PYLE, Judge.
Mitchell Burton ("Burton") appeals his conviction of resisting law enforcement, a class D felony.
We reverse and remand.
The following issue is dispositive: whether the trial court abused its discretion in refusing to give Burton's tendered self-defense and resistance of unlawful force instructions.
At approximately 4:30 a.m. on December 25, 2010, Norman Northcutt ("Northcutt") noticed a silver car parked across the street from his South Bend home. The car was parked in the opposite direction of what it should have been facing.
Approximately thirty minutes later, Northcutt heard a loud "bang," and he looked out the window to see what had caused the noise. (Tr. 161). He saw that the silver car had bumped into the front of the pickup truck that it was facing. Northcutt was concerned that the person inside the car needed help, and he called 911 to report what had happened.
South Bend Police Officer Erik Schlegelmilch ("Officer Schlegelmilch") responded to a dispatch describing an accident involving a "vehicle ... up against another parked vehicle." (Tr. at 108). Officer Schlegelmilch was the first officer to arrive
Officer Schlegelmilch parked his patrol car behind the silver car. The patrol car's red and blue emergency lights were activated, and the car's dash camera automatically began recording.
The DVD of the events recorded by the camera shows that exhaust was coming from the silver car. Officer Schlegelmilch's car was parked in the street a short distance behind and to the right of the car. As Officer Schlegelmilch approached the car, Officer Witt walked behind him, and a police car, driven by Officer Gray, arrived at the scene.
Officer Schlegelmilch walked past the passenger side to the front of the car and shined his flashlight into the car. He informed Officer Witt that there was a person inside. This person was later identified as Burton. Burton apparently pushed the accelerator, and Officer Schlegelmilch told Officer Witt to "Wake his ass up; he's hitting the accelerator." (DVD at 1:00). Officer Witt, who was positioned at the driver's side of the car, tried to open the car door and began tapping on the window with his flashlight. While Officer Witt tapped on the driver's side window, Officer Gray approached and began tapping on the passenger side window.
Burton apparently awakened, and Officer Gray reacted by pointing his service revolver at the car and twice ordering Burton to "shut the car off and open the door." (DVD at 1:35-40). Officer Gray then stated, "If you move, I will shoot you in your fucking head." (DVD at 1:50).
While Officer Schlegelmilch walked toward his patrol car, Officer Witt, in an apparent attempt to break the glass and gain entry, began repeatedly striking the silver car's driver's side window with his flashlight. Officer Schlegelmilch handed Officer Witt a special tool, and Officer Witt used it to break the car window. Officer Witt opened the passenger door as Officer Gray holstered his service revolver and came around the back of the car. Both officers grabbed Burton and wrestled him to the ground. At that point, the view from the police camera is partially blocked by the silver car, but it appears that all three officers began to struggle with Burton, who repeatedly stated something that is indiscernible on the DVD. As Burton, who appeared to be writhing on the ground, shouted that he was not resisting, at least one officer began to punch him.
On December 28, 2010, the State charged Burton with Count 1: resisting law enforcement, a class D felony; Count 2: battery to a law enforcement officer (Witt), a class A misdemeanor; Count 3: battery to a law enforcement officer (Gray), a class D felony; and Count 4: battery to a law enforcement officer (Schlegelmilch), a class D felony. A jury trial was held in February of 2012, and the jury found Burton guilty of Count 1 and not guilty of the battery counts. The trial court subsequently sentenced Burton to a suspended sentence of eighteen months and one year of probation. The trial court
Burton contends that the trial court abused its discretion in refusing to give tendered jury instructions that addressed his right to defend himself and/or use force under the circumstances of this case.
The following are the salient instructions proposed by Burton:
(App. 12-15).
Among other reasons, the trial court refused to give the proposed jury instructions because the evidence did not support the giving of the instructions. In general, "a defendant in a criminal case is entitled to have the jury instructed on any theory of defense that has some foundation in the evidence." Howard v. State, 755 N.E.2d 242, 247 (Ind.Ct.App.2001). We apply this rule even if the evidence is weak and inconsistent, so long as the evidence presented at trial has some probative value to support it. Id. Accordingly, Burton was entitled to a jury instruction on self-defense if there was some evidence that he was justified in using reasonable force against the officers to protect himself from what he believed to be the imminent use of unlawful force.
The camera on Officer Schlegelmilch's car recorded a scene where Burton was sleeping and apparently pressing his car's accelerator while he slept. Burton was awakened by Officer Witt pounding on his driver's side window, Officer Schlegelmilch shining his flashlight through the windshield, and Officer Gray pounding on the passenger's side window. Moments later, Officer Gray pointed his service revolver at Burton and demanded that he turn off the car and open the door, only to declare within the next few seconds that any movement would result in the officer shooting Burton in his "fucking head." (DVD at 1:50). Within a few more seconds, Officer Gray, who had just threatened to kill Burton, helped Officer Witt drag Burton from the car onto the ground. The officers then proceeded to fracture Burton's facial bones. While we recognize that the officers testified to different versions of what the DVD depicted, we must conclude that the DVD provides a strong evidentiary foundation that warrants the giving of the self-defense instruction.
In addition, Burton was entitled to jury instructions on excessive force by police officers if there was some evidence that the officers' use of force was excessive, that is, objectively unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment in light of the facts and circumstances confronting the officers. See Shoultz v. State, 735 N.E.2d 818, 823-24 (Ind.Ct.App.2000) (citing Graham v. Connor, 490 U.S. 386, 395-97, 109 S.Ct. 1865, 104 L.Ed.2d 443 (1989)), trans. denied.
There is no doubt that the DVD provides evidence that a recently awakened Burton could have been confused and/or scared for his life when Officer Gray threatened to shoot him, Officer Witt broke into the car, and both officers pulled him out of the car and threw him to the ground. The DVD provides evidence from which a jury could conclude that Burton was not an immediate threat to the officers or anyone else; indeed, the officers were investigating a non-injury accident where a sleeping Burton allowed his vehicle to bump into another vehicle. Furthermore, the DVD can be reasonably interpreted to show that Burton offered no resistance prior to being pulled from the car and only defensive resistance to multiple blows from three officers after being thrown to the ground. Again, while we recognize that the officers testified to different versions of what occurred, we conclude that there is also a strong evidentiary foundation to warrant the giving of tendered Instructions 1 through 3.
A trial court's refusal to give tendered instructions is subject to harmless error analysis. Snell v. State, 866 N.E.2d 392, 399 (Ind.Ct.App.2007). In determining whether the refusal warrants reversal, we must assess whether the defendant was prejudiced by the trial court's failure to give the instruction. Bragg v. State, 695 N.E.2d 179, 180 (Ind.Ct.App. 1998).
In the present case, the jury was not instructed that Burton was justified in protecting himself under circumstances where the DVD showed that the police officers may have used excess force to extract a recently awakened and dazed Burton from the car and to subdue him as he tried to protect himself from an officer who had threatened to kill him for no apparent reason. The jury would have been so apprised if the trial court had given the tendered instructions. Without the instructions, the jurors were permitted to find Burton guilty of resisting law enforcement even if they believed Burton's claim that he lawfully used reasonable force to protect himself from the threat of great bodily harm.
We reverse and remand with instructions that the trial court vacate the conviction.
FRIEDLANDER, J., and BROWN, J., concur
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(Tr. 400-01).