Dansby v. State

1 S.W.3d 403, 338 Ark. 697, 1999 Ark. LEXIS 509
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 7, 1999
DocketCR 97-1415
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 1 S.W.3d 403 (Dansby 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
Dansby v. State, 1 S.W.3d 403, 338 Ark. 697, 1999 Ark. LEXIS 509 (Ark. 1999).

Opinion

Annabelle Clinton Imber, Justice.

Mr. Joe Louis Dansby was convicted of two counts of capital murder in the deaths of a young Nevada County couple and the jury imposed the death penalty. Accordingly, our jurisdiction is authorized pursuant to Ark. S. Ct. R. 1-2(a)(2) (1999). Mr. Dansby raises six assignments of error on appeal. We find no merit in any of the points raised, and we affirm the judgment of conviction.

On a Saturday afternoon in May, 1992, Malissa Clark and her boyfriend, Jeffrey Lewis, left her residence to go riding on a four-wheeler. Early the next morning, Ms. Clark’s parents discovered that she had not returned home. Law enforcement authorities immediately began to search for the couple. By noon that day they had found a pair of pink panties, a pair of gym shorts stained with blood, some weight lifting gloves, a part of a gun rack, and several expended .22 shell casings in a rural area off of Potlatch Road in Nevada County. This area was designated as Crime Scene 1. Later that same day, the bodies of Mr. Lewis and Ms. Clark were found several miles away from Crime Scene 1 in another rural area off of County Road 422. This area was designated as Crime Scene 2. Mr. Lewis’s body was in the bed of his pickup truck along with his four-wheeler. Ms. Clark’s naked body was lying in the road. Paint found on a stump at the first crime scene matched the paint on Mr. Lewis’s damaged pickup.

Both victims had multiple gunshot wounds inflicted by a .22 rifle, and both ultimately died from gunshot wounds delivered to the head at close range. The Medical Examiner at the State Crime Laboratory recovered .22 bullet fragments from their bodies and also took blood, hair, and vaginal samples. Evidence from the second crime scene indicated that at least one of the victims had been shot inside the truck and that both victims had been placed in the bed of the truck at some point. Several expended .22 shell casings were also recovered at Crime Scene 2. No fingerprints were recovered from either scene. Ms. Clark’s clothing and an amplifier from inside Mr. Lewis’s truck were also never recovered.

During the course of the homicide investigation, Mr. Joe Louis Dansby became a suspect. On August 27, 1993, he consented to a-search of an area surrounding his home by Arkansas State Police Investigators Lt. Finis Duvall and Sgt. Jack Ursery. However the search for .22 shell casings produced no results. On October 19, 1993, Sheriff Abb Morman and Deputies Wayne Kisselburg and Heb Sorrells went to Mr. Dansby’s home to retrieve him for purposes of obtaining blood and handwriting samples pursuant to a seizure warrant signed by a circuit judge. While at Mr. Dansby’s residence, Sheriff Morman located and recovered four expended .22 shell casings, one from the back porch and three more from the surrounding yard. The officers finally located Mr. Dansby nearby at his brother’s home as they were leaving the residence. Mr. Dansby was shown a copy of the warrant, and then accompanied the officers to Dr. Young’s office where the blood sample was to be taken.

Lt. Duvall met the officers and Mr. Dansby at Dr. Young’s office. Ms. Janice Nolan, an LPN, drew blood from Mr. Dansby and filled three tubes. According to Ms. Nolan, she initialed and dated each tube before placing them into a plastic bag. Then she sealed the bag with tape, initialed the tape herself, and then had Mr. Dansby initial the tape. Finally, she gave the bag to Lt. Duvall, who delivered it the next morning to the State Crime Laboratory. Although Lt. Duvall thought that Ms. Nolan had only given him two tubes of blood in the plastic bag, and so indicated on the evidence submission form that accompanied the blood sample to the laboratory, Mr. Kermit Channel, a serologist with the State Crime Laboratory, testified that he received a sealed plastic bag on October 20, 1993, that contained three tubes of blood, two bearing the date of October 19, 1993, and one bearing the date of October 9, 1993. According to Mr. Channel, the initials of Ms. Nolan and Mr. Dansby were displayed on the seal of the bag and all three tubes bore Ms. Nolan’s initials. She confirmed that those initials were in her handwriting and that she had probably made a mistake when writing the date on the tube of blood dated October 9, 1993. Mr. Channel prepared swatches from the tube bearing the October 9, 1993 date and sent them to the FBI Crime Laboratory for DNA testing. By report dated June 17, 1995, the FBI DNA Analysis Unit found that Mr. Dansby’s blood matched the semen taken from the victim. Swatches were also sent to Cellmark Diagnostics, a private laboratory, which also declared Mr. Dansby to be a match. At trial, Mr. Dansby objected to the introduction into evidence of the DNA test results on grounds that the State failed to establish a proper chain of custody. The trial court overruled that objection and admitted the DNA test results into evidence.

The trial court also denied Mr. Dansby’s motion to suppress the introduction into evidence of the .22 expended shell casings found by Sheriff Morman at Mr. Dansby’s home. According to a receipt from Sgt. Ursery, those four .22 shell casings were delivered by Sheriff Morman to Sgt. Ursery on October 19, 1993. At the suppression hearing, Sheriff Morman and Deputy Kisselburg testified that a report about the discovery was placed in the case file. Those shell casings were eventually submitted to the State Crime Laboratory on February 8, 1994. Before Mr. Berwin Monroe, Chief Firearms and Toolmarks Examiner at the State Crime Laboratory, examined and tested the four .22 shell casings, they were forwarded along with other evidence to the Bureau of Alcohol and Firearms Forensic Science Laboratory and to the FBI Laboratory in 1994 and 1995. In May 1996, the four shell casings were finally returned to the State Crime Laboratory, at which time Mr. Monroe completed his examination and concluded that one of the four shell casings found at Mr. Dansby’s home matched the shell casings found at Crime Scenes 1 and 2.

Mr. Dansby was charged in Nevada County on July 13, 1995 with two counts of capital murder. On July 11, 1996, the trial court granted Mr. Dansby’s request that venue be changed from Nevada County to Miller County. Seven months later, on February 18, 1997, after he retained new counsel, Mr. Dansby filed a motion to withdraw the earlier request for a change of venue, asserting that he now wanted to be tried in Nevada County where the crimes were committed. The trial court denied Mr. Dansby’s motion.

Mr. Dansby’s trial began in Miller County on April 7, 1997, with an extensive voir dire of the jury by the trial judge. Voir dire by the attorneys was primarily focused on how the members of the jury panel felt about the death penalty. Mr. Christopher Conner was the first African-American drawn for consideration as a juror. After the State used one of its peremptory challenges to excuse Mr. Conner, Mr. Dansby posed a Batson challenge to the State’s strike. The State responded that Mr. Conner’s views on the death penalty indicated that he would not seriously consider it as a sentencing option. The trial court then overruled Mr. Dansby’s Batson objection.

During the trial, the State called Mr. Jackie Wayne Cooper, a habitual offender with seven prior convictions, to testify as a witness during its cas e-in-chief. Mr. Cooper testified that Mr. Dansby had told him about the murders when they were both incarcerated in the Nevada County jail. According to Mr. Cooper, Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
1 S.W.3d 403, 338 Ark. 697, 1999 Ark. LEXIS 509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dansby-v-state-ark-1999.