VAIDIK, Judge.
Columbus Police Department Officer Troy Love stopped Tony Sluder after discovering Sluder had an outstanding arrest warrant. Officer Love searched Sluder but did not find anything. When Officer Angela Owens arrived to transport Sluder to the Bartholomew County Jail, she again searched Sluder, finding a syringe in the back pocket of his jeans. Sluder had a bench trial and was convicted of Class A misdemeanor possession of paraphernalia. Sluder appeals his conviction, arguing that the evidence was insufficient to establish that he intended to use the syringe to introduce a controlled substance into his body. Finding that no evidence of intent existed, we reverse.
Officer Love was on a bicycle patrolling the area of Fourteenth and Lafayette Streets in Columbus in August 2012. While on patrol, he recognized Sluder riding past him on a scooter. Officer Love called the station to see if Sluder had any outstanding arrest warrants, and the station confirmed that he did. Officer Love then turned around and found Sluder stopped at 1334 Lafayette Street. Officer Love informed Sluder that there was a warrant out for his arrest, arrested him, and searched him. When Officer Love searched Sluder, he did not find anything. Officer Love then called for a police car to transport Sluder to the jail.
Officer Owens arrived in her police car to transport Sluder. Although Officer Love had already searched Sluder, Officer Owens searched Sluder again because she always performs a search before placing someone in her car. Tr. p. 11. This time, Officer Owens found a syringe in the bottom of his rear pocket. She does not recall whether the syringe actually had a needle on it. Id. at 13. No drugs were found on Sluder.
At the time of his arrest, Sluder claimed that the syringe was not his. According to his sister, Tammy Sluder, the syringe Officer Owens found was actually a medicine dropper the hospital gave her to feed her premature baby. Last summer, Tammy gave her small dropper to Sluder because he wanted to use the dropper to feed puppies after their mother was hit and killed by a car. Tammy also stated that she had only one dropper of the same size, which was admitted into evidence for demonstrative purposes as Defendant's Exhibit A, and she remembered giving the small dropper to Sluder because a bigger dropper "would be too much to give the dog."
Sluder claims that he never used the syringe to ingest any kind of controlled substances because, "I don't see how you could." Id. at 27. He also claimed that he did not use it for any illegal purpose.
Officer Owens took Sluder to the Bartholomew County Jail and confiscated the syringe. After transporting Sluder to jail, she placed it in a sharps container at the Columbus Police Department, which was the standard practice for confiscated syringes.
The State charged Sluder with Class A misdemeanor possession of paraphernalia.
Sluder now appeals.
Sluder contends that the evidence is insufficient to support his conviction for Class A misdemeanor possession of paraphernalia. When reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence, we neither reweigh the evidence nor determine the credibility of witnesses. Bailey v. State, 979 N.E.2d 133, 135 (Ind.2012). We look solely to the evidence most favorable to the judgment together with all reasonable inferences to be drawn therefrom. Id. A conviction will be affirmed if the probative evidence and reasonable inferences to be drawn from the evidence could have allowed a reasonable trier of fact to find the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. Id.
As charged here, Class A misdemeanor possession of paraphernalia is knowingly or intentionally possessing a raw material, instrument, device, or other object with the intent to introduce a controlled substance into one's body. Ind.Code § 35-48-4-8.3(a)(1), (b); Appellee's App. p. 1. Sluder argues that the State did not prove that the object seized was intended to introduce a controlled substance into his body.
Our Supreme Court has also held that the mere possession of paraphernalia when a statute requires intent is not sufficient to establish that crime without additional evidence of intent. For example, in Taylor v. State, the Supreme Court held that no intent existed when the defendant possessed a hypodermic needle, an eye-dropper covered with an unknown sticky substance, a bottle cap that had been burned on the bottom, and an empty Excedrin bottle because "there was no evidence of flight or any other behavior indicating consciousness of guilt." 256 Ind. 170, 267 N.E.2d 383, 385 (1971). In that opinion, the Supreme Court commented on the intent element of an earlier version of the statute
Id.
In this case, the State presented no evidence that Sluder intended to use the syringe to inject a controlled substance into his body. There was no evidence of track marks on Sluder's arms, past drug use, previous drug convictions, or the presence of drugs that would circumstantially establish his intent to use drugs. While the State is correct that this is not an exclusive list of the type of evidence necessary to establish intent, the State has not pointed to any other evidence in the record that circumstantially establishes Sluder's intent to use the syringe to introduce a controlled substance into his body.
Reversed.
BAKER, J., and FRIEDLANDER, J., concur.