Court Opinion

ID: 9949770
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-03-12 16:04:50.112884+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:25:54.485387
License: Public Domain

FILED
                                                        Mar 12 2024, 10:08 am

                                                               CLERK
                                                         Indiana Supreme Court
                                                            Court of Appeals
                                                              and Tax Court

                       IN THE

Indiana Supreme Court
          Supreme Court Case No. 23S-JV-40

                         A.W.,
              Appellant (Respondent below),

                           –v–

                  State of Indiana,
                Appellee (Petitioner below).

      Argued: May 4, 2023 | Decided: March 12, 2024

          Appeal from the Marion Superior Court
                 No. 49D09-2107-JD-5869
        The Honorable Geoffrey A. Gaither, Judge
      The Honorable Duane E. Merchant, Magistrate
 On Petition to Transfer from the Indiana Court of Appeals
                        22A-JV-150

                Opinion by Justice Massa
Chief Justice Rush and Justices Slaughter and Molter concur.
Justice Goff concurs in the judgment with separate opinion.
Massa, Justice.

   Does Indiana double jeopardy law apply to a juvenile in possession of a
firearm with a novel Glock switch feature that turns it into a machine
gun?1 We know that “[c]onfusion over double jeopardy is not new.”
Richardson v. State, 717 N.E.2d 32, 59 (Ind. 1999) (Boehm, J., concurring in
result). More than three years ago, this Court in Wadle v. State, 151 N.E.3d
227 (Ind. 2020), attempted to clarify double jeopardy by overturning the
constitutional tests announced in Richardson, which itself sought to
institute a “single comprehensive rule” that combined a “statutory
elements” test with an “actual evidence” test for resolving “substantive”
double jeopardy claims; in other words, claims based on multiple
punishments for the same act in a single proceeding, not multiple trials.
Wadle, 151 N.E.3d at 240–41. But Richardson ultimately proved to be
unworkable in practice—in part, because it presented an “either/or”
option for courts to apply one test over another. Id. at 241. This reflected a
checkered form of “double jeopardy double talk,” see Akhil Amar, Double
Jeopardy Law Made Simple, 106 Yale L.J. 1807, 1807 (1997), that engendered
“a patchwork of conflicting precedent and inconsistent standards,” Wadle,
151 N.E.3d at 235. In response, Wadle introduced a three-part test focused
on statutory interpretation. Id. at 248. Courts have since wrestled with
applying the Wadle framework, and at times have misapplied its
instructions by resurrecting a version of the “actual evidence” test from
Richardson—first in dicta, see Phillips v. State, 174 N.E.3d 635, 646–47 (Ind.
Ct. App. 2021), which then became part of a published decision, see Harris
v. State, 186 N.E.3d 604, 611–12 (Ind. Ct. App. 2022). We disapprove any

1 Subsequent to this adjudication, the Governor signed into law House Enrolled Act 1365, Pub.
L. No. 80-2023, which expanded—for purposes of an enhancement and certain criminal
offenses—the definition of “[m]achine gun,” to include a weapon “designed to shoot . . .
automatically more than one (1) shot, without manual reloading, by a single function of the
trigger.” Ind. Code § 35-31.5-2-190(a)(2) (2023). Under the law, subsection (b) further defines
the meaning of machine gun to include “(1) the frame or receiver of a weapon described in
subsection (a); (2) a: (A) part designed and intended solely and exclusively; or (B)
combination of parts designed and intended; for use in converting a weapon into a machine
gun; and (3) any combination of parts from which a machine gun can be assembled if such
parts are in the possession or under the control of a person.” Id. § -190(b)(1)–(3).

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 23S-JV-40 | March 12, 2024                        Page 2 of 20
opinion that relies on this principle and reiterate the Wadle test for
resolving substantive double jeopardy claims, albeit with a small but
crucial adjustment at Step 2, where courts will now construe ambiguities
from charging instruments in favor of defendants.

   But first, we have a case to resolve. A.W. challenges his multiple
juvenile adjudications for possession of a machine gun, a Level 5 felony if
committed by an adult, and dangerous possession of a firearm, a Class A
misdemeanor.2 We reach three conclusions about these adjudications.
First, we find that A.W.’s exclusive possession of a handgun—one with a
Glock switch attached, which transformed the semiautomatic gun into a
fully-automatic one—coupled with his abrupt flight, supports the finding
that he “knowingly or intentionally” possessed a machine gun in violation
of Indiana Code section 35-47-5-8. Second, we clarify that while Article 1,
Section 14 of the Indiana Constitution could apply in juvenile
proceedings, constitutional avoidance counsels against deciding that issue
today. Third, we hold that possession of a dangerous firearm is a “lesser-
included” offense of possession of a machine gun, and thus violated
A.W.’s right to be free from substantive double jeopardy under Wadle.

    Accordingly, we affirm the sufficiency of the evidence, but reverse the
adjudication that A.W. committed dangerous possession of a firearm.

Facts and Procedural History
   A.W., a seventeen-year-old, fled on foot from a traffic stop for speeding.
While A.W. ran, officers noticed a gun in his hand. Indianapolis police
officer Scott Highland ordered A.W. to get on the ground several times,

2 “Juvenile adjudication” is now the preferred term of art for what was commonly called a
“true finding,” the juvenile law equivalent of a guilty verdict on a particular count in adult
criminal court. The case today involves multiple juvenile adjudications in the same case,
triggering a Wadle substantive double jeopardy analysis. It does not involve successive
juvenile adjudications, which could implicate Article 1, Section 14’s procedural double
jeopardy protections. See infra at Section II.

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but he continued to run. A.W. tripped, and as he started to fall to the
ground, he threw the gun away.

   Officer Highland arrested A.W., and, during a pat down search, found
a phone and a “large sum of money” in his pockets. Tr. at 11. The other
officer at the scene, Sergeant Kyle Hodges, recovered the gun—a nine
millimeter Glock 17 handgun with a 30-round extended magazine and a
laser pointer. Officer Highland noticed the Glock was “essentially” the
same as his own firearm, except something was “different” about this
Glock, as it had a modifying device attached. Id. at 12.

   The State filed a delinquency petition against A.W., alleging that he had
committed acts which, if committed by an adult, amount to three Class A
misdemeanors: (1) carrying a handgun without a license, (2) resisting law
enforcement, and (3) criminal mischief. The State also alleged that A.W.
committed (4) dangerous possession of a firearm, a Class A misdemeanor
applying to mere possession of a firearm by a juvenile. A fellow officer
assigned to work with the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms
and Explosives task force, discovered the device attached to the weapon
was a “Glock switch,” which transforms the weapon “from a
semiautomatic to an automatic handgun,” id. at 21, and explained that
these modifications have “been around for a few years” and that “we’re
seeing more and more of them,” id. at 28, 30.

   With this information, the State amended its delinquency petition to
add another count—possession of a machine gun, a Level 5 felony if
committed by an adult. After a factfinding hearing, the juvenile court
concluded that A.W. committed each of the offenses as alleged in the
amended petition and thus entered separate juvenile adjudications for
each offense. The trial court placed A.W. on probation and released him to
his father’s custody. A.W. appealed.

   In a published opinion, the Court of Appeals unanimously affirmed the
sufficiency of the evidence but reversed in a 2–1 decision on substantive
double jeopardy grounds. A.W. v. State, 192 N.E.3d 227, 232 (Ind. Ct. App.
2022), vacated. First, the panel concluded that A.W.’s exclusive possession
of the Glock as modified was sufficient evidence that he “knowingly or
intentionally” possessed a machine gun in violation of Indiana Code

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section 35-47-5-8. Id. at 231. Second, the majority held that (1) dangerous
possession of a firearm and (2) possession of a machine gun—as charged
and proven at A.W.’s hearing—violated substantive double jeopardy
under Wadle, because the “same firearm was the means used to commit
both offenses,” thus making them factually included offenses. Id. at 232.
The majority reversed the juvenile court’s adjudication that A.W.
committed dangerous possession of a firearm. Id. A dissenting opinion,
however, concluded that the two offenses were not factually included
because while the charges overlap in that A.W. possessed a firearm, they
do not amount to multiple punishment because “one requires proof that
he had the status of a minor” and the other requires proof that he
“possessed a machine gun, which no person may lawfully possess, minor
or not.” Id. at 233 (Bradford, C.J., concurring in part, dissenting in part).

   A.W. sought transfer on the sufficiency of the evidence issue, and the
State submitted a brief in response. The State also filed its own transfer
petition solely on the double jeopardy question. A.W. did not respond.

  We granted transfer, 205 N.E.3d 190 (Ind. 2023), thus vacating the
appellate opinion, Ind. Appellate Rule 58(A).

Standards of Review
   This challenge to the trial court’s multiple juvenile adjudications has
two layers of review. First, A.W.’s sufficiency of the evidence argument
“implicate[s] a deferential standard of review.” Carmack v. State, 200
N.E.3d 452, 459 (Ind. 2023) (cleaned up). When reviewing sufficiency
claims in the special context of a juvenile adjudication, such as here, “we
do not reweigh the evidence or judge witness credibility,” but appraise
“only the evidence favorable to the judgment and the reasonable
inferences supporting it.” B.T.E. v. State, 108 N.E.3d 322, 326 (Ind. 2018)
(citing K.S. v. State, 849 N.E.2d 538, 543 (Ind. 2006)). We will affirm a
juvenile adjudication “if a reasonable trier of fact could conclude that the
[respondent] was guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.” Id. (citing Moran v.
State, 622 N.E.2d 157, 159 (Ind. 1993)). And second, A.W.’s double
jeopardy challenge—(1) whether Article 1, Section 14 of the Indiana

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Constitution applies in juvenile proceedings; and (2) whether his multiple
adjudications violated his right to be free from substantive double
jeopardy—involves controlling questions of law that we review de novo.
Wadle, 151 N.E.3d at 237; Powell v. State, 151 N.E.3d 256, 262 (Ind. 2020).

Discussion and Decision
I.      A.W.’s exclusive possession of the firearm,
        which contained a Glock switch feature, was
        sufficient evidence that he “knowingly or
        intentionally” possessed a machine gun.
   A.W. challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the juvenile
court’s adjudication of possession of a machine gun. He argues that he did
not know the Glock switch converted the firearm from a semiautomatic
weapon to a machine gun, and therefore his “mere possession” of this
feature was insufficient evidence to establish his mens rea. A.W. Pet. to
Trans. at 6. The trial court considered the facts and found that A.W.
“knowingly or intentionally” possessed a modified machine gun. Tr. at 60.

   The statutory mens rea requirement imposes the following burden on
the State: in order to prove that A.W. committed the machine gun offense,
it must show that he “knowingly or intentionally own[ed] or possesse[d] a
machine gun . . . .” I.C. § 35-47-5-8. A.W. admits the evidence established
exclusive possession but claims the State could not show beyond a
reasonable doubt that he knew the Glock switch feature attached to the
slide converted the Glock to a machine gun. We respectfully disagree.

  Admittedly, it is hard to get inside head of the defendant: “[k]nowledge
and intent are both mental states and, absent an admission by the
defendant, the trier of fact must resort to the reasonable inferences from
both the direct and circumstantial evidence[.]” Stokes v. State, 922 N.E.2d
758, 764 (Ind. Ct. App. 2010), trans. denied. So given this real-world
constraint, a defendant’s mens rea may be proven by “circumstantial
evidence,”—that is, it may be reasonably “inferred from a defendant’s
conduct and the natural and usual sequence to which such conduct

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logically and reasonably points.” Id. Reasonable inferences are
foundational to criminal law. In Indiana, courts have found that exclusive
possession of contraband supports an inference that the person “knows of
the contraband’s presence and of its forbidden character.” Carnes v. State,
480 N.E.2d 581, 586 (Ind. Ct. App. 1985), trans. denied. Rightfully so.

   Applying Indiana’s exclusive possession precedent to A.W., we
conclude that his exclusive possession of the gun while the officers were
chasing him for at least thirty seconds supplied the trial court with a
reasonable inference that he knew the gun was, in fact, a modified
machine gun. See id. And the juvenile court finding that his corresponding
conduct—his abrupt flight from the traffic stop—also supports a
reasonable inference that he knew the gun was a machine gun. See Stokes,
922 N.E.2d at 764. We acknowledge this presents a close call, but our
standard of review requires that we reject any invitation to the contrary
today because it would amount to an impermissible reweighing of
evidence. See J.C. v. State, 131 N.E.3d 610, 612 (Ind. Ct. App. 2019). We thus
affirm the juvenile court’s finding that A.W.’s exclusive possession of the
weapon, coupled with his abrupt flight, is sufficient evidence that he
“knowingly or intentionally” possessed a machine gun.

II.        Article 1, Section 14’s protective scope for
           procedural double jeopardy could apply in
           juvenile proceedings, but we decline to answer
           that question due to constitutional avoidance.
  We turn next to A.W.’s double jeopardy claim. The threshold issue is
whether Article 1, Section 14 of the Indiana Constitution—barring
procedural double jeopardy—applies in juvenile proceedings.3 While we
asked for supplemental briefing on this question,4 the doctrine of

3   “No person shall be put in jeopardy twice for the same offense.” IND. CONST. art. 1, § 14.
4   We thank the parties for their supplemental briefing on this constitutional question.

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constitutional avoidance cautions answering it today. See Ind. Land. Tr. Co.
v. XL Inv. Props., LLC, 155 N.E.3d 1177, 1182–83 (Ind. 2020) (explaining
that “constitutional avoidance . . . weighs against deciding constitutional
questions not absolutely necessary” to the merits (quotations omitted)).

   To be sure, there is an important doctrinal distinction in Indiana
between procedural and substantive double jeopardy. In Wadle, this Court
bifurcated the analysis for procedural and substantive double jeopardy
claims, grounding the procedural strand in the state constitution and the
substantive strand in the statutory law.5 For the former type, Wadle
confirmed that the “protective scope” of Article 1, Section 14 is restricted
to “successive prosecutions for the same offense.” 151 N.E.3d at 246
(emphasis added). We acknowledge that same protective scope could
apply in the juvenile context to restrain successive adjudications for the
same offense. And yet while we are open to considering whether Article 1,
Section 14—applicable to claims of procedural double jeopardy—applies
to juveniles, we reserve that constitutional question for another day.

5 We acknowledge our ongoing role in the confusion surrounding the term “double
jeopardy.” In Wadle, we tried to clarify that, as a matter of constitutional law, it only bars
successive prosecutions for the “same offense.” 151 N.E.3d at 246. We have referred to this
principle as “constitutional” or “procedural” double jeopardy, id. at 245–46, and continue to
use the term “substantive double jeopardy” to describe the law barring multiple punishments
in a single proceeding, id. at 246–47, which is not necessarily of constitutional magnitude. Cf.
at 250 (Wadle does “not suggest that protection from multiple punishments in a single
prosecution falls beyond the constitutional pale,” as substantive double jeopardy safeguards
in Indiana may “operate in harmony with, not in isolation from . . . supplemental
constitutional protections”); see also Randall T. Shepard, Second Wind for the Indiana Bill of
Rights, 22 Ind. L. Rev. 575, 576 (1989) (Indiana Bill of Rights erects a robust framework of
constitutional protections enshrined to protect Hoosiers “from the excesses of government”).

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 23S-JV-40 | March 12, 2024                         Page 8 of 20
   We must now assess whether A.W.’s multiple adjudications are the
“same offense” under Wadle, which we assume without deciding applies.6

III. A.W.’s multiple adjudications violated his right
     to be free from substantive double jeopardy.
   Unlike procedural double jeopardy under Article 1, Section 14 (which
bars successive prosecutions for the same offense), substantive double
jeopardy refers to claims related to multiple convictions for the same
offense in a single proceeding. Wadle, 151 N.E.2d at 246–47. We thus look
to Wadle, which established a three-part test based on statutory sources to
more faithfully determine whether A.W.’s multiple adjudications were for
the “same offense.” Today, we apply Wadle step by step, and clarify
perhaps misunderstood directions, while adding a modification at Step 2.

    A. Three-Step Approach to Substantive Double Jeopardy
        1. Interpret statutory language

    We start with the statutory language of the offenses. “If the language of
either statute clearly permits multiple punishment, either expressly or by
unmistakable implication, the court’s inquiry comes to an end and there is
no violation of substantive double jeopardy.” Id. at 248 (footnote omitted).

        2. Apply included-offense statute

   If the statutory language does not clearly permit multiple punishments,
“a court must then apply our included-offense statutes to determine
statutory intent.” Id. (emphasis added) (citing Collins v. State, 645 N.E.2d

6 The issue of whether substantive double jeopardy applies in juvenile proceedings is a classic
policy judgment best fit for the General Assembly. While some criminal-code protections
apply to juveniles, see I.C. § 31-32-1-1 (criminal procedures apply to juveniles whenever the
juvenile code does not provide otherwise), the statute for a court’s entry of a judgment and
sentence when a defendant is convicted of both an offense and an included offense does not
translate perfectly into the juvenile context of delinquency adjudications, see I.C. § 35-38-1-6.
For this reason, and out of deference to the people’s branch, we leave this question for the
legislature to decide if substantive double jeopardy applies in juvenile proceedings.

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 23S-JV-40 | March 12, 2024                           Page 9 of 20
1089, 1093 (Ind. Ct. App. 1995) (highlighting that our included-offense
statute helps courts ascertain “legislative intent”), aff’d in part, vacated in
part on other grounds, 659 N.E.2d 509 (Ind. 1995)). An “included offense,”
as defined by the General Assembly, is an offense

       (1) that “is established by proof of the same material elements or
           less than all the material elements required to establish the
           commission of the offense charged,”
       (2) that “consists of an attempt to commit the offense charged or an
           offense otherwise included therein,” or
       (3) that “differs from the offense charged only in the respect that a
           less serious harm or risk of harm to the same person, property,
           or public interest, or a lesser kind of culpability, is required to
           establish its commission.”

I.C. § 35-31.5-2-168. “If neither offense is an included offense of the other
(either inherently or as charged), there is no violation of double jeopardy”
and the analysis ends—full stop. Wadle, 151 N.E.3d at 248. But if one
offense is included in the other, the court must proceed to Step 3. See id.

   Confusion abounds about the meaning and application of two key
phrases: “inherently” and “as charged.” We take this opportunity to
bridge any analytical gaps. Wadle defined an “inherently included”
offense as one that “may be established by proof of the same material
elements or less than all the material elements defining the crime
charged,” or if “the only feature distinguishing the two offenses is that a
lesser culpability is required to establish the commission of the lesser
offense.” Id. at 251 n.30 (quoting Young v. State, 30 N.E.3d 719, 724 (Ind.
2015)). Wadle thus approved subsection (1) and the last part of subsection
(3) of the included-offense statute to be within the inherently included
inquiry. Id. Today, we clarify that this evaluation should be made under

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all three subsections.7 Thus, to constitute an inherently included offense, it
must fit within one of those enumerated subsections. I.C. § 35-31.5-2-168.

   Wadle does not define the meaning of “as charged.” See 151 N.E.3d at
248. But this phrase makes more sense when analyzed at Step 2 within the
factually included inquiry. These two concepts—as charged and factually
included—should be treated as synonymous under Wadle: “the charging
instrument alleges that the means used to commit the crime charged
include all of the elements of the alleged lesser included offense.” Id. at
251 n.30 (quoting Young, 30 N.E.3d at 724) (cleaned up).

    But that leaves us with another open question about the scope of the
factually included inquiry at Step 2. We conclude that when assessing
whether an offense is factually included, a court may examine only the
facts as presented on the face of the charging instrument. This includes
examining the “means used to commit the crime charged,” which must
“include all of the elements of the alleged lesser included offense.” Id. Step
2 has core constraints: it does not authorize courts to probe other facts,
such as evidence adduced from trial. Cf. Phillips, 174 N.E.3d at 647. The
factually included inquiry at this step is thus limited to facts on the face of
the charging instrument. Otherwise, Step 2 would be another formulation
of the now-retired Richardson approach. Richardson’s “either/or” regime
was rejected because it gave courts options, which thus led to a selective
application of “one test over another.” Wadle, 151 N.E.3d at 241. Using
their discretion, courts typically focused on actual evidence rather than
the statutory elements, which led to a mélange of inconsistency. Compare
Hines v. State, 30 N.E.3d 1216, 1222 (Ind. 2015) (double jeopardy violation
existed “because the facts establishing criminal confinement would also
establish battery[,]” though the facts establishing the latter offense would
not have established the former), with Carrico v. State, 775 N.E.2d 312, 314

7 Our decision to bridge this analytical gap today finds support in Wright v. State, 658 N.E.2d
563 (Ind. 1995), which left open the door for the first part of subsection (3) of the included-
offense statute—“differs from the offense charged only in respect that a less serious harm or
risk of harm to the same person, property, or public interest”—to be “treated as an inherently
included offense” under our double jeopardy analysis. Id. at 566 n.2.

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(Ind. 2002) (no double jeopardy violation where evidence establishing
murder established only one element of B felony robbery, even though
evidence establishing the latter crime may have established the former).

   Inconsistency breeds confusion, and confusion imperils the rule of law.
In addressing this axiom, Wadle attempted to combat any potential
legitimacy concerns by restoring order to Indiana’s double jeopardy
jurisprudence: it focused on the included-offense statute. See 151 N.E.3d at
235. Wadle thus assigned the “underlying” factual inquiry—which
includes evidence from trial—to Step 3. Id. at 249. In other words, Step 3 is
authorized, but only if one offense is included in the other under Step 2.
Wadle contains clear stopping points in its analytical sequence: if Step 2 is
not met, the analysis ends. We thus conclude that courts must confine
their Step 2 analysis to (1) the included-offense statute (whether the
offenses are “inherently” included), and (2) the face of the charging
instrument (whether the offenses “as charged” are factually included).

  The Step 2 analysis has produced confusion beginning with Phillips, 174
N.E.3d 635, an appellate decision that resurrected the actual evidence test
by importing similar language from Richardson. In Phillips, the Court of
Appeals found that two offenses “could be factually included depending
on the manner in which the State charged the defendant and the evidence
produced at trial. In other words, a prosecutor cannot secure two
convictions for the same act using the exact same evidence.” Id. at 647
(emphasis added). Phillips determined the offenses were inherently
included, but then observed in dicta that possession and dealing in
methamphetamine were factually included based on the charging
instrument and evidence at trial, the latter which included the State’s
closing statements when explaining the evidence of the two offenses. Id. at
646–47. Simply put, Phillips engrafted Richardson-style language onto Step
2, and panels have since used phrases like “evidence produced at trial”

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and “exact same evidence,” to revive an actual evidence test at this step.8
But Phillips improperly conflates (a) facts on the face of the charging
instrument and (b) evidence presented at trial, the former which is part of
the factually included inquiry and the latter which reflects Richardson.

   The case before us today is a consequence of Phillips, as the panel cited
Phillips for the proposition that two offenses “could be factually included
depending on the manner in which the State charged the defendant and
the evidence produced at trial.” A.W., 192 N.E.3d at 232 (emphasis
added) (citing Phillips, 174 N.E.3d at 647). It also stated that “[a]
prosecutor cannot secure two convictions for the same act using the exact
same evidence.” Id. (emphasis added) (quotations omitted). We
disapprove any opinion that relies on the Phillips interpretation.9 Step 2
does not allow courts to examine evidence adduced at trial, but only facts
presented in the charging instrument, including the “means used.” Wadle,
151 N.E.3d at 251 n.30.

   We acknowledge, as Judge Vaidik did in Mills v. State, that this limited
analysis under Step 2 “may produce harsh results.” 211 N.E.3d 22, 34 (Ind.
Ct. App. 2023). Indeed, the outcome of a double jeopardy claim could vary
from case to case based on the degree to which prosecutors include or
exclude facts in a charging instrument. Id. at 34 n.4. See, e.g., Demby v.
State, 203 N.E.3d 1035, 1045 n.12 (Ind. Ct. App. 2021) (concluding that
convictions for attempted murder and aggravated battery violated Wadle
because the offenses were included “as charged” based on the State’s
factual allegations that both offenses involved the same firearm, but
without this inclusion there likely would have been no violation).

8In Harris, a panel—citing Phillips—focused on evidence at trial instead of analyzing the facts
on the charging instrument to determine that Level 5 felony intimidation with a deadly
weapon and Level 6 felony pointing a firearm were “factually included.” 186 N.E.3d at 611–
12. The panel relied on trial testimony, which supported the offense of intimidation with a
deadly weapon was the “same evidence” to support pointing a firearm. Id. at 612.
9We have focused primarily on published decisions citing Phillips for this view, but also
acknowledge that at least two unpublished cases adopt a de facto actual evidence test at Step
2. See, e.g., Zoeller v. State, 21A-CR-1012 (Ind. Ct. App. Mar. 28, 2022), trans. denied [4–1, Rush,
C.J., voting to grant]; Marshall v. State, 21A-CR-1725 (Ind. Ct. App. Feb. 22, 2022).

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   Double jeopardy outcomes should not turn solely on the facts the
prosecutor elects to include or exclude in the charging instrument. Step 2
as currently understood confers an asymmetrical benefit to the State.10
Indeed, this Court in Wadle removed Richardson’s arbitrariness that
allowed judges to choose between the statutory elements test and the
actual evidence test because it produced confusion and inconsistency in
the application of double jeopardy. Wadle, 151 N.E.3d at 241. But by
pulling on the strings of Richardson, Wadle loosened the bond of protection
for defendants by swapping one form of arbitrariness for another: a
prosecutor until today could unilaterally decide how much to include (or
not include) in the charging instrument, which could decisively determine
the outcome of a double jeopardy claim. See Mills, 211 N.E.3d at 34 n.4.

   Today, we eliminate this asymmetrical benefit to the State by holding
that where ambiguities exist in a charging instrument about whether one
offense is factually included in another, see Harris, 186 N.E.3d 604, courts
must construe those ambiguities in the defendant’s favor, and thus find a
presumptive double jeopardy violation at Step 2. In this event, the State
can later rebut this presumption at Step 3.11

     A case illustration shows how our new rule would function and apply
in practice. The Court of Appeals opinion in Harris, 186 N.E.3d at 604,
which has been partially disavowed today, provides a useful example. In

10 When determining whether one offense is factually included in another at Step 2, Wadle
constructs an asymmetrical framework benefiting the State in introducing actual evidence. If
the prosecutor does not include facts in the charging instrument establishing one offense is
included in another, then there is an irrebuttable presumption that one offense is not factually
included in another regardless of how clearly the evidence and arguments at trial reveal that
it is included. But if the prosecutor does include facts indicating one offense is factually
included in another, then there is only a rebuttable presumption of a double jeopardy
violation. Thus, the reviewing court then proceeds to Step 3, where the State can rebut the
presumption with tools the defendant could not employ at Step 2—that is, actual evidence.
11To be sure, this modification at Step 2 still allows the State to use actual evidence at Step 3 to
rebut a presumptive double jeopardy violation. Because we have removed the asymmetrical
benefit, the defendant would still be barred from relying on actual evidence to establish a
double jeopardy violation at Step 2. But that concern is now mitigated because the defendant
would not need evidence at Step 2 given the rebuttable presumption that flows from
interpreting the charging instrument in the defendant’s favor rather than the State’s.

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 23S-JV-40 | March 12, 2024                            Page 14 of 20
Harris, the defendant was convicted of Level 5 felony intimidation with a
deadly weapon and Level 6 felony pointing a firearm at the same victim.
The Level 6 felony pointing a firearm was factually included because “the
means used to commit” the Level 5 felony intimidation with a deadly
weapon—pointing a firearm—included “all the elements” of the Level 6
pointing a firearm offense. Id. at 611; see also Wadle, 151 N.E.3d at 251 n.30
(defining a “factually included” offense).

  But at oral argument here, the State argued it was wrong to find a
double jeopardy violation in Harris because it was only clear from the
evidence at trial—not the charging instrument—that the victim was the
same for both offenses and pointing a firearm was factually included in
the intimidation with a deadly weapon offense.12 The State’s brief in Harris
similarly argued that, while the “charging information alleged that Harris
committed intimidation with a deadly weapon by communicating a threat
to Mitchell, and while doing so, Harris did draw or use a handgun,” the
“charge did not specify that a handgun was drawn or used by pointing
the weapon at Mitchell.” Appellee’s Br. at 17–18 (quotations omitted).
Based on the ambiguity in the charging information, it is conceivable that,
while Harris was intimidating Mitchell with a deadly weapon by drawing
his gun, he pointed the gun at someone else, such as a hostage. But the
evidence at trial dissipated any doubt about alternate theories. The
prosecutor convicted Harris by arguing to the jury that Harris “pointed
that gun at Mr. Mitchell.” Harris, 186 N.E.3d at 612 (quotations omitted).

   If we applied our new rule to Harris, the ambiguity from the charging
instrument at Step 2 would create a presumptive double jeopardy
violation that would have been rebutted by the State using actual
evidence at Step 3. In effect, this removes the need to rely on evidence at
Step 2 by focusing exclusively on the State’s charging allegations.
Otherwise, applying the Wadle framework would create unfair outcomes

12See Oral Argument at 22:39–23:05, A.W. v. State, 23S-JV-40,
https://mycourts.in.gov/arguments/default.aspx?&id=2734&view=detail&yr=&when=5&page=
1&court=&search=&direction=%20ASC&future=True&sort=&judge=&county=&admin=False&
pageSize=20, archived at https://perma.cc/7ENN-TPL9.

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 23S-JV-40 | March 12, 2024              Page 15 of 20
based on an asymmetrical benefit to the State. If, for example, a charging
instrument alleges both theft and robbery, but the prosecutor omits facts
revealing the theft is not included in the robbery—that is, because the
actions occurred on different days—the State alone gets a second chance
at Step 3 to demonstrate the offenses occurred at different times by relying
on actual evidence and arguments at trial. Wadle, 151 N.E.3d at 249 n.27.
But in a situation like Harris, if the prosecutor forgets to include—or
perhaps even strategically omits—operative facts establishing that one
offense is factually included in another, the defendant does not have any
means to demonstrate the double jeopardy violation. This would
undermine the fundamental objectives of Wadle in fashioning a neutral,
coherent framework for analyzing substantive double jeopardy claims.

   Our adjustment to Wadle today aligns with how courts typically
construe ambiguities in the criminal context against the State when the
State is the drafter. See State v. Smith, 71 N.E.3d 368, 371 (Ind. 2017)
(“Ambiguities are construed against the drafter; in this case that is the
State, which prepared the plea agreement.”). And “the prohibition against
cumulative punishment, absent clear statutory language to the contrary,
corresponds with the principles of due process rooted in the constitutional
rule of lenity.” Wadle, 151 N.E.3d at 249 n.28. The rule of lenity also
executes a similar function in resolving ambiguities in the defendant’s
favor rather than the State’s. Fix v. State, 186 N.E.3d 1134, 1139 (Ind. 2022)
(explaining that the rule of lenity “requires us to construe a penal statute
strictly against the State while resolving any ambiguities in favor of the
defendant”). In short, our decision today balances the scales by placing a

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 23S-JV-40 | March 12, 2024          Page 16 of 20
defendant’s rights “beyond the reach” of unfair prosecutorial discretion,13
while securing the State’s opportunity to later rebut a violation at Step 3.14

         3. Examine the facts underlying the statutory offenses

   We have now arrived at the final step in Wadle. If a court has found that
one offense is included in the other—either inherently or as charged—the
court must then (and only then) “examine the facts underlying those
offenses, as presented in the charging instrument and as adduced at
trial.” Wadle, 151 N.E.3d at 249 (emphasis added) (citing Bigler v. State, 602
N.E.2d 509, 521 (Ind. Ct. App. 1992), trans. denied). Step 3 functions as a
cabined version of Richardson’s actual evidence test, and it serves an
important, practical role in our double jeopardy analysis: to facilitate the
distinction between what would otherwise be two of the “same” offenses.
See id. at 249 n.27. So, at this final step, a court may only then probe the
underlying facts—as presented in the charging instrument and adduced at
trial—to determine whether a defendant’s actions were “so compressed in
terms of time, place, singleness of purpose, and continuity of action as to
constitute a single transaction.” Id. at 249. If the underlying facts reveal the
two offenses are indeed “separate,” there is no Wadle violation, “even if
one offense is, by definition, ‘included’ in the other.” Id. That said, if the
“facts show only a single continuous crime, and one statutory offense is

13We borrow this memorable phrase from Justice Robert H. Jackson’s prominent opinion in
West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette, 319 U.S. 624 (1943): “The very purpose of a
Bill of Rights was to withdraw certain subjects from the vicissitudes of political controversy,
to place them beyond the reach of majorities and officials and to establish them as legal
principles to be applied by the courts. One’s right to life, liberty, and property, to free speech,
a free press, freedom of worship and assembly, and other fundamental rights may not be
submitted to vote; they depend on the outcome of no elections.” Id. at 638 (emphasis added).
14We also point out that existing protections under our state constitution may alleviate
potential unfairness from double jeopardy. See Wadle, 151 N.E.3d at 250–53 (discussing
“supplemental constitutional protections” with which “double-jeopardy protections in
Indiana operate in harmony”). Article 1, Section 13 enshrines a defendant’s right, in “all
criminal prosecutions,” to “demand the nature and cause of the accusation against him.” IND.
CONST. art. 1, § 13. This safeguard entitles the defendant to “clear notice of the charge or
charges against which the State summons him to defend” at trial. Wright, 658 N.E.2d at 565.

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 23S-JV-40 | March 12, 2024                            Page 17 of 20
included in the other, then the prosecutor may charge these offenses only
as alternative (rather than cumulative) sanctions.” Id.

    B. Application of Wadle to A.W.’s Multiple Adjudications
   A faithful application of Wadle shows a substantive double jeopardy
violation occurred. Here, two statutes trigger double jeopardy: (1)
possession of a machine gun and (2) dangerous possession of a firearm.
The first offense: possession of a machine gun occurs when a “person . . .
knowingly or intentionally owns or possesses a machine gun,” a Level 5
felony. I.C. § 35-47-5-8. “Machine gun” is statutorily defined elsewhere in
the Indiana Code as: “a weapon that: (1) shoots; (2) is designed to shoot; or
(3) can be readily restored to shoot; automatically more than one (1) shot,
without manually reloading, by a single function of the trigger.” I.C. § 35-
31.5-2-190. The second offense: a “child” commits dangerous possession
of a firearm, a Class A misdemeanor, if he “knowingly, intentionally, or
recklessly possesses a firearm for any purpose other than a purpose
described in Section 1[.]” I.C. § 35-47-10-5(a). This offense constitutes a
“Level 5 felony if the child has a prior conviction under this section or has
been adjudicated a delinquent for an act that would be an offense under
this section if committed by an adult.” Id.

   Here, “neither statute clearly permits multiple punishments, either
expressly or by unmistakable implication.” Wadle, 151 N.E.3d at 254. And
so because the statutory language is unclear, we must now analyze these
two offenses under our included-offense statute, bringing us to Step 2.

   At Step 2, we reach two independent conclusions. First, we conclude
that dangerous possession of a firearm is “inherently included” within
possession of a machine gun. Here, subsection (3) of the included-offense
statute supports this conclusion. See I.C. § 35-31.5-2-168(3). The State
contends the two offenses address “separate” harms. See Appellee’s Br. at
12–14. But being a juvenile in possession is “a less serious harm . . . to the .
. . public interest” than possession of a machine gun. See Wadle, 151 N.E.3d
at 254 (stating that OWI-SBI, a Level 5 felony, is the “same” offense of
leaving the scene of an accident, a Level 3 felony). We thus conclude that
dangerous possession is inherently included in machine gun possession.

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 23S-JV-40 | March 12, 2024          Page 18 of 20
   Our second conclusion is equally supported. On review of the face of
the charging instrument, these offenses are also “factually included”
because they punish the same conduct as charged against A.W. in the
juvenile delinquency proceeding. In Count V Possession of a Machine
Gun, the State charged that “[A.W.] did knowingly or intentionally own
or possess a machine gun, to-wit; fully automatic Glock firearm[.]”
Appellant’s App. Vol. II, p. 61 (emphasis added). The State also charged in
Count II Dangerous Possession of a Firearm that “[A.W.] did knowingly,
intentionally, or recklessly possess a firearm for any purpose other than a
purpose described in Indiana Code Section 35-47-10-1[.]” Id. at 60
(emphasis added). Based on these charges, A.W. is both a “child” and a
“person.” And “machine gun” is tucked within the broad category of
“dangerous firearm.” These classifications overlap and thus punish the
same conduct.15 The State even conceded at oral argument that a child
who possesses a machine gun also possesses a dangerous firearm.16 It just
theorized they were separate offenses with distinct harms. But that
concession does not offset the fact that, as charged, a child who possesses
a machine gun necessarily possesses a dangerous firearm. And the extent
to which there is factual ambiguity about whether the “means used” as
presented in the charging instrument was the same weapon—a machine
gun—to commit dangerous possession, the lesser-included offense, see

15The dissent below posited that the multiple adjudications “do not amount to multiple
punishments for one act, as one requires proof that he had the status of a minor who could
not lawfully possess the firearm.” A.W., 192 N.E.3d at 233 (Bradford, C.J., concurring in part,
dissenting in part) (emphasis added). We disagree. The statutory language—“for any purpose
other than a [lawful] purpose”—is not an essential element the State was required to prove,
but rather an affirmative defense, which was not raised by A.W. See, e.g., Washington v. State,
517 N.E.2d 77, 79 (Ind. 1987) (explaining possession of a license is an affirmative defense to
the charge of carrying without a license). The State’s charges essentially establish that no one
can possess a machine gun for any lawful purpose; thus, any juvenile who is charged with
machine gun possession could always be charged with dangerous possession.
16See Oral Argument at 25:35–25:50, A.W. v. State, 23S-JV-40,
https://mycourts.in.gov/arguments/default.aspx?&id=2734&view=detail&yr=&when=5&page=
1&court=&search=&direction=%20ASC&future=True&sort=&judge=&county=&admin=False&
pageSize=20, archived at https://perma.cc/7ENN-TPL9.

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 23S-JV-40 | March 12, 2024                        Page 19 of 20
Wadle, 151 N.E.3d at 251 n.30, we construe any ambiguity in favor of A.W.
See Smith, 71 N.E.3d at 371. Thus, the offenses are factually included here.

  And that brings us to the final step of Wadle. Having determined that
dangerous possession of a firearm is inherently and factually included
within possession of a machine gun, Step 3 instructs that we examine the
underlying facts to determine whether the two offenses are the same.
Wadle, 151 N.E.3d at 248. Based on the facts in the charging instrument
and facts adduced at the hearing, we conclude that A.W. possessed the
same weapon—a fully automatic Glock—for at least thirty seconds, and is
thus “compressed in terms of time, place, singleness of purpose, and
continuity of action as to constitute a single transaction.” Id. at 253.
Accordingly, we find this tight compression to show a Wadle violation.

  We thus hold that the juvenile court’s multiple adjudications violate the
substantive prohibition against double jeopardy, and the adjudication that
A.W. committed “dangerous possession of a firearm” must be vacated.

Conclusion
   For these reasons, we affirm in part and reverse in part.

Rush, C.J., and Slaughter and Molter, JJ., concur.
Goff, J., concurs in the judgment with separate opinion.

ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT
Lisa M. Johnson
Brownsburg, Indiana

ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
Theodore E. Rokita
Attorney General of Indiana

Justin F. Roebel
Supervising Deputy Attorney General
Indianapolis, Indiana

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 23S-JV-40 | March 12, 2024       Page 20 of 20
Goff, J., concurring in the judgment.

   Indiana’s criminal code forbids convicting a criminal defendant for
both a greater offense and a lesser, included offense in the same
proceedings. Not long ago, this Court laid out a three-step analysis
implementing this protection, hoping to bring clarity to a vexed area of
the law. Today, the Court strives to resolve lingering uncertainties. It
succeeds only in part. Though well-intentioned, the Court’s opinion, in
my view, modifies the included-offense analysis in a manner that
introduces ambiguity and inconsistency. It also undermines the stability
of the law. For these reasons, I concur only in the judgment.

    I. Wadle retired the actual-evidence test because,
       over the decades, that standard proved
       unworkable.
   In 2020, this Court handed down its decision in Wadle v. State. Our
opinion in that case aimed to clear away “a patchwork of conflicting
precedent and inconsistent standards” defining the bar on “multiple
convictions or punishments for the same offense in a single trial.” 151
N.E.3d 227, 235 (Ind. 2020). 1 In its place, we offered “clear guidance” to
the bench and bar. Id. at 244. Wadle first held that the Indiana
Constitution’s Double Jeopardy Clause protects only against “successive
prosecutions” for the same offense. Id. at 246. Protection against multiple
convictions for the same offense in a single prosecution, on the other
hand, lay principally in code section 35-38-1-6, which bars convicting and
sentencing a defendant for both an offense and an included offense. Id. at
248. Code section 35-31.5-2-168, in turn, defines an “included offense” as
one established by proof of the “same material elements or less than all
the material elements” of the offense charged, as an “attempt to commit”

1Specifically, Wadle addressed scenarios where “a single criminal act or transaction violates
multiple statutes with common elements.” 151 N.E.3d at 247. The companion case of Powell v.
State addressed scenarios where “a single criminal act or transaction violates a single statute
but harms multiple victims.” Id. (citing 151 N.E.3d 256 (Ind. 2020)).

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 23S-JV-40 | March 12, 2024                          Page 1 of 6
the offense charged, or as an offense distinguished from that charged only
by “a less serious harm or risk of harm” or a “lesser kind of culpability.” 2
Id. (quoting the statute).

   To apply these statutory protections, we set out a three-step test. At
step one, we look at the statutes creating the two offenses. If either
“clearly permits multiple punishment,” the inquiry ends. Id. Otherwise,
we proceed to step two, at which point we ask whether one offense is
included in the other under code section 35-31.5-2-168 “either inherently
or as charged.” Id. Finally, at step three, we ask whether all the facts
“presented in the charging instrument” and “adduced at trial” show that
the greater and included offenses constituted “a single transaction.” Id. at
249 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).

   Step two of the Wadle standard “substantially mirrors the analytical
framework we use to determine whether a party is entitled to an included-
offense instruction at trial.” Id. at 249 n.25 (citing Wright v. State, 658
N.E.2d 563, 567 (Ind. 1995)). As Wright explained, one offense may be
“inherently” included in another based solely on their statutorily defined
elements. 658 N.E.2d at 566. Alternatively, one offense may be “factually”
included in another when the charging instrument alleges “the means
used to commit the crime charged” in such a way as to “include all of the
elements of the alleged lesser included offense.” Id. at 567.

   Wright’s included-offense analysis is hugely important in the context of
jury instructions because the State cannot seek an instruction on an
uncharged offense unless it was fairly included in the offense charged,
thereby giving the defendant notice. Wadle, 151 N.E.3d at 251–52 (citing
Wright, 658 N.E.2d at 567); see also Young v. State, 30 N.E.3d 719, 723 (Ind.
2015). If a prosecutor decides to “‘wield factual omissions as a sword to
preclude lesser offenses,’” then the defendant may likewise “‘rely on them

2Unlike the Court, I would hold that the statutory bar on conviction for a greater and an
included offense also bars adjudicating a juvenile for a greater and an included offense. See
ante, at 9 & n.6. Although the juvenile law does not so provide, “the procedures governing
criminal trials apply in all matters not covered by the juvenile law.” Ind. Code § 31-32-1-1.

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 23S-JV-40 | March 12, 2024                           Page 2 of 6
as a shield to limit his defense’” to the offense charged. Wadle, 151 N.E.3d
at 252 (quoting Young, 30 N.E.3d at 725). “Due process,” as the Wright
Court emphasized, “will brook no confusion on the subject.” 658 N.E.2d at
565.

   Included offenses in the Wadle and Wright contexts are two sides of the
same coin. As we explained in Wadle, “the standard used to identify an
included-offense at trial effectively delineates the scope of the double-
jeopardy protection on appeal.” 151 N.E.3d at 249 n.25 (citing Moore v.
State, 698 N.E.2d 1203, 1208 (Ind. Ct. App. 1998)). Under Wadle, included
offenses are analyzed the same way in both contexts, promoting
consistency and minimizing confusion.

   Today, the Court helpfully clarifies a lingering uncertainty by
explaining that the “as-charged” analysis at Wadle’s step two is limited to
the facts as alleged by the State in charging the greater offense. Ante, at 11.
Limiting the analysis to the facts pled in the charging instrument greatly
simplifies the identification of included offenses, compared with the
“shifting standards and inconsistent application of controlling tests” that
came before. See Wadle, 151 N.E.3d at 244. I would stop there and let the
bench and bar apply our clear, consistent, and by now well-established
standard.

    II. The new standard returns us to the actual-
        evidence test and raises new uncertainty.
   The Court goes further, however. Its opinion modifies Wadle’s
included-offense analysis, holding that “where ambiguities exist in a
charging instrument about whether one offense is factually included in
another,” the ambiguities must be construed “in the defendant’s favor,”
resulting in a presumptive—though rebuttable—conclusion that one
offense does include the other. Ante, at 14 (citation omitted). I appreciate
the Court’s intent to alleviate by this change an element of unfairness in
Wadle. I admit that the as-charged branch of step two allows the outcome
to “vary from case to case based on the degree to which prosecutors
include or exclude facts in a charging instrument.” Id. at 13 (citing Mills v.

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 23S-JV-40 | March 12, 2024           Page 3 of 6
State, 211 N.E.3d 22, 34 n.4 (Ind. Ct. App. 2023)). Still, I cannot endorse the
Court’s solution for this difficulty.

   My primary concern with the new rule is that it doesn’t merely tweak
Wadle. Rather, in my view, it takes us back to the “actual evidence” test
that we abrogated. See Wadle, 151 N.E.3d at 241, 244 (citing Richardson v.
State, 717 N.E.2d 32 (Ind. 1999)). That test asked whether there was a
“‘reasonable possibility’ that the jury used the same evidence to support
two or more convictions.” Id. at 241 (quoting Richardson, 717 N.E.2d at 53).

   Consider the Court’s example of how its new factual-inclusion analysis
will work. A defendant is charged with intimidation using a deadly
weapon. Ante, at 15. The information alleges he communicated a threat
and drew or used a handgun while doing so. Id. The defendant is also
charged with pointing a firearm at the same victim. Id. These allegations
leave it ambiguous whether the intimidating use of a handgun was in fact
the pointing of the firearm, so the majority’s presumption of inclusion
kicks in unless the evidence at trial shows two separate acts. Id.

   But in what sense does the intimidation offense include the pointing-a-
firearm offense here, other than that both offenses are premised on the
same act? One can draw or use a handgun without pointing it. The
intimidation allegation did not specify that it was committed by means of
pointing the handgun. All that remains is the simple fact that one act
violated two statutes.

   An example of our own shows how broadly the new rule may sweep.
Imagine a defendant kills a victim using a machine gun. The State charges
murder and possession of a machine gun. See I.C. § 35-42-1-1(1); I.C. § 35-
47-5-8. The elements of murder do not inherently include possession of a
machine gun. Nor, we assume, does the State expressly allege murder by
machine gun. Yet, under the Court’s new rule, murder includes machine
gun possession simply because the defendant committed murder by
means of firing a machine gun.

   The new standard isn’t really asking, then, whether one offense
includes the other. It’s asking whether the same evidence proves both
offenses. The Court’s tweak reduces Wadle’s as-charged analysis virtually

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 23S-JV-40 | March 12, 2024            Page 4 of 6
to step three alone, merely asking whether the evidence shows that the
same act or “transaction” supported more than one offense.

   It is unclear how workable the new test will be. Although it produces a
commonsense outcome in the Court’s own intimidation-and-pointing
example, its application to trickier scenarios raises questions. Consider a
variation of the Court’s example so that the defendant both menacingly
loaded the handgun with bullets and pointed it. Does that evidence
sustain or rebut the presumption that the intimidation included the
pointing? The question is reminiscent of the intractable evidence-based
issues we meant to leave behind by focusing on the statutory elements
and the facts actually pled. See Wadle, 151 N.E.3d at 241–44.

   The announcement of the new rule also means that the included-
offense analysis in Wadle’s multiple-conviction context will no longer
mirror the rule in Wright’s instructional context. Today, the Court holds
that ambiguity favors a finding of inclusion. But, when there is doubt over
whether to instruct a jury at the State’s request on a lesser, included
offense, the ambiguity “‘must be resolved in favor of the defendant’”—i.e.,
against inclusion. Wadle, 151 N.E.3d at 251 (quoting Young, 30 N.E.3d at
723). Setting up two different tests for included offenses, as I see it, can
only breed confusion.

    III.    This area of the law needs clarity and
       stability, not more change.
   My final concern is simply that the Court is once again changing the
rules after we tried so recently to bring some stability to the law. Every
time we make a change, we open precedential case-law to doubt and raise
issues over which law applies to whom. Last year, in Hessler v. State, a
Court of Appeals panel split over whether Wadle applies retroactively or
not. 213 N.E.3d 511, 525 (Ind. Ct. App. 2023); id. at 528 (Vaidik, J.,
concurring in part and dissenting in part). Parties will soon be litigating
and appealing the issue of whether Wadle or A.W. applies to their case.

  Fundamentally, defining when offenses are included or “the same” is a
vexed problem. These concepts are “deceptively simple in appearance but

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 23S-JV-40 | March 12, 2024         Page 5 of 6
virtually kaleidoscopic in application.” See Whalen v. United States, 445 U.S.
684, 700 (Rehnquist, J., dissenting). The continual churn in our case-law
proves it. See Wadle, 151 N.E.3d at 240–44. It is safe to predict that today’s
rule-change will trigger new and unforeseen dissatisfactions and
problems, just as double-jeopardy rules always seem to. The best we can
do is to give the bench and bar a clear, fixed standard.

   Rather than pursue an ever-receding perfect double-jeopardy rule, we
should remember the other devices in the “legal toolbox.” Id. at 253.
Appellate Rule 7(B) is available to “curb cumulative punishment in a
single proceeding.” Id. Article One, Section Thirteen of the Indiana
Constitution entitles the defendant to clear notice of the offenses charged,
which may help detect included offenses and avoid multiple convictions.
Id. at 250–51. Where a charging instrument leaves it unclear whether two
alleged offenses arise from the same facts, a defendant may move for a
“more definite statement” of the charges under Trial Rule 12(E).
Alternatively, a defendant may prefer ambiguity over whether a charged
offense includes other offenses or not, hoping to leave the door open to
conviction on a lesser, included offense.

    In sum, I would clarify that Wadle’s step two is restricted to the
statutory elements and the facts alleged in the charging instrument, ante,
at 11, and otherwise leave the standard alone. Aside from that, I agree
with the Court’s decision on the sufficiency of the evidence, id. at 6–7, and
its ultimate conclusion that A.W. was wrongly adjudicated liable for the
included offense of dangerous possession of a firearm, id. at 18–20. I
therefore concur in the judgment.

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