Daniel Wayne Neal v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedMarch 24, 2026
Docket0015253
StatusUnpublished

This text of Daniel Wayne Neal v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Daniel Wayne Neal v. Commonwealth of Virginia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Daniel Wayne Neal v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges O’Brien, Lorish and Senior Judge Humphreys UNPUBLISHED

Argued at Lexington, Virginia

DANIEL WAYNE NEAL MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 0015-25-3 JUDGE ROBERT J. HUMPHREYS MARCH 24, 2026 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF PITTSYLVANIA COUNTY Brian H. Turpin, Judge

John S. Koehler (The Law Office of James Steele, PLLC, on brief), for appellant.

Sheri H. Kelly, Assistant Attorney General (Jason S. Miyares,1 Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

A jury convicted David Wayne Neal of first-degree murder, armed statutory burglary,

and use of a firearm in the commission of a felony. The trial court sentenced Neal to life

imprisonment, plus 23 years. On appeal, Neal challenges the trial court’s evidentiary ruling

permitting the Commonwealth to admit evidence of Neal’s involvement with another murder.

BACKGROUND2

We recite the facts “in the ‘light most favorable’ to the Commonwealth, the prevailing

party in the trial court.” Hammer v. Commonwealth, 74 Va. App. 225, 231 (2022) (quoting

Commonwealth v. Cady, 300 Va. 325, 329 (2021)). In doing so, we discard any evidence that

* This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A). 1 Jay C. Jones succeeded Jason S. Miyares as Attorney General on January 17, 2026. 2 We limit our recitation of the facts to those necessary to resolve Neal’s narrow assignment of error. conflicts with the Commonwealth’s evidence, and regard as true all the credible evidence

favorable to the Commonwealth and all inferences that can be fairly drawn from that evidence.

Cady, 300 Va. at 329.

In 2021, Jason Marcus was a confidential informant for Pittsylvania County Sheriff’s

Investigator Jason Colbert; Colbert used Marcus to infiltrate a drug distribution scheme. In

March, Marcus conducted a controlled purchase of methamphetamine from Neal. Colbert later

approached Neal, told him that law enforcement had made two controlled purchases from him

using a confidential informant, and asked Neal to become a confidential informant. Colbert

refused to identify the informant to Neal. Neal agreed to cooperate as a confidential informant

and participated in a successful controlled purchase later that year.

In February 2022, Deputy Aaron Klauss went to a residence in response to a reported

shooting. When he arrived at the residence, Klauss found Charles Van Hooker dead.

Investigators recovered nine-millimeter bullets and cartridge casings at the residence but no

firearm. The autopsy results showed that Van Hooker had been shot 17 times in the head, neck,

torso, and extremities. One of Neal’s employees had previously shot Van Hooker, so

Investigator Marcus Jones interviewed Neal. Neal denied any involvement in Van Hooker’s

murder and said he had known him “for about four or five months, and he didn’t have a

relationship with him or anything like that.”

After Van Hooker’s murder, Neal told his friend Deshawn Hamlett that Colbert had

identified Marcus as the informant who had purchased drugs from both of them. Neal said that

Marcus “had indictments against” each of them. Hamlett believed Neal because he had

delivered methamphetamine to Marcus on Neal’s behalf. Hamlett agreed to kill Marcus for Neal

because Neal “wanted [Marcus] dead.”

-2- Neal gave Hamlett a gun and ordered him to make Marcus’s death look like a suicide.

Neal asked Marcus and Hamlett to pick up a car for him; Hamlett was supposed to kill Marcus

during the trip. But the attempt to make Marcus’s murder look like a suicide was botched when

Hamlett shot Marcus multiple times. Hamlett texted Neal that the murder did not go as planned.

Later, Hamlett met Neal to give him Marcus’s phone.

Campbell County Sheriff’s deputies discovered Marcus’s body with gunshot wounds to

his head and neck in a truck near a cemetery. Officers found spent nine-millimeter casings in the

truck, but no firearm or cell phone. Home surveillance video footage near the cemetery showed

Hamlett in the area around the time of Marcus’s murder. A day after Marcus’s murder, Hamlett

led law enforcement on a car chase that ended with his arrest. Investigators found a credit card

with Neal’s name in Hamlett’s truck. Colbert told investigators that Marcus had been his

confidential informant in drug cases against Neal in Pittsylvania County.

After his arrest, Hamlett confessed to killing both Marcus and Van Hooker and said that

it was Neal’s idea to kill them. Hamlett told investigators that he “hung out” at Neal’s shop four

days a week and he often bought and sold methamphetamine for Neal. Hamlett claimed that he

would not have killed either man if Neal had not told him to do so. Hamlett agreed to kill Van

Hooker as “a favor” after Neal told him that “Van Hooker had indictments against” Neal. In

exchange, Hamlett received “help with [his] kids.”

Ultimately, Neal was arrested and charged with the first-degree murder of Van Hooker,

armed statutory burglary, and use of a firearm in the commission of a felony. Before trial, the

Commonwealth moved in limine to admit evidence of Neal’s involvement in Marcus’s murder at

the trial for Van Hooker’s murder. After hearing arguments from both parties, the trial court

determined that the evidence was admissible to prove motive, identity, and a common plan, and

that the probative value of the evidence outweighed any unduly prejudicial effect.

-3- At trial, various witnesses and law enforcement officers testified to the evidence as

recounted above. Colbert denied that he had revealed Marcus’s identity as the confidential

informant to Neal or told Neal that Marcus had made controlled buys from either Neal or

Hamlett. Colbert did not initially arrest Neal for his controlled methamphetamine sales to

Marcus because Neal had not finished his own work as a confidential informant. Investigators

never charged Neal with the drug sales because of Marcus’s death. Neal did not present any

evidence on his behalf. Neal moved to strike the charges which the trial court denied. The jury

convicted Neal of first-degree murder, armed statutory burglary, and use of a firearm in the

commission of a felony. By final order, the trial court sentenced him to life imprisonment, plus

23 years. Neal appeals.

ANALYSIS

“[W]e review a trial court’s decision to admit or exclude evidence using an abuse of

discretion standard and, on appeal, will not disturb a trial court’s decision to admit evidence absent a

finding of abuse of that discretion.” Kenner v. Commonwealth, 299 Va. 414, 423 (2021) (alteration

in original) (quoting Avent v. Commonwealth, 279 Va. 175, 197 (2010)). “The abuse of discretion

standard draws a line—or rather, demarcates a region—between the unsupportable and the

merely mistaken, between the legal error . . . that a reviewing court may always correct, and the

simple disagreement that, on this standard, it may not.” Jefferson v. Commonwealth, 298 Va. 1,

10-11 (2019) (alteration in original) (quoting Reyes v. Commonwealth, 297 Va. 133, 139 (2019)).

The “abuse of discretion standard requires a reviewing court to show enough deference to a

primary decisionmaker’s judgment that the [reviewing] court does not reverse merely because it

would have come to a different result in the first instance.” Commonwealth v. Thomas, 73

Va. App. 121, 127 (2021) (alteration in original) (quoting Lawlor v. Commonwealth, 285 Va.

187, 212 (2013)).

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