Defendant (Appellant) was convicted, in a trial to the court and over a plea of not guilty by reason of insanity, of two counts of kidnapping
Prior to sentencing, the defendant petitioned under Ind. Code § 35-11-3.1-3 (Burns 1975) for examination as a possible criminal sexual deviant, which examination was granted. Following the medical examinations and hearing, the defendant was found to be a probable deviant and committed to LaRue Carter Hospital for observation and evaluation. Following such observation and evaluation, the Hospital officials reported that the defendant, in their opinion, was such a deviant and was treatable.
Thereafter, life sentences were pronounced upon the kidnapping charges and ten year sentences were pronounced upon the armed felony (kidnapping) charges. The court further found that the defendant was a sexual deviant and ordered him committed under the armed felony counts to the custody of the Department of Mental Health for treatment, with the proviso that upon recovery from his deviancy, he should be relieved from the remainder of the ten year sentence imposed for the armed felonies but should, thereupon, commence concurrent life sentences upon the kidnapping charges.
In this appeal, the defendant charges three errors:
*131 (1) that there was insufficient evidence of his sanity at the time the offense was committed.
(2) that the court erred in sentencing him upon the charges of armed felony (kidnapping), in that they constituted the kidnapping offenses for which he was also sentenced.
(3) that the court erred in applying the criminal sexual deviancy statute only to the armed felony convictions, thereby leaving the life sentences for kidnapping unaffected by the finding that the defendant was a treatable criminal sexual deviant.
ISSUE I
Under this issue, the defendant points to the evidence of his long obsession with pornography and sexual fantasies and his inability to refrain from attempting to act out scenes of sexual deviancy that he saw portrayed in his extensive library of pornographic literature. The psychiatric testimony bore out his admission of being a sexual deviant and that he was acting under impulse and not using his judgment when he committed the criminal acts. We do not, however, draw the same conclusions from such evidence as are drawn by the defendant. Rather, from the psychiatric testimony, we believe a reasonable person could conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant was not insane under the standards of Hill v. State, (1969)
ISSUE II
This question is controlled by Coleman v. State, (1975)
ISSUE. Ill
This question is controlled by our recent decision in Pieper v. State, (1975)
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed as to the convictions for kidnapping, and the cause is remanded and the trial court directed to vacate the sentences upon the armed felony (kidnapping) charges.
Givan, C.J. and Arterburn, DeBruler and Hunter, JJ., concur.
Note. — Reported at
Notes
. 35-1-55-1 [10-2901]. Kidnapping. — Whoever kidnaps, or forcibly or fraudulently carries off or decoys from any place within this state, or arrests or imprisons any person, with the intention of having such person carried away from any place within this state, unless it be in pursuance of the laws of this state or of the United States, is guilty of kidnapping, and, on conviction, shall be imprisoned in the state prison during life. [Acts 1905, ch. 169, § 358, p. 584; 1929, ch. 154, § 1, p. 477.]
. 35-12-1-1 [10-4709]. Commission of or attempt to commit crime while armed with deadly weapon. — Any person who being over sixteen [16] years of age, commits or attempts to commit any felony
