Cassy Henry v. State of Indiana ( 2012 )


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  • Pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 65(D),
    this Memorandum Decision shall not be
    regarded as precedent or cited before                       FILED
    any court except for the purpose of                       May 21 2012, 9:14 am
    establishing the defense of res judicata,
    collateral estoppel, or the law of the                           CLERK
    of the supreme court,
    case.                                                          court of appeals and
    tax court
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT:                         ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:
    JOEL M. SCHUMM                                  GREGORY F. ZOELLER
    Indianapolis, Indiana                           Attorney General of Indiana
    KARL M. SCHARNBERG
    Deputy Attorney General
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    IN THE
    COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
    CASSY HENRY,                                    )
    )
    Appellant-Defendant,                     )
    )
    vs.                               )      No. 49A02-1110-CR-921
    )
    STATE OF INDIANA,                               )
    )
    Appellee-Plaintiff.                      )
    APPEAL FROM THE MARION SUPERIOR COURT
    The Honorable Sheila A. Carlisle, Judge
    The Honorable Steven J. Rubick, Magistrate
    Cause No. 49G03-0804-FB-85663
    May 21, 2012
    MEMORANDUM DECISION - NOT FOR PUBLICATION
    DARDEN, Judge
    STATEMENT OF THE CASE
    Cassy Henry appeals the trial court’s revocation of his probation.
    We affirm.
    ISSUE
    Whether the trial court abused its discretion by ordering Henry to serve his
    suspended sentence.
    FACTS
    In April 2008, the State charged Henry with Count 1, rape as a class B felony;
    Count 2, sexual misconduct with a minor as a class B felony; Count 3, criminal deviate
    conduct as a class B felony; Count 4, sexual misconduct with a minor as a class B felony;
    Count 5, sexual misconduct with a minor as a class C felony; and Count 6, sexual battery
    as a class D felony. In July 2008, Henry entered into a written plea agreement, wherein
    he agreed to plead guilty to class B felony sexual misconduct with a minor as charged in
    Count 2,1 and the State agreed to dismiss the remaining five charges. The State also
    agreed to a sentencing cap of six years but otherwise left sentencing open to the trial
    court. The trial court accepted Henry’s guilty plea and sentenced him to six years with
    three years suspended to probation. Under the terms of his probation required for sex
    offenders, Henry was prohibited from possessing “obscene matter[,]” including videos,
    DVDs, books, or magazines. (App. 61). Henry was also required to submit to random
    home visits and searches.
    1
    In Count 2, the State charged that Henry, being at least twenty-one years old, performed or submitted to
    sexual intercourse with a child who was at least fourteen years old but under age sixteen.
    2
    When Henry started his probationary term on October 16, 2009, his probation
    officer, Tara Olson, reviewed the terms of Henry’s probation with him, including the
    requirement that he not have X-rated movies, videos, or shows with nudity. On July 26,
    2011, probation officers went to Henry’s apartment to conduct a “compliance check.”
    (Tr. 15). When the officers entered his residence, Henry was the only person present in
    the apartment. Officers saw that Henry had fifty-nine DVDs, several of which were
    spread out on the coffee table while others were in a DVD case on the sofa in the living
    room. Thirty of these DVDs contained pornographic material, and “several of them had
    graphic images on the front of the [disc] depicting sexually graphic material.” (Tr. 17).2
    When the officers took the DVDs, Henry denied that the DVDs belonged to him but
    acknowledged that they contained pornographic material. Three days later, Henry called
    his probation officer, Tara Olson, and “verbally admitted that he was possessing
    pornography at his home.” (Tr. 11).
    The State filed a notice of probation violation, alleging that Henry had violated
    probation by possessing obscene matter, specifically adult pornography.                         At the
    beginning of Henry’s probation revocation hearing, the trial court indicated that it wanted
    to make a record of Henry’s prior rejection of the State’s offer to recommend that he
    serve two and one-half years in the Department of Correction in exchange for his
    2
    In an effort to make a record regarding the nature of the DVDs that were introduced at trial, the trial
    court noted that one of the DVDs showed “three naked young women, one apparently holding a penis[,]”
    that another DVD showed “a full-color shot of two topless women, both apparently holding penises, with
    the caption 5 Hour Wet Giant Tits[,]” and that a third DVD showed “two topless African American
    [w]omen with the caption Black Chicks Who Love White Dicks.” (Tr. 29). The trial court also explained
    that some of the DVDs indicated on the disc that they were “XXX.” (Tr. 29).
    3
    admission that he possessed pornography. Specifically, the trial court stated that it was
    “trying to make sure we don’t have any PCR issues regarding offers and advisements.”
    (Tr. 4). After Henry stated on the record that he was rejecting the offer and wanted to
    proceed with a contested hearing, the State presented evidence that Henry possessed
    thirty pornographic DVDs and thereafter admitted to his probation officer that he
    possessed them.
    The trial court revoked Henry’s probation and ordered him to serve his three-year
    suspended sentence. Specifically, the trial court stated:
    Mr. Henry acknowledged that he possessed pornography, though he
    denied viewing it. Nevertheless, he was clearly in possession.
    *****
    The nature of the videos, even from a sheltered life like mine - - the
    nature of these DVDs is beyond question and beyond doubt. The DVDs - -
    several of the DVDs have naked women or topless women in what would
    be construed as obscene poses.
    I think this is not a situation where Mr. Henry perhaps had a Sports
    Illustrated Swimsuit Edition on the coffee table and wasn’t sure if that was
    pornography. There is no doubt as to the character of the contraband in this
    case.
    I find the evidence overwhelmingly supports the State’s position that
    Mr. Henry is in violation of his probation. I find that Mr. Henry knowingly
    possessed obscene material in violation of his probation. I find the
    evidence clearly establishes Mr. Henry understood the conditions of his
    probation and knowingly violated the conditions of his probation.
    Under the circumstances, I’m going to revoke his term of probation
    and order him remanded to the Department of Correction for three years.
    (Tr. 32-33). Thereafter, the trial court again noted Henry’s prior refusal of the State’s
    offer for the record:
    The Court will note in this case that though the State offered Mr.
    Henry less than the full backup time, Mr. Henry did not accept
    responsibility. He continued to deny that he had done anything wrong. I
    find the evidence overwhelming[ly] establishes that he did, and did so
    4
    knowingly, that anything less than the imposition of his full three-year
    suspended sentence would depreciate the seriousness of his violation.
    (Tr. 34).
    DECISION
    Henry does not challenge the trial court’s determination that he violated his
    probation.3 Instead, Henry argues that the trial court abused its discretion by ordering
    him to serve his three-year previously suspended sentence. Specifically, he contends that
    the trial court’s order that he serve his suspended sentence was an abuse of discretion
    because it was based upon a single probation violation, which was not a new criminal
    offense, committed twenty-one months into his thirty-six month probationary period.
    Probation is a matter of grace left to trial court discretion, not a right to which a
    criminal defendant is entitled. Prewitt v. State, 
    878 N.E.2d 184
    , 188 (Ind. 2007). The
    trial court determines the conditions of probation and may revoke probation if the
    conditions are violated. Id.; see also 
    Ind. Code § 35
    –38–2–3. Indeed, violation of a
    single condition of probation is sufficient to revoke probation. Richardson v. State, 
    890 N.E.2d 766
    , 768 (Ind. Ct. App. 2008), reh’g denied. Upon determining that a probationer
    has violated a condition of probation, the trial court may “[o]rder execution of all or part
    of the sentence that was suspended at the time of initial sentencing.” I.C. § 35–38–2–
    3(g)(3). “Once a trial court has exercised its grace by ordering probation rather than
    incarceration, the judge should have considerable leeway in deciding how to proceed.”
    Prewitt, 878 N.E.2d at 188. If this discretion were not given to trial courts and sentences
    3
    While Henry suggests that the evidence supporting the revocation of his probation was “tenuous,” he
    makes no cogent argument challenging the evidence to support his revocation. Henry’s Br. at 3.
    5
    were scrutinized too severely on appeal, trial judges might be less inclined to order
    probation to future defendants.     Accordingly, we review a trial court’s sentencing
    decision from a probation revocation for an abuse of discretion. Prewitt, 878 N.E.2d at
    188 (citing Sanders v. State, 
    825 N.E.2d 952
    , 956 (Ind. Ct. App. 2005), trans. denied).
    An abuse of discretion occurs where the decision is clearly against the logic and effect of
    the facts and circumstances. Prewitt, 878 N.E.2d at 188.
    Here, Henry, who was thirty-five at the time of his offense, was convicted of class
    B felony sexual misconduct with a minor for having sexual intercourse with a fourteen-
    year-old girl. Pursuant to his plea agreement, the trial court sentenced him to a minimum
    term for a B felony of six years but suspended three of those years to probation. While
    on probation, Henry was found in possession of pornographic DVDs, which was in
    violation of the probationary condition that he not possess obscene materials. Henry did
    not possess merely one DVD, he possessed thirty DVDs, which, as the trial court
    explained, undoubtedly contained obscene material. The fact that Henry had served a
    little more than half of his probation without incident is of no moment. He was on
    probation, and he was ordered—as a specific probation condition for sex offenders—that
    he not “possess” obscene materials. (App. 61).       Based on the facts of this case, we
    conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by ordering Henry to serve his
    previously suspended sentence. See, e.g., Peterson v. State, 
    909 N.E.2d 494
    , 499–500
    (Ind. Ct. App. 2009) (holding that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by revoking
    the defendant’s entire suspended sentence when he violated probation at the end of his
    probationary period by viewing pornography in violation of his treatment contract and
    6
    conditions of probation). For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the trial court’s revocation
    of Henry’s probation.4
    Affirmed.
    RILEY, J., and NAJAM, J., concur.
    4
    We also reject Henry’s reliance on Puckett v. State, 
    956 N.E.2d 1182
     (Ind. Ct. App. 2011), and his
    suggestion that the trial court ordered him to serve his suspended sentence based on Henry’s decision to
    proceed with a contested revocation hearing instead of admitting to the probation violation. This case is
    unlike Puckett, where this court found that the trial court had erroneously relied on numerous improper
    factors—including expressing displeasure with the original plea agreement, finding that the defendant
    committed a more serious crime than the one for which he was convicted, and relying on probation
    violation allegations that had been dismissed—when it ordered the defendant to serve his previously
    suspended sentence. See Puckett, 
    956 N.E.2d at 1187-88
    . Here, a review of the transcript from the
    probation revocation hearing makes clear that the trial court’s reference to Henry’s prior rejection of the
    State’s offer was done in an effort to make a record of it in case Henry would raise such an issue in a
    future post-conviction relief proceeding.
    7
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 49A02-1110-CR-921

Filed Date: 5/21/2012

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/18/2021