Dartanya Stapleton v. State of Arkansas

2023 Ark. App. 7, 659 S.W.3d 523
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 18, 2023
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2023 Ark. App. 7 (Dartanya Stapleton v. State of Arkansas) 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
Dartanya Stapleton v. State of Arkansas, 2023 Ark. App. 7, 659 S.W.3d 523 (Ark. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Cite as 2023 Ark. App. 7 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION IV No. CR-22-171

Opinion Delivered January 18, 2023 DARTANYA STAPLETON APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE CLARK COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT V. [NO. 10CR-19-47]

STATE OF ARKANSAS HONORABLE BLAKE BATSON, APPELLEE JUDGE

AFFIRMED

N. MARK KLAPPENBACH, Judge

Following a jury trial in the Clark County Circuit Court, Dartanya Stapleton was

found guilty of first-degree murder and a firearm enhancement and was sentenced to thirty-

five years’ imprisonment. On appeal, Stapleton challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to

support the firearm enhancement, the denial of her motion to suppress, the exclusion of

certain testimony, and the denial of her motions for a curative instruction and mistrial. We

affirm.

Fifty-eight-year-old John Ratton was reported missing on January 23, 2019. Police

received information that earlier in the day, Ratton had driven Stapleton and Brock

Henthorn to the home Stapleton shared with her brother, William Pennino. Rick Loy of

the Clark County Sheriff’s Department spoke to Stapleton, who reported that Ratton had given her and Henthorn a ride and then Ratton had left in a hurry before noon. Two

witnesses subsequently reported to law enforcement that they were inside the home with

Pennino that day when a car pulled up and honked. According to the witnesses, Pennino

went outside, and they looked out the window and saw Stapleton and Henthorn beating and

kicking a man who was not fighting back. Pennino then came back inside, got a rifle, and

told the witnesses to stay inside. The witnesses saw the car being driven down to a second

driveway, and Pennino walked in that direction. The witnesses then heard gunshots.

Law enforcement returned to Stapleton’s home that night. Clark County Sheriff

Jason Watson testified that officers observed blood in the location the witnesses said they

saw Ratton being attacked, and a trail of blood approximately 130 feet long led into a wooded

area. There, police found a shovel, blood, and disturbed ground indicating possible digging.

Pennino and Stapleton were arrested that night, and a knife was recovered from Stapleton

when she was searched at the jail. It was later determined that Ratton’s blood was on that

knife. Pennino later showed law enforcement where Ratton’s body was buried and told

them where to find Ratton’s burned car. Ratton had four gunshot wounds to the back of

his head and a six-to-seven-inch cut across the front of his neck. Stapleton, Pennino, and

Henthorn were all charged with murder.

Stapleton was interviewed by Sheriff Watson and Investigator Roy Bethell on January

24. In the interview, Stapleton admitted that she was “actually the one that slit his throat”

and that she shot Ratton three times in the back of the head with the gun Pennino brought

outside. She said that there was no specific reason for the killing, but she “just kind of

2 wanted to.” Stapleton said that as they were sitting in the driveway in Ratton’s car, she

reached up from the backseat and slit Ratton’s throat. She described his extensive bleeding

as “awesome” but said that she felt bad that he was suffering, so she shot him. She said that

the knife found on her when she came to jail was the one she had used. She claimed that

Henthorn “really didn’t want to do it.”

Prior to trial, Stapleton moved to suppress her statements to police and the knife

recovered from her person. She alleged that law enforcement had illegally arrested her inside

her home without an arrest warrant. Following a hearing in which law enforcement testified

that Stapleton was arrested on her porch, the circuit court denied the motion to suppress.

The video and transcript of Stapleton’s interview were admitted into evidence at trial.

At trial, the State presented the testimony of Teresa Pollock. Pollock testified that

when she and Stapleton were incarcerated in the same jail in July 2019, Stapleton admitted

that she had killed a man and described the killing in detail. According to Pollock, Stapleton

told her that she and a man named Brock left her home to get cigarettes and went to an old

man’s house looking for someone to give them a ride. While in the man’s living room,

Stapleton and Brock talked about how she had been thinking about killing someone for a

while, and she tried to talk Brock into doing it. After the man had taken them to get

cigarettes and back to Stapleton’s home, Stapleton told Brock, who was in the front seat, to

“do it.” After Brock refused, Stapleton called him a “pussy,” and she slit the man’s throat

from behind. Brock then got out of the car, pushed the man to the passenger seat, and drove

the car to another driveway. The man then got out of the car, and Brock put him in the

3 back seat. Stapleton’s brother heard the commotion, came outside and was mad, then went

back inside and got a gun. Stapleton told Pollock that Pennino had shot the man. At the

time of trial, Pollock was imprisoned for false imprisonment and aggravated assault. She

testified that she was not offered a sentence reduction and did not receive any consideration

for her testimony. Pollock said that she simply notified the Clark County authorities and

provided a handwritten statement in August 2019.

Stapleton testified that she started hanging out with Henthorn four days before the

murder when he came to her home and used methamphetamine with her, Pennino, and her

friend Reshelle Murillo. Stapleton testified that she had met Henthorn once before and had

heard he was possibly violent. Henthorn was asked to leave her home after he became

paranoid and physically attacked another friend. Stapleton claimed that at this point, she

became afraid of him. Stapleton said that a couple of days later, she was in a car with

Pennino, Henthorn, and another friend when Henthorn choked the other friend. Stapleton

continued to use methamphetamine with Henthorn, and he went with her to visit her

grandmother in the hospital.

Stapleton testified that at around 2:00 or 3:00 a.m. on January 23, Henthorn insisted

that the two of them walk to a friend’s house in the rain to get a ride to the store for cigarettes.

The friend could not give them a ride, but a neighbor took them to Ratton’s home, where

Henthorn insisted they wait for the store to open. Ratton was sleeping, but other people in

the home were awake. Stapleton testified that Henthorn was acting paranoid, accusing her

of things, and talking about planning to hurt someone. She said that he had talked about

4 killing the woman who gave them a ride and killing people who were at Ratton’s home.

Stapleton said that he asked her to kill one woman, but she declined, and Henthorn became

more insistent about killing someone as the night went on. Eventually, Henthorn woke up

Ratton, who gave them a ride to the store and to Stapleton’s house.

Stapleton testified that Henthorn told her that if she did not do what he said, he

would make her family watch as he killed her, and then he would kill her family. Stapleton

said that when they parked, Henthorn told her, “You’re going to do it.” She initially refused,

but she realized by the look he was giving her that he was going to kill her if she did not do

it. Accordingly, she reached around the front seat with her pocketknife and cut Ratton “a

little” on his neck.

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2023 Ark. App. 7, 659 S.W.3d 523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dartanya-stapleton-v-state-of-arkansas-arkctapp-2023.