Legal Research AI

McManus v. State

Court: Indiana Supreme Court
Date filed: 2004-08-31
Citations: 814 N.E.2d 253
Copy Citations
57 Citing Cases

Attorneys for Appellant                            Attorneys for Appellee
Timothy R. Dodd  Steve Carter
Evansville, Indiana    Attorney General

John P. Brinson  Scott A. Kreider
Evansville, Indiana    Deputy Attorney General
      Indianapolis, Indiana


                                   In the
                            Indiana Supreme Court
                      _________________________________

                            No. 82S00-0104-DP-188

Paul M. McManus,
                                             Appellant (Defendant below),

                                     v.

State of Indiana,
                                             Appellee (Plaintiff below).
                      _________________________________

      Appeal from the Vanderburgh Circuit Court, No. 82C01-0102-CF-192
                     The Honorable Carl A. Heldt, Judge
                      _________________________________

                              On Direct Appeal
                      _________________________________

                               August 31, 2004

Shepard, Chief Justice.


      Paul Michael McManus was convicted  of  three  counts  of  murder  and
sentenced to death.  He challenges the constitutionality of Indiana’s  death
penalty  statute  and  argues  that  his  conviction  is  invalid   due   to
evidentiary errors and his incompetence  to  stand  trial.   We  affirm  the
conviction and sentence.


                        Facts and Procedural History



      On February 26, 2001, Paul McManus murdered his wife and two children.
 Prior to the murders, McManus separated from his wife and was arrested  for
domestic battery.  In the course of  the  battery,  he  threatened  to  kill
“everyone.”  During the weeks immediately  preceding  the  murders,  McManus
spoke of suicide and killing his family.

      On the morning of February 26, 2001, McManus’s wife  served  him  with
divorce papers.  That same  day,  McManus  took  a  taxi  to  a  gun  store,
purchased ammunition, and retrieved a handgun from his brother’s house.   At
about 7:45 p.m., McManus entered his wife’s house and shot her once  in  the
leg and three times in the head.  He then shot his  eight-year-old  daughter
three times in the head and his two-year-old daughter once in the head.

      Police investigators later  retrieved  a  cassette  tape  recorded  by
McManus.  The transcript of the cassette reads in part:
           Well, if you're listening to this tape, I guess I've done what I
           had to do.  I don't expect you guys to understand, but I had  to
           do it.  . . .  I want you to make sure that I am buried with  my
           kids and my wife.  No matter what, I want you to make sure  that
           happens.


Tr. at 701.

      On February 27,  2001,  the  State  filed  a  three-count  information
alleging that McManus knowingly killed his wife and  two  daughters,[1]  and
later amended it to request the death penalty.[2]  On May 7,  2001,  McManus
filed a notice of intent to assert the defense of insanity.


      Voir dire commenced on April 24, 2002, and the trial  began  on  April
29th.  On the 29th, McManus displayed symptoms of a panic  attack,  and  the
trial court granted him a recess until the following  day.   The  next  day,
McManus again became ill and moved  for  a  continuance  or  mistrial.   The
trial  court  denied  his  motions,  and  the  State  continued  to  present
evidence.  On May 1st, McManus again became ill and renewed his  motion  for
mistrial.   The  court  continued  the  trial  until  May  8th  so  that   a
psychiatrist could examine him.


      On May 6th, McManus filed a written motion  for  mistrial,  contending
that the medications as prescribed rendered him incompetent.  After  hearing
argument, the trial court denied the motion.


      On May 9th, the jury returned guilty verdicts  on  all  three  counts.
The following day,  the  jury  heard  evidence  in  the  penalty  phase  and
returned  a  recommendation  for  death.   After  a  subsequent   sentencing
hearing, the trial court found the existence of  aggravating  circumstances,
found  one  mitigating  circumstance,   concluded   that   the   aggravating
circumstances outweighed the mitigating circumstance, and sentenced  McManus
to death.


      On July 5, 2002, McManus filed a motion to correct errors,  contending
that he was incompetent to stand trial.  The trial court denied his  motion.
 McManus now appeals.




            I.    Constitutionality of the Death Penalty Statute



      McManus challenges the constitutionality of the version  of  Indiana’s
death penalty statute in effect at the  time  of  his  sentencing,  claiming
that  it  violates  the  Sixth   and   Eighth   Amendments   to   the   U.S.
Constitution.[3]  A statute is presumed constitutional;  a  challenger  must
rebut this presumption.  State v. Lombardo, 738 N.E.2d 653 (Ind. 2000).



                            A.    Sixth Amendment


      McManus argues that he was denied his Sixth Amendment right to a  jury
trial because the Indiana death penalty statute in effect  at  the  time  of
his sentencing was unconstitutional under Apprendi v. New Jersey,  530  U.S.
466 (2000), and Ring v. Arizona, 536  U.S.  584  (2002).   Specifically,  he
argues that under those cases the jury must find not  only  the  aggravating
circumstances,  but  must  also  find  the  mitigating   circumstances   and
determine the balance between  them.   He  says  the  statute  is  defective
because the jury’s finding is  not  the  final  legal  event  but  merely  a
prelude to the judicial finding contained in the court’s sentencing order.


      Under Indiana’s statute as it read at the time of McManus’s  trial,  a
jury could recommend death only if it found the existence of  at  least  one
statutory aggravator beyond a reasonable doubt.[4]   All  of  our  post-Ring
case law concludes that a defendant whose jury has made such a  finding  has
received what Ring and Apprendi require.   Our  re-examination  of  Apprendi
and Ring provide us with no reason to change that interpretation.[5]

      McManus makes a very similar contention  about  how  the  weighing  of
aggravators and mitigators must occur. We have  previously  held  that  “the
determination of the weight to be accorded the  aggravating  and  mitigating
circumstances is not a ‘fact’ which  must  be  proved  beyond  a  reasonable
doubt, but is a balancing process.”  Bivins v. State, 642  N.E.2d  928,  946
(Ind. 1994); see also Wisehart v. State, 693  N.E.2d  23,  55  (Ind.  1998).
After  examining  Apprendi   and   Ring,   we   recently   re-affirmed   the
constitutionality  of  Indiana’s  statute  against  arguments  substantially
similar to those raised by McManus.  Ritchie v. State, 809 N.E.2d 258  (Ind.
2004).[6]

                           B.    Eighth Amendment


      McManus argues that his Eighth Amendment right to be free  from  cruel
and unusual punishment was violated because the jury was informed  that  its
sentencing recommendation was  not  binding  on  the  trial  court  and  the
sentencing  determination  therefore  lacked  the  heightened  standard   of
reliability required in capital cases under  Caldwell  v.  Mississippi,  472
U.S. 320 (1985).


      In Caldwell, the prosecutor urged the  jury  not  to  view  itself  as
responsible for determining whether the death penalty  was  appropriate  for
the defendant because the death sentence would be reviewed automatically  by
the state’s highest court.  The defendant challenged  the  validity  of  his
death sentence on the grounds that these statements were  inconsistent  with
the Eighth Amendment’s need for heightened reliability in  a  capital  case.
The U.S. Supreme Court held that “it is  constitutionally  impermissible  to
rest a death sentence on a determination made by a sentencer  who  has  been
led to believe that the responsibility for determining  the  appropriateness
of the defendant's death rests elsewhere.” Id. at 328-29.   Quoting  Justice
Harlan,  the  Court  based  its  holding  on  the  assumption  that  “jurors
confronted with the truly awesome responsibility of decreeing  death  for  a
fellow human will  act  with  due  regard  for  the  consequences  of  their
decision . . . .”  Id. at 329-30 (quoting McGautha v. California,  402  U.S.
183, 208 (1971)).  Belief in the truth of this assumption, the  Court  said,
is “indispensable to . . . the Eighth Amendment’s need  for  reliability  in
the determination that death is the appropriate  punishment  in  a  specific
case.”  Id. at 330 (internal quotations omitted).

      The Court clarified Caldwell’s holding in Romano v. Oklahoma, 512 U.S.
1 (1994).  In Romano, the defendant was found guilty of murder,  and  during
the subsequent penalty phase,  the  prosecution  introduced  evidence  of  a
previous conviction and death  sentence.   The  defendant  argued  that  the
admission of the  prior  death  sentence  undermined  the  jury’s  sense  of
responsibility for determining the death penalty in violation of the  Eighth
Amendment.  The Court noted  that  Caldwell  was  a  plurality  opinion  and
because the fifth vote was supplied by Justice O’Connor, who  “concurred  on
grounds narrower than those put forth by  the  plurality,  her  position  is
controlling.”  Id. at 9.
           Accordingly, we have since read Caldwell  as  relevant  only  to
           certain types of comment – those that mislead the jury as to its
           role in the sentencing process in a way that allows the jury  to
           feel  less  responsible  than  it  should  for  the   sentencing
           decision. Thus, to establish a Caldwell violation,  a  defendant
           necessarily must show that the remarks to  the  jury  improperly
           described the role assigned to the jury by local law.


Id. (internal  quotations  omitted).   Consequently,  the  Court  held  that
admitting evidence about the prior death sentence did not  violate  Caldwell
because the evidence was neither false at  the  time  it  was  admitted  nor
pertained to the jury’s role  and  because  the  trial  court’s  instruction
emphasized the importance of the jury’s role.  Id.

       McManus  argues  that  because  the  jury  was  instructed  that  its
sentencing recommendation was not binding on  the  trial  judge,  it  had  a
diminished sense of responsibility in violation of Caldwell.  We dealt  with
this exact claim in Wisehart v. State, 693 N.E.2d 23  (Ind.  1998).   Citing
Romano, we said:
           This Court previously has held that it is  not  unconstitutional
           to instruct the jury that the ultimate sentencing responsibility
           rests  with  the  trial  judge  because  such   an   instruction
           accurately reflects the requirements of Indiana law.  An Indiana
           jury does not impose a sentence, but instead makes a  sentencing
           recommendation to the judge, who in turn decides  what  sentence
           to impose.


Id. at 53 (citing Lowery v. State, 640 N.E.2d 1031, 1044 (Ind.  1994));  see
also Wrinkles v. State, 690 N.E.2d 1156, 1167 (Ind. 1997) (“It is not  error
to inform the  jury  that  its  sentencing  decision  is  a  recommendation,
because this is a correct statement of Indiana law.”).  McManus argues  that
Wisehart and Wrinkles cannot control this case because  an  “advisory  jury”
does not satisfy the Sixth Amendment as interpreted in Ring.  This  argument
cannot survive our holding  in  the  previous  section;  thus  Wisehart  and
Wrinkles are still good law.
      McManus further argues:
           It makes no difference if the reason for the diminished sense of
           responsibility is a result of  prosecutor’s  misrepresentations,
           as in Caldwell, or the result of correct jury  instructions,  as
           in  Wrinkles  and  in  this  case.   If  the  jury’s  sense   of
           responsibility is less than full, the verdict is unreliable  and
           unconstitutional.


Appellant’s Br. at 16.  This  argument  disregards  Romano,  however,  which
states that  “a defendant necessarily must show  that  the  remarks  to  the
jury improperly described the role assigned to the jury  by  local  law”  to
establish a Caldwell violation.[7]  Romano, 512 U.S. at 9.  In addition,  we
note that the jury in this case not  only  received  a  correct  instruction
but, as in Romano, was impressed with the importance of  its  role  and  the
gravity  of  its  decision.   The  court  instructed  the  jury  that:   its
recommendation is a an integral part of the death penalty  process  and  the
law requires  that  the  trial  judge  give  it  great  weight  and  serious
consideration; the jurors “should assume that if  you  recommend  the  death
penalty for Paul M. McManus, he will, in fact, be executed by the  State  of
Indiana per your decision”; it should not rely on leniency  or  clemency  by
another authority; and if  it  is  their  unanimous  decision  to  recommend
death, “each of you must do so with the fixed assumption in  your  own  mind
that the sentence of death will be carried out.”  Tr. at 1746-47.

      Because Wisehart and Wrinkles correctly interpret Sixth Amendment  law
and Eighth Amendment law, they control  this  case.   The  jury  instruction
correctly described Indiana sentencing procedure as it existed at that  time
and thus did not unconstitutionally lead the jury to “feel less  responsible
than it should for the sentencing decision.”  Romano, 512 U.S. at 9.


           II.   Testimony of Expert Witness Regarding Mitigation



      As a part of trial evidence, the court called Dr. Thomas Liffick as an
expert witness to provide his evaluation of McManus’s sanity at the time  of
the  offense.   McManus  contends  that  the  admission  of  Dr.   Liffick’s
testimony is reversible error because it constituted a legal conclusion.


      In a videotaped  deposition  played  for  the  jury,  the  prosecution
questioned Dr. Liffick in relevant part  as  follows:   “[Prosecution.]   As
for the mental depression, the mild mental depression and the not liking  to
be alone, do you feel like those in any  way  mitigate  his  crime  in  this
case?”  Tr. at 1307-08.  McManus objected to the question.  The trial  court
overruled the objection,  and  Dr.  Liffick  responded  as  follows:   “[Dr.
Liffick.]  You know, I -- I -- I just don't think that that mild  degree  of
difficulty in the big picture to any significant degree would  excuse  these
actions.”  Tr. at 1308.

      Indiana Evidence Rule 704(b) reads as  follows:   “Witnesses  may  not
testify to opinions concerning intent, guilt, or  innocence  in  a  criminal
case; the truth or falsity of allegations; whether a witness  has  testified
truthfully; or legal conclusions.”  Dr. Liffick’s testimony was in  response
to a question calling for a legal conclusion  and  inadmissible  under  Rule
704, and the court should have  sustained  the  objection.   Of  course,  an
error in the admission of  evidence  is  not  ground  for  setting  aside  a
conviction  unless  such  erroneous  admission  appears  inconsistent   with
substantial justice or affects the substantial rights of the parties.   Ind.
Trial Rule 61.

      Prior to Dr. Liffick, the court called Dr.  David  Hilton  to  examine
McManus and evaluate his sanity at the time  of  the  offense.   Dr.  Hilton
testified as follows:
           [W]hen we reviewed the actual symptoms he was experiencing, they
           didn't seem to meet the necessary criteria to call  it  a  major
           depression.  It was most consistent with what I  would  consider
           an adjustment disorder.  He was going through a difficult  time.
           He had an impending divorce.  He was  under  a  lot  of  stress.
           Adjustment disorders generally are not felt to be severe  enough
           to affect a person's perception to the point  of  justifying  an
           insanity defense.  He  also  gave  a  long-standing  history  of
           chronic  low-grade  depression.   He  basically  had   described
           himself as being depressed to some degree all of his adult life,
           and that is generally felt to  be  consistent  with  a  disorder
           called Dysthymic Disorder or Dysthymia.   Again,  that's  not  a
           disorder that affects a person's perception to  the  point  that
           they would not be able to appreciate the wrongfulness of his  or
           her actions.


Tr. at 1079-80.  Dr. Hilton did not attempt to  offer  a  legal  conclusion.
Both doctors shared the same medical opinion after evaluating  McManus,  and
neither doctor stated that McManus’s condition mitigated his crime.

      The likelihood that this question and the reply weighed  for  much  in
the jury’s deliberations is minimal.  We find the error harmless.


                      III.  Administration of Medicines


      Counsel for McManus have wisely focused most  of  their  attention  on
questions relating to his fitness to stand trial.  We  have  likewise  given
these claims careful attention.  During  McManus’s  pretrial  incarceration,
he was on a fourteen-month-long regimen of Elavil, an anti-depressant  drug.
 On April 17, 2002, his anti-depressant was changed to Effexor.  Seven  days
later, jury selection began.  On April 29th, the first  day  of  the  trial,
McManus reported symptoms of a panic attack  requiring  repeated  visits  to
the hospital and doses of Lortab, Xanax, Versed, and  morphine.   The  court
ordered a week’s continuance.


      McManus contends (1) that the trial court erred by denying his  motion
for mistrial because the change in his anti-depressant  and  the  subsequent
administration of various drugs  rendered  him  incompetent,  (2)  that  the
State was obligated to disclose exculpatory evidence about the  medications,
and (3) that the trial court erred in  refusing  to  admit  a  news  article
discussing jurors’ impressions of his demeanor  during  trial.   We  address
these contentions in turn.


                A.    Motion for Mistrial Due to Incompetency


      During the course of the  trial,  McManus  moved  for  a  mistrial  on
numerous  occasions,  arguing  that  the  various  drugs,  as  administered,
rendered him incompetent.  On May 7, 2002, the trial court  held  a  hearing
on McManus’s written verified motion  for  mistrial.   It  denied  McManus’s
written motion and all oral motions.  On appeal, McManus contends  that  the
trial court erred in denying his  motions  because  he  was  incompetent  to
stand trial.[8]

      On appeal, the trial judge’s  discretion  in  determining  whether  to
grant a mistrial is afforded great deference because the  judge  is  in  the
best position to gauge the surrounding circumstances of  an  event  and  its
impact on the jury.  We therefore review the trial court’s  decision  solely
for abuse of discretion.  After all, “a mistrial is an extreme  remedy  that
is only justified when other remedial measures are insufficient  to  rectify
the  situation.”   Mickens  v.  State,  742  N.E.2d  927,  929  (Ind.  2001)
(citations and quotation marks omitted).

      Generally, “alleged errors in determination of competency are  subject
to the usual rules of appellate review, and  are  waived  if  the  defendant
proceeds to trial without objection.”  Budd v. State, 499 N.E.2d 1116,  1118
(Ind. 1986).  Even though McManus did  not  raise  competency  as  an  issue
before his trial, his motion for mistrial  was  properly  before  the  trial
court because his alleged incompetency did not occur until after  the  trial
commenced.   We  therefore  review  the  trial  court’s  determination  that
McManus was competent to stand trial  and  the  denial  of  his  motion  for
mistrial.

      “To be competent at trial, a defendant must be able to understand  the
nature of the proceedings and be able to assist in the  preparation  of  his
defense.”  Timberlake v. State, 753 N.E.2d 591, 598 (Ind.  2001).   We  have
defined this standard as “whether or not the defendant  currently  possesses
the ability to consult rationally with counsel and factually comprehend  the
proceedings against him or her.”  Brewer v. State,  646  N.E.2d  1382,  1384
(Ind. 1995).  “The trial and conviction of one without  adequate  competence
is a denial of federal due process and a denial of a state  statutory  right
as well.”  Id.
           The trial court as trier of fact is vested  with  discretion  to
           determine if reasonable grounds exist for believing a  defendant
           is competent to stand trial, and on appeal  a  determination  by
           the trial court of  the  issue  is  viewed  from  a  deferential
           perspective.   Where  the  evidence  is  in  conflict,  we  will
           normally only reverse this decision if it was clearly erroneous,
           unsupported by the facts and circumstances before the court  and
           the reasonable conclusions that can be drawn therefrom.


Id. (citation omitted).

      On the first day of trial, McManus suffered pain  and  symptoms  of  a
panic attack and was transported to the  hospital  for  treatment.   On  the
following day,  McManus  again  complained  of  pain  and  anxiety  and  was
transported to the hospital, during the lunch  break,  where  he  was  given
Versed to calm him down, morphine for pain, and Xanax for  anxiety.   Before
releasing him to jail personnel,  Dr.  Reza  Mohammadi,  an  emergency  room
physician, prescribed McManus Lortab and Xanax and reported that  “this  man
– I could not talk with him when he was in  such  a  state  of  anxiety.   I
mean, he was – you could – you could not get any information on –  from  him
nor could you carry on a conversation with him being so  anxious.”   Tr.  at
815.  The trial court then questioned Dr. Mohammadi as follows:
           [Court.]  Now, let me ask you first  about  the  medication  you
           gave him today.  Can that medication be what I would  call  mind
           altering or affect a person's mental processes?
           [Doctor.]  Absolutely.
           [Court.]  And to what extent and in what respect?
           [Doctor.]  Well, again, it's a broad  range.   Unfortunately,  I
           cannot specifically say  in  one  way  or  another,  but  –  for
           example, if the medicine is given to someone  who's  not  having
           any problems like this gentleman, it would probably put  you  to
           sleep and you will not be able to  interact,  period,  but  when
           someone is as anxious as this gentleman was, it  probably  would
           bring him down to a level that he can actually communicate,  and
           – so I would not – for example, with – just to give you an idea,
           with people whom we prescribe  this  type  of  medicine  on,  we
           instruct them not to drive for – within four to six hours and  –
           because we believe it does alter their decision making and so on
           and so forth.
           [Court.]  Would he be able to think rationally?
           [Doctor.]  I think – I think he  can  think  rationally  now  as
           opposed to when he was so anxious, yes.
           [Court.]  But the medications  you  gave  him  today,  would  it
           prevent him from thinking rationally?
           [Doctor.]  I would say that he would – it would alter the way he
           would perceive things.  Now, in the  spectrum  of  what  we  are
           dealing with today, I would say that he would be  thinking  more
           rationally now than he was when  he  was  so  anxious,  if  that
           answers your question.
           [Court.]   Yes.   And  how  about  the  medications   that   you
           prescribed for him, the Xanax and the  Lortab,  how  would  they
           affect his mind and his judgment?
           [Doctor.]  I believe he can – he can make judgments in –  if  he
           was given enough time to make the judgment at, and again, it's a
           decision that if, in fact, this man is not – if his condition is
           not controlled, he would not be able – in the state of  mind  he
           presented today, he would not be able to  answer  any  questions
           rationally, period, and now that he’s on medicine, he may  be  –
           in my view, he can possibly now proceed and give  some  rational
           answers, but these medicines do alter – alter people's  judgment
           in the vast majority of people, yes, they do.


Tr. at 816-17.  On cross examination, the State questioned Dr. Mohammadi  as
follows:
           [Prosecutor.]  [I]f he were in the courtroom, would  he  realize
           that he was sitting next to his  two  attorneys?   He'd  realize
           those were his attorneys?
           [Doctor.]  I believe so, yes.
           [Prosecutor.]  And he would know that we're the prosecution?
           [Doctor.]  If so advised, yes.
           [Prosecutor.]  Yeah.  And he would know  that  we're  trying  to
           find him – have him found guilty, and he'd know  they're  trying
           to help him be found not guilty?
           [Doctor.]  I believe so.
           [Prosecutor.]  Now, after you  administered  the  medication  to
           him, did you notice a difference in his demeanor?
           [Doctor.]  Yes.
           [Prosecutor.]  And it was what?
           [Doctor.]  He was calm and forthcoming with more information.


Tr. at 820.  Following this testimony, McManus moved for a continuance or  a
mistrial.  The trial court  denied  both  motions  and  continued  with  the
trial.  Before recessing for the day, the State called  ten  more  witnesses
to the stand.  Tr.  at  839-977.   That  evening,  McManus  was  once  again
transported to the hospital for treatment.

      During the  morning  of  May  1st,  jail  personnel  administered  two
pertinent medications to McManus, Effexor  and  Xanax.   Tracy  Sander,  the
jail nurse, testified that these drugs would make a person very drowsy,  but
are routinely prescribed.  Tr. at 988.  Sanders also testified that she  was
able to communicate with McManus.  McManus then renewed  his  motion  for  a
mistrial.   McManus’s  counsel  added  that   McManus   was   nauseous   and
lightheaded.  Tr. at 989.  The trial court denied  the  motion,  finding  no
evidence suggesting that McManus was unable to  assist  in  his  defense  or
participate in the trial.  Tr. at 990.


      As the fourth witness of the day began to testify, McManus requested a
recess and complained of similar symptoms.  During  the  recess,  the  trial
court questioned Ken Mitz of the  Vanderburgh  County  Sheriff’s  Department
regarding McManus’s condition.   Mitz  reported  that  McManus  was  in  the
infirmary  and  hyperventilating.   Tr.  at   1059-60.    The   jail   nurse
administered a  shot  to  McManus  to  ease  his  breathing,  rendering  him
incapacitated for several hours.  After  brief  argument,  the  trial  court
ordered a continuance of one week.


      On May 2, 2002, Dr. Willard  Whitehead  changed  McManus’s  medication
regimen.  On May 7th, the trial court held a hearing on  McManus’s  verified
motion for mistrial.  As of that date, McManus was taking one  milligram  of
Xanax three times a day, forty milligrams of Popranolol three times  a  day,
and  the  antidepressant  Remeron.   The  court  called  Dr.  Whitehead,   a
psychiatrist.  He examined McManus on  May  2nd  and  May  7th.   The  trial
court’s direct examination of Dr. Whitehead proceeded in  relevant  part  as
follows:
           [Court.]  Well, if he is having  hyperventilation  episodes,  do
           you think that the – that the treatment regimen that he  is  on,
           including  the  drugs  that  he  is  being  –  that  are   being
           administered to him are going as far as you could possibly go at
           this point to get him ready to sit through the trial?
           . . .
           [Psychiatrist.]  Well, if you look at treatment for anxiety dis-
           –  anxiety problems or hyperventilation – actually, we  got  off
           the Internet  a  thing  on  managing  hyperventilation.   That's
           something as a psychiatrist I've never seen  before.   I  called
           some emergency – an emergency room doctor and  talked  with  him
           about what it looked like.  The only way to confirm what it  is,
           apparently, is to check an arterial blood  gas,  which  I  don't
           think we could do here very well, but we got some stuff off  the
           Internet on managing it, and one thing they said to  use  was  a
           benzodiazepine like Xanax.  Xanax  is  quick.   It's  effective.
           Much more often than not you  would  expect  it  to  work.   You
           wouldn't want to give someone so much  that  they  would  become
           intoxicated with it.  When you  get  into  a  problem  with  Mr.
           McManus, I asked to have him checked for intoxication – and this
           is the only copy we have of this – but they had a Matt Hill, who
           is an investigator who is apparently  trained  in  working  with
           intoxication, examine him and he thought that  Mr.  McManus  was
           not  cooperating  and  trying  to  skew  the  findings  of   the
           evaluation towards looking intoxicated.
           . . .
           [Court.]  The next question is, if this trial is terminated  and
           we try him again a month from now or two  months  from  now,  is
           there any reason to believe that  his  situation  would  be  any
           different then?
           . . .
           [Psychiatrist.]  If it is an anxiety situation related  to  this
           stressor and, like he says, he wants to get this taken  care  of
           and over with, and on medication, there's a chance he  would  do
           better.  In fact, that – that could happen by tomorrow.  .  .  .
           You have two different treatment strategies on board.  Now,  you
           have the Xanax, which is relatively fast acting.  You're doing a
           little   bit   of   a   tightrope   between   intoxicating   and
           undertreating.  You want to get the right level, but that should
           be doable pretty rapidly.  Unfortunately, it's hard to  tell  if
           you're intoxicating him  because  of  his  strange  findings  on
           examination.  You also have a  medicine  called  Propranolol  or
           Inderal going  which  blocks  adrenaline.   Again,  that's  fast
           acting.
           . . .
           It blocks adrenaline,  so  if  you  start  to  get  afraid,  the
           adrenaline goes out there and just --  your  body  stays  pretty
           cool.  So he's on that, too.  That's another one that  could  be
           increased and -- in fact, he's on 40 milligrams  three  times  a
           day now.  His blood pressure looks good, so you  could  increase
           that to be more aggressive with  his  treatment.   I  would  say
           right now, the Xanax is equivocal because of the findings on his
           neurological exam.  If you wanted to increase anything right now
           that might work quickly, it would be the  Propranolol  to  block
           the fright response.


Mistrial Hearing Tr. at 12-14, 16-18.  Dr.  Whitehead  also  indicated  that
McManus was being uncooperative.

      At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court held as follows:
           Okay.  I'm going to deny the motion.  I'm  convinced  that  it's
           either self-induced, or  if  not  self-induced,  it's  something
           that's caused by this trial.  I think these  --  this  --  these
           doctors are giving him the optimum treatment he  can  get.   I'm
           convinced that we're not going to face any better situation  the
           next time than what we're facing right now and I believe we  can
           get through this trial in a proper fashion  and  that's  what  I
           want to do.


Mistrial Hearing Tr. at 69.  Following the denial of McManus’s  motion,  the
trial proceeded to its conclusion  without  incident.   At  the  hearing  on
McManus’s motion to correct error, Dr. Roger Maickel, an expert in  forensic
toxicology and  pharmacology,  testified  that  the  drugs  administered  to
McManus may impair functional  cognitive  skills.   Dr.  Maickel  based  his
opinions on medical records.

      It is apparent that the trial court based its  decision  on  continual
reports from medical  professionals  who  maintained  contact  with  McManus
throughout  the  trial.   While  the  testimony  was  often  equivocal,  the
consensus of the witnesses was that  the  medications  assisted  McManus  in
participating in his trial.  Without the medications, McManus proved  to  be
unable to cope with the stress of the proceeding.   McManus’s  situation  is
markedly different from the defendant  who  requires  medication  to  attain
competence  so  that  the  trial  can  begin.   Before  trial,  McManus  was
competent and participated in preparing his  case.   The  administration  of
medication appeared to manage a sudden  onset  of  stress,  rather  than  to
medicate a diagnosed  psychosis.   Reliance  on  psychotropic  drugs  during
trial is  obviously  to  be  approached  with  great  care,  and  competency
hearings to evaluate the effects on a defendant’s ability  to  appropriately
participate in his or her defense are very important.  In the case  at  bar,
we cannot say that the trial court’s competency  determination  was  clearly
erroneous and therefore affirm the denial of McManus’s motion for  mistrial.



           B.    State’s Failure to Disclose Exculpatory Evidence


      McManus next contends that the State failed  to  disclose  exculpatory
evidence of the various drugs administered to him in violation of  Brady  v.
Maryland, 373  U.S.  83  (1963).   Under  Brady,  “the  suppression  by  the
prosecution of evidence favorable to an accused upon  request  violates  due
process where the evidence is material either to  guilt  or  to  punishment,
irrespective of the good faith or bad faith of  the  prosecution.”   Id.  at
87.  The transcript and record are  replete,  however,  with  references  to
every drug administered to McManus.  Indeed, McManus moved the  trial  court
for  continuances  and  mistrial  arguing  incompetence  due   to   improper
administration of medication and proffered extensive  evidence  relating  to
McManus’s  medications.   At  moments  when  it  mattered,  evidence   about
McManus’s medication was laid out for all to see.


               C.    Newspaper Article Impeaching the Verdict




      At the sentencing hearing, McManus tendered a news article  purporting
to relate jurors’ perceptions of McManus  during  the  trial.   He  contends
that the trial court erred by excluding the exhibit.

      “The trial court has inherent discretionary power on the admission  of
evidence, and  its  decisions  are  reviewed  only  for  an  abuse  of  that
discretion.”  Jones v. State, 780 N.E.2d 373, 376  (Ind.  2002).   Indiana’s
Evidence Rule 606(b) reads as follows:
           Upon an inquiry into the validity of a verdict or indictment,  a
           juror may not testify as to any matter  or  statement  occurring
           during the course of the jury's deliberations or to  the  effect
           of anything upon that or any other juror's mind or  emotions  as
           influencing the juror to assent to or dissent from  the  verdict
           or indictment or concerning  the  juror's  mental  processes  in
           connection therewith, except that a juror may testify
             (1)    to drug or alcohol use by any juror,
             (2)  on  the  question  of   whether   extraneous   prejudicial
             information was improperly brought to the jury's attention or
             (3)  whether any outside influence was  improperly  brought  to
             bear upon any juror.
           A juror's affidavit or evidence of any statement  by  the  juror
           concerning a matter about which the  juror  would  be  precluded
           from testifying may not be received for these purposes.


McManus does not argue any of the three exceptions.  He contends  only  that
the defense was unaware of the  medications  administered  to  him  and  was
therefore unable to account for his cool demeanor.  This was  not  a  ground
for permitting impeachment of the verdict.


                    IV.   Appropriateness of the Sentence


      Because the trial court imposed  the  death  penalty,  we  review  the
appropriateness of the sentence.  The  Indiana  Constitution  provides  that
“the Supreme Court shall have, in all appeals of criminal cases,  the  power
to review and revise the sentence imposed.”  Ind.  Const.  art.  VII,  §  4.
“The Court may revise  a  sentence  authorized  by  statute  if,  after  due
consideration of the trial  court’s  decision,  the  Court  finds  that  the
sentence is inappropriate in light of the nature  of  the  offense  and  the
character of the offender.”  Ind. Appellate Rule 7(B).  In a  death  penalty
case, a court may consider only those statutory aggravators that  have  been
charged by the State and found by the jury.  In  this  instance,  those  are
committing multiple murders and murdering a person under the age of  twelve.
 Ind. Code § 35-50-2-9(b)(8) and (12).


      McManus does not  contest  that  the  aggravating  circumstances  were
proven  beyond  a  reasonable  doubt.   He  acknowledges  that   the   first
aggravator, commission of multiple murders, was proven at  the  guilt  stage
when the jury returned guilty  verdicts  on  all  three  counts  of  murder.
Appellant’s Br. at 18.  On the night of the murder, McManus admitted to  his
sister, his mother, and finally the police that he killed his wife  and  two
children.  At trial defense counsel acknowledged  that  McManus  had  killed
his family but  asserted  an  insanity  defense.   The  two  court-appointed
psychiatrists testified that McManus was not legally insane at the  time  of
the murders.  The defense’s psychiatrist testified that McManus  suffered  a
psychotic break rendering him unable to control his actions while he was  at
his wife’s home.  There was  substantial  evidence,  however,  that  McManus
went to his wife’s home with the intention of killing his family.


      McManus  further  acknowledges  that  the  evidence  of   the   second
aggravator, murder of a person under the age of  twelve,  was  “overwhelming
and uncontradicted.”  Appellant’s Br. at 18.  Defense counsel  informed  the
jury at trial that Lindsey was born December 31, 1992, and Shelby  was  born
March 20, 1999.


      As for mitigating circumstances,  the  defense  focused  on  McManus’s
capacity to appreciate the  criminality  of  his  actions  and  conform  his
conduct to the requirements of  law  and  his  emotional  disturbance.   The
defense argued that his low I.Q., depression and attention deficit  disorder
contributed to poor problem-solving abilities, poor  internal  controls  and
poor social learning.  Tr.  1694-95.   The  defense  also  argued  that  the
stressors in McManus’s life,  including  overwork,  financial  strains,  his
disabled child, and impending divorce, combined with these factors,  leading
him to see only one way out.  Id. at 1696.  In addition, the  defense  noted
McManus’s lack of a significant  criminal  history.   Finally,  the  defense
argued that the medication administered to McManus  affected  his  demeanor,
which may have had a  negative  impact  on  the  jury  and  thus  should  be
considered as a mitigating factor.


      After finding that the State had proven the aggravating  circumstances
beyond a reasonable doubt, the trial judge considered each of the  statutory
mitigating circumstances.  He found that McManus “was  suffering  from  some
form of depression and other mental abnormalities when  these  murders  were
committed” that was a mitigating circumstance that  “should  be  given  some
weight.” Tr. of  Sent.  Hr.  at  21-22.   Based  on  McManus’s  actions  and
statements before and after the crime, however, the court found  that  these
disturbances did not substantially impair “his capacity  to  appreciate  the
criminality of his conduct or to conform that conduct  to  the  requirements
of law.”  Id. at 22-23.  With regards to  McManus’s  criminal  history,  the
court found that although the record was not “lengthy,” it  was  significant
in that it included a conviction for battery against  one  of  the  victims,
Melissa McManus, and therefore was not a mitigating  circumstance.   Id.  at
21.  Finally, the court explored whether there  were  any  other  mitigating
circumstances appropriate for consideration and  found  that  none  existed.
Id.  at  23.   The  court  concluded  that  the  aggravating   circumstances
outweighed the  mitigating  circumstances  and,  giving  “great  weight  and
consideration” to the jury’s recommendation and finding  that  it  was  both
reasonable and appropriate, sentenced McManus to death.


      We have usually  regarded  multiple  murder  as  constituting  weighty
aggravation, and  surely  the  weight  of  killing  two  small  children  is
substantial.  The weight of the proffered mitigation is  moderate  at  most.
We agree with the trial court’s analysis and find that the aggravators  were
proven beyond a reasonable doubt  and  that  they  outweigh  the  mitigating
circumstances.  The sentence was an appropriate one.


                                 Conclusion


      We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
      Dickson, Sullivan, Boehm, and Rucker, JJ., concur.
-----------------------
[1] See Ind. Code § 35-42-1-1(1).

[2] See Ind. Code § 35-50-2-9.
[3] Indiana Code § 35-50-2-9.  A new version of Indiana Code §  35-50-2-9(e)
became effective July 1, 2003.

[4] Indiana Code § 35-50-2-9(k) (repealed effective July 1, 2003) states:


           Before a sentence may be imposed under this section,  the  jury,
           in a proceeding  under  subsection  (e),  or  the  court,  in  a
           proceeding under subsection (g), must find that:        
              1) the state has proved beyond a  reasonable  doubt  that  at
                 least one (1) of the aggravating circumstances  listed  in
                 subsection (b) exists; and
              2) any mitigating circumstances that exist are outweighed  by
                 the aggravating circumstance or circumstances.


[5] See, e.g., Ritchie v. State,  809  N.E.2d  258  (Ind.  2004);  State  v.
Barker, 809 N.E.2d 312 (Ind. 2004); State v.  Ben-Yisrayl,  809  N.E.2d  309
(Ind. 2004); Williams v. State,  793  N.E.2d  1019  (Ind.  2003);  Brown  v.
State, 783 N.E.2d 1121 (Ind. 2003); Wrinkles v. State, 776 N.E.2d 905  (Ind.
2002).

[6] We said in Ritchie that “the pivotal inquiry under Ring and Apprendi  is
whether exposure to punishment is  increased,  not  whether  the  punishment
should or should not be imposed in  a  given  case.”   809  N.E.2d  at  265.
Consequently, we held:  “Once a statutory aggravator  is  found  by  a  jury
beyond a reasonable doubt, the Sixth Amendment as interpreted  in  Ring  and
Apprendi is satisfied. . . .  The outcome of the weighing does not  increase
eligibility.  Rather, it fixes the punishment  within  the  eligible  range.
It is therefore not required to be found by a jury under a reasonable  doubt
standard.”  Id. at 268.  See also, Apprendi, 530 U.S. at  481  (emphasis  in
original) (“We should be clear that nothing in this  history  suggests  that
it is  impermissible  for  judges  to  exercise  discretion  –  taking  into
consideration various factors relating both to offense  and  offender  –  in
imposing a judgment within the range prescribed  by  statute.”);  Ring,  536
U.S. at 605 n.5 (quoting Harris  v.  United  States,  536  U.S.  545  (2002)
(alteration in original) (“The factual  finding  in  Apprendi  extended  the
power of the judge, allowing him or her to  impose  a  punishment  exceeding
what was authorized by the jury. [A]  finding  [that  triggers  a  mandatory
minimum sentence] restrains the judge's power, limiting his or  her  choices
within the authorized range. It is quite consistent  to  maintain  that  the
former type of fact must be submitted to the jury while the latter need  not
be.”).
[7] Despite McManus’s invocation of Caldwell, his argument is more similar
to one addressed in our recent opinion in Clark v. State, 808 N.E.2d 1183
(Ind. 2004).  In Clark we noted that the claim was not that the jury was
incorrectly instructed in violation of Caldwell, but rather “boil[ed] down
to a claim that the pre-2002 version of the Indiana Death Penalty Statute
was inherently defective because the jury did not consider its
determination to be binding on the judge.”  Id. at 1196.  We rejected this
argument, however, holding that there was “no authority for the proposition
that a nonbinding recommendation is inherently unconstitutional.”  Id.
[8] Indiana Code § 35-36-3-1 provides:
           (a) If at any time before the final submission of  any  criminal
           case to the court or the jury trying the  case,  the  court  has
           reasonable grounds for believing that the  defendant  lacks  the
           ability  to  understand  the  proceedings  and  assist  in   the
           preparation of his defense, the court shall  immediately  fix  a
           time for a hearing to determine whether the defendant  has  that
           ability.   The  court  shall  appoint  two  (2)  or  three   (3)
           competent, disinterested psychiatrists,  psychologists  endorsed
           by the Indiana state board of examiners in psychology as  health
           service providers in psychology, or physicians, at least one (1)
           of whom must be a psychiatrist, who shall examine the  defendant
           and testify at the hearing  as  to  whether  the  defendant  can
           understand the proceedings and assist in the preparation of  the
           defendant' s defense.


           (b) At the hearing,  other  evidence  relevant  to  whether  the
           defendant has the ability  to  understand  the  proceedings  and
           assist in the preparation of  the  defendant's  defense  may  be
           introduced.  If the court  finds  that  the  defendant  has  the
           ability  to  understand  the  proceedings  and  assist  in   the
           preparation of the defendant's defense, the trial shall proceed.
            If the court finds that the defendant lacks  this  ability,  it
           shall delay or  continue  the  trial  and  order  the  defendant
           committed to the division of mental health and addiction, to  be
           confined  by  the  division  in   an   appropriate   psychiatric
           institution.