Christopher Keller v. State of Indiana (mem. dec.) ( 2020 )


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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                             Jul 31 2020, 9:58 am
    court except for the purpose of establishing                              CLERK
    the defense of res judicata, collateral                               Indiana Supreme Court
    Court of Appeals
    estoppel, or the law of the case.                                          and Tax Court
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT                                    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
    Leanna Weissmann                                          Curtis T. Hill, Jr.
    Lawrenceburg, Indiana                                     Attorney General of Indiana
    Josiah Swinney
    Deputy Attorney General
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    IN THE
    COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
    Christopher Keller,                                       July 31, 2020
    Appellant-Defendant,                                      Court of Appeals Case No.
    20A-CR-148
    v.                                                Appeal from the Jefferson Circuit
    Court
    State of Indiana,                                         The Honorable Donald J. Mote,
    Appellee-Plaintiff                                        Judge
    Trial Court Cause No.
    39C01-1907-F3-929
    Altice, Judge.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-CR-148 | July 31, 2020                  Page 1 of 18
    Case Summary
    [1]   Christopher Keller pled guilty to four counts of Level 3 felony aggravated
    battery. The trial court sentenced Keller the maximum term of sixteen years for
    each offense and ordered the sentences be served consecutively for a total
    sentence of sixty-four years. Keller presents two issues for our review:
    1. Did the trial court abuse its discretion in ordering the
    sentences be served consecutively?
    2. Is the sentence imposed inappropriate?
    [2]   We affirm.
    Facts & Procedural History
    [3]   On May 25, 2019, Kyla Hammons (Mother) left her eighteen-month-old
    (Child) and ten-month-old sons in the care of Keller, her fiancé, 1 while she went
    to work. Mother returned home around 11:00 p.m. and both of her children
    were asleep. The following morning Mother noted that Child was “clingy” and
    “fussy” when she was out of his sight. Transcript Vol. II at 22, 23. Because
    Child could not talk yet due to his age and no visible injuries had manifested,
    Mother attributed Child’s behavior to the possibility that he might be getting
    sick.
    1
    Mother and Keller were married on May 28, 2019.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-CR-148 | July 31, 2020   Page 2 of 18
    [4]   On June 7, 2019, Mother again left Child and his infant brother in Keller’s care
    while she went to work. When she arrived home around 11:45 p.m., she
    looked in and saw Child sleeping in his crib and did not suspect anything out of
    the ordinary. Around 6:00 a.m. the following morning, Mother went to Child
    and noticed bruising on his face and a bite mark on his arm that were not
    present when she left for work the day before. Child cried and winced in pain
    whenever Mother touched him. As she undressed Child, she discovered that he
    was “covered head to toe with bruises.” Id. at 26. She immediately took Child
    to the local hospital, where he was examined and then referred to Riley
    Hospital for Children. An examination of Child revealed that he had suffered
    four compression fractures to his spine; two possible additional backbone
    fractures; elevated liver enzymes indicating a liver injury; an injury under his
    tongue; missing patches of hair on both sides of his head; bruising on his right
    collar bone, back, left ear, thighs, knees, shins, calves, and feet; patterned
    bruising (in the shape of a circle) to his upper left arm; “significant bruising” to
    his forehead, left cheek, nose, and under both eyes as well as to his right
    forearm; and scratches over his hands and feet. Exhibit Volume at 38.
    [5]   While at the hospital, Mother texted Keller about Child’s injuries and Keller
    suggested that his two-year-old daughter inflicted the injuries on Child during
    normal toddler play. When Mother sent him a picture of the bite mark on
    Child’s arm, Keller explained that his daughter bit Child and that he “smacked”
    her and “busted her mouth open” and “made her lip bleed.” Id. at 20, 18, 19.
    Keller then texted Mother, “yeah ok bitch I didn’t touch your dumbass little
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-CR-148 | July 31, 2020   Page 3 of 18
    slow learning crying ass child” and “bitch once again I have video with me and
    the kids so f*ck you go die or kill yourself I would love for you to do that one
    more if you killed yourself nice and slowly.” Id. at 21. He also sent a message
    to Mother that he “DIDN’T TOUCH HIT KICK SMACK PUNCH OR BITE
    YOUR CHILD…..[CHILD] GOT HIS ASS HANDED TO HIM BY A 2
    YEAR OLD GIRL.” Id. at 23 (capitalization in original). He continued in
    another text that “if I lose my daughters or I go to jail because of you I swear on
    everything I love in this world I will make every waking day of your life a living
    hell I swear I didn’t touch [Child].” Id. at 25.
    [6]   On July 25, 2019, the State charged Keller with two Level 3 felonies for battery
    on a child under fourteen years of age and neglect of a dependent. At some
    point thereafter, police were notified about a memory card from a surveillance
    system inside Keller’s home that was found under the mattress in his bedroom.
    Police secured the memory card pursuant to a warrant and discovered that it
    contained a video of Keller abusing Child. 2 The video was date stamped May
    25, 2019.
    [7]   Based on the content of the video, on August 9, 2019, the State amended the
    charging information to include a charge of attempted murder and sixty-eight
    other counts of aggravated battery, battery, neglect, contributing to the
    delinquency of a minor, and reckless supervision of a minor as Level 3, Level 5,
    2
    When police recovered the memory card, they learned that the surveillance system had been removed from
    Keller’s home.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-CR-148 | July 31, 2020                Page 4 of 18
    and Level 6 felonies. On December 18, 2019, Keller pled guilty to four counts
    of aggravated battery as Level 3 felonies in exchange for dismissal of the
    remaining charges. 3 Sentencing was left open to the court’s discretion. The
    court held a sentencing hearing the same day.
    [8]   The presentence investigation report showed that Keller had three prior felony
    convictions, seven prior misdemeanor convictions, and that Keller was on
    probation at the time of the instant offenses. Of his prior convictions, in 2014,
    Keller pled guilty to domestic battery in the presence of a child less than sixteen
    years old as a Class D felony and strangulation as a Class D felony in a case
    where he was also charged with battery resulting in bodily injury to a pregnant
    woman. Regarding the current offenses, Keller reported that he was under the
    influence of methamphetamine, heroin, Subutex, and “Flocka”. Appendix Vol.
    Two at 144.
    [9]   During the sentencing hearing, the State played excerpts from the video of
    Keller’s abuse of Child. The video begins with Keller repeatedly shoving Child
    into the crease of a couch until he became quiet and then forcefully slapping
    Child in the back of the head. Keller then directed his two-year-old daughter to
    jump on Child and as she was jumping on Child’s legs, Keller picked her up
    and threw her on Child’s head. Less than a minute later, Keller torments Child
    3
    The time stamp on the video showed that the offenses to which Keller pled guilty occurred at 10:53 a.m.,
    3:11 p.m., 5:46 p.m., and 7:10 p.m. Thus, the time periods that elapsed between the acts were 4 hours 18
    minutes; 2 hours 35 minutes; and 1 hour 24 minutes.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-CR-148 | July 31, 2020                    Page 5 of 18
    by muttering in his face and then striking him about the head numerous times
    with his hand. Keller then placed Child in a smothering headlock for
    approximately forty seconds. He allowed only Child’s squirming legs to escape
    the weight of his body. As Keller walked away, he shoved Child’s face into the
    couch cushion. About a minute passed and then Keller put Child in another
    headlock for about thirty seconds, during which Child’s squirming legs were
    visible. Keller again encouraged his young daughter to jump on Child as he lay
    crying. Keller then resumed his smothering of Child as Child struggled to free
    himself. Keller walked away from Child but returned about thirty seconds
    later, picked up Child, and body slammed him into the couch, keeping his
    weight on Child for about fifteen seconds as Child struggled beneath him.
    [10]   About an hour later, Keller repeatedly punched Child’s bottom with the palm of
    his hand before transitioning to violent thrusts to Child’s lower back as Child
    was lying face down on the couch. The thrusts were so forceful as to cause
    Child to bounce about a foot in the air. Before walking away, Keller repeatedly
    slapped Child’s feet. About three minutes later, Keller is seen holding Child but
    as he does, he presses Child’s face into his body.
    [11]   About four hours later Keller held Child parallel to the ground and dropped
    him about two feet onto a blanket. Five minutes later he slapped Child in the
    mouth and then kicked him with enough force to cause Child to slide several
    feet across the floor. Within the next hour, Keller carried Child by his ankles
    before throwing him on the couch and repeatedly encouraged his daughter to
    “[g]et him.” Exhibit 17. Keller also placed Child on top of a couch cushion that
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-CR-148 | July 31, 2020   Page 6 of 18
    was on the floor but standing on its side and forced Child to fall forward and hit
    the floor headfirst. Keller then jumped on Child—knees first—as his daughter
    smothered Child’s head with a pillow. About fifteen seconds after Keller
    removed his weight from Child, Keller forcefully tackled Child.
    [12]   Keller placed Child on top of the inverted couch cushion again and pushed
    Child to the floor. He did this numerous times and during one instance, Child’s
    neck appears to snap backward. As Child was lying face up on the floor, Keller
    smothered Child with a pillow and then jumped on the pillow with all his
    weight, hitting Child’s feet as he squirmed under him. Keller got up and yelled
    at Child to “get the f*ck up.” Id.
    [13]   While Keller changed Child’s diaper, he pinched Child’s penis and yelled at
    him to “Quit!” Id. He then used the palm of his hand to apply pressure to
    Child’s anus and placed the soiled side of the diaper on Child’s face and pushed
    it down. After he placed a fresh diaper on Child, Keller used the back of his
    hand to strike Child six times on his penis. Keller continued to hover over
    Child and sat his laughing daughter on Child’s face. Keller placed his face next
    to Child’s and repeatedly screamed, “She got you!” Id. Child responded by
    lying silently on the floor. Keller then thrust his elbow into the side of Child’s
    neck as his daughter hung on his other arm. Keller and his daughter then sat on
    Child with all their weight for about thirty seconds. About a minute later,
    Keller smacked Child in the face and threw him on the couch. Child then
    endured thirteen strikes by a pillow and each time Keller wound up and hit
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-CR-148 | July 31, 2020   Page 7 of 18
    Child with all his might. Keller then drug Child to another part of the couch by
    his hair.
    [14]   Over an hour later, Keller returned to body-slamming Child, and he smacked
    Child five times. When Child continued to cry, Keller picked him up and
    smacked his bottom twenty-six times. About thirty minutes later, Keller
    allowed Child to fall from his knee face first into the floor, began texting, and
    then smacked Child a few more times. Keller forced Child to stand up and as
    he picked up Child, he growled at him, let him fall back to the floor, and then
    growled at him again. Keller continued by bouncing Child on his knee while he
    hopped around on his other leg, grimacing to show his increased effort. Keller
    also placed a couch cushion on top of Child and then sat on the cushion.
    [15]   The State suggested that given the date stamp and the fact that some of Child’s
    injuries were not explained by Keller’s conduct as depicted in the video, that
    Keller abused Child on May 25 and again when Child was in his care on June
    7. Because there was no video from June 7, Detective Yancy Denning of the
    Jefferson County Sheriff’s Department testified that “[u]nfortunately” it was
    impossible to know “what happened to cause” the injuries Child presented with
    on June 8, 2019. Transcript Vol. II at 42.
    [16]   Dr. Lucinda Woodward also testified at the sentencing hearing. She informed
    the court that Child now experiences post-traumatic stress disorder, nightmares,
    fear of strangers, and fear of baths. Dr. Woodward also explained that Child
    now exhibits “verbal delays” which suggests he is “on a path for
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-CR-148 | July 31, 2020   Page 8 of 18
    neurobiological damage, long-term consequences.” Id. at 47. The State also
    submitted a letter from Dr. Cortney Demetris, a child abuse pediatrician at
    Riley. Dr. Demetris reviewed the video and noted that “the video clips
    revealed horrific repeated severe unprovoked physical abuse” of Child that was
    “life threatening.” Exhibit Vol. at 39. She concluded, stating:
    There are not words to express in full the pain and suffering
    experienced by [Child] during the many hours in which he was
    tortured and beaten by [Keller]. [Child] is witnessed to be crying
    at times, withdrawn at times, and even possibly unconscious
    briefly at various times. He was at substantial risk for death
    during many of the video clips including those of suffocation,
    repeated impact to his head, repeated forces applied about his
    neck resulting in dangerous neck positions, and other traumatic
    forces applied about his body including those that resulted in his
    compression fractures of the backbones. In the more than 15
    years I have been evaluating children who are victims of child
    abuse, including hundreds of cases of severe physical abuse, this
    case stands out as one of the most severe.
    Id. at 40.
    [17]   In its written sentencing order, the court noted that the video supported the
    conclusion that Keller “made a series of decisions over an entire day, thinking
    of novel ways to inflict harm to [Child].” Appendix Vol. Two at 241. The court
    also set out the aggravating and mitigating circumstances it identified during the
    sentencing hearing. In its oral sentencing statement, the court addressed each
    proffered mitigator and aggravator as follows:
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-CR-148 | July 31, 2020   Page 9 of 18
    With respect to the undue hardship on the dependents, the Court
    rejects this argument. The Court credits the State’s argument
    that the undue hardship is not supported by the record. In fact,
    the Court demonstrates that [Keller] began using his daughter . . .
    as an instrument to batter [Child] at the beginning of the day,
    gradually encouraging the child – encouraging the child to harm
    [Child]. I have noted at 10:52 in the video he’s instructing her to
    step on [Child]. At 15:08 he’s instructing [his daughter]
    repeatedly to “Get him, . . . . Get him.” By the end of the
    evening, it appears from the video clearly that [Keller’s daughter]
    is assaulting [Child] without any prompting. At 19:20 she’s
    sitting on him casually watching cartoons. She body tackles
    [Child] at 19:23, and she shoves [Child] to the floor at 19:24.
    [Keller] chose not to intervene. I won’t go so far as to say that
    Mr. Keller’s children are better off . . . and the hardship will be
    significant, but I cannot conclude that it’s undue. The Court
    gives very little weight to remorse. The Court credits the State’s
    argument that the communications made to [M]other at the time
    that [Keller] was confronted with the injuries to [Child] were
    shockingly indifferent. In fact he . . . went on the offensive,
    encouraging suicide and even making threats to her that he
    would make her life miserable. The Court gives in terms of
    accepting responsibility with his plea of guilty – the Court affords
    [Keller] little weight. The offenses that he’s plead [sic] guilty to
    are on high definition video, and the Court sees his plea of guilty
    more of a pragmatic decision than an acceptance of
    responsibility. As to drug addiction, the Court . . . gives this
    factor zero weight. If you credit [Keller]’s version, he was caring
    for his daughter and [Mother]’s two boys under the influence of
    methamphetamine, Subutex, heroin and (inaudible) and this is
    exactly the reason why a trial court would restrict parenting time
    in a CHINS case for parents who are inactive [sic] addiction, and
    again that’s if the Court credits this version. But what the video
    supports is in fact a calculated series of decision[s] over an entire
    day. It appeared to me that . . . Keller was basically trying to
    think up new ways – he was looking up in the sky kind of
    pondering what new and novel ways he could use to harm
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-CR-148 | July 31, 2020   Page 10 of 18
    [Child]. The Court also finds that he was offered treatment at
    least one time in October 2014 . . . . Regarding the aggravators,
    the Court finds the harm, injury damage and loss – I’ll say loss
    because . . . we don’t know what necessarily the future holds for
    [Child], but that it was significant and greater than the elements
    necessary to prove the commission of the offense. Compelling to
    this Court was [Mother’s] testimony that she couldn’t even touch
    [Child] without him wincing. He has night terrors. He wouldn’t
    even sit for a bath which is a treasured time for any parent and a
    treasured time for any child. To be in a warm bath should be a
    place of safety with your . . . parent, and the Court finds that . . .
    it’s very troubling to the Court. And also the fact that [Child]
    won’t sleep on his back. The Court is very troubled by that.
    Sleeping on your back demonstrates submission. It demonstrates
    safety. It demonstrates your [sic] okay with your environment,
    so you’re willing to lay supine, prone on – on your bed and
    you’re not afraid of anything, and [Child] is the opposite of that.
    He’s – he’s always looking around the corner worried about
    what’s coming now. The trauma that was described by Dr.
    Woodward was also significant, the medical intervention, the
    brain scan and the harm that that caused on [Child] and then not
    only that but this sort of twisted irony that – that even Mr.
    Keller’s incarceration is going to cause pain to [Child]. It’s
    difficult for this Court to – to reconcile that to know that [Child]
    loves Mr. Keller and will now be in pain – further pain with the
    idea that he’s facing incarceration. The Court finds another – the
    other – an additional statutory aggravator, his criminal history.
    [Keller] has, by my count, ten prior convictions over the course
    of . . . 2003 to 2018, so fifteen years . . . . [T]he Court sees Mr.
    Keller as having been given ten chances to sort of figure things
    out, and the other thing that’s striking to the Court is that
    according to the Pre-Sentence Investigation Mr. Keller was
    afforded leniency time and time and time again. . . . I saw so
    many times where he was offered time-served sentences and
    received probation, and he chose to turn his back on all of those
    things . . . and this demonstrates to the Court that he is not a
    good candidate for community supervision. The statutory
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-CR-148 | July 31, 2020   Page 11 of 18
    aggravator that the victim was less than 12 is clearly in the
    record. [Child] was 17 months at the time. He was on this
    planet 537 days not including the time that he spent in his
    mother’s womb, and that is a horrible begin[ning to] your life.
    [Keller] committed these crimes in the physical presence of a
    child less than 18. His two-year old daughter was present, not
    only present but recruited by [Keller] to continue on with the
    assaults on [C]hild, and the Court also recognizes [Child]’s baby
    brother was present at the time of these assaults. [Keller] was on
    probation at the time of this offense. He admitted, and again if
    you credit that version in the Pre-Sentence Investigation, he
    admitted to using four different hard drugs at the time of this
    offense while he’s on probation. It doesn’t seem that anything
    really mattered. The probation terms before – it’s confusing to
    this Court and the message is clear – will be clear for Mr. Keller
    that probation is a privilege. We’re offering serves [sic] to you to
    remove barriers, to intervene, to help you, to figure out what the
    trouble is so that we as a community come together and try to fix
    the problems. That’s what probation is, and when you violation
    [sic] probation this Court sees that as . . . significant and will . . .
    hold you accountable. [Keller] had care and custody or control
    over [C]hild at the time of the offense. Mom leaves her baby
    boys in your care so she could go to work . . . . You think about
    all the single parents out there that don’t have that option, but
    she left the boys in your care so she could go to work, and she
    trusted you, and we all trusted you with those babies, and you
    violated that trust in what the Court sees as an unimaginable
    way. The non-statutory aggravator the Court finds is the nature
    and circumstances in this case are particularly troubling. Using a
    full – the full weight and strength that you had, your delivering
    blows to this 17-month old baby knocking him down, holding
    him above your head by the thighs causing him to arch his back
    which had to be extremely painful, balancing him . . . on your
    thigh, bouncing him violently. That had to strike his genitals on
    more than one occasion, and that had to be tremendously
    painful. I saw at 14:39 while you were changing his diaper that
    you pinched his penis in a way that harmed him and caused him
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-CR-148 | July 31, 2020   Page 12 of 18
    to cry out. That was not lost on this Court. I saw also that at a
    different time it appeared to this Court that you forced your
    finger into – inside [C]hild while you’re wiping his bottom
    because he cried out as you did that, using an arm bar on his
    neck, screaming at him nose-to-nose repeatedly, and what the
    Court struggled with today, not that any of it was really
    something to tolerate, but screaming the song “Itsy Bitsy Spider”
    at this baby . . . was just a lot. The Court finds that the
    aggravating circumstances by far outweigh any mitigation
    presented before the Court today. The Court will sentence
    [Keller] to 16 years [on each count]. The Court finds that these
    offenses are accepted [sic] from the episode of criminal conduct’s
    statute. For each bone that you broke in that baby’s body, you
    will serve four – four sixteen-year sentences consecutive for a
    term of 64 years executed at the Indiana Department of
    Correction with none suspended.
    Transcript Vol. II at 60-63. Keller now appeals.
    Discussion & Decision
    [18]   Keller argues that the trial court abused its discretion in imposing consecutive
    sentences without properly articulating why such was appropriate. Keller
    further argues that “the imposition of consecutive sentences added to maximum
    sentences on each offense resulted in a sentence so harsh it became
    inappropriate.” Appellant’s Brief at 12. Keller asks this court to reduce his
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-CR-148 | July 31, 2020   Page 13 of 18
    sentence by ordering that the maximum sentence on each offense 4 be served
    concurrently for a total term of sixteen years.
    1. Consecutive Sentences
    [19]   Sentencing decisions, including the decision to impose consecutive sentences,
    are matters left to the sound discretion of the trial court. Anglemyer v. State, 
    868 N.E.2d 482
    , 490, clarified on reh’g, 
    875 N.E.2d 218
     (Ind. 2007); Gilliam v. State,
    
    901 N.E.2d 72
    , 74 (Ind. Ct. App. 2009). On appeal, we review a trial court’s
    sentencing order only for an abuse of discretion. 
    Id.
     It is an abuse of discretion
    if the trial court’s “decision is ‘clearly against the logic and effect of the facts
    and circumstances before the court, or the reasonable, probable, and actual
    deductions to be drawn therefrom.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting K.S. v. State, 
    849 N.E.2d 538
    ,
    544 (Ind. 2006)).
    [20]   A single aggravating circumstance may support the imposition of consecutive
    sentences. Lavoie v. State, 
    903 N.E.2d 135
    , 140 (Ind. Ct. App. 2009). Although
    a trial court is required to state its reasons for imposing consecutive sentences, it
    may rely on the same reasons to impose a maximum sentence and consecutive
    sentences. 
    Id.
    [21]   Keller argues that the trial court’s sentencing statement did not adequately
    explain why consecutive sentences were warranted. We disagree. We begin by
    4
    “A person who commits a Level 3 felony (for a crime committed after June 30, 2014) shall be imprisoned
    for a fixed term of between three (3) and sixteen (16) years, with the advisory sentence being nine (9) years.”
    
    Ind. Code § 35-50-2-5
    (b).
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-CR-148 | July 31, 2020                      Page 14 of 18
    noting that the State argued that consecutive sentences were warranted because
    the offenses to which Keller pled guilty were “separated” in time in that they
    were “hours apart.” Transcript Vol. II at 59. In its oral sentencing statement, the
    court recognized the prolonged timeframe in which Keller abused Child and
    that his actions appeared “calculated” and that he was “basically trying to think
    up new ways . . . he could use to harm [Child].” Id. at 61. In addition, the trial
    court provided a very thorough and comprehensive sentencing statement,
    describing in detail the appalling, unprovoked abuse Child suffered at the hands
    of Keller that was depicted in the video. The court carefully addressed each
    proffered mitigating and aggravating circumstance and found that the
    aggravating circumstances “far outweigh[ed]” the mitigating circumstances.
    Transcript Vol. II at 63. Additionally, the court found that the nature and
    circumstances of this case were “particularly troubling” and then described
    several heinous acts portrayed in the video. Id. Further, implicit in the court’s
    sentencing statement is its recognition that the abuse underlying the offenses to
    which Keller pled guilty occurred at separate times throughout the day. It is
    clear from our review of the court’s sentencing statement that it justified
    imposition of consecutive sentences not just as punishment “[f]or each bone
    that [Keller] broke in that baby’s body” but for the horrific, senseless, and
    repeated abuse that Keller inflicted on an innocent seventeen-month-old child.
    Id. We cannot say that the trial court abused its discretion in ordering the
    sentences be served consecutively.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-CR-148 | July 31, 2020   Page 15 of 18
    2. Inappropriate Sentence
    [22]   Keller argues that imposition of the maximum, consecutive sentences for an
    aggregate term of sixty-four years renders his sentence inappropriate. He notes
    that the sentence he received is one year less than the maximum sentence for
    murder. 5 See 
    Ind. Code § 35-50-2-3
     (providing that the sentencing range for
    murder is between forty-five and sixty-five years). Keller also compares his
    aggregate sentence to others who received similar sentences for what he
    describes as “worse” crimes involving fatal injuries as demonstrating that his
    sentence is inappropriate. Appellant’s Brief at 20.
    [23]   Pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 7(B), we “may revise a sentence authorized by
    statute if, after due consideration of the trial court’s decision, the Court finds
    that the sentence is inappropriate in light of the nature of the offense and the
    character of the offender.” Our Supreme Court has explained that our principal
    role should be to attempt to leaven the outliers, “not to achieve a perceived
    ‘correct’ result in each case.” Cardwell v. State, 
    895 N.E.2d 1219
    , 1225 (Ind.
    2008). “‘[W]e must and should exercise deference to a trial court’s sentencing
    decision, both because Rule 7(B) requires us to give ‘due consideration’ to that
    decision and because we understand and recognize the unique perspective a
    5
    Keller also argues that had his offenses not been crimes of violence, his sentence could not have exceeded
    twenty years as they were part of a single episode of criminal conduct. See I.C. § 35-50-1-2(c), (d)(4)
    (providing that, except for crimes of violence, the total of consecutive terms of imprisonment for felony
    convictions arising out of an episode of criminal conduct may not exceed twenty years if the most serious
    crime for which the defendant is sentenced is a Level 3 felony). His crimes, however, are identified as crimes
    of violence. Thus, this argument has no merit.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-CR-148 | July 31, 2020                     Page 16 of 18
    trial court brings to its sentencing decisions.’” Rogers v. State, 
    878 N.E.2d 269
    ,
    275 (Ind. Ct. App. 2007) (quoting Stewart v. State, 
    866 N.E.2d 858
    , 866 (Ind. Ct.
    App. 2007)), trans. denied. “Such deference should prevail unless overcome by
    compelling evidence portraying in a positive light the nature of the offense (such
    as accompanied by restraint, regard, and lack of brutality) and the defendant’s
    character (such as substantial virtuous traits or persistent examples of good
    character).” Stephenson v. State, 
    29 N.E.3d 111
    , 122 (Ind. 2015). Whether we
    regard a sentence as inappropriate “turns on our sense of the culpability of the
    defendant, the severity of the crime, the damage done to others, and myriad
    other factors that come to light in a given case.” Cardwell, 895 N.E.2d at 1224.
    [24]   Regarding Keller’s character, we note that he has a criminal history that
    includes convictions for battery and strangulation. Keller also admitted to
    using four different drugs while he was charged with the care of his two-year-
    old daughter and his fiancé’s two young children. As he abused Child, he
    encouraged his two-year-old daughter to participate. After being confronted
    with the injuries to Child, Keller encouraged Mother (his wife at the time) to
    kill herself and threatened to make her life miserable. We find no compelling
    evidence in the record that casts Keller’s character in a positive light.
    [25]   Regarding the nature of the offense, we find that Keller’s abuse of a seventeen-
    month-old child was despicable and alarming. In the video excerpts submitted
    during the sentencing hearing, Keller is seen repeatedly smothering, hitting,
    kicking, pushing, and tackling Child with the full weight of his body and he
    encourages his young daughter to participate in the abuse. Keller’s abuse of
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-CR-148 | July 31, 2020   Page 17 of 18
    Child began first thing in the morning and continued on and off over a period of
    approximately ten hours. The abuse is not easy to watch, and it is shocking
    that Child did not suffer more severe injuries. In addition to the physical
    injuries, which included at least four fractures to his back, Dr. Woodward
    testified that Child now experiences, among other things, post-traumatic stress
    disorder, nightmares, and “verbal delays” that suggest he is “on a path for
    neurobiological damage, long-term consequences” that could impact how he
    matures and interacts with others as he grows older. Id. at 47. Although Keller
    did not inflict fatal injuries on Child, the impact of Keller’s abuse will be life-
    long. The nature of the offense is brutal, and Keller showed no restraint or
    regard for Child.
    [26]   In short, we do not find Keller’s sentence to be inappropriate in light of his
    character and the nature of the offense.
    [27]   Judgment affirmed.
    Bailey, J. and Crone, J., concur.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 20A-CR-148 | July 31, 2020   Page 18 of 18
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 20A-CR-148

Filed Date: 7/31/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021