CHRISTOPHER MCDANIELS v. STATE OF ARKANSAS

CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedSeptember 25, 2025
DocketCR-24-842
StatusPublished

This text of CHRISTOPHER MCDANIELS v. STATE OF ARKANSAS (CHRISTOPHER MCDANIELS v. STATE OF ARKANSAS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
CHRISTOPHER MCDANIELS v. STATE OF ARKANSAS, (Ark. 2025).

Opinion

Cite as 2025 Ark. 139 SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS No. CR-24-842

Opinion Delivered: September 25, 2025 CHRISTOPHER MCDANIELS APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE DESHA COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NO. 21ACR-23-106] V. HONORABLE ROBERT B. GIBSON III, JUDGE STATE OF ARKANSAS APPELLEE AFFIRMED.

NICHOLAS J. BRONNI, Associate Justice

A Desha County jury convicted Christopher McDaniels of first-degree murder for

killing his grandmother’s husband, James Petty, and sentenced him to life in prison.

McDaniels appeals, arguing that there was insufficient evidence to support his conviction

and that the circuit court abused its discretion by admitting testimony that he told a witness

he wanted to “get” Petty by burning down his grandmother’s house. We reject both

arguments and affirm.

Facts and Procedural Background

On July 15, 2023, McDaniels stabbed Petty more than two dozen times in his

grandmother’s kitchen and then dragged Petty’s lifeless body down the house’s front porch

steps, down the driveway, and into the street. Covered in blood and holding the “long-ass

knife” that he had used to kill Petty, McDaniels then threatened passersby, warning them

not to “come down my meemaw’s street.” When police arrived, McDaniels attempted to

flee and had to be tased and subdued. McDaniels never denied killing Petty, claiming he did so in self-defense. The jury rejected that claim and convicted McDaniels of first-degree

murder.

On the day that he killed Petty, McDaniels had only recently been released from his

latest stint in prison; McDaniels has a lengthy criminal record, including five previous felony

convictions. Following his release, McDaniels was staying at his grandmother’s house.

McDaniels “didn’t care for” his grandmother’s husband, Petty, and admitted that on the day

of the murder, he and Petty argued and that he was “pissed off.” Indeed, earlier that day,

McDaniels told his grandmother’s next-door neighbor, Neal Charleston, that he could not

get into the house and that “if his grandmother wasn’t there, he’d get him and burn down

the house.” Charleston assumed McDaniels was speaking figuratively because, while he

seemed “sort of mad because he couldn’t get [inside the house] or something,” he did not

seem angry when he made the comment. McDaniels never denied making the comment.

McDaniels later returned to his grandmother’s house. Petty was the only other

person home, and McDaniels and Petty began arguing and “getting into it on the [screened-

in] porch” attached to the house. At trial, McDaniels testified that Petty allowed him into

the house and that Petty snuck up behind him in the kitchen with a knife. McDaniels

claimed that when Petty tried to stab him, he “caught the blade” of the knife with his hand

and killed Petty in self-defense in the ensuing struggle.

The forensic evidence told a different tale. Dr. Charles Kokes, the forensic

pathologist who performed Petty’s autopsy, testified that Petty suffered twenty-five sharp-

force cuts and wounds to his neck, forearms, shoulders, face, scalp, and back—some of

which penetrated Petty’s bones and even chipped his skull. Petty’s forearm injuries were

2 consistent with defensive wounds, suggesting Petty had attempted to shield himself or

struggled to grab the knife from McDaniels. And the wounds to Petty’s front and back

revealed that Petty had fallen facedown on the kitchen floor and had been repeatedly

stabbed—a fact corroborated by photographic evidence showing a large pool of blood in

that area. Dr. Kokes’s testimony further established that Petty had died from the total loss

of blood from all his wounds, not from any individual wound. He concluded that the sheer

volume of stab wounds indicated that Petty had been deliberately killed.

After stabbing Petty, McDaniels dragged Petty’s body outside, down his

grandmother’s driveway, and into the street. Nichosha Lison, McDaniels’s childhood

acquaintance, witnessed McDaniels drag Petty toward the street, saw him sit on Petty, and

heard him warn passersby not to come down the street. Not long after, Lance Shurtleff

drove by and recognized Petty lying in the street. Shurtleff called 911 and got out of his

truck to check if Petty was responsive. McDaniels then approached him. Seeing McDaniels

covered in blood and holding the knife that he had used to kill Petty, Shurtleff quickly

retreated to his vehicle. McDaniels told Shurtleff that he “had to” and that he “wasn’t no

punk.” When Shurtleff insisted that they needed to help Petty, McDaniels tried to reach

through the vehicle window and grab Shurtleff’s cell phone. With his young son in the

back seat, Shurtleff pulled the child out of McDaniels’s reach and drove off.

Police soon arrived. Deputy Wayna Green found Petty lying facedown with a large

knife beside his body. When Green approached McDaniels, McDaniels moved away and

was noncompliant. After resisting arrest, officers tased McDaniels six times before finally

subduing and taking him into custody.

3 The State charged McDaniels with first-degree murder. Before trial, McDaniels

moved to exclude Charleston’s testimony that Petty had told him that, if his grandmother

were not home, he would get Petty and burn the house down. McDaniels argued the

remark was not relevant and was significantly more prejudicial than probative. The circuit

court denied the motion, finding the statement relevant to McDaniels’s state of mind and

concluding that its probative value was not substantially outweighed by any risk of unfair

prejudice.

At McDaniels’s ensuing jury trial, Dr. Kokes, Shurtleff, Lison, Charleston, Green,

and several other witnesses testified. The State also introduced the murder weapon,

photographs of the crime scene, and DNA evidence. When the State concluded its case-

in-chief, McDaniels moved for a directed verdict, arguing only that the State had failed to

prove he had intended to cause Petty’s death. The circuit court denied the motion,

concluding that the State had presented sufficient evidence from which the jury could

conclude that McDaniels had acted purposely.

McDaniels then took the stand in his own defense. He admitted killing Petty, but

he claimed that he did so in self-defense. In confusing and contradictory testimony,

McDaniels ultimately claimed that Petty had initially denied him entry into the house; that

they “were talking shit”; that Petty had suddenly stabbed him in the kitchen; and that in

the ensuing struggle, he had killed Petty. He also claimed that after repeatedly stabbing

Petty, he had tried to help him by dragging him down the front stairs and into the street.

McDaniels did not present any evidence corroborating his account of the murder.

4 After testifying, McDaniels renewed his directed-verdict motion, and when asked by

the circuit court whether he wished to add anything to his original motion, McDaniels

declined, stating that he had “[n]o additional bases” for his motion. Thus, as particularly

relevant here, in his renewed motion, McDaniels did not argue that the State had failed to

negate his self-defense claim, opting instead to simply rely on his claim that the State had

failed to show that he acted intentionally. The circuit court again denied the motion.

The jury found McDaniels guilty of first-degree murder and sentenced him to life in

prison. McDaniels timely challenges that conviction.

Discussion

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