Aрpellant Dontay Jones was charged with murder, Ind.Code Ann. § 35-50-2-3 (West 1998); attempted robbery, a class A felony, Ind.Code Ann. § 35-42-5-1 (West 1998); and carrying a handgun without a license, a class A misdemeanor, Ind.Code Ann. § 35-47-2-1 (West 1998). Jones pled guilty to murder and the handgun violation. The trial court sentenced him to the рresumptive term of fifty-five years for murder, with a concurrent one-year sentence for the handgun conviction.
Appellant raises two issues in this direct appeal:
(1) Whether the trial court was required to create a detailed sentencing statement articulating its reasons for imposing the presumptive sentencе for murder, and
(2) Whether the trial court erred in rejecting Jones’ proposed mitigating circumstances.
Facts
On the evening of September 12, 1996, Jones, Dennis Johnson, and Raymond Johnson formulated a plan to rob Norval Peters. They then secured firearms from Johnson’s home to help them carry out their scheme.
Early the next day, the men regrouped at the home of Carlos Arevado, a neighbor of Peters. They waited for Peters’ fiancée to leave before forcing their way into the house.
According to Jones, the other two men made their way into the home before him. Raymond Johnson attempted to subdue Peters by striking him in the head with his gun. Peters, however, shot the three intruders with his own weаpon. The trespassers then shot and killed Peters.
I. A Presumptive Sentence Does Not Require a Detailed Sentencing Statement
Appellant argues that the trial court’s sentencing order did not adequately identify the aggravating and mitigating factors the court considered in imposing sentence.
Sentencing is conducted within the “discretion of the trial court and will be reversed only upon a showing of abuse of that discretion.”
Sims v. State,
The trial judge here imposed the presumptive term for the murder conviction and thus was not required to state a basis for imposing that sеntence.
II. The Trial Court Properly Rejected the Mitigating Factors
Jones argues in the alternative that the trial court’s sentence should be remanded because it failed to consider all significant mitigating circumstances after both parties had acknowledged that some mitigators were present.
Jones concedes the proposition articulated in
Tunstill v. State
that a trial court is not “obliged to accord the same weight to a factor which the defеndant considers mitigating or to find mitigators simply because it is urged by the defendant.”
Sentencing decisions are within the discretion of the trial court and we will reverse only upon a showing of abuse of that discretion.
Sims,
When a court engages in a balancing process between aggravating and mitigating circumstances, it is obligated to include a statement of its reasons for selecting the sentence imposed.
Hammons,
It appears clear from the statement the trial judge made at the close of the sentencing hearing that the court indeed engaged in a balancing of aggravating and mitigating factors. 1 In mitigation, he recognized that Jones’ lacked a male role model during his formative years and that he was only eighteen when he committed the crime. The judge also indicated several aggravating fаctors, including Jones’ criminal history at an early age, his intoxicated state when he committed the crime, and his disregard for the hardship that his potential incarceration would cause his young child and girlfriend.
A judge’s use of aggravating factors to offset a mitigating factor in order to arrive at a presumptive sentence is well within his discretion—indeed it exhibits the type of reasoning required by our law.
At the heart оf Jones’ argument, however, ‘is his contention that the trial court failed to consider additional mitigating circumstances strongly supported by the record.
2
Our review of the record causes us to believe Jones’ claim is without merit. What constitutes a “significant” mitigating factor is generally within the discretion of the trial court.
See Ross v. State,
We have on occasion found an abuse of discretion on the grounds that a trial court failed to cоnsider significant mitigating factors,
see, e.g., Tunstill,
Conclusion
We affirm the sentence imposed by the trial court.
Notes
. At the beginning of his sentencing statement the judge noted; "this case has compelling facts on ... both sides.” (R. at 98.)
. Appellant lists a number of mitigating factors which he feels the trial court fаiled to take into consideration, including: (1) Jones' age and troubled childhood, (2) Jones' voluntary intoxication, (3) Jones’ voluntary guilty plea, (4) Jones' expression of remorse (5) Jones’ loss of two siblings to violent acts, (6) testimony speaking to Jones’ good character, and (7) the potential hardship that would be imposed on Jones’ family as a result of his incarceration.
