Pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 65(D),
this Memorandum Decision shall not be
regarded as precedent or cited before                      Oct 31 2014, 10:00 am
any court except for the purpose of
establishing the defense of res judicata,
collateral estoppel, or the law of the case.


ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT:                            ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:

JESSE R. POAG                                      GREGORY F. ZOELLER
Newburgh, Indiana                                  Attorney General of Indiana

                                                   MICHAEL GENE WORDEN
                                                   Deputy Attorney General
                                                   Indianapolis, Indiana




                               IN THE
                     COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

THOMAS BOSWELL,                                    )
                                                   )
       Appellant-Defendant,                        )
                                                   )
               vs.                                 )       No. 82A01-1405-CR-193
                                                   )
STATE OF INDIANA,                                  )
                                                   )
       Appellee-Plaintiff.                         )


                APPEAL FROM THE VANDERBURGH SUPERIOR COURT
                        The Honorable Robert J. Tornatta, Judge
                            Cause No. 82D02-1307-FA-936


                                        October 31, 2014

                MEMORANDUM DECISION - NOT FOR PUBLICATION

PYLE, Judge
                                 STATEMENT OF THE CASE

       Appellant/Defendant, Thomas Boswell (“Boswell”), appeals his conviction for

Class A felony dealing in methamphetamine.1 He argues that there was insufficient

evidence to support his conviction absent the testimony of his co-defendant, whom he

claims was not credible. Because we may not reweigh the credibility of Boswell’s co-

defendant on appeal, we conclude that there was sufficient evidence to support Boswell’s

conviction.

       We affirm.

                                               ISSUE

       Whether there was insufficient evidence to support Boswell’s conviction
       for Class A felony dealing in methamphetamine.

                                               FACTS

       Alan Vanwinkle (“Vanwinkle”) lived in an apartment building in Evansville,

Indiana in July of 2013. Vanwinkle was addicted to methamphetamine and let people use

his apartment to make methamphetamine in exchange for some of the resulting

methamphetamine. Although Boswell did not have a key to the apartment, he had stayed

there previously and had an arrangement with Vanwinkle to use Vanwinkle’s key and

then return it to Vanwinkle when he left the apartment. On the night of July 15, 2013,

Vanwinkle returned to his apartment around 6 p.m. and found Boswell making




1
  IND. CODE §§ 35-48-4-1.1(a)(1)(A); and 35-48-4-1.1(b)(3). We note that, effective July 1, 2014, a new
version of the dealing in methamphetamine statute was enacted. Because Boswell committed his offense
in 2013, we will apply the statute in effect at that time.


                                                  2
methamphetamine in a half-gallon glass whiskey bottle. He let Boswell continue to make

methamphetamine in the kitchen and living area of the apartment while he went to bed.

       After sleeping for a while, Vanwinkle heard “a big scream and a bottle busting.”

(Tr. 21). He left his bed and saw Boswell pulling glass fragments out of his knee from

the busted whiskey bottle. He also saw that Boswell’s leg was bleeding. Boswell

bandaged the wound while Vanwinkle swept glass off the floor. Boswell then scooped

some of the shattered glass into a Mountain Dew bottle and began making another batch

of methamphetamine.

       About thirty minutes later, Vanwinkle received a phone call from a man he knew

as “Chop.” (Tr. 22). Chop arrived at the apartment, accompanied by a man named Greg.

Chop went out to the balcony of the apartment to make methamphetamine. At some

point after Chop arrived, another person began tapping on Vanwinkle’s door really

“light[ly].” (Tr. 54). Meanwhile, Bobby Vaughn (“Vaughn”), a maintenance technician

for the apartment building, happened to be walking down the hallway of the apartment

building outside of Vanwinkle’s door at that time and saw the person tapping lightly on

the door. As a joke, Vaughn said, “That ain’t how you knock on a door. This is how you

knock on a door.” (Tr. 54). Vaughn knocked on the door “real loud.” (Tr. 54). Boswell

opened up the door and started “verbally cussing” at Vaughn, telling him that he had “no

business beating on his door like that.” (Tr. 54). While he was cussing at Vaughn,

smoke started coming out of the top of the door, and the smoke had a “funny or foul

smell.” (Tr. 54). Vaughn asked Boswell if he was cooking methamphetamine in the

apartment and told him that he was going to call the police.

                                            3
       Vaughn proceeded down the hallway and then heard a door. He turned around

and saw two silhouettes exit the side door of the apartment unit and go down the

staircase. He could not tell who the two people were because the hall was so smoky, but

he noticed that one of them was carrying a backpack.

       When he reached downstairs, Vaughn called 9-1-1, and law enforcement officers

from the Evansville Police Department arrived at the scene. As soon as Officer Corey

Nutt (“Officer Nutt”) walked into the apartment building, he could detect “a smell that

commonly resembles an active meth lab.” (Tr. 96). He went to get gas masks for the

officers. In the meantime, Officer Justin Jackson (“Officer Jackson”) went to the fourth

floor of the apartment, where Vanwinkle’s apartment was. He found Boswell by the

elevator and asked him which apartment he was heading towards. When Boswell stated

that he was going to Vanwinkle’s apartment, Officer Jackson detained him.

       Shortly thereafter, Vanwinkle appeared by the elevator holding a trash bag.

Officer Jackson opened the bag and saw that there was a “huge gas cloud.” (Tr. 114).

Because he did not have on his gas mask, Officer Jackson closed the bag. He then moved

the bag down the hall with his foot and began evacuating the apartments on that floor of

the building. He also searched Boswell and found a pocket knife and a small bag of

marijuana.

       After the other officers and the fire department arrived, Officer Jackson

transported Boswell to jail, with a stop at the hospital to treat his wound. At the hospital,

Officer Jackson saw the nurse pulling small pieces of glass from Boswell’s leg.



                                             4
        Back at Vanwinkle’s apartment, Officer Elizabeth McKinney (“Officer

McKinney”) interviewed an apartment resident, Daniel Craig (“Craig”).                      Craig told

Officer McKinney that he had seen a bag outside of Vanwinkle’s apartment that was

smoking and had a strong odor. He had also seen a man take the bag outside of the

building and throw the bag in the bushes at the corner of the building while another man

got into a car and left.

        Detective Brock Hensley (“Detective Hensley”) with the Evansville Police

Department arrived on the scene and was directed to a black backpack the police officers

had found outside of the apartment building. The backpack contained a two-liter bottle

and a one-liter container of “liquid fire,” a material containing sulfuric acid. Based on his

experience, Detective Hensley determined that the two-liter bottle was indicative of a

“one-pot meth lab” that was “still under quite a bit of pressure.” (Tr. 167). Detective

Hensley took the bottle to a safe area and de-pressurized it so that it was safe. During

that time, a Sergeant with the Evansville Police Department also rendered the black trash

bag they had recovered from Vanwinkle safe. Afterwards, the officers examined the

contents of the trash bag and found various products used to manufacture

methamphetamine, including a “cut open ammonium nitrate;”2 two “stripped out lithium

batteries;” two glass jars; and a “little bit of pill dough,” which is a byproduct of the

methamphetamine manufacturing process. (Tr. 170).




2
  Detective Hensley testified that the ammonium nitrate necessary to manufacture methamphetamine
comes from cold packs. In order to separate the ammonium nitrate, a person must “take the cold pack, cut
the top, and [] remove the little pellets inside.” (Tr. 7).
                                                   5
      The next day, on July 16, 2013, a Housing Specialist for the Evansville Housing

Authority that worked at Vanwinkle’s apartment building noticed that there was another

backpack and a two-liter bottle behind the air conditioning units outside of the building.

She left the items there that day, but when they were still there the next day she reported

them. Evansville Police Detective Patrick McDonald (“Detective McDonald”) responded

to the scene and found the backpack, the two-liter bottle, and a few bags. He opened the

backpack and bags and discovered a l.5 liter bottle; a prescription bottle in Boswell’s

name; some coffee filters inside a plastic bag; two digital scales; a cellular phone; some

pills; a used syringe; a glass wine bottle that had been used as an HCL gas generator; a

two-pound container of Red Crown lye; an orange plastic cup; a pair of blue jeans with

red liquid on them; two one-gallon cans of Coleman camp fuel; an eleven-ounce can of

starting fluid; a container of drano crystals; and sodium hydroxide or lye-based drain

cleaners in a measuring cup. He also found that the two-liter bottle next to the backpack

contained an organic solvent. He identified all of these items as necessary for producing

methamphetamine.

      Subsequently, Detective McDonald looked up Boswell’s NPLEX report. The

NPLEX       reporting   system   documents   prescription   pseudoephedrine-based     cold

medication purchases because Pseudoephedrine is a necessary ingredient for

methamphetamine manufacturing. Boswell had purchased pseudoephedrine-based cold

medication on July 10, 2013 and July 15, 2013. Both of these purchases were from a

different pharmacy than the one listed on Boswell’s prescription bottle found in the

backpack.

                                             6
          On July 17, 2013, the State charged Boswell and Vanwinkle with Class A felony

dealing in methamphetamine; Class D felony maintaining a common nuisance; and Class

B misdemeanor criminal recklessness.                  However, on February 19, 2014, the State

dismissed the maintaining a common nuisance and criminal recklessness charges against

Boswell.3 On February 20 and 21, 2014, the trial court held a jury trial on Boswell’s

charges. At trial, Vanwinkle testified as to the events that had occurred in his apartment.

At the time, Vanwinkle’s case had not been resolved, but the State had not offered him a

plea agreement that required his testimony against Boswell. Vanwinkle testified that he

was “not expecting any sort of help or more lenient treatment.” (Tr. 38).

          At the conclusion of the trial, the jury found Boswell guilty of Class A felony

dealing in methamphetamine, and the trial court entered judgment of conviction. On

April 23, 2014, the trial court sentenced him to thirty (30) years executed. Boswell now

appeals.

                                                 DECISION

          On appeal, Boswell challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his

conviction for Class A felony dealing in methamphetamine. In order to convict Boswell

as charged, the State was required to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Boswell

knowingly or intentionally manufactured methamphetamine within one thousand feet of a

family housing complex. I.C. §§ 35-48-4-1.1(a)(1)(A); and 35-48-4-1.1(b)(3). When we

review the sufficiency of the evidence supporting a conviction, we will only reverse a

conviction when reasonable persons would not be able to form inferences as to each

3
    It is not clear from the record whether the State also dismissed these charges against Vanwinkle.
                                                       7
material element of the offense. Perez v. State, 872 N.E.2d 208, 212-13 (Ind. Ct. App.

2007), trans. denied. We do not reweigh evidence or judge the credibility of witnesses.

Id. at 213. In addition, we only consider the evidence most favorable to the verdict and

the reasonable inferences stemming from that evidence. Id.

       Boswell does not dispute that the State proved the elements of the charge against

him.   His only claim on appeal is that Vanwinkle’s testimony, which provided a

substantial amount of the evidence against him, was not credible because Vanwinkle was

charged as his co-defendant. He argues that there was not sufficient evidence to prove

the elements of dealing in methamphetamine without this testimony.

       Generally, the testimony of an accomplice is subject to high scrutiny. Stephenson

v. State, 742 N.E.2d 463, 496 (Ind. 2001), cert. denied. However, it is well-established

that the testimony of an accomplice alone is enough to support a conviction. Timberlake

v. State, 690 N.E.2d 243, 251 (Ind. 1997), reh’g denied, cert. denied. The fact that the

accomplice may not be completely trustworthy goes to the weight and credibility of the

witness’s testimony, something that is completely within the province of the trier of fact

and cannot be reviewed on appeal. Id. at 252. As Boswell only challenges Vanwinkle’s

credibility, we will not consider his argument on appeal. Id. Because he does not

otherwise dispute the sufficiency of the evidence, we affirm his conviction.

       Affirmed.

NAJAM, J., and BAILEY, J., concur.




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