The event is open to the public and the audience will have a chance to ask the judges questions about the judiciary following the argument; however, they are unable to speak about the specific case.
The Court of Appeals of Indiana's award-winning civics education outreach program, Appeals on Wheels, is coming to Putnam County on Friday
The Traveling Oral Argument will take place at 10:30 a.m. at DePauw University - Inn at DePauw. A panel of judges will hear live, in-person arguments in A.H. v. State.
The event is open to the public and the audience will have a chance to ask the judges questions about the judiciary following the argument; however, they are unable to speak about the specific case.
The case involves an Indianapolis police officer responding to a dispatch approached four juveniles at a picnic table in a park. Three of the juveniles fled. The fourth, fourteen-year-old A.H., was lying on top of the table. He saw the officer approaching and sat on the bench seat. The officer saw a black hoodie on top of the table and started to move it out of the way. He felt something hard, lifted up the hoodie, and found a firearm underneath.
The officer handcuffed A.H. due to safety concerns and asked for his personal information. A.H. gave the officer a false name and a date of birth and stated that he had been arrested before in Marion County. No records with that name were in the database. The officer believed that he had probable cause to arrest A.H., searched him, and found a lollipop wrapper containing two grams of marijuana. Three DNA profiles were found on the firearm, but A.H. was excluded as a contributor.
The State filed a petition alleging that A.H. committed dangerous possession of a firearm, a Class A misdemeanor, and possession of marijuana, a Class B misdemeanor. A.H. filed a motion to suppress the marijuana, which the juvenile court denied. At the fact-finding hearing, the marijuana was admitted into evidence over A.H.’s objection, and the court adjudicated him delinquent on both counts.
On appeal, A.H. argues that the State failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that he constructively possessed the firearm. He also argues that the juvenile court committed reversible error in admitting the marijuana, claiming that it was seized during a search incident to an unconstitutional arrest.
The scheduled panelists includes Judge Terry Crone, Judge Peter Foley and Judge Dana Kenworthy. Crone, a DePauw graduate, just announced this week his upcoming retirement from the Court of Appeals after 20 years in that position.
The event is scheduled to last one hour.
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