Lori Barcroft v. State of Indiana ( 2018 )


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  •                                                                        FILED
    Dec 03 2018, 3:01 pm
    CLERK
    Indiana Supreme Court
    Court of Appeals
    and Tax Court
    IN THE
    Indiana Supreme Court
    Supreme Court Case No. 18S-CR-135
    Lori Barcroft
    Appellant (Defendant)
    –v–
    State of Indiana
    Appellee (Plaintiff)
    Argued: April 24, 2018 | Decided: December 3, 2018
    Appeal from the Marion Superior Court
    No. 49G04-1205-MR-33537
    The Honorable Lisa F. Borges, Judge
    On Petition to Transfer from the Indiana Court of Appeals
    No. 49A05-1704-CR-844
    Opinion by Justice Massa
    Chief Justice Rush and Justice David concur.
    Justice Goff dissents with separate opinion in which Justice Slaughter joins.
    Massa, Justice.
    The jurisprudence of the insanity defense in Indiana—spanning nearly
    two centuries—is deeply rooted in the Anglo-American legal tradition,
    marked by periodic policy changes to the standards for evaluating
    criminal responsibility. Throughout this evolution, one principle stands
    the test of time: Whether the defendant meets the standards of insanity is
    a question for the trier of fact, that “sole sentinel in the protection of both
    the rights of the accused and the welfare of society.” Hill v. State, 
    252 Ind. 601
    , 616–17, 
    251 N.E.2d 429
    , 438 (1969). And in rendering its judgment, the
    factfinder—whether judge or jury—may consider all evidence relevant to
    the defendant’s mental state. 
    Id. In this
    case, all three mental-health experts concluded that the
    defendant was legally insane at the time of the offense and could not
    appreciate the wrongfulness of her actions. No lay witnesses offered
    opinion testimony. The trial court rejected the insanity defense and relied
    on evidence of the defendant’s demeanor in rendering its verdict of guilty
    but mentally ill (GBMI). Because the factfinder may discredit expert
    testimony and rely instead on other probative evidence from which to
    infer the defendant’s sanity, we affirm the trial court’s GBMI conviction.
    Facts and Procedural History
    Born in 1965, Lori Barcroft grew up as an only child. The product of a
    generally stable family environment, she described her formative years as
    “great” and free of any physical or emotional abuse. Court’s Ex. A, p. 4.
    She advanced through public school as an average student and, upon
    graduation, attended college where she studied nursing and psychology.
    Although she soon withdrew from her full-time studies to marry and raise
    a family, she continued with her coursework for the next twenty years,
    balancing several jobs along the way.
    By the early 2000s, Barcroft’s marriage had failed, leaving her in a state
    of depression. She sought counseling and underwent periodic mental-
    health evaluations on an outpatient basis. But other than ADHD, medical
    records indicate no formal diagnoses of a psychiatric disorder. Still, her
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 18S-CR-135 | December 3, 2018        Page 2 of 17
    cognitive faculties continued to wane. And, in 2007, Barcroft—living then
    with her son, Jordan Asbury, and his wife Tamia—began to exhibit
    increasingly odd behavior. According to Asbury, his mother described
    seeing messages on the refrigerator, she became obsessed with the color of
    cars, and she often rambled nonsensical codes. This behavior
    progressively worsened after her father died in 2010.
    Concerned with his mother’s deteriorating mental health, and fearful
    for Tamia’s life, Asbury confided in Jaman Iseminger, a pastor at the
    family’s church. Pastor Jaman believed Barcroft needed prayers and
    hospitalization. And he urged Asbury to have his mother leave the home.
    Indeed, Barcroft moved out sometime in early 2012 to live with her
    mother.
    Two or three months later, on the morning of May 19, 2012, Pastor
    Jaman was working in his church office. He had arrived early, having
    arranged to meet Jeff Harris, a church volunteer planning to lead a
    workshop that day. Just before 7:00 a.m., as Harris was preparing coffee in
    the church kitchen, he noticed someone walking alongside the building
    outside, dressed in black clothing and carrying a backpack.
    Harris went outside to find this person—later identified as Barcroft—
    peering into a window of the church basement. When he approached her,
    Barcroft asked if Pastor Jaman was there. Harris reentered the church to
    find the pastor in his basement office, unaware that Barcroft had followed
    him into the building. With the pastor in tow, Harris then led the way
    back to where he had left the visitor. As they ascended the basement
    stairs, Barcroft stood waiting above at the landing. Harris walked past her,
    unsuspecting and without comment. Suddenly, a single gunshot shattered
    the early-morning silence. Harris turned to find Barcroft pointing a gun in
    his direction, commanding him to “Go. Go.” Tr. Vol. II, p. 119.
    Harris fled to safety as two more gunshots rang out. From the parking
    lot, he saw Barcroft run, “crouched down” along the building, and then
    disappear between two houses across the street. Tr. Vol. II, p. 123. Lisa
    Walden, another church volunteer, also witnessed Barcroft flee while
    covering her head with the hood of her black sweatshirt. Moments later,
    Pastor Jaman emerged from the church, gasping for help as he staggered
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 18S-CR-135 | December 3, 2018     Page 3 of 17
    and then collapsed to the ground. By the time Harris and Walden reached
    him, Pastor Jaman had lost consciousness. The twenty-nine-year-old
    clergyman died soon after, having suffered a fatal gunshot wound to the
    chest.
    When police arrived, a K-9 unit led them to a nearby area overgrown
    with vegetation. Barcroft, fully hidden under the brush, lay motionless
    despite an officer’s order for her to surrender. On the second command,
    when police threatened to shoot, she finally emerged from her hiding
    spot. Quiet, calm, and cooperative with the officers, Barcroft relinquished
    her weapon and submitted to arrest. “I’m the one you’re looking for,” she
    told police. Tr. Vol. II, p. 142.
    With Barcroft in custody, the lead detective informed her of the
    investigation and advised her of her Miranda rights. When asked if she
    understood these rights, Barcroft responded that she did. She then gave
    her statement, without prompting or questioning from the detective. The
    long, often unintelligible monologue that followed described a world in
    which Pastor Jaman—as part of a larger conspiracy involving drug
    smuggling and human trafficking by officials from the highest levels of
    the federal government—had plotted to kill her and her family. The
    pastor, she insisted, was an agent of the Mexican mafia who intended to
    “pick off” her family members “one by one,” leaving her no choice but to
    kill him. Defendant’s Ex. A1, p. 9. Still, Barcroft swore that she was “not
    some sort of murderer,” noting that she had “actually planned on not
    getting caught.” Defendant’s Ex. A at 9:05:28–31, 9:05:36–37.
    The State charged Barcroft with murder and sought a sentencing
    enhancement for the use of a firearm. See Ind. Code § 35-42-1-1 (2012)
    (murder); Ind. Code § 35-50-2-11 (2012) (sentencing enhancement).
    Barcroft invoked the insanity defense and waived her right to a trial by
    jury. 1
    1The trial court initially found Barcroft incompetent to stand trial but reversed that finding
    after evaluations during her commitment determined otherwise.
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 18S-CR-135 | December 3, 2018                       Page 4 of 17
    Three mental-health experts testified at Barcroft’s bench trial: court-
    appointed psychiatrist Dr. George Parker, court-appointed psychologist
    Dr. Don Olive, and defense psychologist Dr. Stephanie Callaway. All three
    experts concluded that Barcroft was legally insane at the time of the
    offense and could not appreciate the wrongfulness of her actions. No
    expert found evidence of feigning or malingering.
    Several eyewitnesses also testified at trial: the responding officers, the
    lead detective, and Harris and Walden. These witnesses—none of whom
    knew Barcroft prior to the day of the crime—testified only to the
    defendant’s demeanor before, during, and just after the shooting.
    The trial court judge found Barcroft GBMI, 2 sentencing her to fifty-five
    years with five years suspended to mental-health probation. While
    acknowledging Barcroft’s “complex delusions,” the court ultimately
    concluded that she understood the gravity of her crime. Tr. Vol. III, pp.
    104, 107. In reaching this decision, the court relied on evidence of
    Barcroft’s demeanor: her sophisticated plan to commit the crime, her self-
    restraint in waiting for Pastor Jaman at the church, her decision to spare
    the life of an eyewitness to the shooting, her later escape and attempt to
    hide, her cooperation with police, and her stated intent of avoiding arrest.
    The court also found that Barcroft had a “separate and conflicting
    motivation” for the crime, a motivation to avoid scrutiny of—and possible
    detention for—her mental illness because of Pastor Jaman’s advice to her
    son. 3 
    Id. at 104.
    2A verdict of guilty but mentally ill requires an evaluation and treatment of the defendant’s
    mental illness during his or her incarceration “in such a manner as is psychiatrically
    indicated,” but otherwise imposes the same criminal sentence as a standard conviction of
    guilt. Ind. Code § 35-36-2-5(a), (c). By contrast, a verdict of nonresponsibility by reason of
    insanity may result in the defendant’s civil commitment if the trial court finds by clear and
    convincing evidence that the defendant is mentally ill and either dangerous or gravely
    disabled. I.C. § 35-36-2-4.
    3This was the second time a court had found Barcroft GBMI. See Barcroft v. State, 
    26 N.E.3d 641
    (Ind. Ct. App. 2015). After her first bench trial, the Court of Appeals reversed and
    remanded for a new trial, holding that the admission of Barcroft’s initial request for counsel as
    evidence of sanity violated her due process rights. 
    Id. at 646–47.
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 18S-CR-135 | December 3, 2018                       Page 5 of 17
    A divided Court of Appeals reversed. Barcroft v. State, 
    89 N.E.3d 448
    ,
    458 (Ind. Ct. App. 2017), vacated. The majority, relying on this Court’s
    decision in Galloway v. State, 
    938 N.E.2d 669
    (Ind. 2010), concluded that—
    absent evidence of malingering and because of Barcroft’s history of mental
    illness and the unanimous expert opinion—“the demeanor evidence relied
    on by the trial court simply had no probative 
    value.” 89 N.E.3d at 457
    . The
    dissent, however, would have affirmed in deference to the factfinder,
    concluding that Barcroft’s “demeanor, behavior, and statements before,
    during, and immediately after the crime,” supported “a reasonable
    inference of sanity.” 
    Id. at 458.
    We granted the State’s petition to transfer, thus vacating the Court of
    Appeals opinion. Ind. Appellate Rule 58(A). Additional facts follow in our
    discussion below.
    Standard of Review
    A factfinder’s determination that “a defendant was not insane at the
    time of the offense warrants substantial deference from” an appellate
    court. 
    Galloway, 938 N.E.2d at 709
    . On review, we do not reweigh
    evidence, reassess witness credibility, or disturb the factfinder’s
    reasonable inferences. Myers v. State, 
    27 N.E.3d 1069
    , 1074 (Ind. 2015). We
    will instead affirm the trial court’s conviction unless “the evidence is
    without conflict and leads only to the conclusion that the defendant was
    insane when the crime was committed.” Thompson v. State, 
    804 N.E.2d 1146
    , 1149 (Ind. 2004).
    Discussion and Decision
    To convict a criminal defendant, the State must prove each element of
    the offense beyond a reasonable doubt. Ind. Code § 35-41-4-1(a). But a
    defendant may avoid criminal responsibility by invoking the insanity
    defense. 
    Myers, 27 N.E.3d at 1075
    . This plea requires the defendant to
    prove by a preponderance of the evidence (1) that she suffers from a
    “mental disease or defect” and (2) that the “mental disease or defect”
    rendered her unable to appreciate the wrongfulness of her conduct at the
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 18S-CR-135 | December 3, 2018     Page 6 of 17
    time of the offense. 4 I.C. §§ 35-41-4-1(b), 35-41-3-6(a). Proof of mental
    illness alone is not enough. 
    Myers, 27 N.E.3d at 1075
    .
    There is no dispute here that Barcroft suffered from mental illness
    when she shot and killed Pastor Jaman. So, the question is whether, at the
    time of the shooting, she understood the wrongfulness of her actions.
    I. The Evidentiary Dimensions of the Insanity
    Defense
    When a person invokes the insanity defense, all relevant evidence is
    admissible, including evidence which a court may otherwise find
    inadmissible. 5 Garner v. State, 
    704 N.E.2d 1011
    , 1014 (Ind. 1998). Most
    defendants attempt to satisfy their evidentiary burden through the
    testimony of expert witnesses. Cate v. State, 
    644 N.E.2d 546
    , 547 (Ind. 1994).
    But in deciding whether a defendant has met this burden, the factfinder
    may rely on other probative evidence, including lay opinion testimony
    and proof of demeanor. 6 
    Galloway, 938 N.E.2d at 712
    .
    A. Expert Testimony
    Opinion testimony from psychiatrists, psychologists, and other mental-
    health experts is central to a determination of insanity. Tyler v. State, 
    250 Ind. 419
    , 423, 
    236 N.E.2d 815
    , 817 (1968). Through examinations,
    interviews, and other sources, these experts gather facts from which they
    4Prior to 1984, a “mental disease or defect” did “not include an abnormality manifested only
    by repeated unlawful or antisocial conduct.” I.C. § 35-41-3-6(b) (1982). The amended law,
    which remains in force today, expanded on this definition by describing the term as “a
    severely abnormal mental condition that grossly and demonstrably impairs a person’s
    perception.” Pub. L. No. 184-1984, § 1(b), 1984 Ind. Acts 1501, 1501 (codified at I.C. § 35-41-3-
    6(b) (2018)).
    5Evidence is relevant if it tends to make a fact more or less probable than it would be without
    the evidence. Ind. Evidence Rule 401.
    6Probative evidence is simply evidence that tends to prove or disprove a point of issue.
    Black’s Law Dictionary 1397 (10th ed. 2014).
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 18S-CR-135 | December 3, 2018                        Page 7 of 17
    “draw plausible conclusions about the defendant’s mental condition, and
    about the effects of any disorder on behavior.” Ake v. Oklahoma, 
    470 U.S. 68
    , 80 (1985). At trial, “they offer opinions about how the defendant’s
    mental condition might have affected his behavior at the time in
    question.” 
    Id. “Unlike lay
    witnesses, who can merely describe symptoms
    they believe might be relevant to the defendant’s mental state,” mental-
    health experts “can identify the elusive and often deceptive symptoms of
    insanity and tell the jury why their observations are relevant.” 
    Id. (internal citations
    and quotations omitted). In short, their goal is to assist
    factfinders, “who generally have no training in psychiatric matters, to
    make a sensible and educated determination about the mental condition
    of the defendant at the time of the offense.” 
    Id. at 81
    (internal citations and
    quotations omitted).
    Expert opinion provides “a strong justification for raising the insanity
    defense.” 
    Cate, 644 N.E.2d at 547
    . Their testimony, however, is purely
    advisory, not conclusive. 
    Id. Indeed, once
    the expert offers an opinion, “it
    is society as a whole, represented by judge or jury, which decides whether a man
    with the characteristics described should or should not be held accountable for his
    acts.” 
    Hill, 252 Ind. at 617
    , 251 N.E.2d at 438 (internal quotation marks
    omitted). Even when experts are unanimous in their opinion, the
    factfinder may discredit their testimony—or disregard it altogether—and
    rely instead on other probative evidence from which to infer the
    defendant’s sanity. 
    Galloway, 938 N.E.2d at 710
    . This evidence may include
    lay testimony or demeanor evidence.
    B. Lay Testimony
    “Opinion testimony is not the exclusive domain of experts.” McCall v.
    State, 
    273 Ind. 682
    , 688, 
    408 N.E.2d 1218
    , 1222 (1980). Indiana courts have
    long admitted lay testimony about a defendant’s sanity. 
    Id. (citing Doe
    ex
    dem. Sutton v. Reagan, 
    5 Blackf. 217
    , 218 (1839)). Lay testimony—often from
    a family member, acquaintance, or other person with whom the defendant
    has interacted—is admissible not because of the witness’s specialized
    knowledge but because of his or her particular experience with the
    defendant. 
    Id. at 689,
    408 N.E.2d at 1222; 
    Galloway, 938 N.E.2d at 712
    .
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 18S-CR-135 | December 3, 2018           Page 8 of 17
    Lay testimony is especially useful in identifying a defendant’s
    “behavior before, during, and after a crime,” and is often “more indicative
    of actual mental health at the time of the crime than mental exams
    conducted weeks or months later” by psychiatrists or other mental-health
    experts. 
    Thompson, 804 N.E.2d at 1149
    . Ultimately, a factfinder need not
    “give more weight to the testimony of medical experts than to that of non-
    expert witnesses who state facts within their own knowledge.” Sanders v.
    State, 
    94 Ind. 147
    , 149 (Ind. 1884). And it “is not for the court to pronounce
    as a matter of law which of the two classes of witnesses shall receive the
    greater weight. That is a question for the jury,” 
    id., or, in
    this case, the
    judge sitting as factfinder. A conviction may stand based solely on lay
    testimony, even in the presence of conflicting expert opinion. Barany v.
    State, 
    658 N.E.2d 60
    , 63 (Ind. 1995).
    C. Demeanor Evidence
    Indiana’s test for insanity is a “purely cognitive” one, as it looks only to
    “what the defendant was thinking and whether he or she could appreciate
    the wrongfulness of his or her conduct.” 7 
    Galloway, 938 N.E.2d at 714
    . But
    a factfinder may rely on circumstantial evidence of a defendant’s actions
    and statements before, during, and after the crime to infer his or her
    mental state. Wayne R. LaFave, 1 Substantive Criminal Law § 8.3(b) (3d
    ed. 2017). And demeanor evidence may sufficiently prove a defendant’s
    sanity, even when expert and lay witnesses conclude otherwise. 
    Galloway, 938 N.E.2d at 712
    .
    7 The State’s former “irresistible impulse” test, by contrast, included a volitional factor, which
    considered whether the defendant could “conform his conduct to the requirements of law.”
    I.C. § 35-41-3-6(a) (1982), repealed by Pub. L. No. 184-1984, § 1, 1984 Ind. Acts at 1501. Because
    of this volitional component, demeanor evidence—whether in negating an insanity defense or
    in supporting it—carried more probative value than under the modern cognitive test. See
    
    Galloway, 938 N.E.2d at 714
    . By removing the volitional factor, the new law no longer excused
    those mentally-ill defendants who understood that it was “wrong to inflict bodily harm upon
    another person,” but who, “owing to a mental derangement,” were “incapable of controlling
    the impulse to commit such an act.” See Hill v. State, 
    252 Ind. 601
    , 607, 
    251 N.E.2d 429
    , 433
    (1969). In effect, the amendment significantly narrowed the substantive test for insanity.
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 18S-CR-135 | December 3, 2018                        Page 9 of 17
    As with lay testimony, evidence of demeanor is useful in identifying
    the defendant’s mental health before, during, and after the crime. 
    Id. Demeanor evidence
    is also helpful in determining whether the defendant
    is feigning mental illness. 
    Id. But even
    with no apparent deception, this
    evidence may still be appropriate. 
    Id. at 713
    (citing 
    Barany, 658 N.E.2d at 64
    ).
    II. Weighing the Totality of the Evidence
    Barcroft contends that it was contrary to law for the trial court to find
    her GBMI. In support of her argument, she points to (1) the unanimous
    agreement among the experts, (2) the lack of lay testimony, and (3) the
    lack of demeanor evidence sufficiently probative to show sanity. Her
    actions, she insists, “were motivated completely by her complex
    delusion,” not by any threat Pastor Jaman may have posed in counseling
    her son. Appellant’s Br. at 31.
    The State, on the other hand, argues that Barcroft’s conviction rests
    firmly on probative demeanor evidence reflecting her appreciation of the
    crime at the time of its commission. In urging us to affirm the trial court,
    the State also points to flaws or contradictions in the experts’ opinion
    testimony.
    For the reasons below, the State’s argument prevails.
    A. Ample demeanor evidence supports the trial court’s
    rejection of Barcroft’s insanity defense.
    Barcroft argues that Galloway dictates the outcome of this case. There,
    the trial court rendered a GBMI verdict despite unanimity among the
    experts that the defendant was insane. 
    Galloway, 938 N.E.2d at 703
    . This
    Court reversed, concluding that the defendant’s conduct on the day of the
    crime—shopping, eating, refueling his car, and cooperating with police—
    was “simply neutral and not probative of sanity” given the defendant’s
    long history of mental illness. 
    Id. at 715.
    In short, this Court, over the
    strong dissent of Chief Justice Shepard joined by Justice Dickson, found
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 18S-CR-135 | December 3, 2018     Page 10 of 17
    “very little evidence” of the defendant’s demeanor during the crime to
    support the trial court’s conviction. 
    Id. Here, by
    contrast, we find ample demeanor evidence—before, during,
    and after the crime—to support the trial court’s rejection of Barcroft’s
    insanity defense. 8
    First, Barcroft exhibited deliberate, premeditated conduct in the weeks
    and days leading up to the crime: She asked another member of the
    church when Pastor Jaman planned to return from a mission trip. She
    purchased a handgun and waited for a permit. She prepared goodbye
    letters to members of her family. She packed several rounds of
    ammunition, a pair of binoculars, and other personal items in her
    backpack. And she planned to confront the pastor during the early
    morning hours, before the day’s activities had started and to avoid
    potential witnesses. Barcroft’s choice of clothing—black pants and a black,
    hooded sweatshirt—likewise show a calculated attempt to evade
    detection or to obscure her identity. See 
    Cate, 644 N.E.2d at 548
    (evidence
    showing defendant’s “deliberation in accomplishing the killing”
    supported the factfinder’s rejection of insanity defense).
    Barcroft’s actions during and right after the shooting also suggest a
    consciousness of guilt. As she spoke with Harris outside the church, she
    kept her handgun—a .22 caliber pistol—concealed in her front pocket. See
    Jones v. State, 
    825 N.E.2d 926
    , 930–31 (Ind. Ct. App. 2005) (finding that
    defendant’s attempt to silence a gun used in shooting so that his
    “neighbors wouldn’t hear it” supported the jury’s rejection of the insanity
    defense), trans. denied. Even more revealing was her decision to spare
    Harris’s life. Expert testimony suggested that this conduct reflected
    8We acknowledge that evidence of the defendant’s demeanor during the crime may have
    greater probative value than such evidence before and after the crime. See 
    Galloway, 938 N.E.2d at 714
    . But neither Galloway nor any other decision from this Court has imposed strict
    temporal limitations on the utility of this evidence. And as the Galloway Court recognized,
    demeanor evidence “‘before, during, and after a crime may be more indicative of actual mental
    health at [the] time of the crime than mental exams conducted weeks or months later.’” 
    Id. at 712
    (emphasis added) (quoting Thompson v. State, 
    804 N.E.2d 1146
    , 1149 (Ind. 2010)).
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 18S-CR-135 | December 3, 2018                    Page 11 of 17
    Barcroft’s delusional state, the inference being that a sane person would
    have shot the eyewitness to avoid criminal implication. But a factfinder
    could have reasonably come to the opposite conclusion: that Barcroft’s
    decision not to shoot showed an understanding that killing is wrong. See
    Carson v. State, 
    807 N.E.2d 155
    , 160–61, 163 n.3 (Ind. Ct. App. 2004)
    (concluding that, just after the attempted murder, defendant’s statement
    to eyewitness that “they had to leave” suggested sanity).
    Cloaked by the hood of her sweatshirt, Barcroft then fled from the
    crime scene and attempted to hide, taking great pains to conceal herself
    under the foliage of an overgrown lot. She lay motionless in her hiding
    spot even as police ordered her to surrender, emerging only when an
    officer threatened to shoot. See 
    Myers, 27 N.E.3d at 1077
    (fleeing, hiding,
    and refusing to comply with police orders is probative of defendant’s
    sanity).
    Finally, when the detective asked whether Barcroft understood that she
    “ha[d] to be arrested” for her crime, she replied that she had “actually
    planned on not getting caught.” This comment implies a consciousness of
    guilt. See Lawson v. State, 
    966 N.E.2d 1273
    , 1281 (Ind. Ct. App. 2012)
    (concluding that defendant’s concern with going to jail if anyone
    discovered her crime was sufficiently probative of sanity), trans. denied.
    We thus find the demeanor evidence more than sufficient to support
    the trial court’s rejection of Barcroft’s insanity defense. Cf. 
    Galloway, 938 N.E.2d at 715
    (finding “very little evidence” of the defendant’s demeanor
    during the crime to support the trial court’s conviction).
    B. Issues in the experts’ opinion testimony likewise
    support the trial court’s rejection of Barcroft’s insanity
    defense.
    Barcroft acknowledges that a factfinder may disregard or discredit the
    opinion testimony of a mental health expert. Still, she insists that the trial
    court, “by unreasonably disregarding the experts’ unanimous
    conclusions,” failed to properly consider the legislative intent behind
    Indiana Code section 35-36-2-2, the statute requiring court-appointed
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 18S-CR-135 | December 3, 2018       Page 12 of 17
    experts in cases involving the insanity defense. Appellant’s Br. at 47–49.
    This requirement, Barcroft contends, “speaks to the value our society
    places on verdicts being informed by the science of mental health.” 
    Id. at 48.
    We agree that mental-health experts play an important role in cases
    involving the insanity defense. 
    See supra
    Section I.A. But we refuse to
    elevate the value of expert opinion over other forms of probative
    evidence, as Barcroft would have us do. See 
    Thompson, 804 N.E.2d at 1149
    ;
    
    Galloway, 938 N.E.2d at 710
    .
    Barcroft also overlooks another important reason for the statutory
    requirement: avoiding the so-called “battle of the experts.” LaFave, 1
    Substantive Criminal Law § 8.2(c). A court-appointed expert introduces an
    element of neutrality to the trial proceedings, countering the inherent bias
    of opinion testimony from experts retained by the opposing parties. 
    Id. See also
    I.C. § 35-36-2-2 (the court shall appoint two or three “competent
    disinterested” mental-health experts) (emphasis added).
    Even with the benefit of this statutory protection, psychiatry and
    psychology are imprecise sciences, and experts in these fields “disagree
    widely and frequently on what constitutes mental illness” and “on the
    appropriate diagnosis to be attached to given behavior and symptoms.”
    
    Ake, 470 U.S. at 81
    . While each of the experts here ultimately agreed on
    Barcroft’s insanity, their underlying diagnoses varied: Drs. Callaway and
    Olive diagnosed Barcroft with paranoid type schizophrenia. Dr. Parker,
    on the other hand, diagnosed her with delusional order of the persecutory
    type. And while Dr. Calloway observed signs of disorganized thought
    and behavior in Barcroft, Dr. Parker specifically premised his diagnosis on
    the absence of these symptoms. These conflicting diagnoses could have
    reasonably deprived the expert opinions of credibility in the eyes of the
    trial court. See Satterfield v. State, 
    33 N.E.3d 344
    , 349–51 (Ind. 2015)
    (conflicting diagnoses may support an inference of sanity); 
    Lawson, 966 N.E.2d at 1281
    (factfinder may consider discrepancies in expert opinion
    when rejecting the insanity defense).
    The lapse in time between Barcroft’s commission of the crime and the
    experts’ mental-health examinations likewise could have discredited their
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 18S-CR-135 | December 3, 2018    Page 13 of 17
    opinion testimony. See 
    Thompson, 804 N.E.2d at 1149
    . Dr. Parker first met
    with Barcroft on September 18, 2012—four months after the crime had
    taken place. And Dr. Olive’s examination took place even later, on
    October 2. Dr. Calloway examined Barcroft on July 20, much closer in time
    to the offense than the court-appointed experts. But even then, Dr.
    Calloway testified that Barcroft’s mental health had deteriorated by the
    time they first met for the assessment.
    Other issues with the experts’ analysis could have reasonably led the
    trial court to refute the probative value of their opinion. For example, in
    preparing her report, Dr. Calloway failed to review psychiatric
    evaluations prepared at the time of Barcroft’s arrest. The defense
    psychologist also admitted to not having reviewed Barcroft’s statement to
    the detective before issuing her report and only later reviewing portions
    of the videotaped statement. Dr. Calloway also reviewed the eyewitness
    statements from Harris and Walden only in part and had no discussions
    with the officers present at the scene to corroborate evidence of Barcroft’s
    demeanor. And yet despite these omissions in her analysis, Dr. Calloway
    acknowledged that demeanor evidence from the day of the crime is the
    “most reliable” evidence in determining a defendant’s mental state. Tr.
    Vol. II, pp. 230–31.
    Dr. Olive, for his part, appears to have conducted a thorough review of
    the records in preparing his report. He examined Barcroft’s videotaped
    statement to the detective, the probable-cause affidavit, medical records
    from the Marion County Jail, and other material. But at trial, the court-
    appointed psychologist admitted his interview with Barcroft “was
    somewhat abridged” as she “did not wish to provide the type of detailed
    information that [he] would’ve liked at the time.” 
    Id. at 246.
    As a result, he
    acknowledged, “a large part, perhaps a disproportionate part,” of his
    evaluation “consisted of the other sources of data.” 
    Id. at 248.
    Dr. Olive
    also noted that Barcroft, when asked whether she understood the
    wrongfulness of her conduct at the time of the offense, “didn’t directly
    answer that to [his] satisfaction.” Tr. Vol. III, p. 3.
    As with Dr. Olive, Barcroft also declined to answer questions from Dr.
    Parker related to the events that took place on the day of the shooting. Dr.
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 18S-CR-135 | December 3, 2018      Page 14 of 17
    Parker admitted to having reviewed only the probable-cause affidavit and
    Barcroft’s interview with the detective, the former source containing no
    evidence of Barcroft’s demeanor on the day of the crime. The court-
    appointed psychiatrist likewise failed to review the statement from Harris,
    the principal eyewitness to the shooting, to corroborate Barcroft’s
    demeanor. Without this corroboration, the trial court could have placed
    greater weight on circumstantial evidence of Barcroft’s actions at the time
    of the shooting. See Johnson v. State, 
    255 Ind. 324
    , 328, 
    264 N.E.2d 57
    , 60
    (1970) (the factfinder may “take into consideration other facts which the
    psychiatrists did not consider”).
    Portions of the expert testimony could have also validated the trial
    court’s finding that Barcroft had a motive for the crime. As Dr. Calloway
    attested, Barcroft knew that her son was acting on Pastor Jaman’s advice
    when he asked her to leave the home and seek medical treatment. Barcroft
    saw this as an attempt to “brainwash the kids and the family,” the doctor
    opined. Tr. Vol. II, p. 220. This testimony corroborates statements Barcroft
    made to police immediately following her arrest. As she explained to the
    detective, the pastor had infected the head of her son, who “believes every
    word Jaman says.” Defendant’s Ex. A at 8:47:30–37.
    To be sure, Dr. Calloway attributed Barcroft’s retaliatory motivation to
    her psychotic and delusional behavior. But the defense psychologist also
    acknowledged that, “even if people have delusions, they can also have a
    . . . logical reason for the behavior.” Tr. Vol. II, p. 220. The other two
    experts made similar concessions. Dr. Olive admitted that Pastor Jaman’s
    advice to Barcroft’s son could have been a motivating factor for the
    shooting. And Dr. Parker, the court-appointed psychologist, admitted that
    a person’s delusions “can coexist with the ability to make some rational
    decisions.” Tr. Vol. III, p. 55. According to him, Barcroft “is able to
    function at some level, despite living in a delusional world.” 
    Id. at 56.
    It
    was “possibl[e],” he admitted, for Barcroft’s anger toward Pastor Jaman to
    have been a rational response to his interference with her family. 
    Id. at 56–
    57.
    Taken together, the flaws, inconsistencies, and concessions in the
    experts’ opinion testimony also support the trial court’s rejection of
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 18S-CR-135 | December 3, 2018     Page 15 of 17
    Barcroft’s insanity defense. 9 See Fernbach v. State, 
    954 N.E.2d 1080
    , 1085
    (Ind. Ct. App. 2011), trans. denied.
    C. Barcroft’s history of mental illness provides little
    support for her insanity defense.
    Finally, Barcroft argues that evidence of her demeanor at the time of the
    shooting is neutral and lacks probative value considering her long history
    of mental illness. We find little support for this argument.
    Nothing in the record shows that Barcroft had ever been formally
    diagnosed with schizophrenia, delusional disorder, or other acute mental
    illness before her arrest and later evaluations. Her medical records show
    periodic psychiatric assessments on an outpatient basis between 2004 and
    2010. During that time, doctors diagnosed her only with ADHD,
    describing her behavior as “agitated, irritable, and tangential.” Court’s Ex.
    A. p. 3. And doctors also characterized her as “grandiose with dissociative
    episodes.” 
    Id. But even
    then, they questioned whether she was in fact
    delusional. Psychiatric notes from a 2007 evaluation described Barcroft as
    “very paranoid with questionable schizophrenia” and with a “questionable
    history of ADHD.” 
    Id. (emphasis added).
    And without a formal diagnosis,
    doctors released her for failing to meet the standards for involuntary
    hospitalization.
    Barcroft’s statements during her initial psychiatric appraisal at the
    Marion County Jail, and during her evaluations with the experts,
    corroborate this history. She has consistently acknowledged her past
    symptoms of depression, diagnosis of and treatment for ADHD, and
    mental-health evaluations on an outpatient basis. She has also consistently
    denied experiencing symptoms of psychosis, insisting that there was
    “never any sign of mental illness.” Court’s Ex. B at 2. These statements
    suggest an awareness of her psychiatric history and tend to support her
    9While emphasizing the experts’ unanimity that Barcroft was legally insane at the time of the
    offense, the dissent does not address the weaknesses in their testimony as a factor supporting
    the trial court’s findings.
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 18S-CR-135 | December 3, 2018                    Page 16 of 17
    claim that she “was of sound mind” at the time of the shooting. Court Ex.
    A at 7.
    The lack of a well-documented history of mental illness—whether
    schizophrenia or other acute psychiatric disorder—does not necessarily
    preclude a finding of insanity. But “the lack of such history is a
    circumstance that a fact-finder may consider in evaluating an insanity
    defense.” 
    Lawson, 966 N.E.2d at 1282
    .
    Conclusion
    In sum, we hold that evidence of Barcroft’s demeanor—taken together
    with the flaws in the expert opinion testimony and the absence of a well-
    documented history of mental illness—was sufficient to support an
    inference of sanity. Although some evidence could have led to a contrary
    finding, we cannot say that the “evidence is without conflict and leads only
    to the conclusion that the defendant was insane when the crime was
    committed.” 
    Galloway, 938 N.E.2d at 710
    (internal quotation marks
    omitted).
    Affirmed.
    Rush, C.J., and David, J., concur.
    Goff, J., dissents with separate opinion in which Slaughter, J.,
    joins.
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 18S-CR-135 | December 3, 2018    Page 17 of 17
    Goff, J., dissenting.
    As our legislature has recognized, when mental illness renders a person
    incapable of distinguishing right from wrong, the law excuses her would-
    be criminal conduct. This notion is foundational to our criminal justice
    system.
    This case invokes that bedrock principle by presenting a simple
    question: was there sufficient demeanor evidence that Lori Barcroft was
    sane to create a conflict with three unanimous expert opinions that she
    was not. All three experts testified that Lori Barcroft could not appreciate
    the wrongfulness of her conduct the moment she shot Pastor Iseminger.
    But the trial court, and now the majority, rejected that unanimous expert
    opinion evidence in favor of dubious, non-probative demeanor evidence.
    In so doing, the Court today retreats from the stand we took in Galloway,
    where we said: “Thus, as a general rule, demeanor evidence must be
    considered as a whole, in relation to all the other evidence. To allow
    otherwise would give carte blanche to the trier of fact and make appellate
    review virtually impossible.” Galloway v. State, 
    938 N.E.2d 699
    , 714 (Ind.
    2010).
    There is no doubt that Barcroft’s conduct resulted in the senseless
    death of a beloved community leader. But she engaged in that conduct
    while suffering from complex delusions which, in the unanimous opinion
    of three mental health experts, rendered her incapable of distinguishing
    right from wrong. Unlike the majority, I would hold that the demeanor
    evidence—when considered in light of all other evidence, particularly the
    copious evidence of her chronic mental illness—is wholly consistent with
    the experts’ unanimous conclusions that Barcroft was legally insane when
    she shot and killed Pastor Iseminger. For this reason, I respectfully dissent
    from the Court’s judgment affirming her conviction and sentence.
    I. Indiana law distinguishes the insanity defense
    from other statutory defenses by requiring expert
    opinion evidence.
    Indiana law will not punish people who are not culpable for their
    crimes, Cate v. State, 
    644 N.E.2d 546
    , 547 (Ind. 1994)—including those who
    cannot appreciate the wrongfulness of their conduct. The Indiana Code,
    culling from the centuries-old common law, has set the insanity defense
    apart from other criminal defenses. It is the one defense where the trial
    court must appoint “two (2) or three (3) competent disinterested
    psychiatrists, psychologists . . . , or physicians” who then must “examine
    the defendant and testify at the trial.” Ind. Code § 35-36-2-2(b) (2008
    Repl.). The legislature even specifies when the experts are to testify at
    trial—after the State’s and defense’s cases-in-chief. 
    Id. And since
    our 2010
    Galloway opinion, the legislature amended that section, adding the
    requirement that court-appointed psychiatrists, psychologists, or
    physicians “have expertise in determining insanity.” I.C. § 35-36-2-2(c)
    (2018). See also Pub.L. 54–2014, § 1, 2014 Ind. Acts 524. Clearly, Indiana
    places great importance on expert opinion evidence when a defendant
    invokes an insanity defense.
    II. Our Galloway opinion explained both the limited
    value of demeanor evidence and how to measure
    its sufficiency to support rejection of unanimous
    expert opinion evidence of insanity.
    Our Galloway opinion reinforced the importance of expert opinion
    evidence without abdicating the factfinder’s role as final arbiter of the
    defendant’s sanity. Recalling Indiana’s settled, cautionary rule that experts
    do not provide the final word in sanity determinations, we explained that
    expert opinion “assist[s] the trier of fact in determining the defendant’s
    insanity” and therefore is “merely advisory, and even unanimous expert
    testimony is not conclusive on the issue of sanity.” 
    Galloway, 938 N.E.2d at 709
    . Yet we also recognized the significant role experts play in these
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 18S-CR-135 | December 3, 2018     Page 2 of 10
    decisions, effectively making unanimous expert opinions that a defendant
    could not appreciate the wrongfulness of her conduct a rebuttable
    presumption of insanity. Indeed, we instructed: “Where there is no
    conflict among the expert opinions that the defendant was insane at the
    time of the offense, there must be other evidence of probative value from
    which a conflicting inference of sanity can be drawn.” 
    Id. at 712
    .
    Galloway’s significance cannot be understated. Following a string of
    decisions where this Court held the defendant was sane despite
    nonconflicting expert testimony that he was insane, Galloway returned the
    insanity defense to solid jurisprudential ground. See 
    id. at 709–10.
    It
    provides guidance to bench and bar for evaluating a defendant’s insanity
    defense at the trial and appellate levels when the experts agree that the
    defendant was insane when she committed the offense. The case instructs
    that to disregard unanimous expert opinions, there must be other
    probative evidence (either lay opinion testimony or demeanor evidence)
    that conflicts with those expert opinions. With this direction, Galloway
    provided an inflection point for the insanity defense generally and the
    demeanor-evidence evaluation specifically.
    Under Galloway, demeanor evidence still represents the defendant’s
    conduct before, during, and after the offense—what she did. Yet,
    “[d]emeanor evidence requires the trier of fact to infer what the defendant
    was thinking based on his or her conduct.” 
    Id. at 713
    .
    Galloway observed there are two ways to use demeanor evidence in
    evaluating a defendant’s sanity. First, “[d]emeanor [evidence] is useful
    because a defendant’s ‘behavior before, during, and after a crime may be
    more indicative of actual mental health at [the] time of the crime than
    mental exams conducted weeks or months later.’” 
    Id. at 712
    (second
    alteration in original) (citation omitted). Second, “[d]emeanor evidence
    may be most useful where there is some indication that the defendant is
    feigning mental illness and insanity.” 
    Id. But just
    as Galloway recognized the utility of demeanor evidence, we
    also discussed its four limitations. First, demeanor evidence’s value is
    limited when a defendant has a long history of mental illness marked by
    psychosis because it is difficult to parse what is normal or abnormal
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 18S-CR-135 | December 3, 2018    Page 3 of 10
    behavior for that defendant. 
    Id. at 713
    . Second, its value is limited because
    it can be used only to discern what the defendant was thinking at the time
    of the offense. 
    Id. at 714.
    Indeed, Galloway explained that demeanor
    evidence had more probative value when Indiana’s insanity defense
    included a volitional (irresistible impulse) component that emphasized
    what the defendant did. 
    Id. Third, demeanor
    evidence is most valuable
    when limited to the defendant’s demeanor during the crime. 
    Id. (stating “demeanor
    evidence before and after a crime is of more limited value than
    the defendant’s demeanor during the crime”). Fourth, demeanor evidence
    cannot be considered in isolation, but “must be considered as a whole, in
    relation to all the other evidence.” 
    Id. Recognizing these
    limitations, Galloway considered whether there was
    sufficient demeanor evidence to undermine the unanimous expert
    opinions that the defendant was legally insane when he murdered his
    grandmother. 
    Id. at 714–16.
    The Court said no, employing a test I would
    apply here to reach the same conclusion: “[W]hen viewed against the
    defendant’s long history of mental illness . . . the defendant’s demeanor
    during the crime . . . and the absence of any suggestions of feigning or
    malingering, this demeanor evidence is simply neutral and not probative
    of sanity.” 
    Id. at 715.
    III. There is insufficient demeanor evidence to
    support the trial court’s rejection of Barcroft’s
    insanity defense.
    This case, like Galloway, turns upon whether there was sufficient
    demeanor evidence to establish a conflict with the experts’ opinions that
    Barcroft was insane when she shot Pastor Iseminger. I would follow
    Galloway’s approach and find the demeanor evidence provided was
    insufficient to create such a conflict.
    Here the record shows all experts testified Barcroft suffered under
    complex delusions. Dr. Callaway stated: “I’ve seen a handful of situations
    where the psychotic delusions are that complex. But she is . . . one of the
    more complex systems that I’ve ever seen.” Tr. Vol. II, p. 188, lines 23–25.
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 18S-CR-135 | December 3, 2018     Page 4 of 10
    Dr. Olive testified that Barcroft suffered from “paranoid delusions, and . . .
    grandiose delusions.” 
    Id. at 249,
    lines 6–7. Dr. Parker agreed:
    Well, you . . . have to understand that her behaviors are driven
    by the delusions themselves. So if she’s convinced with
    complete certainty, absolute certainty, that she is the nexus of
    this complex grandiose delusional scheme which involves the
    Columbian [sic] cartels, Mexican mafia, the Bush family,
    satellites in the sky, her family being at risk of being killed,
    herself at risk, well, then taking actions to keep yourself safe, to
    prevent harm from coming to you or your family, that becomes
    rational in that context.
    Tr. Vol. III, pp. 46–47. Each expert went on to testify that these delusions
    prevented Barcroft from appreciating that it was wrong to shoot Pastor
    Iseminger. Tr. Vol. II, p. 185, lines 22–24, p. 249, lines 4–8; Tr. Vol. III, pp.
    21–22.
    A. The record provides scant demeanor evidence.
    By contrast to these unanimous expert opinions, there is very little
    demeanor evidence here, very little of what Barcroft did during the crime
    that opens the window to what she was thinking, as the State astutely
    acknowledged at oral argument, explaining:
    Here the . . . evidence that we’re mostly talking about as
    demeanor evidence isn’t necessarily demeanor evidence, it’s
    actually evidence of the crime. It’s evidence of what she did,
    which is a little different than demeanor. The demeanor
    evidence typically is what you say and how you communicate
    with other people, how you’re presenting yourself . . . .
    Oral Argument at 21:57–22:14. But the majority doesn’t heed the State’s
    warning and broadens demeanor evidence to include what Barcroft did
    weeks before and hours after the murder. So, what exactly was the actual
    demeanor evidence here?
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 18S-CR-135 | December 3, 2018           Page 5 of 10
    One witness testified that Lori Barcroft—clad in all black—asked if
    Pastor Iseminger was in the church. After that witness led her into the
    building, she calmly shot the pastor and then looked at the witness and
    told him, “Go. Go.”, before she shot the pastor again. This is the only
    evidence of what Barcroft did during the crime, and it doesn’t provide
    much insight into what she was thinking. It certainly doesn’t show that
    she appreciated the wrongfulness of her conduct at that moment.
    When compared to the unanimous expert opinions, this scant
    demeanor evidence here appears even thinner.
    B. The scant demeanor evidence provided is of little value.
    Recall, under Galloway, demeanor evidence’s utility increases when
    there is evidence that the defendant is feigning mental illness and
    decreases when the defendant actually suffers a long history of psychotic
    mental illness. The demeanor evidence here provides little value because
    there was no indication that Barcroft feigned or malingered her
    longstanding and well-documented mental illness. Tr. Vol. II, pp. 204–05;
    Tr. Vol. III, pp. 12, 41–43. Further, unlike the majority, I find that the
    record contains ample evidence that Barcroft suffered a long history of
    mental illness.
    Barcroft long suffered from paranoid delusions and seemingly
    everyone in her life, including the victim of her crime, thought she needed
    professional medical care for her mental illness. Although the majority
    notes that she received periodic psychiatric assessments between 2004 and
    2010, see Slip Op., p. 16, it omits the fact that she received “outpatient
    treatment in Florida, at St. Vincent from 1996 to 1999, and Midtown since
    2000.” Court’s Ex. B, p. 2. The majority fails to note that Barcroft took
    stimulant medication to treat attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
    beginning in 1997 until mid-2003. 
    Id. In 2005,
    after disclosing delusions to
    her therapist, she “started on Neurontin, a mood-stabilizing medication.”
    
    Id. at 3.
    The last page in her record from Midtown, where she was treated
    between 2000 and 2008, is a note saying her parents appeared in person to
    request an emergency detention order, fearing for their daughter’s safety.
    
    Id. Barcroft also
    received in-patient services at Halifax Medical Center
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 18S-CR-135 | December 3, 2018     Page 6 of 10
    between November 4 and 7, 2011. But she did not meet the criteria for
    involuntary hospitalization. Court’s Ex. A, p. 5. The majority also leaves
    out the fact that Barcroft “reported a history of depression, bipolar
    disorder, and alcohol abuse in her father,” 
    id. at 6,
    which is at least as
    relevant as the fact that she grew up in a home free of abuse, see Slip Op.,
    p. 2.
    Everyone in Barcroft’s life thought she had a mental illness and needed
    professional help. Her mother indicated to a doctor that “Ms. Barcroft
    experienced significant deterioration in her mental status when she
    moved to Florida with her husband as of approximately 2000.” Court’s Ex.
    A, p. 4. Barcroft’s son indicated that his mother experienced significant
    deterioration in her mental health in approximately 2007. 
    Id. Most notably
    around that time, she “was seeing messages on the refrigerator, and was
    obsessed with the color of cars.” 
    Id. According to
    the majority, the Pastor
    at her church, the ultimate victim in this case, “believed Barcroft needed
    prayers and hospitalization.” Slip Op., p. 3.
    The facts paint a clear picture of Barcroft as someone in denial of her
    mental illness and who did not meet the legal requirements for
    involuntary commitment. But she had been in and out of treatment and on
    and off different medications for roughly 15 years at the time of her
    offense, and every person in her life believed she needed professional
    help. This compelling evidence of Barcroft’s chronic mental illness further
    devalues the demeanor evidence the majority relies upon.
    Strict adherence to Galloway demands that we view the demeanor
    evidence through the lens of Barcroft’s mental illness. 
    Galloway, 938 N.E.2d at 715
    (viewing demeanor evidence “against the defendant’s long
    history of mental illness with psychotic episodes”). To be sure, neither
    trial nor appellate courts may isolate the demeanor evidence from the
    record evidence of mental illness. 
    Id. at 714
    (“[D]emeanor evidence must
    be considered as a whole, in relation to all the other evidence.”). And so,
    considering the demeanor evidence as a whole with all the evidence of her
    complex delusions, her mental illness, and the unanimous expert opinions,
    I would hold that this neutral, non-probative demeanor evidence does not
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 18S-CR-135 | December 3, 2018      Page 7 of 10
    create a conflict with the experts’ opinions that Lori Barcroft was insane at
    the time of the shooting.
    C. The scant demeanor evidence provided also supports a
    determination that Barcroft was insane.
    Even if I could expand what Galloway says constitutes useful, probative
    demeanor evidence—as the majority does here—by considering Barcroft’s
    planning, preparation, her clothing, hiding her gun, sparing Harris’s life,
    and fleeing from police, I still cannot agree that this “evidence [is] more
    than sufficient to support the trial court’s rejection of Barcroft’s insanity
    defense.” Slip op., p. 12. The majority’s wide collection of demeanor
    evidence fits too well into Barcroft’s complex delusions to create a conflict
    with the expert opinions that she was insane. In other words, the
    demeanor evidence the majority cites is neutral at best because it points
    just as fairly to insanity as it does to sanity for this particular defendant.
    And unlike the majority, I’m hesitant to count Barcroft’s flight from
    police as probative demeanor evidence. My hesitation is threefold. First, it
    is difficult, if not impossible, to separate Barcroft’s behavior from her
    complex delusions that she was a Colombian mafiosa trying to settle a
    drug feud, avenge her father’s death, and protect her family. Second,
    Galloway cautioned that evidence of flight is not valuable evidence of
    sanity since the opposite (staying and waiting for police) can also suggest
    sanity. 
    See 938 N.E.2d at 714
    (comparing cases). Third, I believe Galloway
    signals courts to elevate what the defendant did during the crime over
    what she did afterwards. 
    Id. at 714.
    Accordingly, whether applying Galloway’s measured evaluation of
    demeanor evidence or the majority’s expanded approach, I would reverse
    the trial court’s guilty-but-mentally-ill verdict and remand with
    instructions for the trial court to enter a not-responsible-by-reason-of-
    insanity verdict.
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 18S-CR-135 | December 3, 2018       Page 8 of 10
    Conclusion
    Indiana’s insanity defense stands apart from other criminal defenses,
    and rightly so. It would be unjust to punish a person suffering from a
    mental disease or defect that prevented her from appreciating the
    wrongfulness of her conduct. And so Indiana law requires that mental
    health experts aid factfinders in sanity determinations. While judges and
    juries sit as the final authorities on a defendant’s sanity, our Galloway
    opinion instructs that their authority cannot, and should not, go
    unchecked. In my view, the majority loosens Galloway’s limitations on
    demeanor evidence and thereby erodes Indiana’s insanity defense. I
    respectfully dissent.
    Slaughter, J., joins.
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 18S-CR-135 | December 3, 2018    Page 9 of 10
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT
    Valerie K. Boots
    Marion County Public Defender Agency
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
    Curtis T. Hill, Jr.
    Attorney General of Indiana
    Stephen R. Creason
    Larry D. Allen
    Deputy Attorneys General
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 18S-CR-135 | December 3, 2018   Page 10 of 10