INDIANAPOLIS — The Indiana Supreme Court on Thursday heard an appeal from a Gas City woman who was sentenced to life in prison for killing her 10-year-old stepdaughter.
Amanda Carmack appeared in court challenging whether "sufficient evidence proved beyond a reasonable doubt that she did not act in 'sudden heat'" when she killed Skylea Carmack.
A judge previously ordered Amanda Carmack to serve life in prison without parole for of the10-year-old girl, whose body was discovered in September 2019. She had last been seen days earlier.
Amanda Carmack was found guilty of murder, strangulation, neglect of a dependent resulting in death and domestic battery resulting in death to a person under 14.
In 2020, a mistrial was declared after an outbreak of COVID-19 cases. The trial began Oct. 19 of that year and was delayed for one week on Oct. 27 when individuals associated with the trial were found to be COVID-19 positive.
The Grant County Coroner said Skylea died of strangulation and had been dead four days when state police found her body.
According to court documents, when questioned by detectives about whether she had done anything to the child, Amanda Carmack said, "I don't remember," or "it doesn't matter." But she eventually admitted to killing Skylea, by choking the girl and then tying "something" around her neck.
Carmack said she did it because she was angry and claimed "mental disease" as her defense. But a mental evaluation found the woman was competent to stand trial.
According to court documents, Carmack eventually admitted to killing Skylea, by choking the girl and then tying "something" around her neck.
Thursday's full hearing can be viewed here.
-
Stadium bill clears another hurdle, voting bill stalls as session winds down
As the legislative session winds down, Hoosiers have their eyes on a few pieces of legislation, including a bill that would shorten early voting and another to build a stadium for the Chicago Bears.
Indy expresses interest in hosting NFL Draft as soon as 2030
The 2026 NFL Scouting Combine is underway in Indianapolis, but city leaders are turning their attention to another major sporting event in the future.
City education nonprofit is searching for next group of emerging school leaders
The Mind Trust's Emerging Leaders Fellowship is equipping educators with the tools they need to transform classrooms and the lives of students across Indianapolis.
NFL Women's Forum hopes to inspire next generation of women in football
The 10th annual Women's Forum was held in Indianapolis on Tuesday, connecting women working in college football across the country with coaches, general managers and owners across the league.