Daryl Jason Scarbrough v. State of Arkansas

2024 Ark. 71, 687 S.W.3d 557
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 2, 2024
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 2024 Ark. 71 (Daryl Jason Scarbrough 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
Daryl Jason Scarbrough v. State of Arkansas, 2024 Ark. 71, 687 S.W.3d 557 (Ark. 2024).

Opinion

Cite as 2024 Ark. 71 SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS No. CR-23-574

Opinion Delivered: May 2, 2024 DARYL JASON SCARBROUGH APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE PULASKI COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT V. [NO. 60CR-21-4137]

STATE OF ARKANSAS HONORABLE CATHLEEN V. APPELLEE COMPTON, JUDGE

AFFIRMED.

JOHN DAN KEMP, Chief Justice

Appellant Daryl Jason Scarbrough appeals a Pulaski County Circuit Court order

convicting him of capital murder and aggravated robbery and sentencing him to a term of

life imprisonment with a consecutive term of forty-years’ imprisonment, respectively. For

reversal, Scarbrough argues that the circuit court erred in granting the State’s motions for

continuance, denying his motion for continuance, denying his motion to suppress,

permitting alleged prejudicial remarks by the prosecutor, and admitting a map into evidence.

We affirm.

I. Facts

Because Scarbrough does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence, we provide

only a recitation of the facts relevant to the arguments on appeal. See Williams v. State, 2024

Ark. 7, at 1, 682 S.W.3d 313, 315. On September 8, 2021, Scarbrough knocked on the

front door of Sharon Dawson’s home in Hensley. When Dawson answered the door, Scarbrough said that he had been mowing and asked if he could get a drink of water from

the water hose. Dawson grew suspicious when she saw no lawn equipment and asked for

his name. Scarbrough became angry and began to cuss at her, and she asked him to leave.

As he walked toward Ivy Chapel Road, Dawson called her partner, David Dunn; recounted

what had happened; and told him that she was upset. Dunn, who worked nearby, told her

that he would come home. Dawson then called 911 and reported the encounter. Afterward,

she called her daughter and heard several gunshots. Dawson called 911 again and reported

the gunshots. Meanwhile, as Terrence Reed was driving down Ivy Chapel Road, he saw a

man lying in the street. Reed stopped, called 911, witnessed the man gasp his last breath,

and stayed until police arrived at the scene. There, Deputy Bruce Scott found Dunn, who

had been shot six times, including a shot to the back of his head, lying face-down in the

middle of the road. Scarbrough fled the scene in Dunn’s red truck, which contained Dunn’s

cell phone. Unbeknownst to Detective Scott at the time, his dashboard camera captured

Dunn’s truck being driven away from the scene at 6:39 p.m. as he drove toward it. Police

later found Dunn’s truck abandoned in the woods approximately seven miles from where

Dunn’s body was found.

After a two-day search, law enforcement located Scarbrough hiding in a flower bed

on property belonging to homeowners on Highline Road. When the officers pulled him

out of the flower bed, Scarbrough stated, “You guys are pretty rough on a hitchhiker out

here, huh?” Scarbrough had active outstanding full-extradition warrants from Missouri and

California, and the police arrested him on an active parole-absconder warrant.

2 Detective Jeff Allison of the Pulaski County Sheriff’s Office transported Scarbrough

to the Pulaski County jail and escorted him to an interview room, which was monitored

on closed-circuit television. Detective Allison instructed him to take off his civilian clothing,

put it in an evidence bag, and put on jail clothing. The detective stepped out of the interview

room and watched the closed-caption television as Scarbrough changed clothes. According

to the detective, Scarbrough took off his jeans, “held them up and looked at them from

front to back and from the waist to the ankles and shook his head and then folded them like

he was trying to maybe hide something.” The detective retrieved the jeans, saw “stains that

[he] believed to be blood,” secured and sealed them, and sent them to the crime lab for

DNA testing.

The State charged Scarbrough with capital murder and aggravated robbery and later

nolle prossed felon-in-possession and habitual-offender allegations. It amended its felony

information to include one count of capital murder, one count of possession of firearms by

certain persons, and one count of aggravated robbery.

Prior to trial, on March 30, 2022, Scarbrough filed a motion to suppress evidence of

DNA evidence obtained from the blood on his jeans, arguing that he was objecting not to

the seizure of the jeans but, specifically, to the blood testing. He claimed that “police

collected the evidence and had it examined without a search warrant”; that there was no

exception to the warrant requirement; and that his arrest “was not legal.”

The State responded to Scarbrough’s motion to suppress and asserted that Scarbrough

was arrested on active outstanding full-extradition warrants from Missouri for new charges

committed in Missouri and from California for absconding his parole. The State asserted

3 that Scarbrough was lawfully arrested pursuant to those active warrants and pursuant to Rule

4.1 of the Arkansas Rules of Criminal Procedure. It stated that the clothes seized from

Scarbrough at the time of his arrest were seized pursuant to Arkansas Rule of Criminal

Procedure 12.1 involving a search incident to arrest and Arkansas Rule of Criminal

Procedure 12.6 involving the taking of property pursuant to an arrest.

On April 20, 2022, the State filed a motion for continuance, stating that it had sent

numerous pieces of evidence to the Arkansas State Crime Laboratory (“the crime lab”) but

that the crime lab’s caseload was backlogged, and it had not yet completed testing on DNA

and ballistics. The State contended that it had been diligent in seeking the test results and

that DNA and ballistics testing was material to the State’s case. On April 28, the circuit court

conducted a hearing during which the State represented that “[i]n this case there was a lot

of DNA” and that “DNA swabs are still out for testing.” The State reminded the circuit

court that “the crime lab ha[d] been very, very backed up” and that the DNA and ballistics

were “both crucial to the State’s case.” Defense counsel objected and argued that Scarbrough

had been continuously in custody and that DNA evidence would not “necessarily change

the outcome of the case one way or the other[.]” The circuit court granted the State’s

motion for continuance.

On April 29, 2022, the State filed a motion for Scarbrough’s saliva samples, pursuant

to Rule 18.1(a)(vii) of the Arkansas Rules of Criminal Procedure, to be used for DNA

analysis. In its motion, the State averred that the crime lab had determined that the blood

on Scarbrough’s jeans matched the victim’s DNA and that of an unknown male. The State

stated that the crime lab requested a “known DNA sample” from Scarbrough to compare

4 to the unknown sample found on the jeans and from swabs taken from the victim’s truck.

The circuit court granted the State’s motion for a DNA sample pursuant to Rule 18.1(a)(vii)

and, alternatively, ruled that the California search waiver executed by Scarbrough when he

was released on parole “would separately authorize such sample.” The crime lab later

determined that Dunn’s blood was on the right leg of Scarbrough’s jeans.

On October 3, 2022, the circuit court conducted an omnibus hearing on

Scarbrough’s motion to suppress. Detective Allison testified that Missouri police had

contacted him and relayed that Scarbrough had committed armed home invasions in

Missouri and had stolen a car.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Christopher Coy Gamble v. State of Arkansas
2026 Ark. 44 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 2026)
James Thompson v. State of Arkansas
2026 Ark. App. 96 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2026)
James Jackson v. State of Arkansas
2025 Ark. App. 611 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2025)
TIMOTHY CLEVENGER v. STATE OF ARKANSAS
Supreme Court of Arkansas, 2025
Dean Leroy Meacham v. State of Arkansas
2025 Ark. 27 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 2025)
Hunter De La Garza v. State of Arkansas
2025 Ark. 10 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 2025)
James Nowlin v. State of Arkansas
2024 Ark. App. 607 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2024)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2024 Ark. 71, 687 S.W.3d 557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daryl-jason-scarbrough-v-state-of-arkansas-ark-2024.