Highbaugh v. State

ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT:                      ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:


KATHLEEN M. SWEENEY                     STEVE CARTER

Indianapolis, Indiana                              Attorney General of
Indiana

                                             GRANT H. CARLTON
                                             Deputy Attorney General
                                             Indianapolis, Indiana



                                   IN THE

                          SUPREME COURT OF INDIANA


MICHAEL HIGHBAUGH,                      )
                                        )
      Appellant (Defendant),            )
                                        )
            v.                          )  Cause No. 49S00-0008-CR-466
                                        )
STATE OF INDIANA,                       )
                                        )
      Appellee (Plaintiff).                  )

________________________________________________________________________

                    APPEAL FROM THE MARION SUPERIOR COURT
                     The Honorable Cale Bradford, Judge
                       Cause No. 49G03-9712-CF-183229



                               August 15, 2002


SHEPARD, Chief Justice

      Michael Highbaugh pleaded guilty  to  one  count  of  murder  and  two
counts of attempted murder.  The trial court sentenced him to  life  without
parole for murder and an aggregate, consecutive term of 100  years  for  the
attempted murders.  Highbaugh’s central challenges in this appeal  focus  on
his sentence.  We affirm.



                        Facts and Procedural History


      On the evening of December 11, 1997, David Hairston was  at  his  home
in Indianapolis,  as  were  twenty-year-old  Khalalah  and  fifteen-year-old
Michael.  When the doorbell rang, Khalalah answered and  observed  two  men,
one of whom was wearing a police uniform.  She also observed a  police  car.
The two men entered the foyer uninvited and requested to  search  Hairston’s
home,  indicating  that  other  officers  were  en  route  with  a  warrant.
Hairston refused to let the men search his home until  the  warrant  arrived
and told them to wait outside.  When they refused, Hairston  demanded  their
names and badge numbers.  The uniformed officer stated  that  his  name  was
“Thompson.”  Hairston asked “Thompson” where his name badge  was,  to  which
the officer replied he was not wearing his  badge.   Hairston  then  brushed
aside the officer’s coat and saw a nametag that read “Powell.”

      The man wearing civilian  clothing  (later  identified  as  Highbaugh)
then pulled out a gun  and  put  it  to  Hairston’s  head.   After  Hairston
refused Highbaugh’s demands to lie down on the floor, Highbaugh shot him  in
the head.  He died as a result.

      In the meantime, Khalalah and Michael ran  from  the  foyer  into  the
kitchen.   Highbaugh  chased  them  and  shot  Michael  in  the  head.   The
resulting wound was not fatal, and Michael lay motionless pretending  to  be
dead.  Highbaugh then placed the barrel of the gun against  Khalalah’s  head
and pulled the trigger.  When it misfired, Highbaugh  grabbed  a  knife  and
stabbed Khalalah in the neck approximately ten times.  She survived.


      While motionless on the kitchen floor, Michael saw Powell run  to  the
back of the house.  After several minutes, he saw Powell run  out  the  door
carrying several bags.


      The State charged Highbaugh with murder, felony murder, two counts  of
attempted murder, robbery, and carrying a handgun without  a  license.   The
State also alleged that Highbaugh was an habitual offender  and  sought  the
death penalty.  In exchange for Highbaugh’s guilty plea for murder  and  two
counts of attempted murder, the State dropped the  remaining  charges.   The
plea agreement provided a sentencing  range  of  sixty-five  years  to  life
without parole, to be decided by the trial court.  In addition to  the  life
sentence and the term  of  years  for  attempted  murder,  the  court  later
sentenced Highbaugh to a concurrent term of six months after  he  was  found
in contempt of court.[1]


                 I. Necessary Proof for Life Without Parole

      Highbaugh first challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to  support
his life sentence for the murder of Hairston, arguing that the State  failed
to prove that he committed an intentional killing during the  commission  of
a  robbery.   Highbaugh  specifically  argues  that  the  State  failed   to
establish that any property of value  was  taken  and  did  not  prove  that
property was taken from the person or presence of Hairston.  A  trial  court
may sentence a defendant to life without parole when the  State  has  proven
an aggravating circumstance specified in the death penalty statute beyond  a
reasonable doubt.  Ind. Code Ann.  §  35-50-2-9(b)  (West  2000);  Greer  v.
State, 749 N.E.2d 545, 549 (Ind. 2001).[2]


      The State proved that Highbaugh took property of value.  The  charging
information stated that Highbaugh took “bags and contents”  from  Hairston’s
home.  (R. at 108.)  Michael testified that when Highbaugh and Powell  first
arrived at Hairston’s house, both were empty handed.  Although  Michael  was
lying on the kitchen floor playing dead, he saw Powell leave the house  with
several bags,  one  of  which  contained  marijuana.   This  was  sufficient
evidence that property of value was taken.  See Ortiz v. State,  716  N.E.2d
345, 351 (Ind. 1999) (marijuana taken during robbery).


      Highbaugh also argues  that  the  items  taken  were  not  taken  from
Hairston’s person or presence.  Moreover, because  Hairston  apparently  was
buying the home on contract with another person, Highbaugh  asserts  “it  is
unknown  whether  Hairston  had  sole  control  of  the  premises  or   even
personally possessed the unrecovered and unidentified items.”   (Appellant’s
Br. at 15.)  The evidence leads us to conclude otherwise.


      A sufficiency challenge will not prevail simply because the murder and
the taking of property occurred in different rooms.  See Ortiz,  716  N.E.2d
at 352.  A perpetrator still commits robbery when  the  property  seized  is
not owned by the victim, but is merely under the personal protection of  the
victim.  Paul v.  State,  612  N.E.2d  1060,  1062  (Ind.  1993)  (upholding
robbery conviction when defendant took cigarettes from store  after  fatally
shooting employee in charge).


      As we noted above, Highbaugh and Powell were  empty-handed  when  they
arrived at Hairston’s.  After shooting and stabbing the victims,  they  left
Hairston’s house with packaged  marijuana  and  other  bags.   Later,  while
investigating the crime  scene,  police  found  an  ashtray  full  of  loose
marijuana in plain view in  the  basement  where  Hairston  was  immediately
prior to the shooting.  See Henderson v. State, 715 N.E.2d  833,  835  (Ind.
1999) (constructive possession may be found when items are in plain view  of
a person because the  person  has  the  ability  to  exercise  dominion  and
control over the items).  Police also  found  packaging  equipment,  scales,
and other paraphernalia in plain view that would indicate  that  drugs  were
dealt from  the  home.   The  marijuana  taken  from  the  home  was  either
possessed by Hairston or  in  his  personal  protection.   The  evidence  is
sufficient to support the statutory aggravator.





                           II.  Claimed Mitigators



      Highbaugh next contends  that  the  trial  court  wrongfully  rejected
proffered  mitigators,  failed  to  give   enough   weight   to   recognized
mitigators, and did not properly articulate how it  weighed  the  recognized
mitigators against the lone aggravator.  He asks us to vacate  the  sentence
of life without parole and sentence him to a term of years.


      Highbaugh’s father testified on his behalf, as did a  psychotherapist.
Both testified about how Highbaugh’s childhood may have contributed  to  his
drug use and this crime.


      The  trial  court   recognized   several   mitigating   circumstances:
Highbaugh came from a dysfunctional family  whose  father  was  involved  in
drugs and committed acts of  domestic  abuse;  Highbaugh  maintained  steady
employment during periods of his life; Highbaugh had a  loving  relationship
with his wife and children; Highbaugh surrendered himself to police and  did
not resist arrest;  and  Highbaugh  accepted  responsibility,  in  part,  by
pleading guilty to some of the crimes.  (Supp. R. at 49-50.)


      Highbaugh  offered  other  mitigating  circumstances  that  the  court
rejected.  These  circumstances  included:   (1)  Hairston  facilitated  the
offense; (2) Highbaugh was under the  control  of  Powell;  (3)  Highbaugh’s
sentence for life without parole is not proportional  to  Powell’s  sentence
of sixty-five years; and (4) Powell was found not guilty of robbery.  (Id.)

      A trial court is not obligated to find a circumstance to be mitigating
simply because the circumstance is proffered by the  defendant.   Spears  v.
State, 735 N.E.2d 1161, 1167  (Ind.  2000),  reh’g  denied.   On  appeal,  a
defendant must show  that  the  mitigating  circumstance  advanced  is  both
significant and clearly supported by the record.  Id.   Although  a  finding
of mitigating factors is within the discretion of a  trial  court,  a  trial
court is not obligated to weigh or credit  the  mitigating  factors  as  the
defendant requests.  Georgopulos v.  State,  735  N.E.2d  1138,  1145  (Ind.
2000).  Only when a trial court fails to find a mitigator  that  the  record
clearly supports  do  we  reasonably  believe  the  trial  court  improperly
overlooked a mitigator.  Id.


      Highbaugh  claims  that  because  Hairston  was  a  drug  dealer,   he
implicitly consented to the risks of the trade, including death.  The  trial
court noted that Hairston did nothing to  facilitate  his  own  murder.   In
fact, Hairston was in the basement of his home  when  Highbaugh  and  Powell
arrived.  (R. at 1270.)  The trial court did not  abuse  its  discretion  in
rejecting this proposed mitigator.


      The trial court also did not abuse its discretion when it declined  to
find that Highbaugh was under the substantial control of Powell.   Highbaugh
unquestionably had an accomplice, but he was the major participant in  these
crimes.  In light of the fact that Highbaugh  fatally  shot  Hairston,  shot
Michael,  and  stabbed  Khalalah  without  direction  or   help   from   his
accomplice, there was no abuse of discretion to  reject  this  a  mitigating
circumstance.


      As for Highbaugh’s proffered  mitigators  that  his  sentence  is  not
proportional to Powell’s and that Powell was found not  guilty  of  robbery,
the court did not  abuse  its  discretion  in  rejecting  these.   First,  a
constitutional proportionality analysis does not require a court to  compare
the sentence of a particular crime  to  others  convicted  of  the  same  or
similar crimes.  Willoughby v. State, 660 N.E.2d 570, 584 (Ind. 1996).


      Moreover, Highbaugh was the principal actor in the murder of  Hairston
and the attempted murders of Michael and Khalalah.  Highbaugh shot  Hairston
and tried to murder Michael  and  Khalalah  while  Powell  stood  by  saying
nothing.  The court properly gave Highbaugh  a  stiffer  sentence  than  his
accomplice.  Finally, given that the State proved the  statutory  aggravator
of intentional killing during the course of a robbery, there  was  no  abuse
of discretion when  the  trial  court  ignored  the  fact  that  Powell  was
acquitted of robbery.


      As  for  Highbaugh’s  claim  that  the  trial  court  is  required  to
articulate the weight given to each mitigator, this Court recently  rejected
such a  requirement  in  Hollen  v.  State,  761  N.E.2d  398  (Ind.  2002).
Although we acknowledged in Hollen  that  trial  courts  facilitate  a  more
thorough appellate review by delineating  how  much  weight  to  give  to  a
specific aggravating or mitigating circumstance, we nonetheless held that  a
trial court is not required to assign specific  weight  to  each  aggravator
and mitigator.  Id. at 402.  Accordingly, we find no error.





                   III.  Was Life Manifestly Unreasonable?



      In  the  same  vein,  Highbaugh  claims  that  his  life  sentence  is
manifestly unreasonable.  He argues that had the court given full weight  to
the recognized mitigators and to those mitigators that Highbaugh  identifies
as erroneously overlooked, a lesser sentence would have been imposed.


      A life sentence imposed  on  a  person  who  murders  one  person  and
attempts to kill two others is not manifestly unreasonable, given the  state
of the mitigators described above.





                            The Contempt Finding



      Highbaugh lastly claims the court erred when it found him in contempt.
 Highbaugh argues that because he still possessed his Fifth Amendment  right
to remain silent so as to not incriminate himself, he could not  be  ordered
to provide testimony in Powell’s case.  We reject his blanket  assertion  of
the privilege against self-incrimination.


      Highbaugh pled guilty to  one  count  of  murder  and  two  counts  of
attempted murder.  In exchange, the State declined  to  prosecute  Highbaugh
for robbery, felony murder, and carrying a handgun without a  license.   The
State also dismissed the habitual offender information.  The plea  agreement
contained an additional provision requiring  Highbaugh  “to  appear  and  be
interviewed to give sworn and unsworn statements or testimony as  required.”
 (R. at 1187.)  The guilty plea was filed and accepted by  the  trial  court
on February 4, 2000.  On March 20th, Powell’s attorney deposed Highbaugh  in
preparation for Powell’s separate trial.  (Supp.  R.  at  20-24.)   At  this
deposition, Highbaugh declined to answer any question beyond his name,  date
of birth, and place of residence.  (Id.)


      Powell’s attorney moved that Highbaugh be held  in  contempt  for  his
refusal to answer any questions.  The court held a  hearing  on  the  motion
two days after Highbaugh was sentenced.   The  court  ordered  Highbaugh  to
answer “any and all questions concerning your knowledge of this matter,  and
if you refuse . . .  you  could  be  found  in  contempt.”   (R.  at  1385.)
Highbaugh again declined to answer  any  questions  and  indicated  that  he
would be appealing the imposition of a life sentence.  (R.  at  1383.)   The
court ruled that Highbaugh did not have a Fifth Amendment  privilege,  found
him in contempt, and sentenced him to a term of  six  months  to  be  served
concurrent with his life sentence.


      The  privilege  against  self-incrimination  contained  in  the  Fifth
Amendment  exists  up  to  the  point  where  there  can   be   no   further
incrimination.  Mitchell v. United States, 526 U.S. 314,  326  (1999).   The
possibility of further incrimination  ceases  when  the  sentence  has  been
fixed and the judgment of conviction has become final.  Id.   The  privilege
against self-incrimination also is lost when counts  of  an  indictment  are
dismissed as a part of a plea agreement.  United States v. Smith,  245  F.3d
538, 543 (6th Cir. 2001).  The reasoning is that “since promises to  dismiss
charges as part of a  plea  agreement  are  binding  on  the  Government,  a
witness may not be exposed to prosecution on those  charges,  and  the  need
for the privilege is lost.”  Id. (quoting United States v. Pardo,  636  F.2d
535, 543 (D.C. Cir. 1980)).  Nevertheless, a defendant or witness  does  not
lose the privilege against self-incrimination on crimes that are not a  part
of the plea agreement.  Id.


      Although Highbaugh retained his privilege with regard to some  things,
his refusal to answer any questions outside of  name,  date  of  birth,  and
place of residence  transcended  his  Fifth  Amendment  privilege.   Because
Highbaugh expressed his intent to appeal his  life  sentence,  he  may  have
retained his privilege with regard to  the  statutory  aggravator,  but  the
privilege only extended to questions that  could  incriminate  him  on  that
matter.  Highbaugh could have  answered  any  number  of  questions  without
further incriminating himself.  Because he refused to answer any  questions,
the trial court could properly find him in contempt.





                                 Conclusion



      We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

DICKSON, SULLIVAN, AND RUCKER, JJ., concur.
BOEHM, J., concurs in part and dissents in part with separate opinion.

BOEHM, Justice, concurring in part, dissenting in part.
      I concur in parts I, II, and III of the majority opinion, but  dissent
as to part IV of the opinion.  As the majority points out,  in  Mitchell  v.
United States, 526 U.S. 314, 326 (1999), the  United  States  Supreme  Court
held that the privilege against self-incrimination contained  in  the  Fifth
Amendment exists until the  possibility  of  further  incrimination  ceases,
i.e., when “the sentence has been fixed and the judgment of  conviction  has
become final.”  The Supreme Court in Mitchell did not define  the  point  at
which a judgment of conviction becomes final for Fifth  Amendment  privilege
purposes, but there is a substantial body of law from other  courts  holding
that the privilege continues  pending  an  appeal.   See  United  States  v.
Duchi, 944 F.2d 391, 394 (8th Cir. 1991)  (“Fifth  Amendment  right  not  to
testify concerning transactions for which one has been  convicted  continues
until the time for appeal has expired  or  until  the  conviction  has  been
affirmed on appeal”); Mills v. United States, 281 F.2d 736,  741  (4th  Cir.
1960);  Ellison  v.  State,  528  A.2d  1271,  1278  (Md.  1987);  State  v.
Kaquatosh, 600 N.W.2d 153, 158 (Minn. Ct. App. 1999); People  v.  Bell,  485
N.Y.S.2d 416, 420 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1985); Knight v. Maybee, 253  N.Y.S.2d  59,
63 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1964).
      In this case, Highbaugh had the right to appeal his life sentence, and
indeed had expressed his intent to do so.  Accordingly, at the time  of  his
contempt hearing, Highbaugh retained  his  Fifth  Amendment  privilege  with
regard to the  statutory  aggravating  circumstance  that  he  committed  an
intentional killing during the commission of a robbery  that  was  essential
for life without parole.  I agree with the majority that this privilege  did
not permit Highbaugh  to  refuse  to  answer  all  questions  asked  him  in
Powell’s case, but it did extend to any questions that could  establish  the
statutory aggravator.  I do not agree, however, that “the trial court  could
properly find him  in  contempt.”   Because  Highbaugh  retained  his  Fifth
Amendment privilege as to the aggravator, I believe the court erred when  it
found that Highbaugh’s “[Fifth] Amendment rights no  longer  exist[ed]”  and
ordered him to answer “any and all questions concerning [his]  knowledge  of
this  matter.”   This  overly  broad  directive,  based  on   an   incorrect
assumption that the Fifth Amendment right “no  longer  exist[ed],”  violated
Highbaugh’s Fifth  Amendment  right  against  self-incrimination.   I  would
reverse the  trial  court’s  finding  of  contempt  and  vacate  Highbaugh’s
concurrent term of six months imprisonment.


      -----------------------
      [1]  Powell was charged with murder,  felony  murder,  two  counts  of
attempted murder, and robbery. The State also sought the death penalty,  but
later amended its complaint and sought life without parole.   After  a  jury
trial, Powell was convicted of felony murder and acquitted of the  remaining
charges.  The trial court thereafter sentenced Powell  to  sixty-five  years
imprisonment.  (Supp. R. at 35-36.)
      [2]  To sentence a defendant to life without parole, the  trial  court
must complete two additional steps.   Along  with  finding  that  the  State
proved the statutory aggravator beyond a reasonable doubt, the  trial  court
must  find  that  the  aggravating  circumstances  outweigh  the  mitigating
circumstances.  Greer, 749 N.E.2d at 550.   Lastly,  the  trial  court  must
make a record of the  reasons  supporting  the  sentence  it  imposes.   Id.
Highbaugh does not assert a challenge relating to these steps.