BAKER, C.J.
Here, a juvenile was in a school classroom and got into an altercation with another student. As his teacher attempted to separate the students, D.H. threw a punch at the other student but struck his teacher instead. The juvenile court found that D.H. committed the equivalent of battery against his teacher, and D.H. now argues that the evidence does not support a conclusion that he knowingly or intentionally struck his teacher. We disagree, and find that the doctrine of transferred intent supports the delinquency finding.
Appellant-respondent D.H. appeals the juvenile court’s finding that he committed an act that would have been Battery, a class D felony, had it been committed by an adult. D.H. contends that there is insufficient evidence supporting the conclusion that he intended to strike his teacher. Finding sufficient evidence, we affirm.
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. . . It has long been held that “[t]he fact that [the defendant] did not strike his intended victim but instead injured another is not a defense. We have found in similar cases that the defendant’s intent is transferred from the person against whom it was directed to the person actually injured.” Tucker v. State, 443 N.E.2d 840, 842 (Ind. 1983). Here, because D.H. admitted that he intended to punch the other student, the fact that he instead mistakenly struck Cornett cannot act as a defense.
D.H. argues that the transferred intent cases are inapposite to the matter at hand because in those cases, the doctrine was applied to crimes that were charged at the same or lower punishment level as the crime originally intended to be committed. Here, in contrast, if D.H. had struck the other student, he would merely have committed the equivalent of a class A or class B misdemeanor battery. But because he struck a teacher instead, D.H.’s act was elevated to a class D felony. Under these circumstances, D.H. contends that the doctrine of transferred intent should not apply.
Although compelling at first glance, we do not find this argument to be wholly persuasive. As the State points out, Indiana Section 35-41-2-2(d) provides that the level of culpability required for the commission of an offense is required with respect to “every material element of the prohibited conduct.” (Emphasis added). We have held that “prohibited conduct” and “element” are not synonymous; thus, the culpability requirement applies only to the conduct of the statute. Markley v. State, 421 N.E.2d 20, 21-22 (Ind. Ct. App. 1981).
Specifically with respect to the battery statute, the culpability requirement applies only to the conduct elements—touching another in a rude, angry, or insolent manner. Id. In contrast, aggravating circumstances that increase the penalty for the crime must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt but do not require proof of culpability. Id. (finding that the culpability requirement did not apply to the aggravating circumstance of “serious bodily injury,” enhancing a battery to a class C felony); see also Owens v. State, 742 N.E.2d 538, 542-43 (Ind. Ct. App. 2001) (finding that “bodily injury to a law enforcement officer” is an aggravating circumstance of battery that “increases the penalty for the offense committed without proof of any culpability separate from the culpability required for the conduct elements of the offense”).
We find that the fact that the victim of a battery is a school employee in the course of her duties is akin to a battery causing a serious bodily injury—it is an aggravating circumstance that increases the penalty for the crime. Thus, while the State is required to prove this fact beyond a reasonable doubt, it need not prove that D.H. acted with the requisite culpability with respect to this fact.
In other words, the State is not required to prove that D.H. knowingly or intentionally struck his teacher. Instead, the State is required to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that D.H. knowingly or intentionally struck someone, and then prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the victim happened to be a teacher in the course of her duties, elevating the act to the equivalent of a class D felony. Inasmuch as D.H. admits that he threw a punch, intending to hit another student, and mistakenly struck his teacher instead, we find that the evidence is sufficient to support the juvenile court’s finding of delinquency.
The judgment of the juvenile court is affirmed.
NAJAM, J., and MATHIAS, J., concur.