During appellant Steven Ried’s trial, the court admitted evidence which might now be excluded under
Lannan v. State
(1992), Ind.,
After an initial mistrial, Ried was convicted of two counts of child molesting, a class C felony, Ind.Code § 35-42-4-3(b) (West 1986), and found to be an habitual offender. He presented two issues on appeal. First, Ried contended that his retrial violated the prohibition against double jeopardy. Second, he contended that the trial court erred in admitting testimony by T.H. that Ried molested her at some point in the past. The Court of Appeals rejected the first of these claims on the merits. It held that the second claim had not been preserved for appellate review because Ried had not objected at trial. The judgment of the trial court was thus affirmed.
Ried v. State
(1993), Ind.App„
Judge Barteau dissented, saying that admission of T.H.’s testimony should be tested against the
Lannan
standard. She believed that the admissibility of evidence under the depraved sexual instinct rule should be reviewed under the doctrine of fundamental error.
Id.,
This debate is resolved by
Pirnat v. State
(1993), Ind.,
Ried’s case was pending on direct appeal when
Lannan
was decided, but Ried did not present the issue by objection at trial to the testimony by T.H. The issue is thus not preserved for appellate review.
Johnson v. State
(1985), Ind.,
