AG Curtis Hill asks U.S. Supreme Court to ensure justice for 4-year-old girl and mother who were brutally slain
Attorney General Curtis Hill announced today he has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to reinstate the death sentence of Fredrick Baer, a man convicted of brutally slashing to death a 4-year-old girl and her young mother.
“One of the most foundational functions of my office is to secure justice throughout the appeals process on behalf of crime victims,†Attorney General Hill said. “This mission is particularly critical with brutal and vicious crimes such as Fredrick Baer’s animalistic attack on an unsuspecting mother and her little girl. It would be a miscarriage of justice for the death sentence in this case to be overturned now, after Baer has been on death row for 13 years, and I’ll do everything within my authority to prevent such an odious outcome.â€
The details of Baer’s crime are harrowing:
On Feb. 25, 2004, after already contemplating raping another woman he randomly spotted, Baer saw a young woman named Cory Clark taking trash to the curb at her home near Lapel, Indiana. He stopped and parked his car.
After Ms. Clark went back inside her home, Baer walked up to the woman’s house and knocked on the door. The first person to answer was 4-year-old Jenna Clark; the girl’s mother appeared moments thereafter. Baer asked if he could borrow a phone. Showing kindness to a stranger, Cory Clark offered him her phone and stepped back into her house, leaving Baer on the porch to presumably make a call.
Baer – as he later recounted to a court-appointed psychologist – stood on the porch weighing whether to proceed with raping the woman. Then he walked into the home, where a startled Cory Clark began screaming. Baer pulled a knife, grabbed Ms. Clark by the head, ordered her to shut up and forced her into her bedroom.
Wondering what was happening, little Jenna came down the hall looking for her mother. Baer blocked the closed door with his body and ordered Ms. Clark to tell her little girl to go away. Nonetheless, Jenna kept pushing against the door.
Rather than continuing with his initial plan to rape Cory Clark, Baer instead forced her into a kneeling position and slit her throat. Jenna Clark then burst into the bedroom to the sight of her murdered mother’s mutilated body.
Screaming, the child ran toward her own bedroom, but Baer gave chase – catching the girl and slicing her throat, nearly decapitating her.
After killing his victims, Baer took money from Cory Clark’s purse, collected some decorative rocks as souvenirs from his exploits and drove to his job at a construction site. He told co-workers he was late because he had gotten lost. Then he handed another crew member some cash and asked the co-worker to go buy him hamburgers.
After being convicted of murder, attempted rape and theft, Baer was sentenced to death. His convictions and sentence were twice affirmed by the Indiana Supreme Court, and a federal district court denied Baer’s request for habeas corpus. Now, several years later, a three-judge panel from the U.S. Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that Baer was entitled to habeas relief in the form of a new penalty phase of his trial – effectively sending the case back to Madison Circuit Court for a redo of sentencing.
Attorney General Hill sought to obtain an en banc rehearing of the matter – that is, the full court’s review of the three-judge panel’s ruling – but was rebuffed by the court. Taking this case to the U.S Supreme Court, Attorney General Hill noted that no one disputes Baer’s guilt or the basic facts of his horrendous crime.
The primary issue is a closing statement made by the prosecuting attorney, Attorney General Hill writes in the attached petition, that “Baer’s rough upbringing did not diminish the enormity of his crime: the brutal murder of a young mother and her four-year-old daughter. The prosecutor made the point by informing the jury of his own tough childhood and observing that, although his mother was a prostitute who succumbed to a drug overdose, he still became a county prosecutor.â€
The petition adds, “The Seventh Circuit seized on this remark and granted Baer habeas relief, concluding that Baer received constitutionally inadequate assistance . . . because his counsel did not allege prosecutorial misconduct or challenge certain jury instructions.â€
In the attached petition, Attorney General Hill asks the U.S. Supreme Court to consider whether the Seventh Circuit violated the deferential review requirements of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act by disregarding the reasoned decision of the Indiana Supreme Court.
COA reverses murderer’s post-conviction relief
Katie Stancombe for wwww.theindianalawyer.com
Post-conviction relief was revoked from a man convicted of murder and sentenced to 141 years in prison after the Indiana Court of Appeals found res judicata barred him from making a claim for relief.
Matthew Stidham was twice convicted in 31-year-old Daniel Barker’s 1991 kidnapping and murder. Barker was beaten and stabbed 47 times and thrown into a river after Stidham and several of his friends began attacking Barker at his apartment after horseplay gone wrong. The group, including then 17-year-old Stidham, gagged Barker, loaded him into a van, drove him to a secluded area where he was thrown into the Mississinewa River.
Stidham received a 141-year sentence and eventually petitioned for post-conviction relief in February 2016, proposing findings of fact and conclusions of law that concluded his sentence should be ordered reduced to time served based on his exemplary behavior and progress while in prison.
In March, a Delaware Circuit judge re-sentenced Stidham to consecutive terms of 60, 50 and 20 years for his murder, robbery and criminal confinement convictions in the killing. Stidham’s final conviction for Class C Felony battery was suspended, the remainder of that eight-year sentence ordered to be served under supervised probation. A day after the trial court ordered Stidham released, the Court of Appeals granted the state’s motion to stay the order.
On appeal, the state contended that Stidham was erroneously granted post-conviction relief and that the challenge of his sentence is barred by res judicata.
Stidham argued that his direct appeal addressed whether double jeopardy barred some of his sentences and whether his sentence was unreasonable. He also argued that no claim was made that his sentence was unconstitutional.
But the appellate court found that Stidham did not allege that he filed a petition for sentence modification or that he had the consent of the prosecuting attorney as required under Ind. Code § 35-38-1-17 at the time his petition was filed in February 2016.
“Based upon the arguments in his 1993 brief and in his petition for postconviction relief, we conclude that the controversy adjudicated by the Indiana Supreme Court in 1994 determined this issue and that the doctrine of res judicata precludes Stidham’s claim,†Judge Elaine Brown wrote in the Thursday opinion.
“We cannot say that Stidham filed a proper modification of his sentence pursuant to Ind. Code § 35-38-1-17(k) or that the post-conviction court had the authority to modify the sentence.â€
The appellate court held that the post-conviction court had no authority to modify the petitioner’s sentence following the time limit in Ind. Code § 35-38-1-17, “in light of the fact that the post-conviction rules do not provide for modification of a sentence which has been established by the Legislature as appropriate for the offense and which has been found to be constitutional.â€
Judge Melissa May wrote separately that she was “constrained to concur†with the majority’s determination that the doctrine of res judicata prohibits the appellate court from reconsidering the appropriateness of Stidham’s sentence.
“Our understanding of juvenile offenders and of the factors to consider when determining an appropriate sentence for juveniles have changed greatly in the twenty-five years since seventeen-year-old Stidham received his 141-year sentence,†May wrote. “Thus, were we able to consider the merits of Stidham’s argument, it may be that his 141-year sentence is inappropriate in light of his offenses and character.â€
However, May noted that Stidham challenged his sentence on Eighth Amendment grounds in his 1993 appellate brief and the high court addressed his sentencing arguments, leaving no place for the appellate court to serve as a “coordinate court.â€
For the foregoing reasons, the appellate court reversed Stidham’s grant of post-conviction relief in State of Indiana v. Matthew Stidham, 18A02-1701-PC-68.
USI Women’s Golf Opens Season Sunday
University of Southern Indiana Women’s Golf opens the 2018-19 season Sunday when it hosts the 23rd annual Screaming Eagles Classic at Cambridge Golf Course. The two-day, 36-hole event is being held at Cambridge Golf Course for the 13th consecutive year.
USI is one of 10 teams competing in this year’s tournament. Joining the Eagles are Great Lakes Valley Conference foes Bellarmine University, Lewis University, Maryville University, McKendree University, Missouri S&T, Quincy University, Rockhurst University and William Jewell College. Former GLVC member and current regional opponent Kentucky Wesleyan College rounds out the 10-team field.
Junior Grace Davis (Valparaiso, Indiana) is looking to become the first-player in tournament history to win the individual title three times after finishing first with a two-under par 142 (72-70) as a freshman in 2016 and a five-over par 149 (68-81) as a sophomore last season.
Davis’s efforts helped the Eagles capture the team crown for the fifth time last year. USI posted a two-round total of 626 after beginning the event with a 308 in the opening round.
USI, which is set to play in five tournaments during the fall season, is under the direction of Head Coach Jim Cheaney, who is no stranger to USI Golf. Cheaney, who begins his first year with the women’s team, directed the men’s program from 2012-15.
The Eagles return six players from last year’s NCAA II Tournament squad, including Davis, who finished the year with an 80.29 strokes-per-round average in seven rounds of action last fall. Sophomore Brooke Moser (Leo, Indiana) is USI’s top returnee from a year ago after finishing second on the team with a strokes-per-round average of 80.24. She had three top-10 finishes and a pair of top-five placements in her first year of collegiate golf.
Finding a replacement for Taylor Howerton (Evansville, Indiana), who was lost to graduation, will be USI’s toughest challenge early in the year. Howerton set the program’s single-season scoring record with a strokes-per-round average of 76.92, while also setting the career mark with an average of 77.32.
Play begins Sunday at 9 a.m., followed by a shotgun start Monday at 8 a.m. Cambridge Golf Course is located about a mile south of the Hwy. 41 and I-64 intersection.
ADOPT A PET
Fred is a big hunk of pittie love, weighing in at more than 50 lbs.! He was surrendered at the end of July and is now up for adoption. He’s about 2 years old. Fred’s adoption fee is $110 and includes his neuter, microchip, vaccines, and more. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 for adoption details!
HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE
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Seven IU Swimmers, Three Coaches Named to U.S. National Team
Seven Indiana University swimmers, along with three members of the IU coaching staff were named to USA Swimming’s 2018-19 National Team.
Current IU swimmers Zach Apple, Michael Brinegar and Lilly King were named to the team, as well as Hoosier postgrad swimmers Margo Geer, Zane Grothe, Cody Miller and Blake Pieroni.
Indiana head swimming coach Ray Looze, associate head coach Mike Westphal and associate head sprint coach Coley Stickels were named coaches for the team.
The 2018-19 USA Swimming National Team features the top six athletes in each individual Olympic event based off the combined results of the 2018 Phillips 66 National Championships, 2018 Pan Pacific Championships and 2018 Junior Pan Pacific Championships.
Current Indiana Swimmers
Zach Apple – 50 Freestyle, 100 Freestyle, 200 Freestyle
Michael Brinegar – 1500 Freestyle, Open Water
Lilly King – 100 Breaststroke, 200 Breaststroke
 IU Postgrad Swimmers
Margo Geer – 50 Freestyle, 100 Freestyle
Zane Grothe – 400 Freestyle, 800 Freestyle, 1500 freestyle
Cody Miller – 100 Breaststroke
Blake Pieroni – 100 Freestyle, 200 Freestyle
Indiana Coaches
Ray Looze
Coley Stickels
Mike Westphal
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University of Evansville to Host Webelos Engineering Pin Day
The University of Evansville College of Engineering and Computer Science is hosting a 2018 Webelos Engineering Pin Day on Saturday, October 27, in the Koch Center for Engineering and Science on UE’s campus. Registration is at 7:30 a.m., with the event starting at 8:00 a.m. and ending at 11:15 a.m.
This event is a workshop with activity stations designed to provide some of the experience required for a Webelos scout to qualify for an engineering pin.
A registration fee of $6 per Webelos scout is required. Registration for the event is limited to 200. Registrations will be taken until the event is full or until Thursday, October 18 – whichever comes first.Â
In order to register, a registration packet must be filled out and submitted. The packet can be found by going to www.evansville.edu/WebelosEngineeringPinDay.
For more information, contact 812-488-2651 or kh209@evansville.edu.