OPINION
Theodore Wethington was convicted of robbery, 1 as a Class A felony, kidnapping, 2 as a Class A felony, attempted murder, 3 as a Class A felony, and auto theft, 4 as a Class D felony. He appeals the denial of his petition for post-conviction relief, raising the following issues:
1. Whether the denial of post-conviction relief despite newly discovered evidence was error?
2. Whether Wethington's multiple convictions violate double jeopardy provisions of the Indiana and United States constitutions? We vacate the auto theft conviction and otherwise affirm the trial court's denial of We-thington's petition.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On March 18, 1987, Leah Clayton was abducted from a grocery store parking lot. She had unlocked her driver's side door and *94 placed her purse and groceries inside, when Wethington shoved her into the car, wrested the keys from her hand, and told her, "I'm seared, I just robbed a bank, and as soon as we get out of town I'll let you go." Record at 166. Leah repeatedly begged Wethington to release her, pleading that she was seventy-two years old and recovering from heart surgery. Wethington ignored her pleas and drove off with her in the car.
Several times Leah attempted to lower the window and call for help. Each time We-thington ordered her to get down and threatened to kill her. He repeatedly struck her head with a tire tool. Wethington then demanded all of Leah's money and again threatened to kill her. She gave him approximately $60.00, and he continued driving around. He later stopped the car, pinned her against the door, and choked her; he then beat her head again with the tire tool, pushed her out of the car, and drove away.
Leah sustained serious injuries including head lacerations, a erushed hand, a bruised neck, a detached retina, temporary blindness in one eye and optic nerve damage.
At trial, Leah identified her attacker as appellant Theodore Wethington. The State introduced a hair sample found in Leah's car. The State's expert witness testified that forensic tests performed on the sample did not exclude Wethington and that the hair could have been his.
In support of his petition for post-conviction relief, Wethington submitted new evidence consisting of DNA analysis showing the hair did not belong to him. He also claimed that his multiple convictions contravened the double jeopardy clauses of the Indiana and United States constitutions. The post-conviction court denied relief.
DISCUSSION
I. POST-CONVICTION RELIEF BASED ON NEW EVIDENCE
Wethington first contends that the post-conviction court erred when it found that newly discovered DNA hair analysis evidence would not likely produce a different result on retrial. In post-conviction proceedings, the petitioner must meet his burden of proof by a preponderance of the evidence. Ind.Post-Conviction Rule 1(5); Fleenor v. State (1993), Ind.,
Wethington argues that the hair analysis evidence was crucial because Leah's identification of him was weak. He claims her identification was suspect because her vision was affected both when her glasses were knocked off during the attack and when the beating resulted in blood in her eyes, a detached retina and optic nerve damage. Leah, however, observed Wethington during the entire commission of the offense, which lasted at least thirty minutes, including that time before her glasses were knocked off and before she sustained her injuries. Three times she unequivocally identified Wething-ton as her attacker: once within a photo array, later in a line-up, and again at trial.
Wethington claims Leah's initial description of his blue trousers as beige at trial, and her physical description of him during initial police questioning in which she missed his age, height, weight and beard, further supports his contention. Despite her initial de-seription, Leah immediately corrected herself without prompting regarding the color of Wethington's trousers. Although Leah missed perfect numerical measurements of Wethington's age by three years, height by three inches, and weight by twenty-five pounds, her description of him was not unreasonably inaccurate. Finally, Leah's claim *95 that Wethington had a beard was substantiated by his driver's license photograph.
The hair sample was not pivotal evidence at trial. It was never conclusively determined to be Wethington's, and the state's forensic scientist testified it could have come either from Wethington or from someone else. Additionally, in pronouncing Wething-ton's guilt, the trial court expressly based its decision on witness credibility and made no mention of hair evidence.
The trial court concluded that the newly discovered evidence would not likely produce a different result on retrial. Wethington has failed to show that such evidence leads only to a contrary conclusion.
II. DOUBLE JEOPARDY
Wethington next contends that his convictions for both robbery as a Class A felony and attempted murder, and for both robbery and auto theft, violate the double jeopardy clauses of the Indiana and United States constitutions.
The State argues Wethington waived review of this issue by failure to timely raise it on direct appeal.
5
An appellant waives an issue that was available but not presented on direct appeal. Cornelius v. State (1991), Ind.App.,
A. ROBBERY AS A CLASS A FELONY AND ATTEMPTED MURDER
Wethington contends that his conviction and sentencing for both robbery as a Class A felony and attempted murder violates the double jeopardy clause of the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Article One, Section Fourteen of the Indiana Constitution. He argues that the serious bodily injury used to elevate the robbery to a Class A felony resulted from an act underlying the attempted murder, and that, therefore, he may not be punished for both.
Double jeopardy protects against, inter alia, multiple punishments for the same offense. Whalen v. United States (1980),
The "identity of offenses" test under Bigler was not violated. See Jackson v. State (1993) Ind.,
Where review of the statutory provisions reveals no double jeopardy violation, then the factual bases predicating the State's charges must then be examined. Fuller v. State (1994), Ind.App.,
"[Dlid knowingly, while armed with a deadly weapon, to-wit: A TIRE TOOL take from [Leah] property, ... by putting [her] in fear or by using or threatening the use of force ... which resulted in serious bodily injury to [her], to-wit: SEVERE *96 HEAD LACERATION AND A BROKEN HAND,. ..."
Record at 2.
Wethington's attempted murder reads as follows: charge
"[Dlid attempt to commit the crime of MURDER, which is to knowingly kill another human being, ... by engaging in conduct, to-wit: Knowingly stricking [sic] [Leah] about the head with a deadly weapon, to-wit: A TIRE TOOL, choking [her] about her neck with his hands, and pushing [her] out of a moving vehicle, which constituted a substantail [sic] step toward the commission of said crime of MURDER, ..."
Record at 8.
Wethington argues that the serious bodily injury used to elevate the robbery, namely, the head laceration and broken hand, resulted from the conduct constituting a substantial step charged for attempted murder, namely, the striking about Leah's head with a deadly weapon. He argues that they are the same conduct and that therefore he may not be punished for both, relying on Bevill v. State (1985), Ind.,
While serious bodily injury is a result, not conduct, a substantial step is conduct, not a result. Zickefoose v. State (1979),
Attempted murder requires an intent to kill. Burgess v. State (1984), Ind.,
Attempted murder requires a certain act and a certain intent. It does not matter whether the act, the substantial step taken toward the commission of murder, results in any injury whatsoever, so long as it is coupled with the intent to kill. If We-thington had swung his tire tool at Leah's head with the intent to kill her but missed, the substantial step element required for attempted murder would still be satisfied.
In Bevill, our supreme court held that punishments for both class A burglary and attempted murder could not stand where each were based on the same injury. The court found no proof of injury except the same stabbing underlying both charges, concluding that both charges therefore rested upon and sought punishment for the same stabbing and the same injurious consequences. "There was only one quick and confined multiple stabbing. Appellant cannot be punished twice for it." Id. at 1254. See also Malott v. State (1985), Ind.,
Bevill, Malott and Mitchell, however, predate the United States Supreme Court's decision in United States v. Dixon (1993), -- U.S. --,
The defendant in Jackson bludgeoned, strangled and shot his victim. The Jackson court noted that these multiple injuries were not "a single act." Here, Wething-ton repeatedly bludgeoned, strangled and pushed his victim from the car. Leah sustained more than one injury, and their infliction was neither quick nor confined: two separate tire tool attacks, a choking and an ejection from a vehicle, all of which took place over the span of approximately half an hour. As in Jackson, the multiple injuries Wethington inflicted were not a single act.
Wethington also contends that the same use of a deadly weapon impermissibly elevated the robbery charge because it also formed the basis of the attempted murder charge thus: "... knowingly struck Leah about the head with a tire tool." In support of his contention, he cites Lyles v. State (1991), Ind.App.,
B ROBBERY AND AUTO THEFT
Wethington also contends that the trial court erred in convicting and sentencing him for both theft and robbery because the theft was a lesser included offense of the robbery. The charging instruments show that both charges were predicated on the taking of the same car. If the property underlying a robbery charge is the same as that underlying a theft charge, the theft becomes a lesser included offense of the robbery, and conviction for both counts violates double jeopardy provisions. Winfrey v. State (1989), Ind.,
We affirm the convictions and sentences for robbery, as a Class A felony, and attempted murder, and remand to the trial court with instructions to vacate the convietion and sentence for auto theft.
Notes
. See IC 35-42-5-1 (1986 Supp.)
. See IC 35-42-3-2 (1982 Ed.)
. See IC 35-41-5-1 (1982 Ed.), IC 35-42-1-1 (1982 Ed.)
. See IC 35-43-4-2.5 (1986 Supp.)
. The State also claims that Wethington did not raise double jeopardy in either of his petitions for post-conviction relief; he did in fact raise such in his May 14, 1993 petition for post-conviction relief. P.C.Record at 45.
. In Mitchell, our supreme court anticipated Dixon by suggesting that evidence showing nonsu-perficial injury separate from the subject gunshot might sustain multiple punishments without violating double jeopardy principles. Mitchell v. State,
