Donald William Myers, III v. State of Indiana ( 2014 )


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  •  Pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 65(D),
    this Memorandum Decision shall not be
    regarded as precedent or cited before any
    court except for the purpose of
    establishing the defense of res judicata,
    collateral estoppel, or the law of the case.                        Apr 14 2014, 9:28 am
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT:                             ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:
    KIMBERLY A. JACKSON                                 GREGORY F. ZOELLER
    Indianapolis, Indiana                               Attorney General of Indiana
    IAN MCLEAN
    Deputy Attorney General
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    IN THE
    COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
    DONALD WILLIAM MYERS, III,                          )
    )
    Appellant-Defendant,                         )
    )
    vs.                                      )      No. 76A03-1305-CR-173
    )
    STATE OF INDIANA,                                   )
    )
    Appellee-Plaintiff.                          )
    APPEAL FROM THE JOHNSON CIRCUIT COURT
    The Honorable Allen Wheat, Judge
    Cause No. 76C01-0404-FA-411
    April 14, 2014
    MEMORANDUM DECISION – NOT FOR PUBLICATION
    MATHIAS, Judge
    Donald Myers (“Myers”) was convicted in Steuben Circuit Court of four counts of
    Class A felony attempted murder and sentenced to an aggregate term of 120 years
    incarceration. Myers appeals and presents five issues, which we restate as the following
    three dispositive issues: (1) whether the jury clearly erred in rejecting Myers’s insanity
    defense; and 2) whether the trial court abused its discretion in admitting evidence of
    Myers’s post-arrest silence and request for counsel to prove Myers’s sanity. We hold that
    in the absence of any admissible evidence of probative value that even inferred sanity at
    the time of the crimes, the jury clearly erred in rejecting Myers’s insanity defense. We
    further hold that the trial court abused its discretion in allowing the State to present
    evidence of Myers’s post-arrest silence and request for counsel as alleged proof of his
    sanity. For these reasons we reverse Myers’s convictions.
    Facts and Procedural History
    Myers has suffered from serious mental health issues since he was nineteen or
    twenty years old. In 2000, he was diagnosed with schizophrenia and placed on a regimen
    of anti-psychotic medications. From 2001 to 2004, Myers was periodically hospitalized
    when he decompensated, or failed to take his medications. Sometime in April 2004,
    Myers again decompensated.       On April 28, 2004, Myers’s mother, Judy Weininger
    (“Weininger”), with whom Myers shared a mobile home in the Silver Lake Trailer Court
    in Steuben County, called Myers’s psychiatrist to report that Myers had stopped taking
    his medications. In response, Myers’s psychiatrist authorized a bed for Myers at a local
    mental health center. However, when Weininger attempted to persuade Myers to get into
    her car to go to the mental health center, Myers refused.
    2
    On the evening of the following day, April 29, 2004, David Brown (“Brown”), his
    wife, Vickie, and their grandson were driving through the Silver Lake Trailer Court when
    they heard a loud gunshot. Brown looked around the trailer park and observed a man,
    later identified as Myers, standing between two trailers and holding a long gun, later
    identified as a shotgun. Brown accelerated his car quickly out of the trailer park and onto
    the adjacent U.S. Highway 20. As he drove away and called 911, Brown saw the man
    running alongside U.S. 20, still carrying the gun. The man again pointed the gun at
    Brown’s car, and Brown heard the sound of a second gunshot. Brown later noticed a
    small indentation on the side of his car and a white substance on the back window of his
    car. No one in Brown’s car was injured.
    That same evening, around 9 p.m., Desmond Augenstein (“Augenstein”) was
    driving westbound on U.S. 20, near the Silver Lake Trailer Court, when he passed a man,
    later identified as Myers, walking east in the middle of the highway. Augenstein thought
    that the man had been struck by another car, so he turned around to drive back toward the
    man. As Augenstein approached, however, he saw that the man was holding a long gun.
    Augenstein turned his car back around to escape. When he looked in his rearview mirror,
    he saw the man aim the gun at Augenstein’s car. The man fired two shots. Neither of the
    shots hit Augenstein’s car, but Augenstein heard the pellets “zipping” past his window.
    Tr. pp. 236-37. Augenstein called 911 to report the incident.
    Indiana State Police Trooper Lionel Smith (“Trooper Smith”) received a radio
    dispatch about a man shooting a gun at motorists on U.S. 20. Trooper Smith drove his
    marked police cruiser along U.S. 20 until he spotted Myers on the shoulder of the road.
    3
    As Trooper Smith approached Myers in his cruiser, Myers lifted his gun and fired
    towards the driver’s side window of Trooper Smith’s car. The pellets from Myers’s gun
    struck the cruiser’s driver’s side door and window, the exterior of the car’s roof, and the
    car’s light bar. Trooper Smith was not injured and the only damage to his car was caused
    by two pellets lodged in the rubber sill above the driver’s side window. Smith parked his
    cruiser across the highway to block traffic, retrieved his service shotgun, and positioned
    himself behind his car. He ordered Myers to drop his weapon, but Myers ignored
    Trooper Smith and began to walk in the opposite direction. With his shotgun drawn,
    Trooper Smith pursued Myers on foot.
    Steuben County Sheriff’s Department Sergeant Phillip Knott (“Sergeant Knott”)
    also heard the radio dispatch about gunshots in the trailer court and along U.S. 20. As he
    drove towards the scene, he received an additional radio message from Trooper Smith
    reporting that a man had fired a gun at Smith’s car. Sergeant Knott soon arrived at the
    location of Trooper Smith’s car, parked his own vehicle next to Smith’s car, and joined
    Smith’s foot pursuit of Myers.
    Indiana State Police Trooper Terry Ghent (“Trooper Ghent”), who had also heard
    the initial 911 dispatch regarding the gunfire, soon arrived in the area through which
    Trooper Smith and Sergeant Knott were pursuing Myers. When he realized that Myers
    was positioned between himself and the other responding officers, Trooper Ghent
    positioned his cruiser across the highway to block traffic. As Myers walked towards
    Ghent, still carrying the shotgun, Ghent ordered Myers to stop. Myers ignored Trooper
    Ghent and continued to walk towards him. Ghent fired his service pistol at Myers,
    4
    striking him in the shoulder. Trooper Smith also fired two shots at Myers, and Sergeant
    Knott fired four to five shots at Myers. Myers then ran away from the road, down an
    embankment, and into a nearby wooded area.
    The officers moved their vehicles to the area in which Myers had disappeared and
    turned on their headlights to illuminate the brush. They fanned out on foot to attempt to
    locate Myers and prevent his escape. A SWAT team arrived shortly thereafter, and, for
    the next several hours, a police negotiator attempted to persuade Myers to surrender.
    Myers’s younger brother also urged Myers to surrender. However, Myers remained
    hidden in the brush. At one point, the officers could see the burning tip of a cigarette as
    Myers smoked.
    The officers deployed six cans of tear gas into the area where Myers was located,
    but he still refused to surrender. Eventually, the police drove an armored Humvee into
    the wooded area, stopped several feet from Myers, and ordered him to raise his hands in
    the air. Shortly after midnight, about three hours after he had entered the wooded area,
    Myers surrendered. He had suffered gunshot wounds to the shoulder and groin. The 20-
    guage shotgun Myers had been carrying was recovered. Five shotgun shells fired from
    his gun were found in Myers’s vest, along with an unfired shotgun shell.
    Myers was taken into custody and transported to a local hospital where he
    underwent surgery for his wounds. Tr. pp. 298, 306, 308. An officer was posted outside
    Myers’s hospital room while he was recovering.         During this time, police officers
    attempted to obtain a statement from Myers, but Myers refused. While he was in the
    hospital, Myers told his mother that he wanted a lawyer.
    5
    The day after the incident, April 30, 2004, the State charged Myers with Class D
    felony criminal recklessness and six counts of Class A felony attempted murder.
    Approximately two weeks later, on May 11, 2004, the trial court conducted an initial
    hearing. At the hearing, Myers refused to answer the trial court’s questions.
    On June 1, 2004, Myers filed a notice of defense of mental disease or defect. The
    trial court appointed two physicians, Dr. David Lombard and Dr. John Rathbun, to
    evaluate Myers’s competency to stand trial. Later that month, both physicians reported
    that Myers was not competent to stand trial. On August 20, 2004, the trial court found
    Myers to be incompetent and remanded him to the care and custody of the Division of
    Mental Health and Addiction Services for placement in a mental health care facility.
    Myers was placed in the Isaac Ray Unit of the Logansport State Hospital.
    Less than eight months later, on April 5, 2005, the superintendent of the
    Logansport State Hospital certified that Myers “will not attain the ability to understand
    the proceedings and assist in the preparation of his defense in the foreseeable future.”
    Appellant’s App. p. 71. The hospital’s conclusion as to Myers’s incompetence was based
    on a forensic interview with Myers, his medical records, a review of the police reports
    from April 29, 2004, and a review of Myers’s previous competency evaluation. The
    hospital’s report concluded, “Mr. Myers continues to be delusional and psychotic and
    continued long-term treatment will be needed at this point,” and, further, due to his
    delusions and psychosis, “it is highly questionable” that he would be able to assist his
    attorney in his own defense. Appellant’s App. pp. 253-54. The same day, the trial court
    issued an order for the commencement of regular commitment proceedings and removed
    6
    the case from the court’s docket, subject to reinstatement if Myers ever regained
    competency to stand trial.
    Some four years later, on June 2009, the Logansport State Hospital reported to the
    trial court that Myers had regained competency to stand trial. Thereupon, the trial court
    ordered Myers to be transferred from the hospital to the Steuben County jail.
    On April 1, 2010, Myers filed a notice of intent to assert insanity defense and
    request for evaluation. On April 8, 2010, the trial court appointed two physicians, Dr.
    David Lombard and Dr. Herbert Trier to evaluate Myers’s competency to stand trial and
    to determine whether Myers suffered from a mental disease or defect at the time of the
    alleged offense. On July 14, 2010, Myers filed a pro se motion for dismissal. In his
    motion, he argued that his right to a speedy trial had been violated. The trial court denied
    Myers’s motion “due to its then set trial date of June 28, 2010.” On July 29, 2010, the
    trial court issued an order remanding Myers to the Division of Mental Health and
    Addiction Services and noting that both Dr. Lombard and Dr. Trier had determined that
    Myers was incompetent to stand trial. Myers was returned to the Logansport State
    Hospital.
    On November 19, 2010, the Logansport State Hospital filed a report with the trial
    court indicating that Myers had not regained competency to stand trial and requesting that
    the trial court extend Myers’s commitment for ninety days so that Myers could receive
    additional psychiatric services. The trial court granted the hospital’s request. Then, on
    February 1, 2011, the Logansport State Hospital’s interim superintendent certified that
    Myers would not attain competency to stand trial in the foreseeable future, just as the
    7
    Logansport superintendent had done some six years earlier. At this time, the hospital
    commenced regular commitment proceedings.
    One year later, on February 29, 2012, Myers was transferred to Richmond State
    Hospital.     Four months after that, on June 21, 2012, Richmond State Hospital’s
    superintendent reported to the trial court that Myers had regained competency to stand
    trial, noting that Myers had been on a regime of anti-psychotic medications for over a
    year and “has been stable on it.” Appellant’s App. p. 282.
    On April 9, 2013, the State filed a motion to dismiss Count I, criminal
    recklessness, and Counts V and VI, attempted murder. The trial court granted the motion
    on the same day. Myers’s three-day jury trial began a week later, on April 16, 2013.
    During the trial, Myers testified in his own defense. He stated that he was a Marine, that
    he had worked at the Pentagon, and that he was friends with former President George W.
    Bush. He further testified that he worked with the “NSA” and the “SIG” to eradicate
    “some groups of devil worshipers who entered into the service called Koi [and the]
    Magic Cult.” Tr. p. 492. He stated:
    And Koi would demand that we all be gay with each other or come and be
    gay with them. And they didn’t want to be gay because they would be
    guilty under the law of Magic. So, ah, they would fight each other all the
    time . . . they had this strange belief that anybody that smoked marijuana
    was going to go to hell if they died. So they would kill people who smoke
    marijuana and [steal] all their drugs and take ‘em out of there and put, like,
    robot in place for a couple of days so they could get more drugs and money
    and kill a few more people and then they burn the place down, collect
    insurance on it, and get out of town.
    Tr. p. 493.
    8
    He testified that on April 29, 2004, he heard voices that told him he deserved to
    “go to hell for killing people who practice magic.” Tr. p. 495. Myers denied carrying a
    gun or ammunition on the night of the offenses. Instead, he claimed, he possessed a fake
    gun called a “blast” which was used by the NSA in “war games.” Tr. p. 489. He stated
    that he was “on duty” that night and was shot by the police ten times while he was
    walking to a McDonald’s restaurant. He stated that a police officer stopped him as he
    walked, asked for identification, told him that he could leave, and then shot him. He
    believed that he was being shot by the police in an assassination attempt. Myers also
    claimed that he was stabbed in the arm and groin area with two different knives. He
    testified that, while he was in the hospital following his arrest, he was tortured with a
    Taser gun by the DEA and FBI.
    At trial, Dr. Trier testified that, based on his June 2010 interview with Myers, his
    review of Myers’s hospital records, his review of the notes of other psychiatrists and
    psychologists who had evaluated Myers, and his review of the probable cause affidavit,
    he had determined that Myers was legally insane and did not appreciate the wrongfulness
    of his conduct on April 29, 2004. Dr. Lombard, a clinical psychologist employed by the
    State of Indiana, testified that based on his clinical interviews with Myers, psychological
    testing, and his review of the probable cause affidavit, he had also determined that Myers
    was insane on April 29, 2004.       He further testified that the psychological testing
    conducted on Myers was designed to detect malingering or feigned mental health
    symptoms and that the results indicated that Myers was not feigning his delusions.
    9
    Despite this unanimous professional medical testimony, indeed in four different
    reports by three different psychiatrists over a period of nine years during which Myers
    was hospitalized in the State’s mental health system, and Myer’s own nonsensical
    testimony at trial, the jury rejected Myers’s insanity defense and returned verdicts of
    guilty but mentally ill on all four counts of attempted murder. On April 29, 2013, exactly
    nine years after Myers’s offense, the trial court held a sentencing hearing. At the hearing,
    Myers requested that the court consider as mitigating factors that he had not injured any
    person and that he had a long history of mental illness. The trial court ordered Myers to
    serve four consecutive terms of thirty years, with credit for 3,287 days of pre-sentence
    incarceration, for an aggregate sentence of 120 years.
    Myers now appeals.
    Discussion and Decision
    I. The Insanity Defense
    “The existence of a scienter requirement is customarily an important element in
    distinguishing criminal from civil statutes.” Wallace v. State, 
    905 N.E.2d 371
    , 381 (Ind.
    2009) (quoting Kansas v. Hendricks, 
    521 U.S. 346
    , 362 (1997)). The conviction of an
    individual who acts without the necessary mens rea “strikes squarely against the
    principles of fairness and due process.” Greer v. State, 
    643 N.E.2d 324
    , 326 (Ind. 1994).
    Insanity at the time of the crime negates the element of scienter or intention needed to
    convict one of a crime. Truman v. State, 
    481 N.E.2d 1089
    , 1089-90 (Ind.1985).
    Myers argues that the jury clearly erred “in finding Myers guilty but mentally ill,
    rather than not responsible by reason of insanity at the time of the crime.” Appellant’s Br.
    10
    at 31. He claims that “the evidence in this case leads to only one conclusion—that Myers
    was legally insane at the time of the offenses.” 
    Id. at 32.
    Even where the State meets the burden of proving each element of the charged
    offense beyond a reasonable doubt, a defendant can avoid criminal responsibility by
    successfully raising and establishing the “insanity defense,” which results in the
    defendant being found not responsible by reason of insanity. See Ind. Code §§ 35-41-3-
    6(a); 35-36-2-3-4. The defendant bears the burden of establishing the insanity defense by
    a preponderance of the evidence. See Ind. Code § 35-41-4-1(b). To meet this burden, the
    defendant must establish that (1) he suffers from a mental illness and (2) the mental
    illness caused him to be unable to appreciate the wrongfulness of his conduct at the time
    of the offense. When a defendant is found to be not guilty by reason of insanity, Indiana
    Code section 35-36-2-4 requires that the prosecuting attorney file a written petition for
    commitment with the court and that the trial court hold a commitment hearing. Double
    jeopardy principles from the Fifth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution bar a second trial
    for such a defendant. State v. Berryman, 
    796 N.E.2d 741
    (Ind. Ct. App. 2003) trans.
    granted, opinion aff’d in part, vacated in part.1
    Whether a defendant appreciated the wrongfulness of his or her conduct at the
    time of the offense is a question for the trier of fact. Thompson v. State, 
    804 N.E.2d 1146
    , 1149 (Ind. 2004). Therefore, a finding that a defendant was not insane at the time
    1
    Myers has been and remains institutionalized in a secure facility within Indiana’s mental health system.
    Unless new psychotropic medications sufficient to treat his serious mental illness are developed, he will
    likely remain institutionalized for the rest of his life.
    2
    See Galloway v. State, 
    938 N.E.2d 699
    , 714 (Ind. 2010) (“[D]emeanor evidence before and after a
    11
    of the offense warrants substantial deference from reviewing courts. See 
    id. This court
    will not reweigh evidence, assess witness credibility, or disturb reasonable inferences
    made by the trier of fact. 
    Thompson, 804 N.E.2d at 1149-50
    . However, although the
    standard of review is very deferential, the defendant’s conviction will be set aside “when
    the evidence is without conflict and leads only to the conclusion that the defendant was
    insane when the crime was committed.” 
    Thompson, 804 N.E.2d at 1149
    .
    Indiana Code section 35-36-2-2 provides for the use of expert testimony to assist
    the trier of fact in determining the defendant’s insanity. Such expert testimony, however,
    is advisory, and even unanimous expert testimony is not necessarily conclusive on the
    issue of the defendant’s sanity. Cate v. State, 
    644 N.E.2d 546
    , 547 (Ind. 1994). The trier
    of fact may disregard the unanimous testimony of experts and rely instead on the
    conflicting testimony of lay witnesses. Barany v. State, 
    658 N.E.2d 60
    , 63 (Ind. 1995).
    Even where there is no conflicting lay testimony, the trier of fact is free to disregard or
    discredit the expert testimony. 
    Thompson, 804 N.E.2d at 1149
    .
    In the present case, both of the mental health experts who testified at trial had
    evaluated Myers at the request of the trial court. The experts not only repeatedly found
    Myers to be incompetent to stand trial, even after years of psychiatric treatment and
    hospitalization, but they both unwaveringly and unanimously concluded, based on their
    meetings with Myers as well as their review of his medical records and the probable
    cause affidavit, that he was not able to appreciate the wrongfulness of his behavior on the
    night of April 29, 2004. Both experts further testified that Myers has a long history of
    serious mental illness, including delusions and paranoid schizophrenia. Dr. Lombard
    12
    testified that the psychiatric testing he conducted on Myers was designed to detect
    malingering or feigning of psychiatric symptoms, and that the results revealed that Myers
    was not feigning his mental illness.
    Importantly, the testimony of Dr. Lombard and Dr. Trier was not in conflict with
    the facts of the case. Myers’s mother testified as to Myers’s history of mental health
    problems, his hospitalizations, and his periodic failures to take his prescribed anti-
    psychotic medications, which had again occurred at the time of the offense. Myers’s
    mother further testified that Myers was “not in his right mind” on the day of the offenses.
    Tr. p. 458. None of the victims or responding officers offered any testimony indicating
    that Myers was sane. Myers shot at a marked police car, and when he was struck with
    police bullets, he fled into the brush, where he later lit a cigarette, thus revealing his
    location. He refused to surrender, even though he had suffered multiple gunshot wounds
    and even when assaulted with tear gas. There was no evidence of a plan or motive. He
    reported that he was “on duty” that night, that he was shot, stabbed, and beaten by the
    police in an assassination attempt, and he denied carrying a gun. Appellant’s App. p. 239.
    Myers’s demeanor and testimony at trial—where he stated that he had been a member of
    the military since birth, that he had been subjected to brainwashing, torture, and
    assassination attempts, that he was friends with President George W. Bush, that he had
    heard voices, and that he was working with intelligence groups to eradicate imaginary
    cults—provided further evidence of the depth of his mental illness. See Manuel v. State,
    
    535 N.E.2d 1159
    , 1162 (Ind. 1989) (per curiam) (noting that a defendant’s demeanor
    during court proceedings is probative evidence of sanity with regard to his or her
    13
    competence to stand trial). Simply said, there was no testimony, lay or otherwise, that
    contradicted the testimony of two psychiatrists that Myers was insane at the time of his
    crime.
    II. Admission of Myers’s Mother’s Testimony
    Furthermore, there was no properly admitted evidence that Myers was sane
    immediately prior to or following his crime.2 At Myers’s trial, during cross-examination
    of Myers’s mother, and outside the presence of the jury, the State elicited testimony that
    Myers had refused to speak with police officers while he was in the hospital recovering
    from his gunshot wounds and that, when speaking with his mother, he had requested an
    attorney. Over defense counsel’s objection, the trial court admitted the evidence, stating,
    “We’ll permit the State to make enquiry [sic] of the defendant’s request for an attorney in
    hearing the issue of his, ah, mental state on or about the time at issue in this case.” Tr. pp.
    472-73. On cross-examination, the State questioned Myers’s mother as to the nature of
    Myers’s desire for counsel. She answered, “To sue ‘em. To sue them for shootin’ at him
    because he asked me why did they shoot me Mom, they knew me, who I was.” Tr. p. 473.
    When the jury returned, the following exchange occurred between the State and Myers’s
    mother:
    Q: And Donnie told you at time that he wanted a lawyer, isn’t that also
    true? Is that true?
    A: After he started getting better I came down . . .
    2
    See Galloway v. State, 
    938 N.E.2d 699
    , 714 (Ind. 2010) (“[D]emeanor evidence before and after a
    crime is of more limited value than the defendant’s demeanor during the crime” because “[t]he insanity
    defense concerns the defendant’s mental state at the time of the crime.”).
    14
    Q: Did Donnie tell you at the time that he wanted a lawyer?
    A: I probably ask’d [sic] him if he wanted a lawyer.
    Q: Did Donnie tell, did Donnie tell you at the time that he wanted a lawyer?
    A: I’m sure that when I asked him if he wanted a lawyer he said yes. He
    didn’t want to talk to the police.
    Q: He didn’t want to talk to the police, he wanted a lawyer, correct?
    A: I would assume that’s, yeah.
    Tr. pp. 474-75.
    During closing arguments, the prosecutor commented on Myers’s refusal to speak
    with police and his request for an attorney, stating:
    He been to places before, he knew he was mentally ill, and he, and he knew
    he could use this cause he had the ability to know that. He told his mother,
    I, this is one (1) of the questions she really didn’t want to answer, and I
    asked her three (3) or four (4) times, he told his mother he wanted to lawyer.
    This is just in the hospital sometime shortly after the shooting down at
    Parkview. Because he didn’t want to talk to the police. Okay. And I think
    Ms., Ms. Wagoner came back on cross and, and, and, and, and, and well
    was it really for some type of civil suit? Well, that’s not what the mother
    said, she agreed with that then, of course, but that’s not what she said. He
    wasn’t wanting to talk to the police. What does that tell ya? That, that
    gives us a little glimpse into the, because this is an issue, right, his mind,
    this is at issue that he, he, he doesn’t wanna make a statement, he doesn’t
    wanna make a statement to the police. Because maybe he’s aware of what
    he did was wrong, right?
    Tr. p. 577.
    The Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution provides that “[n]o person
    . . . shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself[.]” U.S.
    Const. amend. V. In Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
    , 468 n. 37 (1966), the United
    15
    States Supreme Court held that, pursuant to the Fifth Amendment, “it is impermissible to
    penalize an individual for exercising his Fifth Amendment privilege when he is under
    police custodial interrogation.”
    Ten years after issuing its opinion in Miranda, the United States Supreme Court
    decided Doyle v. Ohio, 
    426 U.S. 610
    , 619 (1976). In Doyle, the Court held that “the use
    for impeachment purposes of petitioners’ silence, at the time of arrest and after receiving
    Miranda warnings, violated the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.” The
    Court explained, “while it is true that the Miranda warnings contain no express assurance
    that silence will carry no penalty, such assurance is implicit to any person who receives
    the warnings.” 
    Id. at 618.
    In Wainwright v. Greenfield, 
    474 U.S. 284
    (1986), the United States Supreme
    Court ruled that the government’s use of the accused’s post-Miranda silence as evidence
    of his sanity violated the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Justice
    Stevens, writing for seven members of the Court, was persuaded that the reasoning in
    Doyle prohibiting the State from using a defendant’s post-Miranda silence to impeach the
    defendant’s exculpatory testimony was also applicable when the State used the
    defendant’s silence as evidence of the defendant’s sanity.
    Like the United States Supreme Court, the Indiana Supreme Court has found
    violations of the rule in Doyle where the jury hears evidence of the defendant’s silence
    and that evidence is used to belie a claim of insanity. See Lynch v. State, 
    632 N.E.2d 341
    , 341 (Ind. 1994) (Doyle violation where trial court instructed jury that tape of
    defendant’s initial police interrogation was to be used for the limited purpose of
    16
    establishing defendant’s state of mind soon after the crime and where tape showed
    discussions regarding defendant’s Miranda rights and defendant’s invocation of his right
    not to be questioned without an attorney); Wilson v. State, 
    514 N.E.2d 282
    , 283 (Ind.
    1987) (finding a Doyle violation where detective testified that defendant indicated he
    wanted to talk to a lawyer before continuing interview and prosecutor referred to those
    statements in closing argument to rebut insanity defense: “Shows you that he knew, he
    understood what [the detective] was saying.”).
    In its appellate brief, the State emphasizes that there is no evidence that Myers
    received a Miranda warning after his arrest and prior to his refusal to speak with police
    and his request for counsel. The State further contends that Myers’s request for counsel
    was made to his mother, not a government agent, and, thus, the rules set forth in Doyle
    and Wainwright do not apply. We disagree. It is apparent that Myers invoked his right
    to remain silent and made his request for counsel while he was in custody. Having been
    arrested at the scene, and with a police officer standing guard outside his hospital room,
    no reasonable person would have felt free to leave the hospital.        See Berkemer v.
    McCarty, 
    468 U.S. 420
    , 440 (1984) (holding that the safeguards prescribed by Miranda
    become applicable as soon as a suspect’s freedom of action curtailed to a “degree
    associated with formal arrest”). Indeed, at least two officers testified that Myers was
    “taken into custody” immediately after Myers surrendered. Tr. pp. 298, 306, 308.
    The United State Supreme Court has held that “[t]he warnings mandated by
    [Miranda are] a prophylactic means of safeguarding Fifth Amendment rights,” but they
    are not the genesis of those rights. 
    Doyle, 426 U.S. at 617
    , 
    96 S. Ct. 2240
    (emphasis
    17
    added). Once the government places an individual in custody, that individual has a right
    to remain silent and a right to counsel. Id; see also Griffin v. California, 
    380 U.S. 609
    ,
    614, 
    85 S. Ct. 1229
    , 
    14 L. Ed. 2d 106
    (1965).
    Therefore, in applying the holdings in Doyle and Wainwright, we conclude that
    both the admission of the evidence of Myers’s post-arrest silence and request for counsel
    and the prosecutor’s closing argument thereon as evidence of his sanity are a violation of
    Myers’s constitutional rights to silence and to counsel.       The entire purpose of this
    evidence was to demonstrate that Myers’s post-arrest silence and request for counsel
    constituted lucid and reasonable behavior, demonstrating an understanding of the nature
    and quality of Myers’s actions, in contradiction of Myers’s claim of insanity. In sum, the
    trial court abused its discretion in allowing the State to use Myers’s refusal to speak with
    police and his request for counsel as substantive evidence of his sanity, and, therefore, his
    guilt. It is this type of conduct that Doyle and Wainwright prohibit.
    Such constitutional error requires reversal unless it is harmless beyond a
    reasonable doubt. See Brown v. State, 
    446 N.E.2d 354
    , 357 (Ind. Ct. App. 1983). In the
    case before us, the jury was presented with expert testimony that Myers was insane at the
    time he committed the crime, followed by testimony from Myers’s mother elicited by the
    State to prove that Myers was sane. This question of constitutional error, then, pertains to
    a crucial fact on which the outcome of this case hinges, Myers’s state of mind at the time
    of the offense and immediately after the offense. Therefore, we are unable to say that the
    trial court’s error in admitting the evidence of Myers’s silence and request for counsel
    was harmless. See Robinette v. State, 
    741 N.E.2d 1162
    (Ind. 2001) (concluding that the
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    admission of evidence of murder defendant’s post-Miranda silence, which the State
    offered to rebut insanity defense, was not harmless error where defendant offered
    substantial testimony that she suffered from a condition causing her to be unable to recall
    or appreciate the crimes she committed, and her videotaped statements, in which she
    repeated, “I don’t want to talk about it,” could have left jurors with the impression that
    defendant was sane enough to recognize that it was not to her benefit to speak with
    police). Considering the jury’s ultimate determination that Myers was mentally ill but
    able to appreciate the wrongfulness of his conduct, rather than not guilty by reason of
    insanity, the potential for harm was substantial. Thus, the admission of this evidence to
    prove Myers’s sanity was reversible error.
    Our review of the record, then, does not reveal any properly admitted lay
    testimony, or expert testimony, or demeanor evidence that could justify rejection of
    Myers’s proffered insanity defense. See Galloway v. State, 
    938 N.E.2d 699
    (Ind. 2010)
    (holding that where testifying experts unanimously agree that the defendant was insane at
    the time of the offense, there must, in order to create a fact issue, be other evidence of
    probative value, usually lay opinion testimony or demeanor evidence, from which a
    conflicting inference of sanity can be drawn, that, when considered in light of the other
    evidence, permits a reasonable inference of sanity to be drawn). With absolutely no
    evidence of probative value from which an inference of sanity could be drawn sufficient
    to create a conflict with the unanimous expert testimony, lay opinion testimony, and
    demeanor evidence indicating that Myers was insane at the time of the offence, the jury
    clearly erred in rejecting Myers’s insanity defense. Because Myers was insane at the
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    time of his offense, he was incapable of forming the requisite mens rea or intent to
    commit the crimes charged, and indeed, to commit any crime. We therefore reverse his
    convictions.
    Conclusion
    The trial court abused its discretion in admitting evidence of Myers’s refusal to
    speak with police and his request for counsel and the jury clearly erred in rejecting
    Myers’s insanity defense.   Accordingly, we reverse Myers’s four Class A felony
    attempted murder convictions.
    Reversed.
    FRIEDLANDER, J., and PYLE, J., concur.
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