ON TRANSFER FROM THE COURT OF APPEALS
The defendant, Samuel Valentin, was convicted of robbery, conspiracy to kidnap, kid-naping, felony murder in the commission of robbery, and felony murder in the commission of kidnaping arising from his involvement in a 1986 hijacking of a van and the kidnaping and killing of its driver. The trial court merged the conviction for kidnaping with that for felony murder in the commission of kidnaping. On direct appeal, this Court vacated the conviction for robbery as a class A felony and ordered that conviction and sentence be entered on the conviction as a class B felony, but otherwise affirmed the trial court.
Valentin v. State,
Since our decisions in Games and Grinstead there has been considerable discussion by the Court of Appeals regarding the viability of the “manner in which the offenses are charged” test for double jeopardy claims. 1 We grant transfer to address this question.
In
Games,
we held that “this Court’s previous interpretation of the federal Double Jeopardy Clause — which looked beyond the statutory elements, adding the requirement that a reviewing court look to the offenses as charged or to the jury instructions outlining the elements of the crimes — does not comport with federal jurisprudence.”
Games,
The Court of Appeals opined that the defendant, by citing to
Buie v. State,
We first note that the defendant in the present ease expressly invoked only the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Brief of Petitioner-Appellant at 1, 5, 6. The defendant’s brief does not provide a separate analysis of the state double jeopardy claim or argue why it provides protection different than the federal constitution. Brief of Appellant at 11-12. In the absence of any separate state constitutional law argument by defendant, the Court of Appeals should not have based its reversal of defendant’s conspiracy conviction oh the Indiana double jeopardy clause. Buie is insufficient to support a claim of double jeopardy under the Indiana Constitution. We leave for another day the question of whether double jeopardy claims under Article 1, Section 14 of the Indiana Constitution are entitled to an analysis separate and distinct from the federal constitution.
Transfer is granted. The trial court is affirmed.
Notes
.
See Richardson v. State,
