Carlos Tacio Ortiz v. State of Indiana
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
Date FiledMay 19, 2026
Docket25S-CR-00303
JudgeGoff, Slaughter, Massa, Rush, Molter
StatusPublished
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Full Opinion
FILED
May 19 2026, 9:52 am
CLERK
Indiana Supreme Court
Court of Appeals
and Tax Court
IN THE
Indiana Supreme Court
Supreme Court Case No. 25S-CR-303
Carlos T. Ortiz,
Appellant-Defendant,
–v–
State of Indiana,
Appellee-Plaintiff.
Argued: January 22, 2026 | Decided: May 19, 2026
Appeal from the Elkhart Circuit Court
The Honorable Michael A. Christofeno, Judge
No. 20C01-0612-MR-9
On Petition to Transfer from the Indiana Court of Appeals
No. 24A-CR-25
Opinion by Justice Slaughter
Chief Justice Rush and Justices Massa and Molter concur.
Justice Goff concurs with separate opinion.
Slaughter, Justice.
To bring a belated appeal, a criminal defendant must (among other
things) be an “eligible defendant” under Indiana Post-Conviction Rule 2.
A defendant is “eligible” under this rule if he would have the “right” to
bring a direct appeal were it timely. Defendant, Carlos T. Ortiz, pleaded
guilty to murder and waived his right to appeal his sentence. His pro-
posed belated appeal argues that the trial court relied on an improper ag-
gravator when imposing sentence.
Just last year, we held in Anderson v. State that a defendant may over-
come an appeal waiver if his sentence is “illegal”—meaning it is outside
the statutory sentencing range or is unconstitutional. Ortiz, though, does
not allege that his sentence is illegal under Anderson’s narrow definition of
illegality. His appeal waiver, accordingly, bars him from making this ar-
gument on direct appeal. His waiver also means, given the definition of an
“eligible defendant”, that Ortiz likewise cannot proceed with his belated
appeal. We affirm the trial court’s dismissal of Ortiz’s petition for a be-
lated appeal, but remand with instructions that the dismissal be without
prejudice.
I
In 2006, Ortiz’s six-week-old son, J.O., started crying and would not
stop. To quiet the newborn, Ortiz shook the baby so hard that he stopped
breathing. J.O. died two days later. The State charged Ortiz with murder.
At first, the State sought a life-without-parole sentence but dropped this
request after Ortiz agreed to an open plea under a plea agreement.
Relevant here, the plea agreement contained an appeal waiver, in
which Ortiz “knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily waive[d] his right
to challenge the sentence on the basis that it is erroneous”. Ortiz sepa-
rately initialed this provision and, at the plea hearing, said he understood
he was waiving his right to appeal. The trial court accepted his plea agree-
ment and held a sentencing hearing.
In its sentencing order after the hearing, the trial court found several
aggravating and mitigating circumstances. Among the mitigators were
that Ortiz accepted responsibility for his actions and that his “educational
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record reflects [that] he received special education as a learning disabled
person.” The aggravators included that Ortiz “occup[ied] a position of
trust with his own son”, and that his son’s death was due to “shaken baby
syndrome”, as defined in Indiana Code section 16-41-40-2. At the time of
Ortiz’s crime, and to this day, the legislature has permitted Indiana courts
to “consider” the presence of “shaken baby syndrome or abusive head
trauma” as an aggravating circumstance when imposing sentence. Ind.
Code § 35-38-1-7.1(a)(9). The trial court found that the aggravators war-
ranted an enhanced sentence of sixty-three-and-one-half years’ imprison-
ment, above the recommended fifty-five-year sentence for murder. Ortiz
did not file a direct appeal.
Thirteen years later, in 2022, Ortiz sought permission to bring a belated
appeal. Post-Conviction Rule 2 allows “eligible” defendants to bring a be-
lated appeal if they are “diligent” in pursuing a belated appeal and with-
out “fault” for failing to file a timely direct appeal. Ind. Post-Conviction
Rule 2(a) § 1. In his petition, Ortiz alleged that he met these requirements
because he had learned only recently that an appeal waiver “contained in
a plea agreement cannot validly waive an appeal of an illegal sentence.”
Thus, Ortiz claimed he was not at fault for failing to seek a prior appeal
and that, despite the lapse of thirteen years, he was diligent in pursuing
his belated appeal. Despite his appeal waiver, Ortiz argued that “the law
does not permit the imposition of a sentence based upon improper aggra-
vating factors”. Thus, he claimed, the “appeal waiver contained in the
[plea agreement] does not bar” his belated appeal.
The trial court denied Ortiz’s belated appeal, finding that he did not
meet all the requirements of Rule 2. The court found that Ortiz was nei-
ther diligent in pursuing appellate relief nor without fault for his untimely
filing. But, “[m]ore importantly”, the trial court said, “the sentence appeal
waiver clause contained in the Plea Agreement bars [Ortiz] from obtaining
a belated direct appeal to challenge the lawfulness of his sentence”. Thus,
according to the court, Ortiz’s claim could not proceed under Wihebrink v.
State, 181 N.E.3d 448 (Ind. Ct. App. 2022), trans. denied, which held that
an appeal waiver bars a defendant from asserting that the sentencing
court abused its discretion. Id. at 452. Because the propriety (or not) of a
sentencing court’s application of aggravators and mitigators is reviewed
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“for an abuse of discretion, not for legality”, the court held that Ortiz’s pe-
tition left him ineligible to pursue a belated appeal.
On appeal, a split panel reversed the trial court’s judgment. Contrary
to the trial court’s findings, the majority held that Ortiz was both “dili-
gent” and “without fault” for failing to file a timely direct appeal. Ortiz v.
State, No. 24A-CR-25, 2025 WL 481725, at *6 (Ind. Ct. App. Feb. 13, 2025)
(mem.). The majority also held that “Ortiz is an eligible defendant pursu-
ant to Post-Conviction Rule 2”, applying Haddock v. State, 112 N.E.3d 763,
766 (Ind. Ct. App. 2018), trans. denied, which allowed a similar belated
appeal to go forward. Ortiz, 2025 WL 481725 at *5. The panel agreed that
Wihebrink would bar Ortiz’s belated appeal but, noting that “Indiana does
not recognize horizontal stare decisis”, opted to apply Haddock instead. Id.
at *5 n.2. Judge Brown dissented, believing the panel should have fol-
lowed Wihebrink. Id. at *7 (Brown, J., dissenting).
The State then sought transfer, which we granted, 271 N.E.3d 1121
(Ind. 2025), thus vacating the appellate decision, Ind. Appellate Rule
58(A).
II
Post-Conviction Rule 2, which concerns belated appeals, governs this
case. “The decision whether to grant permission to file a belated notice of
appeal or belated motion to correct error is within the sound discretion of
the trial court” and is reviewed for an abuse of discretion. Moshenek v.
State, 868 N.E.2d 419, 422, 423 (Ind. 2007). But we review “pure legal ques-
tions de novo”, like how to interpret our post-conviction rules. Kelly v.
State, 257 N.E.3d 782, 792 (Ind. 2025).
We proceed in two steps. First, we interpret Post-Conviction Rule 2.
Second, we apply our understanding of this provision to Ortiz’s belated
appeal and conclude that his petition, on its face, leaves him ineligible for
a belated appeal.
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A
We first address who qualifies as an “eligible defendant” to seek a be-
lated appeal under Rule 2. And then we resolve an ongoing split in our
appellate court on this question.
1
A direct appeal after a final judgment is the “primary route for seeking
review of claimed errors leading to a criminal conviction or sentence”. Id.
at 794. A belated appeal under Post-Conviction Rule 2 is another option
for obtaining appellate review of such “claimed errors”. Rule 2 allows a
belated appeal in limited circumstances, with four relevant requirements
here. The petitioner seeking that relief must be an “eligible defendant”
who “failed to file a timely notice of appeal”, which failure was not his
“fault”, and he must have been “diligent” in seeking permission to pro-
ceed with a belated notice of appeal.
An eligible defendant convicted after a trial or plea of guilty
may petition the trial court for permission to file a belated
notice of appeal of the conviction or sentence if;
(1) the defendant failed to file a timely notice of ap-
peal;
(2) the failure to file a timely notice of appeal was not
due to the fault of the defendant; and
(3) the defendant has been diligent in requesting per-
mission to file a belated notice of appeal under this
rule.
P-C.R. 2 § (1)(a). An “eligible defendant” is one who would otherwise
have the “right” to bring a direct appeal were his filing not untimely.
An “eligible defendant” for purposes of this Rule is a de-
fendant who, but for the defendant’s failure to do so timely,
would have the right to challenge on direct appeal a convic-
tion or sentence after a trial or plea of guilty by filing a no-
tice of appeal, filing a motion to correct error, or pursuing an
appeal.
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P-C.R. 2. This definition creates a simple rule: A defendant is “eligible” to
seek a belated appeal if he “would have the right to challenge” his convic-
tion or sentence in a direct appeal. Ibid.
All criminal defendants presumptively enjoy one appeal of “right”.
Ind. Const. art. 7, § 6 (providing for “an absolute right to one appeal”).
But, as happened here, defendants sometimes agree to waive appellate re-
view as part of a plea agreement. Our recent decision in Anderson v. State,
269 N.E.3d 817 (Ind. 2025), considered the effect of a binding appeal
waiver on a defendant’s appellate rights in the context of a direct appeal.
Anderson reaffirmed “the validity of appeal-waiver provisions”. Id. at
821. Because “plea bargains are essentially contracts”, Garza v. Idaho, 586
U.S. 232, 238 (2019), we held that a defendant’s appeal rights “are limited
by the text and scope” of the waiver. Anderson, 269 N.E.3d at 821. In es-
sence, “[t]he broader the waiver, the fewer the appeal rights.” Ibid. Yet we
noted that a “valid and enforceable appeal waiver . . . only precludes chal-
lenges that fall within its scope.” Ibid. (quoting Garza, 586 U.S. at 238). If
the trial court retains any sentencing discretion, one type of appellate chal-
lenge that is never waivable is that the sentence is “illegal”. Ibid. Under
Anderson, “a sentence is ‘illegal’ only if it is outside the prescribed statu-
tory range or is unconstitutional.” Id. at 822.
2
Anderson resolved a long-running dispute on the issue of appeal waiv-
ers between different panels of our appellate court, exemplified by Had-
dock, 112 N.E.3d 763, on the one hand, and Wihebrink, 181 N.E.3d 448, on
the other. Anderson considered Haddock’s and Wihebrink’s rival views of
what constitutes an “illegal” sentence. Anderson, 269 N.E.3d at 822. In do-
ing so, we rejected Haddock and “approve[d] of Wihebrink’s reasoning”,
ibid., which is that a trial court’s “reliance on one or more invalid aggrava-
tors” does not make “the sentence ‘illegal’ or ‘contrary to law’”, Wihebrink,
181 N.E.3d at 451 (citing Crider v. State, 984 N.E.2d 618 (Ind. 2013)).
Anderson, we note, arose in the context of a direct appeal; Haddock and
Wihebrink, in contrast, concerned belated appeals; and so, too, does Ortiz’s
appeal. These cases’ different procedural postures, though, are immaterial
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to the issue of appellate waiver, given Anderson’s definition of illegality.
Anderson established, indirectly, when a defendant with an appeal waiver
is “eligible” to bring a belated appeal under Rule 2. Under this rule, a de-
fendant is eligible for a belated appeal only if he has the right to bring a
direct appeal challenging his conviction or sentence. P-C.R. 2. And under
Anderson, a defendant is thus “eligible” only if he either (1) did not waive
his right to appeal at all or (2) if he did waive it, is alleging his sentence is
“illegal”—meaning that his sentence either falls “outside the prescribed
statutory range or is unconstitutional.” 269 N.E.3d at 822. In this way, a
defendant seeking a belated appeal has the same “right”—however broad
or narrow—that he has on direct appeal.
The right to bring a direct appeal does not turn on whether the appeal
has merit; criminal defendants often bring appeals that go nowhere. The
defendant’s burden is comparable when bringing a belated appeal: A de-
fendant who seeks to file a belated appeal need not prove that his appeal
would, if allowed to proceed, carry the day. He need only show that he
could have brought his appeal had he filed it timely.
The presence of an appeal waiver does not change this standard.
Again, a defendant’s eligibility for a belated appeal does not turn on the
merits of his underlying claims. His eligibility turns on whether his
claims—assuming they are meritorious—would suffice to overcome the
appeal waiver. An appeal waiver, in other words, limits a defendant’s
“right to challenge” his conviction or sentence on appeal. P-C.R. 2. Thus,
in the same way an appeal waiver often limits a defendant’s “right to chal-
lenge” his conviction or sentence on direct appeal, it also limits his ability
to bring a belated appeal.
This inquiry is akin to the affirmative defense of failure to state a claim
in ordinary civil actions. A motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim
“tests the complaint’s legal sufficiency.” Bellwether Props., LLC v. Duke En-
ergy Ind., Inc. 87 N.E.3d 462, 466 (Ind. 2017). “A complaint states a claim on
which relief can be granted when it recounts sufficient facts that, if
proved, would entitle the plaintiff to obtain relief”. Ibid. Just as a defense
under Trial Rule 12(B)(6) rests not on the merits of the allegations, but on
whether the allegations, if proved, would entitle the plaintiff to relief, so
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too here. A defendant’s “eligibility” for a belated appeal rests not on
whether his petition alleges a meritorious claim, but on whether the claim
would overcome an appeal waiver if timely brought on direct appeal.
Having resolved the meaning of an “eligible defendant”, we apply this
definition to Ortiz’s belated appeal.
B
Ortiz has the same appellate rights in pursuing a belated appeal as if
he were filing a direct appeal. P-C.R. 2 § 1(a). Put differently, if Ortiz tried
to raise claims on direct appeal that were insufficient to overcome his ap-
peal waiver, then those same claims would likewise be insufficient to
make him “eligible” to seek a belated appeal.
Ortiz tries to circumvent his appeal waiver entirely, quoting Garza that
“no appeal waiver serves as a bar to all appellate claims.” 586 U.S. at 238.
That much is true but incomplete. As we held in Anderson, “even a com-
prehensive waiver that purports to foreclose all appeals cannot legally
prevent a defendant from challenging an unbargained-for ‘illegal’ sen-
tence.” 269 N.E.3d at 819. Ortiz’s eligibility for a belated appeal thus turns
on whether his post-conviction filings alleged that his sentence is “illegal”.
They did not.
In the post-conviction court, Ortiz alleged that “the law does not per-
mit the imposition of a sentence based upon improper aggravating fac-
tors”. His argument relied on Haddock and its (erroneous) conception of an
illegal sentence. We observed in Anderson that our criminal code author-
izes trial courts to “impose any sentence that is: (1) authorized by statute;
and (2) permissible under the Constitution of the State of Indiana; regard-
less of the presence or absence of aggravating circumstances or mitigating
circumstances.” Id. at 822 (quoting I.C. § 35-38-1-7.1(d)). As Anderson made
clear, this statute “underscores that the legislature considers a sentence ‘il-
legal’ only if it is not within the permitted range or violates the state con-
stitution.” Ibid. Thus, the allegation in Ortiz’s petition that the trial court
relied on “improper aggravators” when imposing sentence is not a claim
that his sentence is illegal. Id. at 823 (quoting Wihebrink, 181 N.E.3d at 452).
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This is not to say that Anderson necessarily dooms every argument al-
leging improper sentencing aggravators. Judge Vaidik has identified at
least one example where the argument that an aggravator was improper
might defeat an appeal waiver. In Crouse v. State, the defendant “claimed
that the only aggravator found by the trial court” was invalid. 158 N.E.3d
388, 395 (Ind. Ct. App. 2020) (Vaidik, J., concurring in the judgment) (em-
phasis added). Judge Vaidik suggested that if the defendant “were correct
that this aggravator is invalid, then his sentence would be illegal, because
consecutive sentences cannot be imposed without at least one aggrava-
tor.” Id. at 395–96 (emphasis added). Without deciding this question, we
agree with Judge Vaidik that such an argument might suffice to allege ille-
gality—on the ground that the sentence was “outside the prescribed statu-
tory range”. Anderson, 269 N.E.3d at 822.
But this line of reasoning does not work here. For starters, Ortiz did
not argue it, so it is waived. What is more, the trial court found several
other aggravating circumstances besides shaken baby syndrome. Even as-
suming, then, that the shaken-baby-syndrome aggravator were improper,
as Ortiz claims, his sentence would not fall outside the statutory range
and thus would not be “illegal”. Ibid.
At the transfer stage, Ortiz argued for the first time that the “shaken
baby syndrome hypothesis is inaccurate”, and that the statutory aggrava-
tor on which this hypothesis is based “violates his constitutional rights to
due process”. Ortiz has waived this argument by not raising it below.
“[A]ppellate review presupposes that a litigant’s arguments have been
raised and considered in the trial court.” Plank v. Cmty. Hosps. of Ind., Inc.,
981 N.E.2d 49, 53 (Ind. 2013).
Waiver aside, Ortiz’s constitutional claim about one specific aggrava-
tor does not allege that his entire sentence is unconstitutional, and thus
“illegal”, under Anderson. Again, even if Ortiz’s attempted due-process
claim about the shaken-baby-syndrome aggravator were right, this was
just one of several aggravators the trial court relied on in imposing an en-
hanced sentence for Ortiz. The remaining, unchallenged aggravators
would still justify upholding his sentence.
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Ortiz’s proffered claim is a far cry from the examples of unconstitu-
tionality recounted in Anderson—like “a sentence based on ‘constitution-
ally impermissible criteria, such as race’ or the ‘deprivation of some mini-
mum of civilized procedure’ (such as if the parties stipulated to trial by
twelve orangutans).” 269 N.E.3d at 823 (quoting United States v. Adkins,
743 F.3d 176, 192–93 (7th Cir. 2014)). To borrow a phrase from the analo-
gous failure-to-state-a-claim parlance, Ortiz’s belated-appeal allegations
do not show that his constitutional claim “would entitle [him] to obtain”
the requested relief of overcoming his appeal waiver. Bellwether Props., 87
N.E.3d at 466.
* * *
For these reasons, we affirm the trial court’s judgment denying Ortiz’s
petition for belated appeal, with one modification. We remand to the trial
court with instructions to modify its judgment to provide that the petition
is dismissed without prejudice, not denied.
Rush, C.J., and Massa and Molter, JJ., concur.
Goff, J., concurs with separate opinion.
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT
Amy E. Karozos
Public Defender of Indiana
Archer “Randy” Rose, Jr.
Emily L. Hopp
Deputy State Public Defenders
Indianapolis, Indiana
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
Theodore E. Rokita
Attorney General of Indiana
Sierra A. Murray
Tyler Banks
Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 25S-CR-303 | May 19, 2026 Page 10 of 11
Megan Smith
Deputy Attorneys General
Indianapolis, Indiana
Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 25S-CR-303 | May 19, 2026 Page 11 of 11
Goff, J., concurring.
Although I concur in the Court’s opinion, I write separately for two
reasons: first, to explain why I believe the Court’s approach to handling
belated appeal waivers offers a practical solution to the problem of
judicial inefficiency; and second, to point out the potential for consensus
among the Court going forward when analyzing the enforceability of
appeal waivers.
A. The Court offers a practical way of handling appeal
waivers at the PCR 2 stage.
Post-Conviction Rule 2 (or PCR 2) offers convicted persons, under
certain circumstances, an opportunity to restore their post-conviction
rights to direct appeal after the applicable time limits have expired. The
rule asks only whether the petitioner would have had “the right to
challenge on direct appeal [their] conviction or sentence” but for their
failure to do so in a timely manner. Ind. Post-Conviction Rule 2. The
“focus” of a PCR 2 proceeding “is whether a defendant should be granted
permission to file a belated notice of appeal,” limiting the inquiry to “the
defendant’s lack of fault and his diligence to make that determination.”
Hill v. State, 960 N.E.2d 141, 146 (Ind. 2012). The “underlying merits of an
appeal,” we’ve long held, “have no bearing on the question of restoring
fundamental appellate rights where they have been wrongfully denied.”
Gallagher v. State, 410 N.E.2d 1290, 1292–93 (Ind. 1980).
Given this limited inquiry, I wrote separately in Anderson v. State to
emphasize that, “in the context of a PCR 2 proceeding, a defendant should
still be able to raise the issue of whether his sentence was illegal, regardless
of the underlying merits of the belated appeal.” 269 N.E.3d 817, 829 (Ind.
2025) (Goff, J., concurring in the judgment).
The Court today acknowledges that a defendant’s eligibility under PCR
2 “does not turn on the merits of his underlying claims.” Ante, at 7. Rather,
the Court declares, a defendant’s eligibility “turns on whether his
claims—assuming they are meritorious—would suffice to overcome the
appeal waiver.” Id. The proper inquiry, the Court opines, is analogous to
Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 25S-CR-303| May 19, 2026 Page 1 of 4
the affirmative defense under Trial Rule 12(B)(6), which “rests not on the
merits of the allegations, but on whether the allegations, if proved, would
entitle the plaintiff to relief.” Id. Thus, the Court concludes, a “defendant’s
‘eligibility’ for a belated appeal rests not on whether his petition alleges a
meritorious claim” but, rather, “on whether the claim would overcome an
appeal waiver if timely brought on direct appeal.” Id. at 8.
On the one hand, I hesitate in fully endorsing the Court’s reasoning. As
I see it, the question of whether a defendant’s claim “would overcome an
appeal waiver if timely brought on direct appeal” necessarily requires a
court to determine the merits of his underlying claim. In other words,
whether the claim falls beyond the scope of an appeal waiver is the merits
question. To quote Haddock v. State, the Court’s solution here would
require a trial court “to address the merits of [a defendant’s] putative
belated appeal in order to determine that he is not eligible to be heard on
the merits of his belated appeal.” 112 N.E.3d 763, 767 (Ind. Ct. App. 2018),
trans. denied.
On the other hand, the approach taken by the Court of Appeals in
Haddock—addressing the defendant’s diligence and lack of fault while
leaving undecided whether his claim fell beyond the scope of his appeal
waiver—raises obvious concerns with judicial inefficiency. If a timely
direct appellant is barred from litigating a claim covered by his
sentencing-appeal waiver, why shouldn’t a PCR 2 court simply screen the
belated appellant’s claim to avoid delaying the inevitable and to avoid
straining scarce public-defender resources? The Court’s procedure for
handling appeal waivers at the PCR 2 stage offers a practical solution to
this problem. While nothing in PCR 2 requires the defendant to prove the
underlying merits of his appeal issues, he must identify at least some
cognizable basis to sustain his petition, allowing the court to make a
threshold inquiry into whether a defendant’s claim would suffice to
overcome an appeal waiver if raised on direct appeal. And that’s a process
I’m comfortable with, especially given the deferential standard of review.
I also approve the Court’s approach for another reason: As time passes,
I see trial courts facing fewer and fewer claims like those presented here.
A State Public Defender need not file a PCR 2 petition if he or she
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determines that the “petition is not meritorious or in the interest of
justice.” Kling v. State, 837 N.E.2d 502, 507 (Ind. 2005). In assessing the
relative chances for success, then, the State PD would arguably have a
responsibility to consider not just whether the petitioner meets the lack-of-
fault and diligence requirements under PCR 2 but also the merits of his
underlying appeal. Given this Court’s holding in Anderson, I find it
unlikely that a State PD would recommend pursuing a PCR 2 petition for
a defendant raising claims that fall outside that decision’s narrow
definition of illegality.
B. The Court’s opinion sets forth a potential path to
consensus for analyzing the enforceability of appeal
waivers.
As the Court points out, the Anderson decision resolved a long-standing
conflict in Court of Appeals’ precedent over how broadly or narrowly to
interpret the meaning of an “illegal” sentence when analyzing a challenge
to an appeal waiver. Ante, at 6. The Court there ultimately approved the
narrow approach endorsed in Wihebrink v. State, concluding that “an
alleged defect in the trial court’s sentencing discretion, including
determining and applying aggravating and mitigating factors, does not
amount to an unconstitutional, illegal sentence.” 269 N.E.3d at 823 (citing
181 N.E.3d 448, 452 (Ind. Ct. App. 2022), trans. denied). Although I rejected
the Court’s opinion as taking “a much-too-narrow approach,” I
acknowledged that a broad definition of an “illegal” sentence could
render an appeal waiver meaningless “in those cases where a defendant
does not agree to a specific sentence.” Id. at 827, 828 (Goff, J., concurring in
the judgment) (quoting Wihebrink, 181 N.E.3d at 452). In other words, I
recognized the difficulty—if not the impossibility—of drawing a precise
line.
Anticipating, perhaps, that future cases will continue to pose analytical
challenges in determining whether a sentence is “illegal,” the Court today
refrains from declaring “that Anderson necessarily dooms every argument
alleging improper sentencing aggravators.” Ante, at 9. As an example of
an improper aggravator potentially defeating an appeal waiver, the Court
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points to Judge Vaidik’s concurring opinion in Crouse v. State, where the
defendant “claimed that the only aggravator found by the trial court” was
invalid, which, if correct, would render his sentence illegal “because
consecutive sentences cannot be imposed without at least one
aggravator.” Id. (quoting 158 N.E.3d 388, 395–96 (Ind. Ct. App. 2020)
(Vaidik, J., concurring in the judgment)). Notably, I cited the same
example in my separate opinion in Anderson to support my view,
suggesting a common ground and a potential path to consensus in
analyzing the perennially challenging issue of the enforceability of appeal
waivers.
*****
For the reasons above, I concur in the Court’s holding that Ortiz is not
entitled to proceed with his belated appeal.
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