Vaidik, CJ.
Following a heroin overdose, the State charged Tavis Ray Crittendon with Level 6 felony possession of a narcotic drug. Following a bench trial, the trial judge found him guilty, reasoning that Crittendon admitted using heroin and had to possess the heroin in order to use it. Crittendon now appeals, arguing that he cannot be convicted of possessing the heroin he admitted consuming. Because this Court has already determined that a defendant can be found guilty of possessing the drug that was consumed (without the State having to introduce the drug into evidence), we affirm.
In the early-morning hours of January 25, 2016, Acacia Frye called 911 when she found Crittendon, her live-in boyfriend, unresponsive with blue lips. Acacia “immediately recognize[d] it as a [h]eroin overdose” and started administering CPR.
When Deputy Christopher Francis with the Kosciusko County Sheriff’s Department arrived at the Warsaw house, medics were working on Crittendon. Crittendon, who appeared “heavily impaired,” was talking to the medics. As the medics transported Crittendon to the hospital, Deputy Francis spoke with Acacia because he wanted “to figure out exactly what [Crittendon] was on for his well-being.” Acacia told him that there were narcotics in the house. Acacia then led Deputy Francis to a bedroom in the attic and lifted the mattress, revealing plastic baggies, a syringe, and a marijuana pipe. A powder in one of the bags field-tested positive for heroin. Acacia said she purchased the heroin the day before in South Bend.
Meanwhile, another deputy went to the hospital to speak with Crittendon. The interview was recorded. Crittendon told the deputy that he didn’t know about the items under the mattress. When the deputy asked Crittendon what happened, he said:
I, uh, slipped up. Did some, well what I thought was a little bit of coke, some heroin. Went to sleep. Woke up to the ambulance being there and my girlfriend freaking out.
He told the deputy that he used the cocaine and heroin with an old friend at a gas station in Milford, a nearby town in Kosciusko County.
The State charged Crittendon with Level 6 felony possession of a narcotic drug. Crittendon filed a written waiver of his right to a jury trial (which was signed by both him and his attorney), … and a bench trial was held.
At the bench trial, the State’s theory was that Crittendon possessed the heroin found under the mattress. Defense counsel’s theory was that Crittendon did not possess the heroin found under the mattress, that he used a different batch of heroin belonging to a friend, and that a person cannot be convicted of possessing a drug they consumed. The trial judge was not persuaded by defense counsel’s argument, finding that because Crittendon admitted to using heroin and that “[h]e had to possess it to consume it,” he was guilty of Level 6 felony possession of a narcotic drug.
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Crittendon contends that he cannot be convicted of possessing the heroin he admitted consuming. Crittendon concedes that “[c]ase law does exist to equate consumption with possession”—that is, an Indiana Court of Appeals decision from 1974, Smith v. State, 161 Ind. App. 636, 316 N.E.2d 841 (1974), reh’g denied—but he claims that Smith is “no longer good law” because “it has not been cited in any subsequent appellate cases.”
Not so. This Court relied on Smith in 1991 in State v. Vorm, 570 N.E.2d 109 (Ind. Ct. App. 1991). In Vorm, the defendant tested positive for cocaine metabolites during a drug screen while he was on work release and was charged with possession of cocaine. …
….
… We held that evidence that a person has cocaine metabolites in their system is circumstantial evidence of prior possession of cocaine but that additional evidence is needed. In other words, the presence of cocaine metabolites in a person’s system, by itself, is not enough to support a conviction for possession of cocaine. Because there was no evidence showing that Vorm knowingly or intentionally possessed cocaine, we reversed his conviction.
We revisited the issue in 2015 in Smart v. State, 40 N.E.3d 963 (Ind. Ct. App. 2015), reh’g denied. …
The State charged Smart with, among other things, Class D felony possession of methamphetamine. At trial, Smart testified that Janelle had offered him “some speed” that was already loaded into a syringe and that Janelle helped him inject it and then kept the syringe. Smart then admitted using meth. Christina also testified, and she admitted injecting the meth supplied by Janelle.
On appeal, Smart, relying on Vorm, argued that the evidence was insufficient to support his conviction for possessing meth. We held:
We find Vorm distinguishable. … Given the circumstantial evidence and the witness testimony here, we conclude that the evidence is sufficient to sustain Smart’s conviction for Class D felony possession of methamphetamine.
Id. at 967.
Critically, Crittendon does not acknowledge either Vorm or Smart in his appellant’s brief. The State cites Smart in its appellee’s brief, and Crittendon did not file a reply brief. Based on both Vorm and Smart, we find that the evidence is sufficient to support Crittendon’s conviction for possession of a narcotic drug. That is, Crittendon admitted using heroin shortly before waking up to medics, and he showed clear signs of a heroin overdose. Although Crittendon argues that there is a “public policy argument to be made against equating consumption . . . with possession” because it discourages people from seeking medical assistance, public-policy arguments should be made to the General Assembly. We therefore affirm Crittendon’s conviction for Level 6 felony possession of a narcotic drug.
Affirmed.
Riley, J., and Kirsch, J., concur.