OPINION
Case Summary
'David R. Camm appeals his three convictions for the murder of his wife and two children. We reverse.
Issues
The dispositive issue we address today is whether the trial court committed reversible error by allowing the State to present extensive evidence of extramarital sexual activity by Camm. For retrial purposes, we also address other issues that Carm has raised.
Facts
The evidence most favorable to the convictions is that on the evening of September 28, 2000, Camm shot and killed his wife Kim and their children, seven-year-old Brad and five-year-old Jill, at their home in Georgetown. The shooting took place in the Camms' garage, apparently sometime after 7:80 p.m., when Kim and the children would have been due to arrive home from Brad's swimming practice. Camm's version of events was that he was playing basketball at a nearby church from 7:00 pm. until approximately 9:20 p.m., after which he drove home and found Kim,
Police showed the t-shirt Camm was wearing on the night of the 28th to a blood spatter expert. The expert believed certain blood droplets, which were later confirmed to be from Jill, found on one corner of the shirt were high velocity impact spatter resulting from a gunshot. Based in part on this evidence, on October 1, 2000, the State charged Camm with three counts of murder. 1
On January 7, 2002, a jury trial began with the selection of jurors from Johnson County because of the extensive media coverage of the crime in the Louisville area. The trial continued in Floyd County until March 15, 2002, when the jury retired to deliberate. The key physical evidence against Camm was the purported high velocity blood spatter on his t-shirt, which was challenged by Camm's forensic expert. The State also presented extensive evidence of Carmm's personal life, specifically, evidence that he had had several sexual encounters with or propositioned women other than Kim during his time with the State Police. On March 17, 2002, the jury informed the trial court that it was deadlocked; the trial court instructed the jury to continue deliberating. Later that day, the jury returned with guilty verdicts on all three counts. Camm was sentenced to a total of 195 years, and he now appeals.
Analysis
I. Evidence of Camm's Adultery
During the State's case-in-chief, it presented the testimоny of twelve women who had had various types of relationships with Camm since 1991. At one end of the romantic spectrum were three women with whom Camm had had prolonged sexual relationships, the most recent of which occurred in 1997. Camm had a relationship with one of these women, Stephanie Neely, while he was separated from Kim in 1994 and had moved out of the family home and into an apartment. On the other end of the spectrum were two women to whom Camm apparently made implied sexual advances, such as offering to take care of one woman's basement waterproofing bill in "other ways." Tr. p. 2848. Two other women testified as to more overt sexual overtures that they had rebuffed. The remaining five women, who had varying levels of acquaintanceship with Camm, had had at least one instance of sexual contact with Camm, including kissing, fondling and, in some instances, intercourse, but little else besides what the women described as extensivе flirting. Some of the women were asked during their testimony to divulge details of their relationships with Camm, such as when, where, and how they engaged in sexual activities, including such details as the shaving of pubic hair. Camm filed a motion in limine challenging
A trial court has broad discretion in ruling on the admissibility of evidence, and we will disturb its rulings only where it is shown that the court abused that discretion. Griffith v. State,
Evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts is not admissible to prove the character of a person in order to show action in conformity therewith. It may, however, be admissible for other purposes, such as proof of motive, intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, identity, or absence of mistake or accident....
"This rule prevents the State from punishing people for their character. ..." Bassett v. State,
The State asserts that this evidence was offered to establish motive. With respect to the motive "exception" in Evidence Rule 404(b), our supreme court has said that motive is "always relevant" when proving a crime. Ross v. State,
Our supreme court has also said that evidence of extrinsic acts may be relevant as proof of motive if the acts "show the relationship between the defendant and the victim." Ross,
Neither party has cited to this court, nor has our own research revealed, any Indiana case that has discussed the admissibility, as evidence of motive, of a defendant's adulterous affairs in a trial where the defendant is accused of killing his or her spouse. The Indiana case closest to being on point appears to be Henson v. State,
There is a general paucity of cases throughout the country discussing the issue of adultery as evidence of motive to kill one's spouse.
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However, we have discovered that the Supreme Court of Mississippi has addressed precisely this issue in detail and in a manner that appears to us entirely consistent with Indiana case law and Indiana Evidence Rule 404(b). In Lesley v. State,
Any extramarital affаirs of Loretta Lesley other than the affair with Hood [the current lover and alleged co-conspirator] were not part of any chain of events leading to the planned murder of Dale Lesley. Additionally, proof of previous extramarital affairs lacked relevance into the murder conspiracy and was so prejudicial as to fail any balancing test under Rule 403. Her alleged prior adultery did not make it more likely than not that she committed conspiracy to commit murder, and it did inflame any listener.
Id. The court held it was improper to use this evidence "only to show that she had a motive for killing her husband because she was unhappy in her marriage and had a reason for wanting to 'get rid' of her husband. The only effect of such testimony was to show the jury that she was a 'bad woman.'" Id. The court also distinguished the case before it from cases in other jurisdictions that had allowed evidence of extramarital affairs to be introduced, noting аmong other things that in the other cases the "evidence of adultery was introduced in combination with evidence of violence or current conduct [an ongoing affair at the time of the murder] to show mo
In another case, the Seventh Cireuit addressed the admission into evidence of a defendant's extramarital affair in a trial for solicitation to murder the defendant's wife. Cramer v. Fahner,
We conclude it is clear from the above authorities and Indiana law that еvidence of a defendant's marital infidelity is not automatically admissible as proof of motive in a trial for murder or attempted murder of the defendant's spouse. Instead, to be admissible as proof of motive, the State must do more than argue that the defendant must have been unhappily married or was a poor husband or wife, ergo he or she had a motive to murder his or her spouse. This court has previously discussed and acknowledged the high rate of marital infidelity in this country, with some studies estimating that between thirty to fifty percent of women and fifty to seventy percent of men have been unfaithful to their spouses. Jaunese v. State,
There was clearly sufficient proof of Camm's philandering, and at least some of his activities took place relatively near in time to Kim's murder. However, there was no evidence of a violent or hostile relationship between Camm and his wife, nor any evidence that he ever threatened her with harm. Carmm did apparently lose his temper in 1994 following a conflict over an affair at a time when he and Kim apparently were separated. The only evi
There was no evidence that Camm was involved in an extramarital relationship at the time of Kim's murder. Ten days before the murder, Camm had apparently asked a woman with whom he had had a relationship in 1992 and 1998 whether she would be interested in having sex again, and she declined. Camm evidently had asked the same or similar question of this woman on previous occasions. There is no evidence that Camm and this woman, or any other woman, were involved in a romantic relationship at the time of Kim's murder.
Nonetheless, the State argues in its brief, "Under the State's theory, the Defendant did have a defect in his character to allow him to engage in these acts. He did not act as a proper husband and father." Appellee's Br. p 28. This amounts to a virtual concеssion that the evidence of Camm's extramarital sexual escapades was introduced to establish that he was a person of poor character who was more likely to commit murder because of that character. This is precisely what Evidence Rule 404(b) and volumes of case law prohibit. The law simply does not allow the State to pursue conviction of a defendant on the basis that his character is "defective." This. principle has been recognized for many years. It represents the cumulative wisdom and knowledge gleaned from hundreds, if not thousands, of trials conducted over the years as to the inherent unfairness of such evidence. Professor Wigmore observed 100 years ago:
The deep tendency of human nature is to punish, not because our victim is guilty this time, but because he is a bad man and may as well be condemned now that he is caught, is a tendency which cannot help operating with any jury, in or out of court.... Our rule, then, firmly and universally established in policy and tradition, is that the prosecution may not initially attack the defendant's character.
John H. Wigmore, A Treatise on the System of Evidence in Trials at Common Law 1:126-27 (1904). See also Foreman v. State,
Closely related to the issue of the twelve women who testified as to Carmm's adulterous nature during the State's case-in-chief, is the rebuttal testimony of a female guard at the jail where Camm was awaiting trial, who testified that Camm said to her shortly before her upcoming wedding - "that I still had time for one last fling." Tr. p. 6984. Clearly, this evidence is along the same lines as the inadmissible testimony of the twelve women who testified during the State's case-in-chief regarding Camm sexually propositioning them. The State contends that Camm opened the door to this evidence during his cross-examination by the prosecutor; it offers no other basis for its admissibility. During cross-examination, after the prоsecutor accused Camm of being self-centered, Camm said, "Right now it's all about Brad and Jill and Kim." Tr. p. 6728. The prosecutor then asked Camm whether he had propositioned the jail guard in November 2001; Camm said that he could not recall doing so. The State points to nothing on Camm's direct examination that might have opened the door to the guard's testimony. Statements made by a defendant that are elicited by the State on cross-examination cannot be relied upon to "open the door" to otherwise inadmissible evidence. Newman v. State,
The State argues that the admission of the evidence of Camm's sexual affairs and propositioning during its casein-chief and on rebuttal does not constitute reversible error because the trial court gave admonishments and a limiting instruction regarding it. At first, the trial court told the jury that the adultery evidence "has been received on the issue of motive and for impeachment purposes" and that the jury should only consider it for those purposes. Tr. p. 2755. After the jury expressed confusion over how impeachment applied in the case, the trial court modified the admonishment to evidence has been received on the issues of motive and credibility." Tr. p. 2832. The trial court also gave a final instruction containing identical language. See Tr. p. 7126.
It is true that a timely and accurate admonishment is presumed to cure any error in the admission of evidence. Kirby v. State,
Second, the trial court originally admonished the jury that it could consider the extramarital affair evidence for impeachment purposes. This reference to impeachment undoubtedly was confusing, because Camm had not testified to the contrary regarding any of the incidents presented during the State's case-in-chief. The jury, in fact, expressed to the court its confusion over this admonishment. To
The State also argues briefly and without citation to authority that it was allowed to introduce the testimony of the women in order to "impeach" out-of-court statements Camm had made to others, including. police interrogators, regarding the overall good state of his marriage to Kim at the time of the murders that the State introduced into evidence during its case-in-chief. The failure to cite authority waives this argument for our review. Bartley v. State,
Finally, the State argues that the admission of this evidence was harmless. We disregard errors in the admission or exclusion of evidence as harmless unless the errors affect the substantial rights of the party. Wilson v. State,
Eleven witnesses with varying degrees of familiarity with Camm 7 testified that he was playing basketball at a church at the time his wife and children most likely were murdered; although not all eleven were on precisely the same page as to the details of basketball games played one and a half years earlier, they all agreed that Camm was there the entire time and that even though he sat out at least one game, he did not leave the gym. The State's claim in opening argument that Camm made a phone call from his house at 7:19 p.m., which would have refuted the alibi witnesses' testimony that he was at the gym at that time, was found to be incorrect upon examination of a Verizon employee who testified that due to a software error concerning Indiana's unusual time zones, the call was placed instead at 6:19 p.m., when Camm said he was at home and before he left to play basketball The State's gunshot residue expert, who found some gunshot residue particles on Camm's clothing, clearly testified, "you can't ... make that judgment" that such evidence meant Camm was present when the gun was fired. Tr. p. 4590. There was some unexplained evidence found at the scene of the crime, such as the presence of unidentified DNA found on Kim's and Brad's рants, and a sweatshirt found underneath Brad that had the word "Backbone" written on the tag that also had unidentified DNA on it. The determination of Camm's guilt essentially came down to a "battle of the experts," with the State's blood spatter experts claiming certain blood spots on Camm's shirt that came from Jill were high velocity spatter and Caroam's claiming it most likely was transferred by contact. The possibility clearly exists in this case that the improper admission of evidence may have consciously or subconsciously influenced which expert or experts the jury chose to believe and the weight it assigned to the testimony of Camm's alibi witnesses, not to mention Camm's own testimony.
Additionally, the State's attempt to minimize the impact of this evidence, by noting that "only" thirteen witnesses testified
You will hear the Defendant was a predator of women. Their marriage was plagued by the Defendant's continuous affairs. And these aren't affairs based upon admiration and love. These were sexual encounters that were disrespectful and humiliating. ... He collected and devoured women.... And you will hear that while married to Kim those eleven years there were at least fifteen other women.... From strippers, to co-workers, to professional women, married or unmarried, the Defendant collected them just the same.
Tr. pp. 1216-17. The State began its closing argument by again referring to this evidence extensively:
In November of 1994, the Defendant set himself upon a journey that would end in a hail of gunfire, destroying not only his family, but ultimately himself in an orgy of annihilation. In November оf 1994 the Defendant looked upon the surface charms of Stephanie Neely, and having no ability to refute his whims, betrayed his wife and kids.... The Defendant went back to Kim where he betrayed her repeatedly and deliberately. He betrayed not only the honor of his family, but the trust of his badge and the honor of his profession. He used his power to prey upon vulnerable women, the ones they met, the ones that he stopped. The Defendant cared for no one. He sought only his pleasures and it pleased him to invite his secret lover into the very presence of Kim.... He preyed upon woman after woman over the years. The Defendant is a devourer of women. He cares nothing for his immediate family, or extended family. He is willing to bring down upon their heads a holocaust of extermination and destruction.
Tr. pp. 7065-67. We need say no more. Clearly, the State's portrayal of Camm as an immoral, self-centered individual of poor character bеcause of his philandering was central to its case.
Where the evidence against a defendant is far from overwhelming, as was the case here, and the determination of the jury depends in large part on assessing and weighing the credibility of witnesses, "it is paramount that the defendant be protected from evidence which has only the effect of reflecting unfavorably on his character." Lehiy v. State,
IIL Other Issues
Camm has raised a number of other issues with respect to the conduct of his trial. Because we have reversed on the
First, Camm challenges the trial court's allowing one of Kim's friends to relate a statement she made approximately three weeks before the murders. Specifically, in response to a question from the friend regarding Kim's relationship with Camm, Kim reportedly said, "History is repeating itself." Tr. p. 2991. The State essentially argues that the statement was not introduced as proof of the matter asserted, ie. Camm was again being unfaithful, and, therefore, was not hearsay under Indiana Evidence Rule 801(c). Rather, the State argues, the statement indirectly established Kim's dissatisfaction with her marriage, or her state of mind at the time of the statement. If we assume the statement was not introduced for the truth of. the matter asserted, which is doubtful,
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the State technically is correct that the statement was not hearsay. A statement, the substantive content of which does not directly assert the declar-ant's state of mind, is not hearsay if it is admitted only to show the declarant's state of mind. Angleton v. State,
The trial court also allowed the State to introduce evidence, through the testimony of three police officers, of a 1994 incident in which Camm lost his temper and caused some minimal property damage to his house and household furnishings. The outburst . was apparently prompted by a confrontation, with either Kim or Camm's mother, regarding the separation and his affair with Stephanie Neely. Camm's mother called police to Camm's house, but they filed no report regarding the incident. There was no evidence that Kim was even present at the house when Camm had lost his temper or that he had threatened her with any harm. In Spencer v. State, our supreme court stated that evidence of the defendant battering his girlfriend three years before her murder was of low probative value because of the time lapse between the prior incidents and the murder.
The State also introduced evidence that Jill had possibly been molested hours before her death. It argued that Camm was likely the culprit and that he murdered Jill and the rest of his family either to escape detection or after a confrontation with Kim regarding the alleged molestation. The mediсal examiner who conducted Jill's autopsy testified that there was trauma to her genital region consistent with either molestation or a straddle fall; there was no penetration of the hymen, however. The State also presented evidence that Jill had complained of vaginal irritation on at least two prior occasions, the last time being a few days before the murders. Finally, it presented evidence that some of Jill's DNA was found on Camm's bedspread, which could have come from saliva or vaginal secretions. However, none of Jill's DNA was found in the two locations where seminal material from Camm was also found on the bedspread. In fact, at one of those locations Camm's seminal material was mixed with Kim's DNA. 10
Camm did not object to the introduction of this evidence at trial. Therefore, we need not definitively resolve his claim of error on this point. We would note our agreement that evidence Camm had molested Jill would be rеlevant as proof of motive under Evidence Rule 404(b). The closer question, it appears to us, is whether the evidence the State presented on this point was sufficiently probative to be admissible. The United States Supreme Court, in analyzing Federal Rules of Evidence 404(b) and 104(b), has held that in order for "other misconduct" evidence to be admissible, there must be sufficient evi-denee from which the jury could reasonably find the defendant's misconduct proven by a preponderance of the evidence. See Huddleston v. United States,
At trial, the State also presented the testimony of William Chapin, an expert in microscopy, who stated his belief that a very small particle of biological tissue found on Camm's t-shirt was likely deposited there by flight, although he could not say whether it was high velocity flight. Camm's attorney objected to this testimo
We recently addressed an issue similar to this in Bеauchamp v. State,
The final issue we address in detail in our opinion today is the trial court's refusal to allow Camm to introduce a photograph of Jill taken at the time of her autopsy showing the exit wound in her head and the hair around it shaved and the accompanying blood, apparently from her hair, that had transferred to a sheet lying underneath her. Camm's attоrney wished to introduce the photograph in connection with the examination of his blood spatter expert to demonstrate possible ways in which Jill's blood could have been transferred to Camm's t-shirt by contact. The State successfully moved to exclude this photograph from admission as irrelevant and misleading because it did not depict Jill in the backseat of the Bronco where Camm claimed he likely came into contact with Jill's blood, and Camm's attorney could not guarantee that the blood visible in the photograph had not been dislodged when she was removed from the Bronco, placed in a body bag, transported to the medical examiner's office, and removed from the body bag.
We begin by noting that in this case, unlike so many others, it is the defendant, not the State, who was attempting to introduce an autopsy photograph of the victim. Generally, photographs depicting a victim's injuries, including showing a vie-tim's wounds from different angles, or demonstrating a witness' testimony are relevant and therefore admissible. Kubsch v. State,
Additionally, this case is factually similar _to Martin, where a defendant claimed there was an inadequate foundation for the admission of photographs of the victim of a battery that resulted in the victim's death because the doctor who identified the vie-tim and his injuries in the photographs had last seen the victim alive several hours before the pictures were taken at a coroner's office. The defendant contended the State failed to lay an adequate foundation for the photograph because it could not account for what might have happened to the victim during the several hours between when the doctor last saw the victim alive and when the pictures werе taken. We held that this argument went to the weight that might be given the photographs, not their admissibility. Id. We believe the same is true here with respect to the State's claim that Jill had been handled and transported from the Bronco to the medical examiner's office before the photograph was taken. If admitted, the State would have been free to challenge the weight to be given the photograph as it related to depicting a possible source for Jill's blood on Camm's t-shirt.
We need not address any more issues in this case in detail. However, we do trust that some of the claimed instances of pros-ecutorial misconduct were unintentional and will not be repeated in any retrial, such as (1) questioning the defense blood spatter expert as to why his opinion conflicted with five other experts, when only two experts had testified for the State; (2) asking Camm why he did not think domestic violence was "a big deal" when there was no evidence thаt Camm had ever battered Kim, Tr. p. 6750; and (8) representing that a certain witness would be called later and could be questioned directly by defense counsel, then failing in fact to call that witness and protesting when defense counsel sought to do so. 11
Conclusion
Camm was unfairly prejudiced by the introduction of extensive evidence and argument regarding his poor character, where the evidence regarding his philandering was not reasonably related to any proper purpose under Indiana Evidence Rule 404(b), including proof of motive. We reverse his three convictions for murder.
Reversed.
Notes
. Several other claims in the probable cause affidavit were later deemed to be unsubstantiated and were not used against Camm at trial, including that the crime scene had been cleaned with a "high Ph cleaning substance," and that a neighbor heard "three distinct sounds that can be interpreted as gunshots" between 9:15 and 9:30 p.m. App. pp. 55-56.
. This is apart from cases addressing "heat of passion" killings where the victim was engaged in adultery and the spouse killed the victim upon discovering it.
. The Mississippi rule expressly allows introduction of "bad acts" evidence as proof of "opportunity," while the Indiana rule does not.
. Camm allegedly told one of the women who testified that Kim was a "bitch" on a few Tr. p. occasions between 1996 and 1998. 2873. This alone cannot be construed as a threat to harm Kim.
. Evidence Rule 608 clearly limits evidence regarding a witness' credibility to opinion or reputation evidence only; specific instances of conduct such as were explored in this case are generally inadmissible, and always inadmissible on direct examination of a witness. Camm's argument, however, focuses primarily on Evidence Rule 404(b).
. It is not entirely clear that Cam's pretrial statements directly conflicted with the women's testimony in any event, or at least most of their testimony. In those statements, Camm admits having been unfaithful to his wife in the past, with the last relationship he termed an "affair' occurring six years before the murder, which is when Camm and Kim were separated and he had moved out of the house. State's Ex. 20. He also said that his relationship with his wife had been "wonderful," especially in the last six months before the murders. State's Ex. 15. The most recent evidence of Camm having any physical contact with another woman was six months before the murders.
. Some of the witnesses were relatives; some were long-time friends; and some knew Camm only through playing basketball with him.
. We would also note that aside from the prejudice to Camm, the admission of this evidence subjected the women testifying, some of whom were married, to potentially humiliating public disclosure of intimate details of their personal lives, especially in light of the extensive mass media coverage of this trial.
. No limiting instruction was given regarding the use to which the jury could put this statement. Additionally, the State is inconsistent on this point, as it states as part of its argument that the statement was not hearsay, ''The statement also suggested that the reason Kim was dissatisfied with the marriage was that she suspected that the Defendant was once again cheating on her." Appellee's Br. p. 33. That would seem to be using the statement for the truth of the matter asserted-Camm was again being unfaithful.
. Camm also mentioned in one of his statements to police, before being informed that there was evidence Jill had been. molested, that his children often got into bed with him and Kim.
. Defense counsel was cross-examining one of the State's blood spatter experts about whether another expert had changed his mind regarding some of the blood spatter evidence, when the State objected and said "I think when Mr. Bevel [the uncalled expert]! gets here, Mr. Bevel can speak for himself." Tr. p. 4956. Defense counsel then agreed to limit his cross-examination "if representation is he's going to testify. . . ." Id. The State did not verbally respond to this comment.
