The Indiana Court of Appeals rejected an Illinois man’s bid to overturn his rape conviction, saying they would not reweigh the evidence against him.

Lake County Judge Salvador Vasquez sentenced Corrie Westbrook, then 31, of Park Forest, Illinois, to 11 years last December after sexually assaulting his friend in her Munster home while she was in-and-out of consciousness that night after they came home from a bar.

He filmed parts of it on Snapchat.

In a 3-0 decision, Appeals Judge Cale Bradford wrote Westbrook’s rights weren’t violated when prosecutors added amended charges with a broader definition of how the woman was assaulted later on.

Denying to give Westbrook a further hearing after the amended charges didn’t hinder his defense, nor did allowing prosecutors to give jurors a dictionary definition of “consent.”

Bradford also rejected Westbrook’s claim there was insufficient evidence. The woman woke up and was aware of parts of the assault, but couldn’t have consented, he wrote.

The woman told police she went out on April 17, 2021, for dinner with Westbrook, a friend. They left a pizza place before getting food because it was closing, then stopped at a bowling alley for drinks but left because it was too busy, before heading to a Munster bar.

While there, she had a drink and “her memory began to go in and out,” an affidavit states. Police do not believe anyone tampered with her drink, after reviewing the bar’s security footage.

The woman told police the next thing she remembered, she woke up in her home with Westbrook performing a sex act on her before passing out again, the affidavit said. She woke up again with Westbrook having sex with her, to which she could not consent, because she was repeatedly losing consciousness, the affidavit states.

She woke up and confronted Westbrook, who denied doing anything “inappropriate,” before the woman kicked him out, according to the charging affidavit. The woman later confronted him in text messages.

The woman said at trial she met Westbrook when he was a bouncer at a bar she used to frequent.

At trial, the woman said she was never interested in him. But getting together was Westbrook’s “fantasy,” Deputy Prosecutor Tara Villarreal said in closing arguments — one he saw an “opportunity” to turn into “reality” with the assault.

His trial attorney, Donald MacNeil, argued for probation at sentencing, saying he had no prior criminal history.

Westbrook can potentially appeal to the Indiana Supreme Court.

His earlier release date is February 2032.

mcolias@post-trib.com