Slaughter, J.
A Warrick County jury convicted Mathew McCallister of murder and conspiracy to commit murder, and he was sentenced to life imprisonment without parole. In this direct appeal, McCallister challenges (i) the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his convictions, (ii) various evidentiary rulings by the trial court, and (iii) the propriety of his sentence. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.
… During February 2014, Defendant, Mathew McCallister, lived with his girlfriend, Kelli Wyrick, in a series of hotels in Evansville, Indiana. Also living in Evansville hotels then were their friends Shawn Grigsby and Grigsby’s girlfriend. … On February 16, the couples were staying in adjoining rooms at a local Fairfield Inn, and they invited McCallister’s sister, Jade Stigall; her fiancé, David Lackey; and McCallister’s friend, Joseph Nelson; to join them at the hotel to smoke methamphetamine.
At some point that evening, everyone left McCallister’s room except Stigall and Nelson. After the two had smoked meth, Nelson inched closer to Stigall on the shared bed and asked if she would “like to play”. Stigall considered Nelson’s pitch to be an unwelcomed sexual advance. She sent her fiancé, Lackey, a text message explaining what had happened and asked him to return to the hotel. Lackey could not return immediately but told McCallister what had reportedly happened between his sister and Nelson. … After hearing his sister’s version, McCallister told Lackey and Grigsby to get Nelson out of the hotel and drive him to a local convenience store, where McCallister and Wyrick would meet them.
After midnight on February 17, Grigsby and Lackey followed McCallister’s instructions, and the two of them returned to the hotel. …
McCallister eventually directed Stigall to park near the Liberty Mine, a coal mine located in a remote area of Warrick County. … McCallister and Grigsby walked alongside Nelson, with Stigall and Lackey walking a short distance behind. Stigall saw Grigsby give his gun to McCallister.
… When she turned the corner, she saw Nelson on his knees with McCallister and Grigsby standing behind him. She then saw a “spark go off from the gun” and “heard the pop and seen [sic] the flash” as McCallister shot Nelson in the back of the head. …
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A few days after police recovered Nelson’s body, they obtained surveillance video from the Fairfield Inn. The video showed Nelson leaving the hotel with Grigsby, Stigall, and Lackey … Stigall not only gave detailed information about the murder, but also took police to the sewer drain where police recovered Grigsby’s handgun and to the burn pile, where she had disposed of the clothes. For his part, Lackey showed police where the murder occurred. …
When McCallister went to trial in July 2016, Stigall had already pleaded guilty to assisting a criminal with murder. She testified that McCallister was the shooter. … After a six-day trial, the jury found McCallister guilty of murder and conspiracy to commit murder, a class A felony.
During the penalty phase, the jury found as an aggravating circumstance that McCallister committed the murder while on parole. … and it unanimously recommended a sentence of life without parole. The trial court imposed that sentence for murder and a concurrent forty-year term for conspiracy. …
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During its case-in-chief, the State introduced evidence corroborating Stigall’s testimony with various electronic data the police obtained during their investigation. …
The trial court did not abuse its discretion by admitting State’s Exhibit 23—a DVD purporting to show surveillance video from a stationary camera overlooking the lobby at the Fairfield Inn, where several members of the group were staying on February 16 and 17, 2014.
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Nor did the trial court abuse its discretion by admitting a recorded phone conversation between McCallister and his girlfriend, Kelli Wyrick, while she visited him at the Vanderburgh County Jail.
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… The trial court did admit State’s Exhibit 108, an FBI report based on data obtained from her phone, including a conversation from the early-morning hours of February 17. …
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As with the other evidence, any error by the trial court in admitting State’s Exhibit 108 was harmless because it did not prejudice McCallister. …
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McCallister asks us to vacate his life-without-parole sentence and impose a term of years, arguing the trial court “did not fully consider the above-referenced proposed mitigators, and abused its discretion in assigning their weight.” …
It was the jury, not the court, that found the on-parole aggravator beyond a reasonable doubt, weighed it against mitigating circumstances, and unanimously determined the proper sentence was life without parole. McCallister identifies no legal authority requiring the court to issue findings regarding the presence of aggravating and mitigating factors, or the relative weight to be given them, when the jury recommends sentence.
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… We conclude McCallister’s sentence is not an outlier in need of correction and decline to revise it under Rule 7(B).
For these reasons, we affirm McCallister’s convictions and sentence.
Rush, C.J., and David, Massa, and Goff, JJ., concur.