Anthony Gammons, Jr. v. State of Indiana (mem. dec.) ( 2019 )


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  • MEMORANDUM DECISION
    Pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 65(D),
    this Memorandum Decision shall not be                                          FILED
    regarded as precedent or cited before any                                  Oct 17 2019, 9:19 am
    court except for the purpose of establishing                                   CLERK
    the defense of res judicata, collateral                                    Indiana Supreme Court
    Court of Appeals
    and Tax Court
    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
    Caryn N. Szyper
    Deputy Attorney General
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    IN THE
    COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
    Anthony Gammons, Jr.,                                    October 17, 2019
    Appellant-Defendant,                                     Court of Appeals Case No.
    18A-CR-3005
    v.                                               Appeal from the
    Marion Superior Court
    State of Indiana,                                        The Honorable Mark D. Stoner,
    Appellee-Plaintiff.                                      Judge
    Trial Court Cause No.
    49G06-1706-F1-21991
    Altice, Judge.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 18A-CR-3005 | October 17, 2019                   Page 1 of 23
    Case Summary
    [1]   Anthony Gammons shot Derek Gilbert six times, and Gilbert survived.
    Following a jury trial, Gammons was found guilty of Level 1 felony attempted
    murder and Class A misdemeanor carrying a handgun without a license.
    Gammons raises two issues on appeal, which we restate as:
    I. Did the trial court commit reversible error because its jury
    instruction on self-defense included language that self-defense
    was not available to Gammons if he was committing a crime that
    was “directly and immediately related to” the confrontation?
    II. Is Gammons entitled to a new trial because, after trial, the
    trial court could not produce for Gammons a copy of a jury note
    that was sent to the court during deliberations?
    [2]   We affirm.
    Facts & Procedural History 1
    [3]   On the evening of June 6, 2017, Gammons and Gilbert both attended a
    neighborhood social gathering, although they did not arrive together. They had
    known each other for fifteen years or so and as teenagers had been friends, but
    had not seen each other for about ten years. At some point, they saw each
    other at the gathering and verbally argued. Gammons, who concedes that he
    1
    We heard oral argument at Norwell High School in Ossian, Indiana on September 24, 2019. We thank the
    administrators, students, and judges in attendance for their hospitality, and we commend counsel for their
    excellent written and oral advocacy.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 18A-CR-3005 | October 17, 2019               Page 2 of 23
    did not possess a license to carry a handgun, had a handgun on his waistband;
    Gilbert was not armed. According to Gilbert, after the verbal exchange
    concluded, they shook hands and Gilbert started walking to his car. He
    testified that when he tried to open his car door, he realized he had been shot in
    the arm, and he “turned around” and saw Gammons shooting at him.
    Transcript Vol. II at 59. Gilbert thought the argument “was over with” and said,
    “[I]f I felt like I was in harm’s way I wouldn’t never turned my back from him
    at all.” Id. at 64. Gammons fired eight shots, hitting Gilbert six times, with
    some shots striking Gilbert in the lower back and buttocks. After shooting
    Gilbert, Gammons left the scene and disposed of the gun.
    [4]   Gammons’s version of the encounter differed. According to Gammons, Gilbert
    – who Gammons described as someone who “starts trouble” and fights people
    when he gets drunk – approached Gammons as soon as he arrived at the
    gathering and asked him what he was doing there. Id. at 249. Gammons
    described Gilbert as very intoxicated, aggressive, and “acting all crazy.”
    Transcript Vol. III at 11. Gammons testified that he kept telling Gilbert to back
    up, but Gilbert told him, “you looking like you casket ready,” which Gammons
    understood to mean that Gilbert wanted to kill him. Id. at 7. Gammons knew
    that Gilbert had previously been charged with murder. When Gammons saw
    Gilbert “kind of pulling up his pants,” Gammons was “convinced . . . that
    [Gilbert] was either going for a weapon or he was trying to do something to
    harm [him].” Id. Gammons stated that he felt threatened and grabbed his
    handgun and shot at Gilbert. Gammons testified that “[Gilbert] kind of like
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 18A-CR-3005 | October 17, 2019   Page 3 of 23
    spun around but [] kept aggressing towards me,” so Gammons kept shooting
    until he saw Gilbert “retreat and run away[.]” Id. at 8. Gammons
    acknowledged that he was visibly wearing a handgun on his hip. When asked,
    “[Gilbert] could see your gun, right?”, Gammons replied, “Right.” Id. at 13.
    He said that he did not know whether Gilbert had a gun, but had seen him
    “reaching” for something. Id.
    [5]   Gilbert testified at trial that he was not aggressive with Gammons, did not
    threaten him, and was not carrying a gun, explaining, “If I had a gun and this
    dude was shooting me, we both would be dead now. Seriously. I would have
    defended myself.” Id. at 84. Gilbert’s testimony did not indicate whether he
    saw Gammons’s gun before Gammons fired. Gilbert survived, but underwent
    at least twelve surgeries and sustained permanent injuries. On or around June
    12, police tracked Gammons via his cell phone, and after a standoff with police
    and SWAT, Gammons surrendered and was taken into custody.
    [6]   On June 13, 2017, the State charged Gammons with attempted murder and
    carrying a handgun without a license. A two-day jury trial was held on May
    21-22, 2018. Gammons’s defense was that he shot Gilbert in self-defense. In
    addition to his own testimony, he elicited testimony from two females who had
    been at the gathering. They testified that Gilbert was intoxicated and aggressive
    with Gammons.
    [7]   Gammons tendered an instruction on self-defense, and, after reviewing it, the
    court advised that it had an “extensive self-defense one” that included the
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 18A-CR-3005 | October 17, 2019   Page 4 of 23
    language of Gammons’s proposed instruction. 2 Transcript Vol. II at 244. The
    parties reviewed the trial court’s self-defense instruction, Instruction 7b, which
    included the following language, now at issue in this appeal: “A person may
    not use force if: . . . he is committing a crime that is directly and immediately
    related to the confrontation[.]” Appellant’s Appendix Vol. II at 110. Gammons
    stated that he had no objection to the court’s self-defense instruction. Transcript
    Vol. II at 246. However, after Gammons testified and the defense rested,
    Gammons objected to the trial court’s self-defense instruction, arguing that the
    court’s instruction “may cause confusion” due to the “directly and immediately
    related to the confrontation” language. Transcript Vol. III at 25. The court
    responded that its instruction was a correct statement of law, denied
    Gammons’s request to give his tendered instruction, and gave Instruction 7b.
    [8]   Thereafter, the parties presented closing argument. The State’s closing included
    the following with regard to self-defense:
    2
    Gammons’s proposed instruction read:
    USE OF FORCE TO PROTECT PERSON OR PROPERTY
    It is an issue whether Anthony Gammons Acted in self-defense of himself.
    Anthony Gammons may use reasonable force against another person to protect himself from what
    he reasonably believes to be the imminent use of unlawful force.
    Anthony Gamons [sic] is justified in using deadly force, and does not have a duty to retreat, only if
    he reasonably believes that deadly force is necessary to prevent serious bodily injury to himself and
    to prevent the commission of the forcible felony battery against himself.
    The State has the burden of proving beyond a reasonable doubt that Anthony Gammons did not act
    in self-defense.
    Authority: IN Pattern Instruction No. 10.0300, I.C. 35-41-3-2.
    Appellant’s Appendix Vol. III at 102.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 18A-CR-3005 | October 17, 2019                    Page 5 of 23
    So, let’s talk about self-defense. You’re gonna get a jury
    instruction, 7-B. It’s gonna explain the law of self-defense to you.
    Here are the highlights. What has to be reasonable for self-
    defense to apply? The defendant’s fear has to reasonable. The
    force he uses has to be reasonable. And it has to be necessary to
    prevent serious bodily injury. Ladies and gentleman, his actions
    were not reasonable and self-defense does not apply. You also
    can’t be doing anything illegal at the time and you’re gonna note
    that a person may not use force if he is committing a crime that is directly
    and immediately related to the confrontation. Such as, carrying a
    handgun without a license, which he admitted to. Self-defense
    does not apply here.
    Id. at 27 (emphasis added).
    [9]    The case was sent to the jury around 4:10 p.m., and after the jury retired to
    deliberate, the trial court told the attorneys, “Parties just make sure the bailiff
    has your cell phone numbers. If there’s a question from the jury, I’ll call you
    and communicate the question[.]” Id. at 45. Around 8:00 p.m., the jury sent a
    note to the trial court with a question. The trial court contacted the attorneys
    by phone, advised them of the question, and told them that the court would tell
    the jury to continue to deliberate.
    [10]   At about 10:50 p.m., and right before the jury was brought back into the
    courtroom for the verdict, defense counsel argued on the record that the trial
    court did not handle the jury question properly and should have brought the
    jury back into the courtroom and re-read the instructions. The exchange
    between the trial court and defense counsel was:
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 18A-CR-3005 | October 17, 2019   Page 6 of 23
    DEFENSE COUNSEL: The jury went out at -- on behalf of Mr.
    Gammons, the jury went out at 4:10 p.m. I received a call from this
    court at 7:59 p.m. saying that the jury -- jury could not reach a verdict. I
    believe the appropriate protocol would have been Hernandez
    versus State, 
    761 N.E. 2d 845
    -852, Indiana 202, in which the
    court should have . . . called the jury back into the court, in the
    presence of all parties and their counsel. Reread all the
    instructions given to them prior to deliberations without
    emphasis on any of them without further comment. I believe at
    7:59 p.m. that should -- that they should have been given that --
    brought back into the courtroom in the presence of all parties,
    instructions reread but instead they were not and they were –
    COURT: I’d like to make it very clear that that’s not exactly
    what happened. What happened was at 7:59 p.m. the jury sent back a
    note saying, what if we can’t reach an agreement. They didn’t say they
    were at an impasse, as a matter of fact I did not question they were
    at an impasse. My response to them, after consulting with the
    attorneys as I called them, and I informed them that my answer
    would be to the question, which is, if we cannot reach a verdict? The
    answer was, continue to deliberate. At that point, this is a level 1
    felony, it was a two-day trial. They had been out for
    approximately three hours, possibly almost four hours at that
    point and time. . . . Frankly, telling them to deliberate more, that
    is the procedure are going to -- that we were going to follow at
    that point and time. . . . [F]rom what I understand there is a
    verdict and let us go ahead and bring the jury back in.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 18A-CR-3005 | October 17, 2019   Page 7 of 23
    Id. at 46-47 (emphases added). The jury found Gammons guilty of Level 1
    felony attempted murder and Class A misdemeanor carrying a handgun
    without a license.3
    [11]   About one month after trial, on June 18, 2019, Gammons filed a Motion for
    Copy of Jury Note and the Court’s Response Thereto, and the trial court
    granted the motion the same day. After searching and not being able to locate
    the note, Judge Marc Rothenberg issued an order on July 11, 2018 (July Order)
    in which the court outlined the circumstances of the situation, including what
    was on the jury’s note and what the court’s response had been, stating, in part,
    the following:
    2) Once the case was given to the Jury for deliberation, while
    still in the Courtroom, on the record, the parties showed no
    objection to handling any questions by the Jury during
    deliberation with the following process:
    a. Upon receipt of a question, the Judge would contact the
    attorneys by phone, and discussing how to respond to any
    question asked;
    b. Then the response, if any, would be communicated back
    to the Jury in writing.
    3) During the deliberation, at approximately 8:00 PM the Jury
    sent a note to the Court with a single question on it, “What if we
    3
    The State did not pursue Level 5 felony enhancement of the gun offense.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 18A-CR-3005 | October 17, 2019   Page 8 of 23
    can’t come to an agreement?” This question was written on a full
    page from a yellow legal pad.
    4) Once the question was received, the Court, per a process that
    neither party objected to, contacted both attorneys and
    communicated the question, and indicated that the Court is
    inclined to respond with “Continue to deliberate.” This response
    was written on the lower half of the yellow paper on which the
    question was written.
    5) The question that was written on the paper, and the Court’s
    response was memorialized on the record, in open court, prior to
    the jury returning its verdict on 5/22/18 at approximately 10:50
    PM.
    ***
    8) After a diligent search, the Court has been unable to find the
    requested question, and its whereabouts are unknown. Again, it
    should be noted that the question asked by the jurors, and the
    answer that was given to the jurors, were memorialized on the
    record on 5/22/18.
    Appellant’s Appendix Vol. III at 146-47.
    [12]   The day before the sentencing hearing, Gammons filed a Response and
    Objection to the July Order and, along with it, tendered Defense Counsel’s
    Verified Statement of Evidence Regarding the Jury Note and the Trial Court’s
    Communication with the Jury During Deliberations (Statement). The
    Statement objected to the trial court’s recollection of events (as memorialized in
    the July Order) and averred, among other things, that:
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 18A-CR-3005 | October 17, 2019   Page 9 of 23
    3. The Court did not make a record of the time the Court
    received the jury communication; from whom the Court received
    the communication and how that person may have
    communicated with the jury. The Court did not make a copy of
    the original note and the Court’s response.
    4. While the Court communicated with Counsel for Mr.
    Gammons during this process generally, the Court did not share
    the specific communication from the jury and only stated how it
    would respond.
    Id. at 148. The Statement also indicated that, during the phone call with the
    trial court and opposing counsel, defense counsel did not recall the court using
    the language of “What if we cannot come to an agreement?” and, rather,
    recalled the trial court describing the jury question differently, which she said
    was evidenced by the following text that she sent to her attorney colleague at
    7:59 p.m.:
    The Judge just called! The Jurors sent a note saying they cannot reach
    a verdict! His response is that is [sic] has only been 4 hours; so
    keep deliberating.
    Id. at 149 (emphasis added). Contemporaneously with the Response and
    Statement, Gammons filed a Motion to Vacate Jury Verdict, Motion for New
    Trial, and Motion to Correct Errors, raising various issues, including that the
    trial court “erred in responding to the jury note and failing to give defense an
    opportunity to object and make a record.” Id. at 161.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 18A-CR-3005 | October 17, 2019   Page 10 of 23
    [13]   On July 20, the parties appeared for sentencing, but first the court addressed the
    pending motions/pleadings concerning the jury note. The trial court advised
    that it took exception to defense counsel’s statement “to the point where I
    believe you are questioning the integrity of the court.” Transcript Vol. III at 52.
    Regarding Gammons’s allegation that the court did not share the specific
    communication from the jury with the lawyers in the phone call, the court said
    that it had read “the exact words that were on that piece of paper” and that the
    jury did not say that it “couldn’t” reach a verdict, and the juror’s question was
    “what if we cannot come to an agreement” or “what if we can’t come to a
    verdict.” Id. at 53-54, 55. The trial court took issue with “the attitude and
    language” of Gammon’s Response and Statement, which the court found
    “blatantly accuses this court of impropriety and essentially creating falsehoods
    in the record.” Id. at 57. Judge Rothenberg advised the parties that he would
    be recusing. Id. at 57. The matter was later reassigned to Judge Mark Stoner.
    [14]   At a hearing on November 29, 2019, Judge Stoner addressed the jury note issue
    and Gammons’s pending motion to vacate and for a new trial. With regard to
    the jury note and the trial court’s call to counsel, the prosecutor said, “My
    position is that . . . our jury never indicated they were at an impasse. They
    asked a hypothetical question about what might occur if they were at an
    impasse.” Transcript Vol. III at 81. Defense counsel maintained that the trial
    court told them in the phone call that the jury was at an impasse, and she
    further argued that the loss of the note, in and of itself, was prejudicial and
    required a new trial.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 18A-CR-3005 | October 17, 2019   Page 11 of 23
    [15]   The trial court acknowledged that the loss of the note was “troubling,” but
    found that under the circumstances it was not so prejudicial as to require a new
    trial. Id. at 96. The court observed that the jury had been out for less than four
    hours and that the trial court’s direction to continue to deliberate was the proper
    response at that time. The court concluded that “even if the jury indicated that
    they were at an impasse,” the trial court was within its discretion to order the
    jury to continue to deliberate. Id. at 102.
    [16]   The trial court denied Gammons’s motion to correct error and sentenced
    Gammons to thirty-two years, with four suspended, for Level 1 felony
    attempted murder. 4 Gammons now appeals.
    Discussion & Decision
    I. Self-Defense Instruction
    [17]   Gammons argues that the trial court’s instruction to the jury on self-defense was
    an incorrect statement of law and that a new trial is required. The trial court
    has broad discretion as to how to instruct the jury, and we generally review that
    discretion only for abuse. Kane v. State, 
    976 N.E.2d 1228
    , 1231 (Ind. 2012). An
    abuse of discretion occurs if the instructions, considered as a whole and in
    reference to each other, mislead the jury as to the applicable law. Smith v. State,
    
    777 N.E.2d 32
    , 34 (Ind. Ct. App. 2002), trans. denied. “In reviewing a trial
    4
    The trial court did not impose a sentence for carrying a handgun without a license, merging it with the
    attempted murder conviction.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 18A-CR-3005 | October 17, 2019                Page 12 of 23
    court’s decision to give or refuse tendered jury instructions, we consider: ‘(1)
    whether the instruction correctly states the law; (2) whether there is evidence in
    the record to support the giving of the instruction; and (3) whether the
    substance of the tendered instruction is covered by other instructions that are
    given.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting Chambers v. State, 
    734 N.E.2d 578
    , 580 (Ind. 2000), trans.
    denied. “Where, . . . as here, the appellant’s challenge to the instruction is based
    on the first of our three considerations – an argument that the instruction was
    an incorrect statement of the law – we review the trial court’s interpretation of
    that law de novo.” Kane, 976 N.E.2d at 1231. Errors in the giving or refusing
    of instructions are harmless where a conviction is clearly sustained by the
    evidence and the instruction would not likely have impacted the jury’s verdict.
    Randolph v. State, 
    802 N.E.2d 1008
    , 1013 (Ind. Ct. App. 2004), trans. denied.
    [18]   A valid claim of self-defense is a legal justification for an otherwise criminal act.
    Mayes v. State, 
    744 N.E.2d 390
    , 393 (Ind. 2001). Indiana’s self-defense statute,
    Indiana Code § 35-41-3-2, provides that a person is justified in using reasonable
    force against any other person to protect the person or a third person from what
    the person reasonably believes to be the imminent use of unlawful force. I.C. §
    35-41-3-2(c). Further, a person (1) is justified in using deadly force and (2) does
    not have a duty to retreat if the person reasonably believes that that force is
    necessary to prevent serious bodily injury to the person or a third person or the
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 18A-CR-3005 | October 17, 2019   Page 13 of 23
    commission of a forcible felony. Id. However, Subsection (g)5 provides in
    relevant part:
    [A] person is not justified in using force if:
    (1) the person is committing or is escaping after the
    commission of a crime;
    (2) the person provokes unlawful action by another person
    with intent to cause bodily injury to the other person; or
    (3) the person has entered into combat with another person
    or is the initial aggressor unless the person withdraws from the
    encounter and communicates to the other person the intent to do
    so and the other person nevertheless continues or threatens to
    continue unlawful action.
    (Emphases added). Our Supreme Court, in construing this statute, has stated
    that the legislature is presumed to have intended the language it used to be
    applied logically and not to bring about an unjust or absurd result. Mayes, 744
    N.E.2d at 383. Further, we “conventionally construe penal statutes strictly
    against the State.” Id.
    5
    The statute cited is that which was in effect from April 1, 2013 to April 25, 2019, which covers the time
    period during which Gammons was charged and tried.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 18A-CR-3005 | October 17, 2019                 Page 14 of 23
    [19]   Here, the trial court rejected Gammons’s tendered instruction, finding that it
    was covered by the trial court’s self-defense instruction. The trial court gave,
    over Gammons’s objection, Instruction 7b, which provided:
    Instruction Number 7b
    It is an issue whether the Defendant acted in self-defense.
    A person is justified in using reasonable force against another
    person to protect himself or a third person from what the person
    reasonably believes to be the imminent use of unlawful force.
    However, a person is justified in using deadly force and does not
    have a duty to retreat, if he reasonably believes that deadly force
    is necessary to prevent serious bodily injury to himself or a third
    person or to prevent the commission of a felony.
    A person may not use force if:
    He is committing a crime that is directly and immediately related to the
    confrontation;
    He enters into combat with another person or is the initial
    aggressor unless he withdraws from the encounter and
    communicates to the other person the intent to do so and the
    other person nevertheless continues or threatens to continue
    unlawful action; or
    That the Defendant was in a place where he had no right to be.
    The State has the burden of proving beyond a reasonable doubt
    that the Defendant did not act in self-defense.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 18A-CR-3005 | October 17, 2019   Page 15 of 23
    Appellant’s Appendix Vol. III at 110 (emphasis added).
    [20]   On appeal, Gammons argues that the trial court erred by instructing the jury
    that self-defense was not available to Gammons if he was committing a crime
    (here, carrying a handgun without a license) that was directly and immediately
    related to the confrontation. More specifically, his position is that the “related
    to” language of Instruction 7b was an incorrect statement of law based on
    caselaw interpreting the self-defense statute, which, he argues, requires that the
    crime “have a causal link” to the confrontation. 6 In support of his argument,
    Gammons refers us, in part, to our Supreme Court’s decision in Mayes, where
    the defendant was charged with murder and misdemeanor carrying a handgun
    without a license and, at trial, the trial court gave, over Mayes’s objection, a
    self-defense instruction based on the statutory definition of self-defense, stating
    that a person is not justified in using force “if he is committing . . . a crime[.]”
    See I.C. § 35-41-3-2. On appeal, Mayes claimed that the possession of an
    unlicensed handgun was not the type of offense that should negate a claim of
    self-defense.
    6
    We note that, at trial, Gammons did not initially object to the trial court’s instruction, but later, after
    defense rested, Gammons objected, arguing that the “immediately related to” language “may cause
    confusion” and was problematic. Transcript Vol. III at 25. The trial court noted the objection but found
    Instruction 7b was “the correct statement of the law.” Id. Although on appeal Gammons’s argument is more
    precise and asserts that Indiana caselaw requires a “causal nexus,” Reply Brief at 7, and that the “relate to”
    language does not satisfy that requirement, we find that his objection and argument was adequate to inform
    the trial court of his claim and preserve his issue for appeal. See Kane v. State, 
    976 N.E.2d 1228
    , 1232 (Ind.
    2012) (finding objection was enough to show that trial judge considered whether instruction was an incorrect
    statement of law and to preserve for appeal an objection to the instruction on that ground).
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 18A-CR-3005 | October 17, 2019                Page 16 of 23
    [21]   Our Supreme Court agreed, observing that the language of Indiana’s self-
    defense statute “essentially provides that the defense is not available to a person
    who is committing a crime,” but that “a literal application of the
    contemporaneous crime exception would nullify claims for self-defense in a
    variety of circumstances and produce absurd results in the process.” 7 Mayes,
    744 N.E.2d at 393. The Mayes Court held:
    We conclude that because a defendant is committing a crime at
    the time he is allegedly defending himself is not sufficient
    standing alone to deprive the defendant of the defense of self-
    defense. Rather, there must be an immediate causal connection between
    the crime and the confrontation. Stated differently, the evidence
    must show that but for the defendant committing a crime, the
    confrontation resulting in injury to the victim would not have occurred.
    Id. (emphases added).
    [22]   Gammons urges that Instruction 7b’s language that the crime cannot be
    “related to the confrontation” sets the bar too low and “impermissibly dilutes”
    our Supreme Court’s requirement that the crime have an “immediate causal
    connection” or “produce” the confrontation. Appellant’s Brief at 14, 17-18.
    Assuming without deciding that Gammons is correct, we conclude that any
    error was harmless because Gammons shot at an unarmed man eight times,
    7
    The Mayes Court provided the following example: Had Mayes shot his girlfriend the minute before his
    handgun license expired, he would have been able to assert a claim of self-defense, but, had he shot her a
    minute later, the claim would have been unavailable to him. The Court observed, “The legislature could not
    have intended that a defense so engrained in the jurisprudence of this State be dependent upon the
    happenstance of such timing.” 744 N.E.2d at 394.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 18A-CR-3005 | October 17, 2019             Page 17 of 23
    with some shots piercing Gilbert in the back and buttocks, and, therefore, the
    jury could not have found he acted in self-defense. In reaching this decision, we
    find our court’s decision in Fuentes v. State, 
    952 N.E.2d 275
     (Ind. Ct. App.
    2011), trans. denied, to be instructive.
    [23]   In Fuentes, an argument between Fuentes and two men occurred inside a gas
    station, initially beginning as an exchange of words and then, after exiting into
    the parking lot, becoming physical. Fuentes pulled out his illegally-possessed
    handgun and shot Ronald Grayson in the arm. Grayson fell to his knees and
    raised his arms and Fuentes shot him again, killing him. The State charged
    Fuentes with murder and Class C felony carrying a handgun without a license.
    At trial, Fuentes tendered a self-defense instruction, which stated, in part, that a
    person may not use force if he or she is committing a crime “that directly and
    immediately produced the confrontation where the force was used[.]” 
    Id. at 277
    . The trial court did not give the tendered instruction and instead gave an
    instruction that largely tracked the relevant statutory language that a person
    may not use force if he is committing a crime.
    [24]   On appeal, the Fuentes court found that, although the trial court’s instruction
    tracked the language of the statute and was “correct as far as [it] went,” the
    instruction was “incomplete” because, under Mayes, “the simple fact that a
    defendant is committing a crime at the time he is allegedly defending himself
    ‘is not sufficient standing alone to deprive the defendant of the defense of self-
    defense’ and ‘there must be an immediate causal connection between the crime
    and the confrontation.’” 
    Id. at 278-79
     (quoting Mayes, 744 N.E.2d at 394). The
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 18A-CR-3005 | October 17, 2019   Page 18 of 23
    Fuentes court found that “[t]his omission of the judicial gloss on the statutory
    language effectively deprived Fuentes of his only defense.” Id. at 279. The
    court found that Fuentes’s tendered instruction on self-defense was “an accurate
    and, more importantly, complete statement of the law, which the record
    supported giving and which was not covered by other instructions, and . . . it
    was error to refuse to give it.” Id. at 279. However, the Fuentes court
    determined that the error was harmless because, after Fuentes shot Grayson the
    first time, Grayson fell to his knees and put his hands up, and Fuentes shot him
    again. The Fuentes court determined that under these facts “the jury could not
    have properly found that Fuentes acted in self-defense when he shot Grayson a
    second time.” Id. at 280.
    [25]   Here, Gammons, using his illegally-possessed handgun, shot an unarmed
    Gilbert eight times, hitting him six times, some of which entered through his
    back and buttocks. Like the Fuentes court, we find any error in the trial court’s
    self-defense instruction to be harmless. 8 See Fuentes, 
    952 N.E.2d at 280
    ; see also
    8
    Gammons also asserts that Instruction 7b “is at odds” with or “raises concerns” under Indiana’s right to
    bear arms constitutional provision, Article 1, Section 32 of the Indiana Constitution. Appellant’s Brief at 13,
    20. He argues that “[e]xtinguishing the right to self-defense simply because one is carrying a handgun
    without a license is a material and impermissible impairment on the right to bear arms.” Id. at 22.
    Gammons concedes that he did not object to the trial court’s instruction on this basis and would need to
    demonstrate fundamental error. As we have found any error in the instruction to be harmless in this case,
    Gammons cannot demonstrate fundamental error. Moreover, the right to bear arms is not absolute. Our
    court has held that “the core value embodied by Section 32 is the right for law-abiding citizens to bear arms
    for self defense.” Lacy v. State, 
    903 N.E.2d 486
    , 490 (Ind. Ct. App. 2009), trans. denied. Gammons was not a
    law-abiding citizen when he shot Gilbert, given that he was illegally carrying a handgun. We are not
    persuaded that the trial court’s instruction was violative of Article 1, Section 32 of the Indiana Constitution.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 18A-CR-3005 | October 17, 2019                   Page 19 of 23
    Randolph, 
    802 N.E.2d at 1015
     (finding that any instructional error was
    harmless, and thus counsel was not ineffective, where defendant shot victim
    multiple times, and because “[f]iring multiple shots undercuts a claim of self-
    defense,” there was overwhelming evidence before the jury that defendant’s
    claim of self-defense was without merit).
    II. Jury Note
    [26]   The parties agree to the following: (1) about four hours into deliberations, the
    jury sent a question to the trial court, (2) the trial court contacted the attorneys
    for both parties by phone, pursuant to an agreed procedure, to advise that the
    jury had a question, (3) in response to the question, the trial court told the jury
    to continue deliberating, (4) several hours later, and after the jury was done
    deliberating but before the verdict was read, defense counsel made a record that
    it was Gammons’s position that the trial court did not handle the jury’s
    question properly, arguing that the court should have re-read all instructions to
    the jury, (5) the trial court lost or did not keep the note with the jury’s question,
    but should have, and (6) neither party ever saw it.
    [27]   On appeal, Gammons likens the loss of the note to extraneous influences on a
    jury which “fundamentally compromises the appearance of a fair trial” and
    argues that a presumption of prejudice should arise. Appellant’s Brief at 24. He
    maintains, “[B]ecause the content of the note cannot be known[,] . . . its effect
    on the fairness of deliberations cannot be determined[,]” and a new trial is thus
    required. Appellant’s Reply Brief at 14. We disagree.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 18A-CR-3005 | October 17, 2019   Page 20 of 23
    [28]   First, after a copy of the note was requested (a month after trial) by Gammons
    but could not be located, Judge Rothenberg (who presided at trial) issued the
    July Order outlining the court’s recollection of the circumstances of the
    question and its response thereto, stating that the jury question was “what if we
    can’t come to an agreement” or verdict. Appellant’s Appendix Vol. III at 146.
    The prosecutor agreed that this was the substance of what was conveyed to the
    lawyers in the phone call. Thus, this is not a situation where no one recalls the
    jury’s question, and we reject Gammons’s suggestion that that the contents
    “cannot be known.” Appellant’s Reply Brief at 14.
    [29]   Second, after Judge Stoner took over the case and following a hearing, the court
    determined that, even if the jury question had indicated that the jury was at an
    impasse, Judge Rothenberg’s directive to the jury to keep deliberating was not
    an abuse of discretion given that the jury had only been out for four hours in an
    attempted murder trial. We find that this decision was consistent with our
    Supreme Court’s decision in Treadway v. State, 
    924 N.E.2d 621
     (Ind. 2010),
    where Treadway was convicted following a jury trial of murder, felony murder,
    robbery, and battery, and, on appeal, the Court addressed, among other things,
    the issue of whether the trial court erred by instructing the jury to continue
    deliberating.
    [30]   In that case, the jury sent out a note after six hours of deliberation, stating that
    it had not reached a consensus and asking, “[W]hat does the process require at
    this point?” Id. at 631. By agreement of the parties, the court brought the jury
    back into the courtroom and polled them individually asking each whether,
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 18A-CR-3005 | October 17, 2019   Page 21 of 23
    with more time, he or she “could reach a decision, an agreement, unanimous
    decision on any of the four counts?” Id. Only one juror responded in the
    affirmative. The trial court released the jury back to the jury room, and
    Treadway moved for a mistrial. Effectively overruling that motion, the trial
    court determined that it would “give them more time” and that it would be
    sending the bailiff into the jury room with the instruction that “the judge said to
    please continue deliberating.” Id. Treadway objected “to any such
    instruction.” Id.
    [31]   In ultimately determining that the trial court’s directive to continue deliberating
    was not erroneous, the Court referred to and relied on Indiana’s Jury Rules,
    under which trial courts are given “greater leeway ‘to facilitate and assist jurors
    in the deliberative process, in order to avoid mistrials.’” Id. at 631 (quoting
    Ronco v. State, 
    862 N.E.2d 257
    , 259 (Ind. 2007)). In particular, Ind. Jury R. 28
    gives trial courts authority, when the jury advises the court they are at an
    impasse, to poll the jurors in the presence of counsel and the parties, and to
    “direct that further proceedings occur as appropriate.” Our Supreme Court in
    Ronco emphasized that a “question is not an impasse,” and “[i]ndication of an
    impasse must come from the jury’s leader or from the jury as a whole.” Ronco,
    862 N.E.2d at 260.
    [32]   Based on the record before us, the jury’s inquiry was either (1) a question,
    asking “what if we cannot reach an agreement/verdict?”, or (2) a statement,
    indicating that the jury could not reach a verdict. The trial court and the
    prosecutor recalled it as being the former, which was a question (thus not an
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 18A-CR-3005 | October 17, 2019   Page 22 of 23
    impasse, per Ronco), and the trial court’s direction to keep deliberating was not
    improper. However, even if it was the latter, as Gammons claims, we find that,
    where, as here, the jury had only been deliberating less than four hours, it was
    not erroneous for the trial court to tell the jury to continue to deliberate, and,
    accordingly, a new trial is not warranted.
    [33]   Judgment affirmed.
    Kirsch, J. and Pyle, J., concur.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 18A-CR-3005 | October 17, 2019   Page 23 of 23