children and husband to see them. . . . I think
a lot of your friends got a hold of them too. Are you ok??. . . I
feel so bad for you!! Call the police. I’m very worried that these
photos won’t go through Valparaiso. I just don’t want them to
get in the hands of your children or husband.
Ex. 9, p. 133-34.
[18] On September 11, 2019 at 12:07 p.m., the Cook County, Illinois Court issued
an emergency order of protection in favor of R.W. and against J.W. The
persons sought to be protected in that order were R.W., K.B., and M.E.,
however, the order only applied to R.W. On September 11, 2019 at 12:14 p.m.,
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K.B., sent an email to J.W. which contained an explicit photograph that J.W.
had sent to R.W., with the comment, “Far from perfect! So gross[.]” Id. at 123-
24. K.B. sent another email to J.W. saying, “Since you’ve been sleeping
around on your husbands[sic], you’ve contracted herpes. If you don’t tell him
about your virus, I will. He has a right to know!!!” Id. at 124. K.B. wrote to
J.W. in a further email, “Your husband has a right to know honey [t]hat you’re
exposing him to herpes.” Id. In yet another email, K.B. wrote to J.W. and cc’d
R.W., “Do your children and husband know you send trashy photos of your
infected vagina to men in who [sic] are in relationships. Geez. You’re so
desperate it’s disgusting. Poor [M.E.] had no idea what a tramp you are.
[B.O.] said, you have bad skin and your vagina looks like an old steak.” Ex. 11,
p. 159. K.B. was in Chicago with R.W. at the time these emails were sent. A
post on social media dated September 9, 2019, shows K.B. in Chicago after
returning from Amsterdam. R.W. admitted that he saw the email.
[19] On September 19, 2019, J.W. filed an ex parte petition for order of protection
and a hearing was set for October 17, 2019. On October 15, 2019, R.W. filed a
motion to continue the hearing, which was granted causing the hearing to be
reset to October 30, 2019. In that Motion, R.W. did not raise the issue he raises
now, specifically that J.W. incorrectly filed her petition in Indiana when she
should have filed her petition in Illinois. Instead, R.W.’s attorney stated that he
was unavailable for the hearing because he was in trial.
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1
[20] Meanwhile, around October 1, 2019, J.W. found out that a Bumble account
was created using her email address. R.W. previously had a Bumble account of
his own. Bumble contacted J.W., advising her that she was “creating quite a
buzz.” Ex. 17, p. 199. The subject line of the email from Bumble read,
“[J.W.], You’re Buzzworthy!” Id. Because J.W. did not have a Bumble
account, she contacted Bumble and was able to log on to the account. In the
“About me” section it shows “Tramp with herpes,” and in the “My work &
education” section it shows “Prostitute at Home.” Ex. 16, p. 190. She was
notified by Bumble that one of the posted pictures violated Bumble’s guidelines
and was taken down. One of the pictures was a picture only sent to R.W. and
depicted J.W. wearing a shirt R.W. gave her. The hearing date for the Illinois
protective order filed by R.W. was scheduled for October 2, 2019, the day after
J.W. discovered the fake Bumble account.
[21] Two days prior to the Indiana hearing, R.W. filed a motion to dismiss claiming
that the trial court needed to dismiss the matter because R.W. had a pending
petition for order of protection against J.W. in Illinois where he is a resident.
His argument continued by asserting that J.W.’s Indiana petition was required
to be dismissed because pursuant to Indiana Code § 34-26-5-6(4), she needed to
1
According to the provider, “Bumble is a social network that allows you to feel empowered while you make
those connections, whether you’re dating, looking for friends, or growing your professional network.” See,
www.bumble.com.
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file it in Illinois. J.W. filed a response to both the motion for continuance and
the motion to dismiss.
[22] An evidentiary hearing was held on October 30, 2019 and November 5, 2019.
While being questioned during the hearing, R.W. asserted his Fifth
Amendment right and refused to answer 32 questions. To briefly summarize,
he invoked his Fifth Amendment right and refused to answer questions about
his awareness and knowledge of K.B.’s acquisition of the nude photos of J.W.
and her intentions to use them.
[23] J.W. filed a motion asking the trial court to find that R.W.’s Fifth Amendment
invocation resulting in his refusal to answer questions in this civil action
compelled the trial court to reach an adverse inference against R.W. as to those
matters. After evidence was heard and submitted, the trial court issued a
permanent order of protection in favor of J.W. on November 7, 2019 and
entered findings of fact and conclusions thereon when it granted the order on
November 8, 2019.
[24] Criminal charges were filed against K.B., and J.W. also requested a protective
order against K.B. Appellant’s App. Vol. II, pp. 9-10.
1.
[25] R.W. challenges the trial court’s denial of his motion to dismiss J.W.’s petition.
It is apparent from the motion that the relief sought was (1) dismissal as a
sanction for violation of Indiana Code section 34-26-5-5, or (2) transfer of the
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matter to the court in Illinois. The contents of the motion suggest a challenge
to the trial court’s jurisdiction over the particular case; i.e., the “trial court’s
right, authority, and power to decide a specific case within the class of cases
over which a court has subject matter jurisdiction.” See Kondamuri v.
Kondamuri, 799 N.E.2d 1153, 1156 (Ind. Ct. App. 2003), trans. denied. “A
judgment rendered by a court that lacks jurisdiction over the particular case is
voidable and requires a timely objection or the lack of jurisdiction over the
particular case is waived.” Id. at 1156-57.
[26] J.W. filed her petition for order of protection on September 19, 2019. After
R.W.’s request for a continuance of the initial hearing date was granted, he
“filed a Motion to Dismiss on October 28, 2019 indicating an existing ex parte
Order of Protection had been issued for R.W. and against J.W. on September
11, 2019.” Appellant’s Br. p. 4. In his motion, R.W. contended that J.W. ran
afoul of the provisions of Indiana Code section 34-26-5-5 (2002). See
Appellant’s App. Vol. II, p. 26.
[27] That section of the Indiana Code provides that,
At a hearing to obtain an order for protection, each party has a
continuing duty to inform the court of:
(1) each separate proceeding for an order for protection;
(2) any civil litigation;
(3) each proceeding in a family, domestic relations, or juvenile
court; and
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(4) each criminal case;
involving a party or a child of a party. The information provided
under this section must include the case name, the case number,
and the county and state in which the proceeding is held, if that
information is known by the party.
(Emphasis added).
[28] This challenge requires interpretation of this statute. “Our standard of review
for the interpretation of statutes is de novo.” Quinn v. State, 45 N.E.39, 44 (Ind.
Ct. App. 2015). We will assume for the sake of argument that R.W.’s objection
was timely despite his prior motion for continuance. Although it is correct that
J.W.’s petition indicates “NA” in the section of the petition asking for
information regarding any other cases which she and R.W. had pending, see
Appellant’s App. Vol. II, p. 16, the statute clearly states that at a hearing, the
parties have a continuing duty to inform the court. R.W.’s motion informed
the court, and the matter was brought to the court’s attention at the hearing.
Indeed, the record is not clear about whether J.W. had yet received service of
the order granting R.W.’s Illinois emergency order of protection after the Porter
County Sheriff received it on September 13, 2019, which was prior to the filing
of her petition.
[29] Additionally, the existence of the Illinois proceeding initiated by R.W. between
the two did not preclude J.W. from seeking her own order of protection in
Indiana where she lived. See N.E. v. L.W., 130 N.E.3d 102 (Ind. Ct. App. 2019)
(fact that husband was subject to no-contact order as to wife did not prohibit
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wife from seeking protection order against husband). Indiana Code subsections
34-26-5-6 (2) and (3) (2003) explicitly provide that “a petitioner is not barred
from seeking an order because of another pending proceeding” and that “[a]
court may not delay granting relief because another pending action exists
between the petitioner and the respondent.”
[30] R.W. further contends that,
The Porter Superior Court erred by failing to transfer J.W.’s
Petition to the Illinois Circuit Court where an ex parte Order of
Protection had already been issued prior to the Porter Superior
Court’s hearing on extending J.W.’s ex parte Order of Protection.
Appellant’s Br. p. 9. R.W. cites Indiana Code section 34-26-5-6(4) in support of
his argument.
[31] Indiana Code section 34-26-5-6(4) provides in pertinent part:
The following rules apply to an order for protection issued under
this chapter:
....
(4) If a person who petitions for an ex parte order for protection
also has a pending case involving:
(A) the respondent; or
(B) a child of the petitioner and respondent;
the court that has been petitioned for relief shall immediately
consider the ex parte petition and then transfer that matter to the
court in which the other case is pending.
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[32] Of the three reported cases analyzing this statute, only one, Sims v. Lopez, 885
N.E.2d 15 (Ind. Ct. App. 2008), involves the issue of transfer between courts.
See also S.H. v. D.W., 139 N.E.3d 214 (Ind. 2020) and N.E., 130 N.E.3d 102. In
Sims, the former wife’s Lake County ex parte petition should have been
transferred to either St. Joseph County or LaPorte County where the former
husband’s civil actions against her or her current husband were pending. Thus,
it is apparent that in this subsection of the statute, the Indiana legislature
intended to consolidate Indiana actions between or involving these particular
parties and provided for the transfer of actions between Indiana courts to meet
that end. See Sims, 885 N.E.2d at 17. This conclusion finds further support in
the legislature’s choice of specific language referring to actions in other states in
another section. See Ind. Code § 34-26-5-5 (continuing duty to notify court of
case name, number, county and state involving pending litigation between
parties).
[33] J.W., a Porter County resident, properly filed her petition with the trial court
because Indiana Code section 34-26-5-4 (2002) gives a court of record
jurisdiction to issue a civil order for protection in the county in which the
petitioner currently or temporarily resides. Thus, the trial court correctly
denied R.W.’s motion to dismiss the petition and correctly retained jurisdiction
over the matter instead of transferring it to Illinois.
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2.
[34] Next, R.W. contends that the trial court erred by finding and concluding that
J.W. had established that an order of protection was necessary. In particular,
R.W. argues as follows:
The Court further noted in its Findings of Facts that “[s]omehow
[K.B.] came into possession of the nude pictures of [J.W.],” that
“[R.W.] asserted his Fifth Amendment privilege declining to
respond to about as many questions as he agreed to answer,” that
the questions to which he pleaded the Fifth “mostly involved his
awareness or knowledge of [K.B.’s] acquisition of the nude
photos and her intentions to use them,” and that “[t]here is no
evidence [R.W.] tried to stop or block [K.B.’s] harassment or
stalking behavior” regarding these photos.
***
In its Conclusions of Law, the Court stated that though a civil
litigant may freely invoke their Fifth Amendment privilege, “he
may not necessarily be shielded thereby from a negative inference
of the fact finder for using the privilege[.] [T]aking into
consideration the questions [R.W.] answered as well as those to
which he declined to answer [on the basis that the answer might
incriminate him,] the Court concludes that like [K.B.], [R.W.]
was engaged in bringing harassment to bear on [J.W.]”
Appellant’s Br. p. 9 (internal citations omitted) (quoting Appellant’s App. Vol.
II, pp. 11-12).
[35] The appropriate standard of review has been set forth in C.S. v. T.K., 118
N.E.3d 78, 81 (Ind. Ct. App. 2019), which we reproduce here.
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Protective orders are similar to injunctions, and therefore in
granting an order the trial court must sua sponte make special
findings of fact and conclusions thereon. We apply a two-tiered
standard of review: we first determine whether the evidence
supports the findings, and then we determine whether the
findings support the order. In deference to the trial court’s
proximity to the issues, we disturb the order only where there is
no evidence supporting the findings or the findings fail to support
the order. We do not reweigh evidence or reassess witness
credibility, and we consider only the evidence favorable to the
trial court’s order. The party appealing the order must establish
that the findings are clearly erroneous. Findings are clearly
erroneous when a review of the record leaves us firmly convinced
that a mistake has been made. We do not defer to conclusions of
law, however, and evaluate them de novo.
(internal citations and quotations omitted).
[36] Pursuant to the Indiana Civil Protection Act, see Ind. Code § 34-26-5-2 (2019),
“(a) [a] person who is or has been a victim of domestic or family violence may
file a petition for an order for protection against a: (2) person who has
committed stalking . . . .; (b) [a] person who is or has been subjected to
harassment may file a petition for an order for protection against a person who
has committed repeated acts of harassment against the petitioner.” According
to Indiana Code section 34-6-2-34.5 (2019) “domestic and family violence also
includes stalking. . . .” Stalking is defined as “a knowing or an intentional
course of conduct involving repeated or continuing harassment of another person
that would cause a reasonable person to feel terrorized, frightened, intimidated,
or threatened and that actually causes the victim to feel terrorized, frightened,
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intimidated, or threatened.” Ind. Code § 34-45-10-1 (1993) (emphasis added).
“Harassment” is defined as “conduct directed toward a victim that includes but
is not limited to repeated or continuous impermissible contact that would cause
a reasonable person to suffer emotional distress and that actually causes the
victim to suffer emotional distress.” Ind. Code § 35-45-10-2 (1993).
“Impermissible contact” includes but is not limited to knowingly or
intentionally following or pursuing the victim. Ind. Code § 35-45-10-3 (2019).
“[T]he term ‘repeated’ in Indiana’s anti-stalking laws means ‘more than once.’”
Johnson v. State, 721 N.E.2d 327, 332-333 (Ind. Ct. App. 1999), trans. denied.
[37] To sum up the evidence before the trial court and in the words of the trial court,
“[s]ome time between August 10th and September 11th the matter blew up and
all of the parties involved, [K.B.], [R.W.] and [J.W.] were saying nasty things to
each other, back and forth imploring the other to leave them alone.”
Appellant’s App. Vol. II, p. 10. The evidence and inferences therefrom
supporting the issuance of the protective order in favor of J.W. was that K.B.
was with R.W. after his relationship with J.W. soured. When they were
together, R.W. had shared with J.W. his plans to send the video of a nude K.B.
to the man she was then dating. A part of the plan involved creating a new
account on social media through which to reach that man at work. J.W.
counseled against R.W.’s plan.
[38] R.W. left a threatening voicemail for J.W., which made J.W. feel threatened
and terrified. R.W. made several attempts by various means to contact J.W.’s
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husband. During a period of time where K.B. was with R.W. in Chicago, she
downloaded semi-nude and nude pictures of J.W. from R.W.’s password-
protected phone. She then sent them to J.W. and R.W. with her own
disparaging commentary about what was depicted, further adding commentary
purported to be from B.O.
[39] R.W. contacted J.W. to inform her that “somehow” K.B. had come into
possession of those photographs. He did nothing to stop any action by K.B.
despite this awareness. K.B. feigned sympathy for J.W., adding that she did
not want those photographs to come into the hands of J.W.’s four young sons
or husband or be disseminated to her children’s school and through the City of
Valparaiso even though “someone” had told her that those actions were a
possibility.
[40] Just prior to the hearing set for the Illinois protective order, J.W. discovered
that a Bumble account had been created with her email address containing
pictures of her, one of which she had only sent to R.W. and the other of which
had to be taken down from the account. The words used in that account to
describe J.W. bore a striking similarity to the language used by K.B. when
discussing her theory that J.W. had herpes and that her behavior was trashy or
tramp-like.
[41] At the hearing on J.W.’s protective order request, R.W. refused to answer 32
separate questions pertaining mostly to how K.B. came into possession of the
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-PO-2697 | November 13, 2020 Page 19 of 24
pictures of J.W. that were meant only for R.W. and the creation and existence
of the Bumble account, citing his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-
incrimination. “Although the refusal to testify in a civil case cannot be used
against the one asserting the privilege in a subsequent criminal proceeding, the
privilege against self-incrimination does not prohibit the trier of fact in a civil
case from drawing adverse inferences from a witness’[s] refusal to testify.”
Hardiman v. Cozmanoff, 4 N.E.3d 1148, 1151 (Ind. 2014) (quoting Gash v. Kohm,
476 N.E.2d 910, 913 (Ind. Ct. App. 1985)).
[42] The trial court correctly found from the evidence and the inferences from the
evidence that “there is no evidence that R.W. tried to stop or block [K.B.’s]
harassment or stalking behavior utilizing or threatening to use the photos
against [J.W.],” and correctly concluded that “like [K.B.], [R.W.] was engaged
in bringing harassment to bear on [J.W.]” Appellant’s App. Vol. II, pp. 11-12.
There was more than sufficient evidence to support the trial court’s findings of
fact which, in turn, support the conclusions of law in favor of granting J.W.’s
petition for a permanent protective order against R.W.
Conclusion
[43] For the reasons stated above, we conclude that the trial court did not err by
failing to transfer J.W.’s petition to Illinois, and did not err by finding and
concluding that sufficient evidence existed to support issuing a permanent order
of protection in favor of J.W.
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[44] Judgment affirmed.
Mathias, J., concurs.
Crone, J., concurs with separate opinion.
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-PO-2697 | November 13, 2020 Page 21 of 24
IN THE
COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
Rafer Weigel, Court of Appeals Case No.
19A-PO-2697
Appellant-Respondent,
v.
J.W.,
Appellee-Petitioner.
Crone, Judge, concurring.
[45] I agree with the affirmance of the protective order against Rafer Weigel, but I
write separately because I respectfully disagree with my colleagues’ decision to
refer to Weigel by his initials instead of his name.
[46] No statute, court rule, or court policy entitles Weigel to anonymity. In fact,
pursuant to the Rules on Access to Court Records adopted by the Indiana
Supreme Court, Weigel’s name is presumptively accessible to the public. See
Ind. Access to Court Records Rule 4(A) (“A Court Record is accessible to the
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-PO-2697 | November 13, 2020 Page 22 of 24
public except as provided in Rule 5.”).2 Some of the stated purposes of those
rules are to “[c]ontribute to public safety” and “[p]romote governmental
accountability and transparency[.]” Ind. Access to Court Records Rule 1(B).
These overlap with the stated purposes of the Civil Protection Order Act, which
was enacted by the Indiana General Assembly “to promote the: (1) protection
and safety of all victims of domestic or family violence in a fair, prompt, and
effective manner; (2) protection and safety of all victims of harassment in a fair,
prompt, and effective manner; and (3) prevention of future domestic violence,
family violence, and harassment.”
[47] As described in lurid detail above, Weigel threatened and publicly humiliated
J.W., who sought and obtained a protective order against him. Weigel has
challenged the sufficiency of the evidence supporting that order. If we had
ruled in his favor, he could have petitioned to expunge all records relating to the
protective order pursuant to Indiana Code Chapter 34-26-7.5. But since we
have affirmed the trial court’s determination that Weigel harassed J.W., I can
think of no principled reason why this Court should shield his identity from the
2
See Ind. Access to Court Records Rule 3 (defining “Court Record” to include “Case Record,” which
“means any document, information, data, or other item created, collected, received, or maintained by a
Court, Court agency or Clerk of Court in connection with a particular case.”). Exceptions to the Rules’
presumption of public access to court records include “Case Records excluded from Public Access or
declared confidential by Indiana statute or other court rule[.]” Ind. Access to Court Records Rule 5(B)(2).
Certain case records in protective order proceedings (including information regarding the
petitioner/protected person) are excluded from public access pursuant to statute, but those records do not
include the respondent’s name.
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-PO-2697 | November 13, 2020 Page 23 of 24
public. Indeed, naming the perpetrator of such depraved acts could only
contribute to public safety, promote governmental transparency and
accountability (by this Court and by any law enforcement agency that might
have occasion to enforce the protective order, respectively), and prevent future
harassment of J.W. and others.
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