Conway v. State

2016 Ark. 7, 479 S.W.3d 1, 2016 Ark. LEXIS 12
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 14, 2016
DocketCR-15-481
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 2016 Ark. 7 (Conway v. State) 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
Conway v. State, 2016 Ark. 7, 479 S.W.3d 1, 2016 Ark. LEXIS 12 (Ark. 2016).

Opinion

JOSEPHINE LINKER HART, Associate Justice

hA Garland County jury convicted Samuel L. Conway of capital murder and aggravated robbery stemming from the March 14, 2005 shooting death and robbery of Mary Adams. The State waived the death penalty, and Conway was sentenced to life without parole plus 588 months to be served in the Arkansas Department of Correction. He raises five points on appeal, arguing that the circuit court erred (1) by failing to grant his motion for a directed verdict; (2) by granting the State’s motion in limine; (3) by denying his motion to suppress his statement and thereafter allowing the statement to he read into the record .and introduced into the record and introduced at trial; (4) by failing to grant, a mistrial due to the State’s improper remarks during closing; and (5) by giving a nonmodel and - confusing jury instruction. Our jurisdiction is pursuant to Arkansas Supreme Court Rule l-2(a)(2) (2015). We affirm.

A substantial part of the State’s case involved a statement, purporting to bear Conway’s signature, that was generated by the Hot Springs police after interviewing I sConway in 2005. Prior to his November 19, 2014 trial, Conway moved to suppress the statement. At a pretrial hearing, retired detective Jerry Cotten testified that, while serving as lead investigator on the case, he interviewed Conway at 1:39 p.m. on December 13, 2005, at the Garland County Sheriffs Department Criminal Investigation Division offices. At the time, Conway was incarcerated on unrelated charges. Cotten claimed that Conway was Mirandized, but the rights declaration form for the case could not be located. Nonetheless, - Cotten stated that giving Miranda warnings was standard procedure.

According to Cotten, it was the policy of the Hot Springs Police Department in 2005 to not record interviews. Instead, Cotten produced a-typed'document that memorialized the statement. The detective stated that he composed the document from notes he had taken of Conway’s interview and that it was his “policy” to destroy the notes after a typed statement was produced. Sergeant Tim Smith, who assisted Cotten with Conway’s interview, corroborated Cotten’s testimony.

Testifying at the suppression hearing, Conway admitted that he had submitted to an interview with Hot. Springs police. He stated that he was nineteen years old at the time and. claimed to have “pretty good” reading skills. He further testified that after he was told that Dominic Hobson, a suspected accomplice,. had made a full statement, he did tell police “bits and pieces of what happened,” but he did not remember being read his Miranda rights. Likewise, Conway stated .that he did not recall signing the statement. Nonetheless, Conway acknowledged that the written statement recites that he made his statement .after having been “read his Miranda rights and he said he understood them,” and that “he signed and initialed lathe rights form including the waiver and consent section; of the form.” Further, Conway admitted; that it appeared to.be his signature,at the bottom of the document. While he maintained that some of the wording of the statement did not sound like the way he spoke, he conceded that “some of it_appeared] accurate.” The circuit court denied Conway’s motion to suppress the statement.

The case proceeded to trial. Conway asserted the affirmative defense of duress, claiming that his older brother, s Detric Conway, forced him to accompany him to the victim’s home. In limine, the State moved to preclude any mention of Detric’s criminal history or his character. The State argued that Detric was not scheduled to be a witness and there was no rule of evidence that would allow the defense to present such evidence. Conway’s trial counsel replied that he had asserted the defense of duress, and “at, least reputation evidence of Detric Conway would be relevant as it goes to the formation of the belief, the reasonableness of the belief that force — unlawful force would be used upon Mr. Samuel Conway’s person. To exclude that would essentially exclude the defense from putting on an element of proof towards their affirmative defense of duress.” The circuit court ruled,

I will allow a certain amount of testimony by Mr. Conway of his knowledge as to Detrie' Conway’s propensity for violence and his ability to complete or act upon any threats he may have made. But that would, by definition, preclude any testimony from third parties as to that. It’ll have to come from Mr. Conway before the door is open. If you’re asserting the defense of duress, you’re talking about his state of mind. So when he takes the stand to testify about that, then he can testify to what prior knowledge he had about Detric Conway’s propensity for violence and ability or information to act on any threats he may have made.

Conway subsequently made a general objection to the circuit court’s ruling.

14At trial, the State introduced Conway’s statement. It was read into evidence by Cotten over Conway’s hearsay objection. As he had at the suppression hearing, Cotten recounted his interview with Sam Conway. According to Cotten, assisted by Detective Tim Smith, he received a voluntary statement from Conway after he informed him of his Miranda rights. That statement was memorialized in a signed document that Cotten-prepared.

According to the statement, Conway accompanied Detric to Dominic Hobson’s house. While there, Detric said he needed money and asked if Conway and Hobson wanted to “hit a lick,” which they understood to mean, rob someone. According to Conway, he and Hobson just looked at each other. Detric then threatened them with a sawed-off .22-caliber rifle. After that, they accompanied him to Eric Adams’s house. Detric told them that no one would be home because Eric was at work. As instructed, he and Hobson went to the door to ask for Eric, while Detric hid in the bushes, carrying the rifle and wearing a ski mask. Mary Adams, who was Conway’s aunt and Eric’s mother, answered the door and explained that Eric was at work. Hobson asked to use the bathroom, and Ms. Adams let them in. As Ms. Adams turned to lock the door, Detric forced it open and shot her in the forehead. She fell back and blood began to run from her nose. As ordered by Detric, Conway and Hobson began searching for money and marijuana, but found none. Detric, however, found a shoe box containing baggies of marijuana and about $80. About that time, a car pulled into the driveway and sounded its horn. The three ran to the rear of the house and exited through a bedroom window. Conway hid in Detric’s car until Detric and RHobson arrived. They drove to Hobson's house, but when they did not hear the police, they returned to the crime scene and went back in. The robbers each took a pillow case and started taking items that they wanted. Conway took a PlayStation 2 and some games. Detric, took some DVDs, Reebok tennis shoes, a piggy bank, and a watch. Hobson took “some girls shops.” They again returned to Hobson’s house , where they divided the money. Detric kept the marijuana. Detric returned lat.er and retrieved the gun that he had thrown into the bushes. Three weeks later, Conway pawned the PlayStation 2.

Sergeant Tim Smith testified that he assisted Cotten with .taking Conway’s statement. He corroborated Cotten’s account of how the statement was taken and that Conway had been Mirandized.

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Bluebook (online)
2016 Ark. 7, 479 S.W.3d 1, 2016 Ark. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conway-v-state-ark-2016.