Swigeart v. State



Attorney for Appellant

Anthony C. Lawrence
Anderson, IN



Attorneys for Appellee

Karen M. Freeman-Wilson
Attorney General of Indiana

Adam M. Dulik
Deputy Attorney General
Indianapolis, IN



      IN THE
      INDIANA SUPREME COURT


RICHARD D. SWIGEART,
      Appellant (Defendant below),

      v.

STATE OF INDIANA,
      Appellee (Plaintiff below).



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)     Supreme Court No.
)     48S00-9909-CR-480
)
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      APPEAL FROM THE MADISON SUPERIOR COURT
      The Honorable Thomas Newman, Judge
      Cause No.  48D03-9806-CF-243



                              ON DIRECT APPEAL




                                June 28, 2001

SULLIVAN, Justice.

      Defendant Richard Swigeart attacked and injured Cheryl  Graggs  during
an attempt to rob a liquor store.  We uphold his convictions  for  attempted
robbery, battery, and criminal confinement.  In doing so, we find  that  the
trial court properly excluded photographs because the  use  of  a  telephoto
lens  may  have  made  them  misleading.   And  we  find  the  circumstances
supported a witness’s in-court identification of Defendant.


                                 Background


      The facts most favorable to the  judgment  indicate  that  just  after
midnight on May 31, 1998, Defendant and his  son,  Dennis,  attacked  Cheryl
Graggs as she was leaving work.  Defendant and Dennis  went  in  Defendant’s
truck to Cain’s liquor store “to rob  the  lady  that  was  working  there.”
Defendant was armed with a BB gun, and Dennis had a  stun  gun.   As  Graggs
closed the store and went to her car, Defendant  and  Dennis  attacked  her.
Defendant put his arm around her and “put the BB gun to her like  it  was  a
real pistol.”  Dennis then demanded money from Graggs.  Graggs then  started
screaming, at which point Defendant hit her in the head  with  the  gun  and
forced her around to the back of the building.   As  Defendant  was  pulling
Graggs to the back of the building, Dennis stunned her with  the  stun  gun.
Defendant and Dennis beat Graggs and began restraining her  with  tape,  but
fled when some people approached in a car.

      Soon after the attack, Officer Mark McCann was dispatched to the  area
of the attack to look for the suspects.  Officer McCann  stopped  Dennis  on
the street, questioned him, and took him into custody.   As  Officer  McCann
was returning to the police station with Dennis, he passed a person that  he
later identified as Defendant.  As Officer McCann was turning a  corner,  he
spotted an individual walking through a parking lot, but because he did  not
know that the subject was also a  participant  in  the  crime,  he  did  not
immediately report seeing anyone.  The next  day,  however,  Officer  McCann
returned to the police station because he wanted to make sure that  somebody
had “identified or somebody had [known] about  the  subject  that  [he  had]
seen.”  Officer McCann spoke to Detective Gary Copeland  and  described  the
person that he had seen and said that he could recognize the  individual  if
he saw a picture.  Later that day, Officer McCann identified Defendant  from
a photograph.

      Defendant was convicted of Attempted Robbery,  a  Class  A  felony,[1]
Battery, a Class C felony,[2] Criminal Confinement,  a  Class  B  felony,[3]
and Defendant pled guilty to being a habitual offender.[4]  The trial  court
sentenced Defendant to 50 years for the attempted  robbery,[5]  eight  years
for  battery,  and  20  years  for  criminal  confinement,  to   be   served
concurrently.


                                 Discussion



                                      I


      Defendant contends that the  trial  court  abused  its  discretion  by
excluding certain photographic evidence.  See Appellant’s Br. at 9.


      At trial, Defendant sought  to  introduce  a  series  of  photographs,
Exhibits 16 through  19,  into  evidence  to  “depict  the  angle  that  the
Defendant was traveling on foot.”  Appellant’s Br. at 9.   The  trial  court
sustained the State’s objections to Defendant’s  exhibits  17  and  19.   On
appeal, Defendant argues that the photographs were significant because  they
“demonstrated  the  angle  at  which  Officer  McCann   allegedly   observed
[Defendant] walking near the crime scene” as Officer  McCann  passed  by  in
his car.  Appellant’s Br. at 9.


      Exhibits 16 through 19 were all photographs depicting  an  individual,
other than Defendant, standing in the parking lot.  Exhibits 16 and 17  were
almost  identical  pictures  of  the  individual,  but  each  taken  with  a
different lens.  Exhibit 16, taken with a  35-millimeter  camera,  displayed
the individual standing in the parking lot with the  person’s  back  to  the
camera.  Exhibit 17 was  taken  of  the  same  person  in  nearly  the  same
position, but the picture was  taken  from  the  street  with  a  wide-angle
telephoto lens.


      Exhibits 18 and 19 were also nearly identical.  Exhibit 18, taken with
a 35-millimeter camera, shows a person standing in the  parking  lot  facing
away from the camera, at an angle, with the person’s face turned toward  the
camera.  Exhibit 19 shows the same person at the same angle, but  was  taken
with a wide-angle telephoto lens.


      Granting the State’s request, the trial court excluded Exhibits 17 and
19.  The  State  objected  after  Defendant’s  witness  disclosed  that  the
photographs had been taken with a wide-angle telephoto lens.   Although  the
trial court excluded the evidence without comment, it  is  likely  that  the
trial court excluded the photographs on these grounds.  Even where  a  trial
court does not state the ground on which it excluded evidence,  a  reviewing
court may sustain an evidentiary ruling if  it  can  do  so  on  any  theory
consistent with the evidence presented.  See Reaves  v.  State,  586  N.E.2d
847, 857 (Ind. 1992).


      The admission or exclusion of photographic evidence  lies  within  the
trial court’s discretion.  See Robinson v. State, 693 N.E.2d 548, 553  (Ind.
1998).  We will not reverse the trial court’s  ruling  absent  an  abuse  of
discretion.  Id.  “The law approves of the use of photographs to  prove  the
existence and nature of relevant physical objects  and  scenes  so  long  as
they are true and accurate.”  See  Patel  v.  State,  533  N.E.2d  580,  583
(1989); Boyd v. State 494 N.E.2d 284, 295  (Ind.  1986),  cert.  denied  479
U.S. 1046 (1987).  “The purpose of such photographs is to aid  the  jury  in
visualizing the scene as described in  testimony.”   Patel,  533  N.E.2d  at
583.
      The trial court most likely excluded the exhibits  because  they  were
not a “true and accurate” depiction Officer McCann’s view  of  Defendant  in
the parking lot.  Both of the excluded photographs were taken with  a  wide-
angle telephoto lens and  therefore  presented  an  enhanced  view  of  what
Officer  McCann  could  have  seen.   Defendant  offered  the  evidence   to
“demonstrate[]  the  angle  at  which  Officer  McCann  allegedly   observed
[Defendant] walking.”  Appellant’s Br. at 9.  There is  no  apparent  reason
that the jury needed to see a magnified photograph.  If  Defendant  intended
to show the jury what Officer McCann would have seen from his car, then  the
pictures taken with the wide-angle  telephoto  lens  could  well  have  been
misleading.  The trial court did  not  abuse  its  discretion  by  excluding
Exhibits 17 and 19.  Furthermore, Exhibits 17 and 19 were  almost  identical
to 16 and 18, making them cumulative.



                                     II


      Defendant argues that Officer McCann’s  pre-trial  identification  was
the result of an unduly suggestive police procedure.  He contends  that  the
pre-trial  identification  tainted  his  in-court  identification,   thereby
violating his due process rights.  See Appellant’s Br. at 12.

      The day after the attack, Officer McCann identified Defendant  from  a
photograph as the man he had seen in the vicinity of the liquor  store  soon
after the  attack.   Evidence  of  this  initial  identification  was  never
introduced  at  trial.   In  his  testimony,  however,  Officer  McCann  did
identify Defendant as the man he had seen in the vicinity of the attack.

      The day after the attack, Officer McCann told Detective Copeland  that
he had observed another subject on the scene the  previous  night.   Officer
McCann testified that he described the person to Detective  Copeland  as  “a
male white, approximately forty to fifty  years  of  age,  dark  long  black
hair, tattoos on both arms, no shirt on, ... and possibly  a  goatee.”   (R.
at 480-81.)  Officer McCann told Detective Copeland that he  could  identify
the individual if he saw a picture.

      Officer McCann was able to identify Defendant from a  picture  as  the
man that he had seen on the night of  the  attack.   His  identification  of
Defendant, however, was not done according to normal procedures.   Detective
Copeland testified  that  typically,  a  witness  is  shown  a  photo  array
containing photographs of six different individuals from which  the  witness
can identify a  suspect.   According  to  Officer  McCann,  he  walked  into
Detective Copeland’s office and saw a picture  of  Defendant  on  his  desk.
Defendant’s picture was lying on  the  desk  with  two  pictures  of  Dennis
McCann.   Officer  McCann  immediately  recognized  Defendant  and   stated,
“that’s the guy.”  Detective Copeland testified that the identification  was
not done with a photo array because Officer McCann had come into his  office
unexpectedly.

       The  Due  Process  Clause  of  the  Fourteenth   Amendment   requires
suppression of testimony concerning  a  pre-trial  identification  when  the
procedure employed is impermissibly suggestive.  See Harris  v.  State,  716
N.E.2d 406, 410 (Ind. 1999); Parker v. State,  698  N.E.2d  737,  740  (Ind.
1998); James v. State, 613 N.E.2d 15, 27 (Ind. 1993).  A photographic  array
is impermissibly  suggestive  if  it  raises  a  substantial  likelihood  of
misidentification given the totality of the circumstances.  See Harris,  716
N.E.2d at 410.   A  pre-trial  identification  may  occur  in  a  manner  so
suggestive and  conducive  to  mistaken  identification  that  permitting  a
witness to identify a defendant at  trial  would  violate  the  Due  Process
Clause.   See  Young  v.  State,  700  N.E.2d  1143,   1146   (Ind.   1998).
Nevertheless,  a  witness  who  participates   in   an   improper   pretrial
identification procedure may still identify a  defendant  in  court  if  the
totality of the  circumstances  shows  clearly  and  convincingly  that  the
witness has an independent basis for the in-court identification.  Id.

      To determine whether a witness had an independent bases  for  the  in-
court identification, we consider the  following  factors:   The  amount  of
time the witness was in the presence of the defendant; the distance  between
the two; the lighting conditions; the witness’ degree of  attention  to  the
defendant; the witness’ capacity for observation; the  witness’  opportunity
to perceive particular characteristics of the perpetrator; the  accuracy  of
any prior description of the perpetrator by the witness; the witness’  level
of certainty at the pretrial identification; and the length of time  between
the crime and the identification.  See Utley v. State, 589 N.E.2d  232,  238
(Ind. 1992), cert denied, 506 U.S. 1058 (1993).

       The  State  did  not   introduce   evidence   of   Officer   McCann’s
identification of Defendant  at  the  police  station.   It  is  Defendant’s
contention, however, that Officer McCann’s identification  of  Defendant  at
the police station was so suggestive that it violated Due Process  to  allow
Officer McCann to identify Defendant at  trial.   Officer  McCann,  however,
had an independent basis for his in-court identification of  Defendant.   As
Officer McCann was driving toward the police station, he saw Defendant  from
a close distance.  Officer McCann testified that he  saw  Defendant  in  the
vicinity of the crime scene  for  approximately  six  to  eight  seconds  as
Defendant was walking in a  well-lit  parking  lot.   Prior  to  seeing  the
photograph of Defendant, Officer  McCann  described  Defendant  as  being  a
white man, approximately forty to fifty years old,  with  long  black  hair,
tattoos on both arms, no shirt on, and a goatee.  Officer  McCann  testified
that he watched Defendant until he was out of sight.

      We find that the totality  of  the  circumstances  shows  clearly  and
convincingly that Officer McCann had an independent basis for  his  in-court
identification.  Although it is irrelevant in the analysis  of  whether  the
identification was valid,  other  evidence  in  the  case  also  pointed  to
Defendant as perpetrator.  Most notably, Defendant’s son, Dennis,  testified
regarding Defendant’s involvement in the  attack.   Defendant’s  palm  print
was also found on an air conditioner unit that sat next to where the  attack
occurred.  McCann’s  identification  was  cumulative  of  other  substantial
probative evidence of identification.



                                 Conclusion


      We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

      SHEPARD, C.J., and DICKSON, and BOEHM, JJ., concur.


      RUCKER, J., concurs in result.
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      [1]  Ind. Code §§ 35-42-5-1 and 35-41-5-1(1993).

      [2]  Id. § 35-42-2-1 (1997).

      [3]  Id. § 35-42-3-3 (1993).


      [4]  Id. § 35-50-2-8 (Supp. 1997).


      [5]  The sentence for the robbery conviction was enhanced by 30  years
according to the habitual offender statute.