Charles E. Hamner v. Arkansas County Sheriff's Department & Detention Facility

2026 Ark. App. 56
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 28, 2026
StatusPublished

This text of 2026 Ark. App. 56 (Charles E. Hamner v. Arkansas County Sheriff's Department & Detention Facility) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Charles E. Hamner v. Arkansas County Sheriff's Department & Detention Facility, 2026 Ark. App. 56 (Ark. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Cite as 2026 Ark. App. 56 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION II No. CV-24-504

Opinion Delivered January 28, 2026 CHARLES E. HAMNER APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE ARKANSAS COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT, SOUTHERN DISTRICT V. [NO. 01DCV-23-108]

ARKANSAS COUNTY SHERIFF’S HONORABLE DONNA GALLOWAY, DEPARTMENT AND DETENTION JUDGE FACILITY; AND DEAN MANNIS, CHRIS POLLARD, PATRICIA SNYDER, PEGGY PITTS, AND JOHNNY CHEEK, ALL IN THEIR INDIVIDUAL CAPACITIES AFFIRMED APPELLEES

MIKE MURPHY, Judge

Appellant Charles Hamner, an inmate incarcerated in the Arkansas Division of

Correction (ADC), appeals from the Arkansas County Circuit Court’s order dismissing his

complaint filed against appellees under the Arkansas Civil Rights Act of 1993 (ACRA),

codified at Arkansas Code Annotated sections 16-123-101 to -108 (Repl. 2016 & Supp.

2021). Hamner alleges that appellees violated his due-process rights and falsely imprisoned

him in connection with his removal from a parole-violator program and transfer from the

Arkansas County Detention Center to an ADC facility. Appellees moved to dismiss the

action and later removed the case to federal court. After remand by the federal court, the circuit court dismissed Hamner’s complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief can

be granted. We affirm.

Hamner is currently serving an aggregate sentence of thirty-five years’ imprisonment

for kidnapping, residential burglary, and theft of property imposed in January 2015. He was

paroled in March 2020. Hamner v. Ark. Post-Prison Transfer Bd., 2025 Ark. 191, at 1–2, 723

S.W.3d 632, 633. On November 28, 2023, he filed a civil-rights complaint against the

Arkansas County Sheriff’s Department and Detention Center and the sheriff and four

employees of the detention center in their individual capacities.

According to the exhibits attached to the complaint, on May 2, 2021, Hamner was

arrested while on parole and charged with new offenses: aggravated assault, domestic

battering, and terroristic threatening. On May 12, 2021, he voluntarily waived his right to a

parole-revocation hearing, he admitted to having violated the conditions of release as alleged,

and his parole was revoked. He was placed in the custody of “the Arkansas Department of

Correction – Suspended” in what is known as the Short-Term Revocation Program (STRP),

the procedures for which are set out in Arkansas Code Annotated section 16-93-715 (Supp.

2021). The version of the statute in effect in May 2021 provided that a parolee subject to a

parole-revocation hearing for a serious-conditions violation, like Hamner, was subject to

confinement before being released and returned to parole supervision for exactly 180 days.

See Ark. Code Ann. § 16-93-715(a)(1)(B) (later amended, effective July 28, 2021, changing

180 days to 120 days). The statute further provided that the 180-day period of confinement

“may be reduced by the Department of Correction or the Department of Community

2 Correction” by no more than 50 percent “for good behavior and successful program

completion.” Ark. Code Ann. § 16-93-715(a)(2) (emphasis added). “The location of the

appropriate confining facility in which a parolee serves a period of confinement under this

section shall be determined by the Board of Corrections.” Ark. Code Ann. § 16-93-715(c).

In connection with Hamner’s revocation-hearing waiver, the ADC discretionarily

reduced the period of confinement required for his parole violation from 180 days to 90

days subject to the following conditions: (1) that he was eligible to participate in the STRP;

(2) that he maintain good behavior at the county detention center; and (3) that he have an

approved parole plan at the end of the ninety-day period. If Hamner satisfied these

requirements, he would be considered for discretionary reinstatement of parole after

expiration of the ninety-day period. Otherwise, he would be eligible to be considered for

discretionary release again in 180 days, or November 2021.

On June 25, 2021, a county detention officer, appellee Patricia Snyder, sent a

behavior report to “Administration/Sheriff” regarding “Inmate Charles Hamner.” The

report stated that while Snyder and another detention officer, appellee Chris Pollard, were

passing out medication and trays, Hamner reported that he was not going back to his pod

because “Officer Ricky [Smith] made me look like a punk in front of the whole pod

yesterday.” Hamner told Snyder that “when I see [Officer Smith] again I will roll him and we

will see who the bitch is then. He wanted to make me look like a punk ass bitch, I’ll show

him.” When Pollard returned to pick up Hamner’s tray, Hamner again threatened “to roll

[Officer Smith] the first time I see him.” According to Hamner’s complaint, this behavior

3 report is what disqualified him from the reduced period of confinement under the STRP

and resulted in his transfer from the county detention center to an ADC facility.

Hamner alleges in the complaint that on June 30, 2021, the county detention center

used its transport officer, appellee Chris Pollard, to illegally transfer him from the “legal

custody” of the Arkansas Division of Community Correction (ACC) to the “illegal custody”

of the ADC “without consent” and “without sufficient legal or lawful authority.” This “illegal

transfer,” the complaint alleges, “interfere[ed] substantially with [Hamner’s] personal liberty”

and “expos[ed] him to a substantial risk of serious physical injury”—namely, “inmate-on-

inmate abusive sexual contact” alleged to have occurred nearly two years later. Additionally,

the complaint alleges that “said illegal transfer was initiated by and did occur because of the

named Respondents’ submitting a [behavior report] on or around June 25, 2021, to the

Arkansas Parole Board alleging [Hamner] had failed to maintain good behavior while in their

custody under contract for the [ACC].” According to the complaint, the county detention

center “never provided [Hamner] with a rules violation report charging him with violating

any particular rule of the facility, nor, did they ever take him to an institutional hearing and

find him guilty of violating any particular rule of its facility before illegally transferring him

between divisions” in violation of state law, its own “operating procedure,” administrative

regulations, and the Arkansas Constitution. The complaint sought monetary damages of

“fifteen hundred (1,500) dollars per day from June 30, 2021, until [Hamner] is court ordered

or released from being falsely imprisoned in the [ADC]” and “an enhanced civil penalty” of

$50,000 and requested that Hamner’s “parole be re-instated immediately.”

4 The circuit court granted Hamner leave to proceed in forma pauperis, and

summonses were issued for the named defendants on November 28, 2023.

On January 17, 2024, Hamner filed a motion for default judgment. He asserted in

the motion that he mailed copies of the complaint and summonses to the Arkansas County

Sheriff’s Department to serve on defendants/appellees on December 4, 2023, and

defendants/appellees had failed to file a responsive pleading within thirty days.

On February 2, 2024, defendants/appellees, through the office of the prosecuting

attorney, filed a motion to dismiss for, among other things, failure to state a claim upon

which relief can be granted pursuant to Arkansas Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6).1

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2026 Ark. App. 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charles-e-hamner-v-arkansas-county-sheriffs-department-detention-arkctapp-2026.