MEMORANDUM DECISION
Pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 65(D), FILED
this Memorandum Decision shall not be
Feb 16 2017, 6:48 am
regarded as precedent or cited before any
court except for the purpose of establishing CLERK
Indiana Supreme Court
the defense of res judicata, collateral Court of Appeals
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estoppel, or the law of the case.
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
Joel M. Schumm Curtis T. Hill, Jr.
Indianapolis, Indiana Attorney General of Indiana
Richard C. Webster
Deputy Attorney General
Indianapolis, Indiana
IN THE
COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
J.R., February 16, 2017
Appellant-Respondent, Court of Appeals Case No.
49A05-1608-JV-1858
v. Appeal from the Marion Superior
Court
State of Indiana, The Honorable Scott B. Stowers,
Appellee-Petitioner Magistrate
Trial Court Cause No.
49D09-1601-JD-101
Crone, Judge.
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Case Summary
[1] Thirteen-year-old J.R. challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support his
true finding for conduct that would constitute class A misdemeanor resisting
law enforcement if committed by an adult. We affirm.
Facts and Procedural History
[2] The facts most favorable to the delinquency adjudication are as follows. On
January 7, 2016, Sergeant Thomas McClendon was on duty at a middle school
as an Indianapolis Public School officer. Around lunchtime, the school’s
custodian told the sergeant that he had heard banging and crashing in the boys’
restroom. The Sergeant observed two boys running out of the restroom, and he
stopped them and told them that they must accompany him to see the dean.
One of the boys cooperated and followed. The other, J.R., “kept walking
away,” “turning around,” “moving this way and that way,” and not following.
Tr. at 10. The dean was in the crowded cafeteria at the time, and the sergeant
delivered the cooperative boy to her, apprised her of the situation, and informed
her that J.R. was involved in the incident but had not cooperated in following
him into the cafeteria.
[3] Meanwhile, J.R. had entered the cafeteria and hidden under a table full of
students. The students began pointing underneath the table to signal the dean
and sergeant as to J.R.’s whereabouts. When the dean asked for help, Sergeant
McClendon approached the table, cleared the students seated there, told J.R.
that he was not under arrest, and instructed him to come out from under the
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table. J.R. refused and “cussed [him] out.” Id. at 12. When the sergeant
attempted to grip J.R.’s arm, J.R. snatched it away. The situation “escalated,”
and Public School Officer Jack Mertes,1 who was on duty in the cafeteria,
approached to provide assistance. Id. at 24. The two officers continued to try
to get a grip on J.R.’s arms, and he continued to resist. A third officer, also on
duty in the cafeteria, offered assistance. The three officers attempted to retrieve
J.R. from under the table, and J.R.’s twists and turns of his arms became
“quicker” and “violent,” “strong enough to yank [the officers] out of [their]
stances.” Id. at 15. All three officers fell. Officer Mertes appeared to have
injured his wrist and knee.
[4] Sergeant McClendon arrested J.R. for resisting law enforcement and disorderly
conduct. The State charged J.R. with conduct amounting to level 6 felony
resisting law enforcement with bodily injury if committed by an adult. After a
hearing, the trial court noted that Officer Mertes had not been present to testify
concerning his alleged bodily injury and entered a true finding of conduct
amounting to class A misdemeanor resisting law enforcement if committed by
an adult. The trial court placed J.R. on probation and remanded him to his
mother’s custody.
[5] J.R. now appeals. Additional facts will be provided as necessary.
1
The record contains several different spellings of Officer Mertes’s name. We have chosen the spelling as it
appears in the probable cause affidavit and juvenile delinquency petition. Appellant’s App. at 15, 17.
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Discussion and Decision
[6] J.R. challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support his delinquency
adjudication. When reviewing a claim of insufficient evidence to support
juvenile delinquency adjudications, we neither reweigh evidence nor reassess
witness credibility. D.W. v. State, 903 N.E.2d 966, 968 (Ind. Ct. App. 2009),
trans. denied. Rather, we look only to the probative evidence and reasonable
inferences supporting the adjudication to determine whether a reasonable trier
of fact could conclude that the juvenile was guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
Id. The uncorroborated testimony of one witness may be sufficient by itself to
sustain an adjudication of delinquency. Id.
[7] The trial court entered a true finding against J.R. for class A misdemeanor
resisting law enforcement. “A person who knowingly or intentionally …
forcibly resists, obstructs, or interferes with a law enforcement officer or a
person assisting the officer while the officer is lawfully engaged in the execution
of the officer’s duties … commits resisting law enforcement, a Class A
misdemeanor.” Ind. Code § 35-44.1-3-1(a)(1).
[8] J.R. maintains that the evidence was insufficient to establish criminal intent. 2
“A person engages in conduct ‘intentionally’ if, when he engages in the
2
J.R. asserts that he suffers from mental illness and a learning disability and therefore was incapable of
forming the requisite criminal intent. Contrary to J.R.’s suggestion that it is a claim of insufficient evidence,
this is more accurately characterized as a claim of diminished mental capacity, which he did not raise before
the trial court. As such, he has waived it for consideration on appeal. See B.R. v. State, 823 N.E.2d 301, 306
(Ind. Ct. App. 2005) (issue that is raised for first time on appeal of juvenile delinquency adjudication is
waived).
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conduct, it is his conscious objective to do so.” Ind. Code § 35-41-2-2(a). “A
person engages in conduct ‘knowingly’ if, when he engages in the conduct, he is
aware of a high probability that he is doing so.” Ind. Code § 35-41-2-2(b).
Intent may be proved by circumstantial evidence. E.H. v. State, 764 N.E.2d 681,
683 (Ind. Ct. App. 2002). The factfinder may draw reasonable inferences
concerning the juvenile’s intent based on the juvenile’s “conduct and the
natural and usual sequence to which such conduct logically and reasonably
points.” Id.
[9] Here, the record shows that the three officers were lawfully engaged in the
execution of their duties as Indianapolis Public School Officers at the time of
the offense, and J.R. does not dispute this. Sergeant McClendon testified at
length concerning J.R.’s uncooperative responses to his orders. For example,
when the sergeant commanded him to accompany him to see the dean, J.R.
“kept walking away,” “turning around,” “moving this way and that way,” and
not following. Tr. at 10. By the time the sergeant and cooperative student
reached the dean, who was in the cafeteria, J.R. had disappeared. J.R.’s
conduct in hiding under a cafeteria table and not coming out from beneath it
when first ordered to do so supports a reasonable inference of knowing
disobedience of the sergeant’s orders. J.R. correctly observes that as of that
time, he had been advised that the matter was disciplinary as opposed to
criminal. However, Sergeant McClendon testified that when J.R. refused to
come out from under the table, cussed him out, and yanked his arm away, the
incident “escalated,” requiring assistance from two other officers on duty. Id. at
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24. Even the three officers could not easily subdue thirteen-year-old J.R.,
whose movements had become “quicker” and “violent,” with J.R. eventually
yanking all three officers off their feet. Id. at 15. Simply put, the incident
escalated from a disciplinary matter to a criminal matter based on the escalation
of J.R.’s own conduct. The evidence most favorable to the delinquency
adjudication supports a reasonable inference that J.R. knowingly and forcibly
resisted, obstructed, or interfered with the law enforcement officers in the lawful
execution of their duties. Accordingly, we affirm.
[10] Affirmed.
Riley, J., and Altice, J., concur.
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