                                                                                FILED
                                                                            Aug 09 2017, 5:17 am

                                                                                CLERK
                                                                            Indiana Supreme Court
                                                                               Court of Appeals
                                                                                 and Tax Court




ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT                                     ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
R. Patrick Magrath                                         Curtis T. Hill, Jr.
Alcorn Sage Schwartz & Magrath, LLP                        Attorney General of Indiana
Madison, Indiana                                           Katherine Modesitt Cooper
                                                           Deputy Attorney General
                                                           Indianapolis, Indiana



                                            IN THE
    COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

B.T.E.,                                                    August 9, 2017
Appellant-Respondent,                                      Court of Appeals Case No.
                                                           36A05-1607-JV-1702
        v.                                                 Appeal from the Jackson Superior
                                                           Court
State of Indiana,                                          The Honorable Bruce A.
Appellee-Petitioner.                                       MacTavish, Judge
                                                           Trial Court Cause No.
                                                           36D02-1601-JD-3



Brown, Judge.




Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017                           Page 1 of 39
[1]   B.T.E. appeals the juvenile court’s true finding that he committed delinquent

      acts which, if committed by an adult, would constitute attempted aggravated

      battery and conspiracy to commit aggravated battery as level 3 felonies. B.T.E.

      raises four issues which we revise and restate as:


            I.     Whether the court erred in denying B.T.E.’s motion to dismiss based
                   upon Ind. Code § 31-37-11-2; and


           II.     Whether the evidence is sufficient to support the juvenile court’s true
                   findings that B.T.E. committed the delinquent acts which, if
                   committed by an adult, would constitute attempted aggravated
                   battery and conspiracy to commit aggravated battery as level 3
                   felonies.

      We affirm in part and reverse in part.


                                       Facts and Procedural History

[2]   In the Fall of 2015, Seymour High School students B.T.E. and M.V. began

      planning to attack the school on April 20, 2018, and to specifically target two

      other students at the school, J.R. and G.M. The date of April 20, 2018 was

      chosen because it was the “anniversary of the Columbine School Massacre.”

      Transcript Volume 3 at 21. B.T.E. and M.V. frequently communicated about

      the subject using Facebook, and B.T.E. specifically asked M.V. to help him

      carry out the plan. B.T.E. drew a diagram of one of his classrooms, shading

      two students’ seats and drawing an “X” over J.R.’s seat. Id. at 22-23. He also

      drew a diagram of one of the buildings at the school and marked names of

      teachers and doors to the classrooms.




      Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017   Page 2 of 39
[3]   Among the messages exchanged with M.V. on October 31, 2015 B.T.E wrote:

      “I hate [J.R.]. I hope he gets f----- killed. The things I’d do to him. They would

      make even the sociopathic of sociopaths shake and stutter. I hope he f----- dies

      a slow and painful death that lasts for days.” Id. at 33. On November 4, 2015,

      B.T.E. wrote to M.V.: “[J.R.] got a (-1) with [G.M.] because he was [E.’s]

      partner instead of hers. It shows that he should have a crush on [E.] and not

      [G.M.] of [sic] I’ll kill him. I will. If he dates [G.M.] then I will seriously kill

      him. Then she will hate me so I’ll kill her too.” State’s Exhibit 10; Transcript

      Volume 3 at 36. That same day, B.T.E. and M.V. wrote the following on

      Facebook:

              M.V.: If you are going to do a murder. One, wear clothes you
              never would wear again and haven’t worn much before. Wear
              shoes that aren’t yours, or have little to no traction left on the
              bottom. And make it look like you were looking for something
              on them so it appears to be a robbery over a specific item that
              you would never need.


              That way it is harder to identify you and tie you down as a
              suspect.


              How well you hide your tracks determine [sic] the rest


              By identify, I mean in case someone sees you near the scene


              B.T.E.: I don’t need a lesson on s--- I’ve already studied


              M.V.: I’m proving to you that I know my way around too -.-



      Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017    Page 3 of 39
      State’s Exhibit 31; Transcript Volume 3 at 64.


[4]   On November 11, 2015, B.T.E. wrote: “I want to ‘get a bowl cut’ and become

      famous after I’m arrested[.] Then go to jail[.] I will be home there[.] The

      whole f------ worlds out to get me[.] ‘Ha look he’s mad[.]’ Me: Ha look he’s

      scared cause I killed his mom[.] Now I’m f------ talking.” State’s Exhibit 26;

      Transcript Volume 3 at 56.


[5]   On November 12, 2015, B.T.E. and M.V. communicated on Facebook as

      follows:

              B.T.E.: Me and faggot f--- have a mutual thing going on


              He wants to get lots of sleep


              I want him to get nonstop sleep


              I’m pissed


              I hate that f---


              M.V.: What do you think the most painful death would be?


              B.T.E.: Let’s test everything in [J.R.] as we can


              M.V. I was thinking that


              As many cuts as possible


              Without severing any important organs or blood vessles [sic]
      Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017   Page 4 of 39
              B.T.E.: Implement through the ass and out the mouth


              Sometimes


              Scratch that


              You last between a few hours and a few days


              M.V.: Vlad the impaler proved this


      State’s Exhibit 29; Transcript Volume 3 at 62-63.


[6]   On November 13, 2015, B.T.E. and M.V. communicated on Facebook as

      follows:


              B.T.E.: I got pissed many times today


              Three or four times because of [J.R.]


              Hate that c---


              Too bad I don’t have a benevolent mind, or [J.R.] would make it
              past highschool [sic]


              I’m serious


              I’m taking him out with me


              That f----- c---




      Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017   Page 5 of 39
              I got pissed off when I was in math and I called [J.R.] a (this was
              to my friends obviously) ‘Horton hears a who-lookin [sic]
              mother------’ and said that I hated his f----- soul and such I’ll kill
              him[.]


              M.V.: They thought it was funny


              B.T.E.: I think [G.M.] heard me mention [J.R.]


              Good


              I’ll kill him


      State’s Exhibit 18; Transcript Volume 3 at 43-44.


[7]   On November 18, 2015, B.T.E. and M.V. had the following conversation on

      Facebook:


              B.T.E.: Kill [J.R.]


                                                     *****


              B.T.E.: I could steal a knife from POE and kill [J.R.] with it and
              then take out as many people as possible


              M.V.: Or you could buy a gun


              B.T.E.: Or


              I could attempt to break into my dads gun safe so I wouldn’t
              have to buy a weapon


      Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017    Page 6 of 39
              M.V.: Speaking of guns


              Next weekend


              I am going hunting


              B.T.E: I’ve never been


              M.V.: I’m going to be killing birds


              B.T.E.: I’m going to be killing [J.R.]


      State’s Exhibit 30; Transcript Volume 3 at 63.


[8]   On December 2, 2015, B.T.E. wrote to another person on Facebook: “I think I

      figured out how to make pipe bombs when I was researching school shootings

      influenced by columbine.” State’s Exhibit 27; Transcript Volume 3 at 56. That

      same day, he sent on Facebook to M.V. detailed instructions for how to make a

      pipe bomb and noted: “That’s only the important stuff.” State’s Exhibit 28;

      Transcript Volume 3 at 58. On December 7, 2015, B.T.E. wrote on Facebook

      to M.V.: “4/20/18[.] Some people will find out what the state of nothingness is

      like :).” State’s Exhibit 32. Then, on December 9, 2015, B.T.E. and M.V.

      corresponded on Facebook as follows:


              B.T.E.: *gunfire* you better hope I don’t f------ miss


               *hits [J.R.] behind you*


              M.V.: You fat f---
      Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017   Page 7 of 39
               B.T.E.: *pits [sic] three more shots into [J.R.’s] head before
               turning and shooting past you into the classroom on your left
               hitting [G.M.] in the forehead


               M.V.: Well, nice shooting, Texas


       State’s Exhibit 33; Transcript Volume 3 at 66.


[9]    On January 13, 2016, M.V. made a threat against the school to another student,

       B.C., who reported that threat to the school counselor. As a result of the report,

       the school and the Seymour Police Department began an investigation, and

       Officer Brian Williams, who was assigned as the School Resource Officer for

       the Seymour Community School Corporation, examined B.T.E.’s Facebook

       page and observed that he had posted a picture “of the joker character [] and it

       resembled the character from the current Batman movie which was portrayed

       as a, a psychopathic serial killer,” and that within his Facebook “likes section”

       he liked “a page called Columbine High School Massacre.” Transcript Volume

       2 at 22.


[10]   On January 15, 2016, Detective Crystal Schapson interviewed B.T.E., and

       when asked about the allegations against him B.T.E. “immediately began

       advising that it was just a joke, he started to become visibly upset kind of teary

       eyed.” Transcript Volume 3 at 6. B.T.E. stated that “he had talked with other

       students about possible [sic] shooting up the school,” as well as “his hatred for

       some students.” Id. B.T.E. explained that “there was one student in particular

       that he, he liked, had a crush on, and that she was talking to or dating []


       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017   Page 8 of 39
       another student and that angered him and he felt like it was a competition

       between that male student and himself,” and that the male student was J.R. and

       the female student was G.M. Id. at 8. When J.R. was discussed, B.T.E., who

       had been “teary eyed, kind of emotional . . . immediately stopped crying, he sat

       up, he became very stiff, very rigid, [] at times had his hands on the desk and

       was clinching [sic] his fist while talking about it.” Id. B.T.E. stated that he

       came up with the date of April 20, 2018, himself “because that was the

       anniversary of the Columbine School Massacre” and would be his and M.V.’s

       senior year of high school, just as it was for the perpetrators of the Columbine

       shooting. Id. at 21. B.T.E. also referred to the discussions as “just a repetitious

       joke.” Id. Detective Schapson also asked B.T.E. about the drawings of the

       classroom and the school building that had been discovered, and he “hesitated

       in answering [the] question, actually repeated [the] question back to [Detective

       Schapson], which he had not done throughout the entire interview” previously.

       Id. at 22. He indicated that he did not know what he wanted to do after high

       school and contemplated wanting “to be in architecture so he started drawing

       buildings . . . .” Id.


[11]   On January 19, 2016, B.T.E. was arrested. On January 26, 2016, the State

       alleged B.T.E. to be a delinquent child for attempted murder, an act which

       would be a level 1 felony if committed by an adult, and attempted aggravated

       battery, an act which would be a level 3 felony if committed by an adult. The

       court approved the filing of the delinquency petition the same day. In March

       2016, the State filed amended delinquency petitions alleging B.T.E. to be


       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017   Page 9 of 39
       delinquent for committing the acts which would be the following if committed

       by an adult: conspiracy to commit murder as a level 2 felony; conspiracy to

       commit aggravated battery as a level 3 felony; conspiracy to possess a firearm

       on school property as a level 6 felony; and attempted dangerous possession of a

       firearm as a class A misdemeanor. On March 28, 2016, the court ordered

       B.T.E. released to home detention.


[12]   The court commenced a fact-finding hearing on April 27, 2016, and after

       hearing testimony from three witnesses the State moved to continue the hearing

       “on the issue of admission of Facebook records as business records,” which was

       continued over B.T.E.’s objection. On May 5, 2016, B.T.E. filed a motion to

       dismiss pursuant to Ind. Code § 31-37-11-2(1)(b) and filed an amended motion

       to dismiss on May 9, 2016. The court denied B.T.E.’s amended motion to

       dismiss on May 16, 2016.


[13]   The hearing resumed on May 24, 2016. At the hearing, the court conditionally

       admitted the statements of M.V. in Exhibits 29, 30, 31, 34 over B.T.E.’s hearsay

       objections. The State also offered the Facebook message exchanges between

       B.T.E. and another individual, D.H. The first exchange occurred on November

       22, 2015, and is as follows:


               D.H.: who’s she dating?


               me


               B.T.E.: My buddy J------


       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017   Page 10 of 39
           D.H.: show me him.


                                                    *****


           D.H.: so I can kill him


           B.T.E.: Yes


           While you’re at it


           Kill that mucus-snorting queer1


State’s Exhibit 23; Transcript Volume 3 49-50, 52. Also, an exchange between

B.T.E. and D.H. dated November 30, 2015, took place as follows:

           D.H.: I’m so close to killing myself


           B.T.E: No no kill someone else not yourself


           Come to Seymour and kill that f----- and then kill yourself


                                                    *****


           D.H.: I’m gonna kms


                                                    *****




1
    At this point in the Facebook conversation, B.T.E. inserts a picture of J.R.


Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017          Page 11 of 39
               B.T.E.: Oh


               Whisper*


               Don’t do that


               Kill others before yourself


       State’s Exhibit 24; Transcript Volume 3 at 53. B.T.E. objected to the admission

       of Exhibits 23 and 24 on the bases of hearsay and relevancy, arguing regarding

       relevancy that the exhibits have “got nothing to do with, with the conspiracy

       that is alleged between [B.T.E.] and [M.V.].” Transcript Volume 3 at 50. The

       court admitted the exhibits as to the attempt charges but sustained the objection

       as to the conspiracy charges.


[14]   On June 3, 2016, the court entered true findings for conspiracy to commit

       aggravated battery and attempted aggravated battery, both level 3 felonies if

       committed by an adult, and not true findings for the other charges. In its order,

       the court found that the State proved the charge of conspiracy to commit

       aggravated battery by independent evidence and admitted Exhibits 29, 30, 31,

       and 34 as evidence. On June 28, 2016, the court sentenced B.T.E. to probation

       until his 18th birthday, with a suspended commitment to the Indiana

       Department of Correction.


                                                     Discussion

                                                           I.


       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017   Page 12 of 39
[15]   The first issue is whether the court erred in denying B.T.E.’s motion to dismiss

       based upon Ind. Code § 31-37-11-2. B.T.E. argues that the delinquency petition

       was filed on January 26, 2016, that the State requested an early trial because

       B.T.E. was in detention, that more than sixty days after the filing, on March 28,

       2016, the court placed B.T.E. on home detention, that on April 27, 2016, more

       than ninety days after the filing, the fact-finding hearing commenced but

       ultimately was continued at the State’s request and over B.T.E.’s objection

       “because [the State] had not properly certified business records it intended to

       admit,” that he filed an objection to the trial setting on that date, and that on

       May 5, 2016, he filed a motion to dismiss arguing that the State had failed to

       bring him to hearing in a timely manner. Appellant’s Brief at 24. He further

       notes that, on May 24, 2016, the court reconvened and took the matter under

       advisement nearly 120 days after the petition had been filed. B.T.E. notes that

       this Court has previously held that Ind. Code § 31-37-11-2 does not mandate

       dismissal when the deadline is not met, but he “respectfully requests the Court

       reconsider the logic of not holding the State accountable to the mandatory

       deadline . . . .” Id. at 25. He also maintains that, although he did not object to

       the original setting of the fact-finding hearing on April 27, 2016 as outside the

       sixty-day time period, he did object to setting the second Fact Finding Hearing

       on May 24, 2016 on that basis.


[16]   The State argues that B.T.E. waived this issue when he failed to object after the

       court scheduled the hearing outside of the sixty-day time frame. It asserts that

       B.T.E. “did not move to dismiss until the fact-finding hearing had already


       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017   Page 13 of 39
       commenced and several witnesses had been examined before the hearing was

       continued by the juvenile court.” Appellee’s Brief at 40-41. The State further

       argues that, waiver notwithstanding, this court has held that the legislature has

       not provided for a remedy of discharge for a violation of Ind. Code § 31-37-11-

       2. The State maintains that “[j]udicially creating a discharge remedy would be

       inconsistent with the purposes and policies behind the juvenile justice system,”

       which is “intended to ‘ensure that children . . . are treated as persons in need of

       care, protection, treatment, and rehabilitation’ and to ‘provide a juvenile justice

       system that protects the public by enforcing the legal obligations that children

       have to society and that society has to children.’” Id. at 43 (quoting Ind. Code

       §§ 31-10-2-1(5), -1(8)). It argues that “[t]his purpose of providing rehabilitation

       and treatment to a child headed down the wrong path in life is not served if the

       juvenile is discharged before a delinquency petition can be adjudicated and

       rehabilitative measures imposed upon the child.” Id. at 44.


[17]   This Court recently addressed this issue in K.G. v. State, 67 N.E.3d 1147 (Ind.

       Ct. App. 2017), trans. denied. In K.G., the juvenile court granted multiple

       continuances, each over the objection of K.G., and the fact-finding hearing was

       ultimately held outside of the sixty-day time period. 67 N.E.3d at 1148. On

       appeal, K.G. argued “that he was entitled to dismissal because the fact-finding

       hearing was held beyond the time limits set forth in I.C. § 31-37-11-2(b).” Id.

       We began our analysis by observing that Section 2 provides as follows:

               (a) If:



       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017   Page 14 of 39
                         (1) a child is in detention; and


                         (2) a petition has been filed;


               a fact-finding hearing or a waiver hearing must be commenced
               not later than twenty (20) days, excluding Saturdays, Sundays,
               and legal holidays, after the petition is filed.


               (b) If:


                         (1) a child is not in detention; and


                         (2) a petition has been filed;


               the hearing must be commenced not later than sixty (60) days,
               excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays, after the
               petition is filed.


               (c) A child who is ordered detained in the home of the child’s
               parent . . . may not be considered as being detained for purposes
               of this section.


       Id. at 1148-1149.


[18]   We noted that this Court has rejected this argument “on at least two

       occasions.” Id. at 1149 (citing A.K. v. State, 915 N.E.2d 554, 556 (Ind. Ct. App.

       2009) (“the juvenile code does not mandate dismissal of the charges when the

       sixty-day deadline is not met”), reh’g denied, trans. denied; J.D. v. State, 909

       N.E.2d 1035, 1037-1038 (Ind. Ct. App. 2009) (“[w]ithout clear statutory

       authorization, we cannot say that a violation of the sixty-day limit of Section

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017   Page 15 of 39
       2(b) required the trial court to dismiss the allegations”)). We further noted that

       “a review of chapter 31-37-11 reveals that continuances beyond the general

       sixty-day limit are clearly contemplated” and specifically observed that Ind.

       Code § 31-37-11-9(b) contains “the only section of chapter 31-37-11 that

       expressly calls for discharge when a specific time limit is violated” which

       neither party claimed was applicable in that case.2 Id. We held that “[a]lthough

       Section 2 uses ‘must’ regarding the time limits for holding the hearing, we

       conclude that the term is intended to be directory rather than mandatory in this

       context” and “decline[d] the invitation to read a discharge remedy into Section

       2(b) that the legislature did not mandate, especially where the legislature

       specified precise remedies in other parts of the chapter.” Id. at 1149-1150.


[19]   We find that the holding in K.G. applies with equal force here. In fact,

       although the child in K.G. timely objected and requested discharge on multiple

       occasions, here B.T.E. did not object until April 27, 2016, and did not file his

       motion to dismiss until May 5, 2016, both well past the sixty-day time period.

       We cannot say that the court erred in denying B.T.E.’s motion to dismiss.




       2
        Ind. Code § 31-37-11-9(b) provides that the court “shall discharge the child” if the fact-finding hearing is
       “not commenced within the ninety (90) day period required by this section . . . .” Ind. Code § 31-37-11-9(a)
       provides that the court may continue the hearing for not more than ninety days when a motion for
       continuance is made under Ind. Code § 31-37-11-8, which allows the prosecuting attorney to move for a
       continuance of the fact-finding hearing or waiver hearing “because of the absence of a witness” after the
       “child moves for discharge . . . .” B.T.E. does not argue that Section 9(b) is applicable in this case. Further,
       we cannot say that it is applicable given that B.T.E. moved to dismiss the petition on May 5, 2016, based
       upon Ind. Code § 31-37-11-2(1)(b) and that the court held the final fact-finding hearing on May 24, 2016.

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017                          Page 16 of 39
                                                           II.


[20]   The next issue is whether the evidence is sufficient to support the juvenile

       court’s true findings that B.T.E. committed delinquent acts which, if committed

       by an adult, would constitute attempted aggravated battery and conspiracy to

       commit aggravated battery as level 3 felonies. When the State seeks to have a

       juvenile adjudicated to be a delinquent for committing an act which would be a

       crime if committed by an adult, the State must prove every element of the crime

       beyond a reasonable doubt. J.R.T. v. State, 783 N.E.2d 300, 302 (Ind. Ct. App.

       2003), trans. denied. Upon review of a juvenile adjudication, this court will

       consider only the evidence and reasonable inferences supporting the judgment.

       Id. We will neither reweigh the evidence nor judge witness credibility. Id. If

       there is substantial evidence of probative value from which a reasonable trier of

       fact could conclude that the defendant was guilty beyond a reasonable doubt,

       we will affirm the adjudication. Id.


       A. Attempted Aggravated Battery


[21]   Ind. Code § 35-42-2-1.5 provides in part that “[a] person who knowingly or

       intentionally inflicts injury on a person that creates a substantial risk of death or

       causes: (1) serious permanent disfigurement; (2) protracted loss or impairment

       of the function of a bodily member or organ . . . commits aggravated battery, a

       Level 3 felony.” Ind. Code § 35-41-5-1 provides that a person attempts to

       commit a crime when, acting with the culpability required for commission of




       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017   Page 17 of 39
       the crime, the person engages in conduct that constitutes a substantial step

       toward commission of the crime.


[22]   B.T.E. argues that in order to convict a person of an attempt crime, proof of the

       “substantial step” element must go “beyond mere preparation and in

       furtherance of the intent to commit the crime . . . .” Appellant’s Brief at 15. He

       argues that the court “expressly based its determination that [he] had

       committed attempted aggravated battery on the notion that [he] had engaged in

       a substantial step by ‘. . . preparation and planning of the aggravated battery of

       J.R. . . .’” which “[o]n its face . . . demonstrates the insufficiency of the record

       to support an attempted aggravated battery finding.” Id. at 16. He asserts that

       the specific actions found by the trial court “fall far short of the limit set by this

       Court on the reach of ‘attempt crimes.’” Id.


[23]   Specifically, B.T.E. argues that the drawings of the seating chart and school

       building are not linked to any actual step toward committing a crime and

       “represent, at best, the beginnings of a plan.” Id. at 17. He asserts regarding

       weapons that the court found he “planned to get a gun, planned to conceal the

       crime, and researched a pipe bomb,” but “all fall short of taking any step beyond

       mere ‘planning and preparation,’” further noting the statements contained in

       the Facebook Messages “are not actually ‘planning’ statements at all” and

       instead “speak of possibilities and contingencies.” Id. Finally, B.T.E.

       maintains that the “alleged solicitation of D.H. to assist in the crime” does not

       constitute a substantial step and the State’s argument to the contrary is based

       upon “a gross misreading” of Ward v. State, 528 N.E.2d 52 (Ind. 1988), because

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017   Page 18 of 39
       such statements cannot “be considered immediate” and “cooperation or

       submission of D.H. is by no means an essential feature of the substantive

       crime.” Id. at 17-19.


[24]   The State argues that B.T.E. committed a substantial step toward commission

       of the charged crime by creating diagrams and drawings of the classroom and

       school, researching how to make a pipe bomb and sending his findings to M.V.,

       asking M.V. to help him commit the crime, and asking “D.H. to come to

       Seymour and kill J.R[.]” Appellee’s Brief at 29. It asserts that B.T.E.’s

       communications to D.H. “cannot be construed as anything other than ‘the form

       of urging’ and the ‘solicitation urges the commission of the crime at some

       immediate time and not in the future.’” Id. at 30 (quoting Ward v. State, 528

       N.E.2d 52, 54 (Ind. 1988)). It contends that B.T.E.’s arguments are merely

       requests to reweigh evidence, that B.T.E. challenges the admission of certain

       evidence in his argument regarding sufficiency of the evidence which is not

       proper, and that in reviewing sufficiency claims “this Court looks at all of the

       evidence, regardless of claims that some evidence should not have been

       admitted.” Id. at 31.


[25]   “The substantial step element of attempt requires proof of any overt act beyond

       mere preparation and in furtherance of the intent to commit the crime.” Calvert

       v. State, 930 N.E.2d 633, 639 (Ind. Ct. App. 2010) (quoting Jackson v. State, 683

       N.E.2d 560, 566 (Ind. 1997)). “This requirement has been described as a

       minimal one,[] State v. Van Cleave, 674 N.E.2d 1293, 1304 (Ind. 1996), reh’g

       denied, but the conduct must strongly corroborate the defendant’s criminal

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017   Page 19 of 39
       intent.” Id. (quoting Jackson, 683 N.E.2d at 566). A reviewing court’s analysis

       “focuses on what has occurred and not what remains to be done.” Id. (quoting

       Jackson, 683 N.E.2d at 566). Whether a defendant’s actions constitute a

       substantial step is generally a question for the trier of fact based on the totality

       of circumstances, and it “is impossible to lay down any general rule to

       determine what acts are too remote to constitute an attempt.” Id. (quoting

       Collier v. State, 846 N.E.2d 340, 344, 345-346 (Ind. Ct. App. 2006) (quotation

       omitted), trans. denied). Nonetheless, in some cases the defendant’s conduct will

       fall short of a substantial step as a matter of law. Id.


[26]   In Calvert, defendant Calvert was driving a Jeep with three passengers including

       J.F., in which J.F. told Calvert after being picked up “that he was going to rob a

       liquor store by running in, demanding money, and running back out.” Id. at

       637. Officer Staples observed Calvert turn the Jeep into the south side parking

       lot of the House of Spirits liquor store and took notice “because he had been

       assigned to specially patrol the city’s liquor stores, the police department having

       been informed by another law enforcement agency that there were heightened

       grounds to suspect liquor store robberies.” Id. Officer Staples “observed the

       Jeep circle the liquor store by turning into an alley behind the store, driving

       back to the north side parking lot, and finally turning north on State Road 7,

       and he “then drove his police car out of the parking lot of American Rental, a

       business closed at the time and on the opposite side of the road from the liquor

       store, and turned to follow the Jeep.” Id. Calvert turned the Jeep into the

       American Rental parking lot, and Officer Staples parked behind him, stepped

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017   Page 20 of 39
       out, and spoke briefly with Calvert, who told Officer Staples “he was ‘just

       hanging out.’” Id. Other officers arrived, and the Jeep’s occupants were

       ordered from the vehicle. Id. With the doors open, another officer observed a

       sawed-off shotgun lying on the floor in plain view, as well as what looked like a

       handgun, but was actually a BB pistol on the back seat and an orange ski mask.

       Id. “Subsequent searches of the Jeep uncovered another BB pistol, three pairs

       of sunglasses, and two more orange ski masks.” Id. At a police interview,

       Calvert stated that “at the time Officer Staples stopped behind the Jeep, he was

       getting ready to drop J.F. and Cole off at American Rental but had ‘no clue’

       what they were going to do there.” Id. at 637-638. He also stated that J.F. stole

       the two pistols from Wal-Mart and had bought the shotgun. Id. at 638. He was

       charged with and convicted on three counts including a count of attempted

       robbery. Id.


[27]   On appeal, we discussed the law of what might constitute a substantial step as

       follows:


               In Collier, this court held the defendant’s actions did not
               constitute a substantial step toward the murder of his estranged
               wife. Three times on the day of the incident, Collier told a
               neighbor that he was going to kill his wife and himself. Later
               that night, he drove to his wife’s workplace while she was there,
               had in his car an ice pick and a box cutter, and parked in a lot
               with a view of the building’s only after-hours exit. However,
               when police officers later found Collier inside his car, he was
               asleep or passed out. This court reasoned that despite Collier’s
               lying in wait, reconnoitering, and possessing materials to be used
               in the crime, his conduct as a whole was not “strongly
               corroborative of his stated intent,” id. at 348 (emphasis original),
       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017   Page 21 of 39
               because he thereafter ceased to be awake or alert and never came
               close enough to his wife to place her in imminent physical
               danger, id. at 349-50. In Hampton v. State, 468 N.E.2d 1077 (Ind.
               Ct. App. 1984), this court affirmed a conviction for attempted
               robbery of a restaurant. The defendant parked his car next to a
               busy highway, a potential easy escape route; he walked up to the
               restaurant and hid between bushes and the restaurant building in
               an effort to avoid car lights; and when found by police he was
               lying face down between bushes and the building, carrying a
               pistol and wearing a ski mask. Additionally, the defendant was a
               former employee of the restaurant, admitted his plan to rob that
               restaurant, and knew its assistant manager would be departing
               that night with a large amount of cash. Id. at 1079, 1081.


       Id. at 639. We held that “Calvert’s actions, including as an accomplice through

       J.F., were at most mere preparation to rob the liquor store,” noting that “as

       Collier illustrates, merely driving to a location contemplated for a crime while

       possessing materials for use in the crime is not necessarily sufficient for a

       substantial step.” Id. at 640.


[28]   The amended petition alleged the following for attempted aggravated battery:

               The undersigned says that between October 31, 2015 and
               January 15, 2016 . . . [B.T.E.] did knowingly or intentionally
               attempt to inflict injury on J.R. that created a substantial risk of
               death, to wit: developed plans for a school shooting at Seymour
               High School, composed a map of a classroom seating chart with
               J.R.’s seat targeted, developed plan’s [sic] to break into his
               parent’s gun safe, developed plans to stab and torture J.R. prior
               to killing him, discussed how to conceal murder evidence,
               and/or made plans to obtain other weapons which conduct
               constituted a substantial step toward the commission of said
               crime of Aggravated Battery . . . .

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017   Page 22 of 39
Appellant’s Appendix at 127-128. Additionally, the court in its Order on Fact

Finding Hearing entered on May 24, 2016, stated the following in finding that

B.T.E. committed an act that would constitute attempted aggravated battery if

committed by an adult:


        The court finds that the State of Indiana has proven beyond a
        reasonable doubt the material element of Attempted Aggravated
        Battery under I.C. 35-41-2-1.5 and 35-41-5-1 at the Fact Finding
        hearing, a Level 3 Felony. The Court finds that [B.T.E.] did
        knowingly or intentially [sic] engage in conduct with intent to
        commit aggravated battery against J.R. that [B.T.E.] did commit
        preparation and planning of the aggravated battery of J.R.
        through the following acts:


                 a. Drawing of a diagram for the seating chart for Mrs.
                 Buchanan’s class with J.R.’s seat marked, State’s Exhibit
                 4.


                 b. Drawing a map of the 300 building of Seymour High
                 School, State’s Exhibit 5.


                 c. [B.T.E.] engaged conversations and plans to commit
                 aggravated battery of J.R. in a series of multiple messages
                 on Facebook between October 31, 2015 and January 16,
                 2016 with [M.V.], planned to break into his parents’ gun
                 cabinet to obtain a gun, and planned to conceal the crime
                 and evidence. [B.T.E.] also researched building a pipe
                 bomb and sent research to [M.V.] on Facebook. State’s
                 Exhibit 6-19 and 25-34.


                 d. [B.T.E.] also committed the substantial step toward the
                 crime of attempted aggravated battery by soliciting
                 assistance from D.H. to commit the offense of aggravated

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017    Page 23 of 39
                        battery against J.R. in messages on Facebook, State’s
                        Exhibits 21-24.


       Id. at 178-179.


[29]   We agree with B.T.E. that the conduct alleged to constitute a substantial step

       did not go beyond mere preparation and was not strongly corroborative of his

       stated intent. Indeed, B.T.E.’s conduct as a whole falls far short of even that

       alleged in Collier where, again, we found the evidence of a substantial step

       lacking. We do not believe that drawing a diagram of a seating chart or the 300

       building at the school to “be strongly corroborative of the firmness of the

       defendant’s criminal intent,” especially given the proposed date of the attack of

       April 20, 2018. Collier, 846 N.E.2d at 344. We find these acts to be, at best,

       preparation for some criminal act in the future. We similarly are not persuaded

       that any of the alleged acts contained in part (c) of the court’s order constitute a

       substantial step. As the court notes in its order, most of these “acts” are

       nothing more than speaking over Facebook with M.V. about actions they might

       take in order to prepare for an attack. Even B.T.E.’s act of researching how to

       build a pipe bomb is nothing more than mere preparation, for there is no

       evidence that he made any effort toward obtaining any of the ingredients to

       build a pipe bomb.


[30]   Finally, to the extent that the court based its true finding on messages

       exchanged between B.T.E. and D.H. and specifically B.T.E.’s solicitation of

       D.H. to commit the crime, we find that the court misapplied the law of

       solicitation as attempt. In Ward, the Indiana Supreme Court adopted “two
       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017   Page 24 of 39
       separate tests to determine when solicitation may be a substantial step,” noting

       that “[t]he first test is fairly mechanical and the second involves an assessment

       of the wrong which the legislature seeks to sanction.” 528 N.E.2d at 54. The

       tests are as follows:


                 Three-Part Test for Solicitation. First, a solicitation may be a
                 substantial step only when: 1) the solicitation takes the form of
                 urging; 2) the solicitation urges the commission of the crime at
                 some immediate time and not in the future; and 3) the
                 cooperation or submission of the person being solicited is an
                 essential feature of the substantive crime.3


                 Nature of the Crime. Second, if those findings are made, the court
                 must consider the specific crime, and the wrongful human
                 conduct that the legislature sought to sanction. One
                 commentator has stated an eloquent principle about the role
                 which the nature of the crime plays in determining what a
                 substantial step is: “. . . the more serious the crime attempted or
                 the greater the menace to the social security from similar efforts
                 on the part of the defendant or others, the further back in the
                 series of acts leading up to the consummated crime should the
                 criminal law reach in holding the defendant guilty for attempt.”


       Id. (internal citations omitted).


[31]   There are a number of reasons why B.T.E.’s messages to D.H. do not constitute

       a substantial step under the tests articulated in Ward. B.T.E.’s urging was not




             3
              This specific evaluation of the solicitation, therefore, excludes three-party solicitations, where
             A solicits B to murder C. It does include, though, two-party solicitations such as bribery or
             suborning perjury.

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017                          Page 25 of 39
       for D.H. to immediately commit the crime – it was, at best, to do so at some

       point in the future. In Ward, the crime at issue was attempted child molesting,

       in which defendant Ward urged two different children to allow him to perform

       fellatio on them. Id. at 53. Here, by contrast, there is no discussion of when

       D.H. should commit the crime of aggravated battery, and indeed there is no

       specifics of how to do so or weapons that might be used.


[32]   More importantly, the three-part test requires that “the cooperation or

       submission of the person being solicited is an essential feature of the substantive

       crime.” As argued by B.T.E., D.H.’s cooperation is not an essential feature of

       the crime of aggravated battery. The footnote immediately following the test

       underscores how this conduct is not a substantial step where it explains that the

       test “excludes three-party solicitations, where A solicits B to murder C.” Id. at

       54 n.3. That precisely describes the messages at issue, in which A is B.T.E., B

       is D.H., and C is J.R. Having determined that the Facebook messages do not

       meet the three-part test, we need not examine the second test.


[33]   We conclude that the State did not present evidence that B.T.E. completed a

       substantial step toward the commission of the crime of aggravated battery.

       Accordingly, the court’s true finding that B.T.E. committed a delinquent act

       which would constitute attempted aggravated battery must be reversed. 4




       4
        Because we reverse the true finding, we need not address the argument raised by B.T.E. in this section of his
       brief that the court abused its discretion in admitting the Facebook communications between B.T.E. and
       D.H.

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017                       Page 26 of 39
       B. Conspiracy To Commit Aggravated Battery


[34]   Again, the statute defining Aggravated Battery provides that a “person who

       knowingly or intentionally inflicts injury on a person that creates a substantial

       risk of death . . . commits aggravated battery, a Level 3 felony.” Ind. Code §

       35-42-2-1.5. Also, a person “conspires to commit a felony when, with intent to

       commit the felony, the person agrees with another person to commit the

       felony.” Ind. Code § 35-41-5-2(a). The State “must allege and prove that either

       the person or the person with whom he or she agreed performed an overt act in

       furtherance of the agreement.” Ind. Code § 35-41-5-2(b). In other words, to

       prove the conspiracy aspect of the State’s allegations, the State had to prove that

       B.T.E. and M.V. formed an agreement to commit the crime and that one of

       them took an overt act in furtherance of that agreement.


[35]   B.T.E. argues that independent proof of the existence of a conspiracy is

       required before statements of a coconspirator can be admitted under Ind.

       Evidence Rule 801(d)(2)(E). He asserts that, here, “[n]o evidence, other than

       the hearsay statements of the alleged coconspirator, M.T.V.[,] were offered in

       support of a conspiracy agreement.” Appellant’s Brief at 20-21. B.T.E. argues

       that, “[d]espite the trial court’s initial indication of understanding the

       requirement of independent evidence before the introduction of hearsay

       testimony,” it “expressly found the existence of a conspiracy based upon an

       agreement to commit aggravated battery against J.R. which was reached by

       B.T.E. and M.T.V. ‘through a series of Facebook messages.’” Id. at 21.



       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017    Page 27 of 39
[36]   The State argues that the evidence presented was sufficient to show that B.T.E.

       and M.V. agreed to significantly injure or kill J.R. during a school shooting on

       a specific date. Specifically, the State asserts that M.V. made a threat toward

       the school on January 13, 2016, that B.T.E. “admitted in an interview with

       police that he planned to shoot up the school on April 20, 2018” in which J.R.

       and G.M. were specifically targeted and M.V. had agreed to help carry out the

       shooting, that B.T.E. sent M.V. instructions on how to construct a pipe bomb,

       and that B.T.E. wrote to M.V.: “4/20/18; some people will find out what the

       state of nothingness is like :)” and “*gunfire* you better hope I don’t f------ miss;

       *hits [J.R.] behind you*; *pits [sic] three more shots into [J.R.’s] head before

       turning and shooting past you into the classroom on your left hitting [G.M.] in

       the forehead.” Appellee’s Brief at 25. The State argues that if M.V. did not

       agree with B.T.E. to commit the shooting, then he would not have made the

       threat on January 13, 2016, and would have reported B.T.E.’s plan to someone.

       It states that “[t]he most telling evidence of the agreement between [B.T.E.] and

       M.V. to injure or kill J.R[.] is found in their Facebook messages” which

       spanned almost three months and include statements detailing horrific injuries

       they planned to inflict upon him. Id. at 26. It argues that B.T.E. made several

       overt acts in furtherance of the agreement, including drawing diagrams of the

       building and a classroom that he shared with J.R., marking the names of

       teachers of specific classrooms, noting doors to enter each classroom, and

       labeling J.R.’s seat in a classroom using an “X.” Id. at 27. The State asserts

       that B.T.E. also researched how to build a pipe bomb and shared this research

       with M.V., and notes that M.V. instructed B.T.E. how to conceal the crime and
       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017   Page 28 of 39
       avoid becoming a murder suspect by telling him what to wear and how to

       conceal his tracks.


[37]   To prove the existence of a conspiratorial agreement, “it is not necessary to

       present direct evidence of a formal express agreement between conspirators.”

       M.T.V. v. State, 66 N.E.3d 960, 965 (Ind. Ct. App. 2016) (quoting Chambers v.

       State, 526 N.E.2d 1176, 1178 (Ind. 1988)), trans. denied. Rather, “[s]uch intent

       may be inferred from circumstantial evidence alone, including overt acts of the

       parties in pursuance of the criminal act.” Id. (quoting Chambers, 526 N.E.2d at

       1178). As to the overt act, it “need not rise to the level of a ‘substantial step’

       required for an attempt to commit the felony.” Id. (quoting Owens v. State, 929

       N.E.2d 754, 756-757 (Ind. 2010), reh’g denied). Indeed, whereas a substantial

       step must be an act beyond mere preparation, there is no such requirement for

       an overt act. Id. Ultimately, “[t]he crime of conspiracy is complete upon the

       agreement and the performance of an overt act in furtherance of the

       agreement.” Id. Thus, the length of time between the overt act and

       commission of the underlying felony, if ever committed or attempted, is “of no

       significance to the elements of the crime [of conspiracy] itself.” Id. (quoting

       Smith v. State, 655 N.E.2d 532, 540 (Ind. Ct. App. 1995), reh’g denied, trans.

       denied).


[38]   The State alleged the following in the delinquency petition:

               The undersigned says that between October 31, 2015, and
               January 15, 2016 . . . [B.T.E.] did knowingly or intentionally
               conspire with [M.V.] to inflict injury on J.R. that created a

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017   Page 29 of 39
               substantial risk of death, and B.T.E. did perform an overt act in
               furtherance of the agreement, to wit: drawing a map of a
               classroom searing [sic] chart with J.R.’s seat targeted, drawing a
               map of the 300 building of Seymour High School, setting a
               specific date for a school shooting to occur at Seymour High
               School, writing death letters in preparation of the act, researching
               information regarding how to make a pipe bomb, discussed
               stealing a knife from school, discussed how to conceal murder
               evidence, discussed torturing J.R. prior to killing him, and/or
               planned to break into his parent’s gun safe contrary to the form of
               the statutes in such cases made and provided by I.C. 35-42-2-1.5,
               I.C. 35-41-5-2, and against the peace and dignity of the State of
               Indiana.


       Appellant’s Appendix Volume 2 at 128.


[39]   Additionally, the court in its Order on Fact Finding Hearing entered on May

       24, 2016, identified the following overt acts committed by B.T.E. in furtherance

       of the conspiracy:


               a. Creation of a diagram of the classroom seating chart for Ms.
               Buchanan’s room with J.R.’s seat marked, State’s Exhibit 4.


               b. Drawing a map of the 300 building of Seymour High School,
               State’s Exhibit 5.


               c. [B.T.E.], together with his co-conspirator [M.V.], in
               furtherance of the conspiracy committed the following overt acts
               together including planning committing aggravated battery and
               torturing J.R., planning to break into [B.T.E.’s] parents’ gun
               cabinet to obtain a gun, and planning to to [sic] conceal the crime
               and evidence. [B.T.E.] conducted research to build a pipe bomb
               and sent the research to [M.V.] on Facebook in furtherance of the
               conspiracy, State’s Exhibits 4-19 and 25-34. . . .

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017   Page 30 of 39
       Id. at 179.


[40]   The evidence favorable to the adjudication included the diagram of the

       classroom and the map of the 300 building, which were recovered from B.T.E.’s

       binder. The classroom diagram marked with an “X” where J.R. sat. The map

       of the 300 building identified classrooms and points of exit. Also, on December

       7, 2015, B.T.E. sent detailed instructions to M.V. for how to construct a pipe

       bomb, which was the fruit of his research on “school shootings influenced by

       columbine.” State’s Exhibit 27. In addition, B.T.E. and M.V. discussed via

       Facebook how to conceal involvement in violent crime by wearing different

       clothes and shoes, or else shoes with no traction and to “make it look like you

       were looking for something on them so it appears to be a robbery over a specific

       item that you would never need.” State’s Exhibit 31. B.T.E. specifically asked

       M.V. to help him carry out a plan to attack the school on April 20, 2018.

       B.T.E. stated that he would do things to J.R. that “would make even the

       sociopathic of sociopaths shake and stutter” and that he hoped he “dies a slow

       and painful death that lasts for days.” Transcript Volume 3 at 33; State’s

       Exhibit 8. On November 12, B.T.E. and M.V. discussed torturing J.R. by

       inflicting “[a]s many cuts as possible” or by using an “[i]mplement through the

       ass and out the mouth.” State’s Exhibit 29. They discussed either stealing a

       knife or breaking into B.T.E.’s parents’ gun safe to take a gun in order to attack

       J.R.


[41]   We find that there is substantial evidence of probative value to support the

       factfinder’s determination that B.T.E. and M.V. formed an agreement to inflict

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017   Page 31 of 39
       injury on J.R. during a school shooting to be carried out on April 20, 2018, that

       would create a substantial risk of J.R.’s death. B.T.E.’s argument amounts to a

       request to reweigh the evidence, which we will not do. J.R.T., 783 N.E.2d at

       302. We conclude that there is sufficient evidence to support the true finding.

       See M.T.V., 66 N.E.3d at 967 (holding that the evidence was sufficient to

       support the true finding that defendant M.V. and co-conspirator B.T.E.

       committed a delinquent act which would constitute conspiracy to commit

       aggravated battery if committed by an adult).5


                                                      Conclusion

[42]   For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the juvenile court’s true finding that B.T.E.

       committed the delinquent act which, if committed by an adult, would constitute

       conspiracy to commit aggravated battery, and reverse its true finding that he




       5
         B.T.E. also raises the issue of whether the court committed fundamental error by depriving him of fair
       notice of the allegations against him. He argues that the Indiana Supreme Court’s opinion in Young v. State,
       30 N.E.3d 719 (Ind. 2015), requires reversal based upon “fair notice” of the allegations in the delinquency
       petition as to the “means used” in committing the delinquent acts. B.T.E. specifically asserts that “[n]owhere
       in the original, first amended or second amended charging information” of the conspiracy charge are there
       references to an act of solicitation of D.H., “[y]et the trial court found that [he] had committed both
       aggravated battery and conspiracy to commit aggravated battery in part based upon the determination” that
       he “solicited assistance from D.H. to commit the offense of aggravated battery against J.R.” Appellant’s
       Brief at 23.
       The court admitted the Facebook messages exchanged between B.T.E. and D.H. as to the attempt allegations
       and sustained B.T.E.’s objection based upon relevancy as to the conspiracy counts. Thus, because we reverse
       B.T.E.’s true finding on the attempted aggravated battery allegation, we need not address this issue. To the
       extent that the court mentioned the solicitation in its order on Fact Finding Hearing entered on May 24,
       2016, as an overt act in furtherance of the conspiracy, as noted above the court identified numerous overt acts
       performed in furtherance of the conspiracy based upon the evidence presented, including drawing the map
       and the diagram, researching how to construct a pipe bomb, and planning to hurt and torture J.R. These
       overt acts are sufficient to affirm B.T.E.’s true finding on the allegation that he committed a delinquent act
       which would be conspiracy to commit aggravated battery if committed by an adult.

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017                        Page 32 of 39
       committed the delinquent act which, if committed by an adult, would constitute

       attempted aggravated battery.


[43]   Affirmed in part and reversed in part.


       Vaidik, C.J., concurs.


       Bradford, J., concurs in part and dissents in part with separate opinion.




       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017   Page 33 of 39
                                                   IN THE
           COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

       B.T.E.,                                                    August 9, 2017
       Appellant-Respondent,                                      Court of Appeals Case No.
                                                                  36A05-1607-JV-1702
               v.                                                 Appeal from the Jackson Superior
                                                                  Court
       State of Indiana,                                          The Honorable Bruce A.
       Appellee-Petitioner.                                       MacTavish, Judge
                                                                  Trial Court Cause No.
                                                                  36D02-1601-JD-3




       Bradford, Judge, concurs in part and dissents in part with opinion.

[44]   I concur with the majority’s affirmance of the juvenile court’s denial of B.T.E.’s

       motion to dismiss and the true finding that B.T.E. committed conspiracy to

       commit aggravated battery. I cannot agree, however, that the State failed to

       produce sufficient evidence to support the juvenile court’s conclusion that

       B.T.E. committed what would be Level 3 attempted aggravated battery if

       committed by an adult. In my view, the record contains sufficient evidence to

       sustain a finding that B.T.E. took a substantial step toward committing

       aggravated battery. Consequently, I respectfully dissent from the majority’s

       disposition of this issue.

[45]   Pursuant to Indiana Code subsection 35-41-5-1(a),
       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017              Page 34 of 39
               [a] person attempts to commit a crime when, acting with the
               culpability required for commission of the crime, the person
               engages in conduct that constitutes a substantial step toward
               commission of the crime. An attempt to commit a crime is a
               felony or misdemeanor of the same level or class as the crime
               attempted.
[46]   As the Indiana Supreme Court has noted, “[a] statute of this type makes

       possible some preventive action by police and courts to stop the criminal effort

       at an earlier stage, thereby minimizing the risk of substantive harm without

       providing immunity for the offender.” Zickefoose v. State, 270 Ind. 618, 622, 388

       N.E.2d 507, 509 (1979). Indiana’s general attempt statute was modeled after

       Section 5.01 of the American Law Institute’s Model Penal Code, and Indiana

       appellate courts have consistently looked to the section’s provisions for

       guidance. See, e.g., Zickefoose, 270 Ind. at 622, 388 N.E.2d at 509 (“The statute

       is drawn substantially from section 5.01 of the American Law Institute’s Model

       Penal Code (Proposed Official Draft 1962) and covers an area that had been

       treated only sparsely by prior Indiana case law.”); see also Collier, 846 N.E.2d at

       346 (“Indiana’s general attempt statute is based on the Model Penal Code

       approach to attempt liability.”).


[47]   Section 5.01 provides, in part, as follows:


               (1) Definition of Attempt. A person is guilty of an attempt to
               commit a crime if, acting with the kind of culpability otherwise
               required for commission of the crime, he:
               ….
                   (c) purposely does or omits to do anything that, under the
                   circumstances as he believes them to be, is an act or omission
                   constituting a substantial step in a course of conduct planned
                   to culminate in his commission of the crime.

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017   Page 35 of 39
               (2) Conduct That May Be Held Substantial Step Under
               Subsection (1)(c). Conduct shall not be held to constitute a
               substantial step under Subsection (1)(c) of this Section unless it is
               strongly corroborative of the actor’s criminal purpose. Without
               negativing the sufficiency of other conduct, the following, if
               strongly corroborative of the actor’s criminal purpose, shall not
               be held insufficient as a matter of law:
                   (a) lying in wait, searching for or following the contemplated
                   victim of the crime;
                   (b) enticing or seeking to entice the contemplated victim of the
                   crime to go to the place contemplated for its commission;
                   (c) reconnoitering the place contemplated for the commission
                   of the crime;
                   (d) unlawful entry of a structure, vehicle or enclosure in which
                   it is contemplated that the crime will be committed;
                   (e) possession of materials to be employed in the commission
                   of the crime, that are specially designed for such unlawful use
                   or that can serve no lawful purpose of the actor under the
                   circumstances;
                   (f) possession, collection or fabrication of materials to be
                   employed in the commission of the crime, at or near the place
                   contemplated for its commission, if such possession,
                   collection or fabrication serves no lawful purpose of the actor
                   under the circumstances;
                   (g) soliciting an innocent agent to engage in conduct
                   constituting an element of the crime.

[48]   “To establish an attempt, the State must prove that the defendant acted with the

       culpability required, and that the defendant engaged in conduct constituting a

       substantial step toward commission of the crime.” Minter v. State, 653 N.E.2d

       1382, 1383 (Ind. 1995). B.T.E. contends, and the majority agrees, that the State

       failed to produce sufficient evidence to establish a substantial step in a course of

       conduct to culminate in aggravated battery. “What constitutes a substantial

       step must be determined from all the circumstances of each case, and the

       conduct must be strongly corroborative of the firmness of the defendant’s

       criminal intent.” Zickefoose, 270 Ind. at 622-23, 388 N.E.2d at 510. “The
       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017   Page 36 of 39
       substantial step element of attempt requires proof of any overt act beyond mere

       preparation and in furtherance of the intent to commit the crime.” Jackson v.

       State, 683 N.E.2d 560, 566 (Ind. 1997). “Whether a substantial step has

       occurred is a question of fact, to be decided by the jury, based on the particular

       circumstances of each case.” State v. Lewis, 429 N.E.2d 1110, 1116 (Ind. 1981).


[49]   In my view, given B.T.E.’s voluminous communications regarding his desire to

       kill J.R., there can be little doubt that there is ample evidence to support a

       conclusion that he intended to do him harm. The only real question, then, is

       whether B.T.E. acted in a way strongly corroborative of that criminal intent. I

       start, as Judge Barnes did in his dissent in Collier, with the principle that the

       determination of what constitutes a substantial step is for the fact-finder, in this

       case the juvenile court. The juvenile court specifically identified B.T.E.’s

       preparation of maps (uncovered during a search of his home) of (1) a certain

       classroom at Seymour High School with J.R.’s seat marked and (2) the 300

       building of Seymour High School. The preparation of maps of the anticipated

       scene of the Columbine-style attack on J.R. are “overt acts” that, moreover,

       indicate that B.T.E. also acted overtly in evaluating the scene. This conduct

       clearly qualifies as “reconnoitering the place contemplated for the commission

       of the crime[,]” an act specifically identified in Section 5.01 as conduct that may

       be held to be a substantial step. Finally, I would have little trouble affirming a

       finding that B.T.E.’s conduct is strongly corroborative of his frequently-stated

       intent to do J.R. harm. A map of a classroom with J.R.’s seat crossed out




       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017   Page 37 of 39
       might only be more corroborative of criminal intent if B.T.E. had written

       “intended victim” with an arrow pointing to the seat.


[50]   Moreover, I consider B.T.E.’s preparation of his “death note” to be “strongly

       corroborative of the firmness of [his] criminal intent.” Zickefoose, 270 Ind. at

       622-23, 388 N.E.2d at 510. The death note, admitted as State’s Exhibit 3, is a

       handwritten letter to M.V. found in the search of B.T.E.’s home. In the death

       note, B.T.E. begins, “[i]f you are reading this then I have gone. Either by

       running away, or by death. I have written you this death note in case of this

       (you should already know).” State’s Ex. 3. B.T.E. continues, listing several

       persons and what he thought of them “so [M.V. could] tell them how I felt[.]”

       State’s Ex. 3. With the death note, B.T.E. seems to be attempting to “put his

       affairs in order” in the event of his death, a not-at-all-unlikely outcome if he

       attacked or killed J.R. using a firearm in Seymour High School. I consider

       B.T.E.’s death note to be strongly corroborative of the firmness of his intent to

       attack J.R. in school. I would affirm the juvenile court’s conclusion that B.T.E.

       committed what would be Level 3 attempted aggravated battery if committed

       by an adult.


[51]   I acknowledge that this court, based on what are arguably stronger facts, has

       reversed attempt convictions in Collier and Calvert and has affirmed the

       dismissal of charges in State v. Kemp, 753 N.E.2d 47 (Ind. Ct. App. 2001), trans.

       denied. The facts of Collier and Calvert have been thoroughly discussed by the

       majority, so I will not repeat them. In Kemp, the defendant arranged over the

       internet to meet with a person he believed was an underage girl for sex. Id. at

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 36A05-1607-JV-1702 | August 9, 2017   Page 38 of 39
       48. Kemp drove to the agreed-upon meeting place, where he was arrested by

       the detective who had been posing as an underage girl. Id. A grocery bag

       containing a package of condoms was found in Kemp’s vehicle. Id. The trial

       court dismissed attempted child molesting charges against Kemp, concluding

       that his actions amounted only to preparation or planning. Id. at 51.


[52]   Had I been on any—or all—of the panels that decided these cases, I would have

       dissented as I do here. All three cases involved at least one of the circumstances

       specifically mentioned in Section 5.01 that “shall not be held insufficient as a

       matter of law”: in Collier, the defendant followed the intended victim to work,

       laid in wait, and possessed material to be used to commit the crime; in Calvert,

       the defendant was in a vehicle near a liquor store that contained a sawed-off

       shotgun, multiple BB pistols, three pairs of sunglasses, and ski masks; and in

       Kemp, the alleged perpetrator was apprehended at the predetermined

       rendezvous with condoms. As for whether these acts were “substantial steps”

       or were “strongly corroborative” of criminal intent, I would have left that to the

       fact-finder.


[53]   I therefore concur in part and dissent in part.




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