Derek Payne v. State of Arkansas

2025 Ark. App. 250
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedApril 23, 2025
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Ark. App. 250 (Derek Payne 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
Derek Payne v. State of Arkansas, 2025 Ark. App. 250 (Ark. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Cite as 2025 Ark. App. 250 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION III No. CR-24-428

DEREK PAYNE Opinion Delivered April 23, 2025

APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE JEFFERSON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT V. [NO. 35CR-19-475]

STATE OF ARKANSAS HONORABLE JODI RAINES DENNIS, JUDGE

APPELLEE AFFIRMED

STEPHANIE POTTER BARRETT, Judge

Derek Payne was charged by felony criminal information in Jefferson County as a

habitual offender with capital murder in the death of Christopher Jones, arson, and abuse

of a corpse. Immediately before trial, the State moved to amend the information, nolle

prossing the arson charge and reducing the capital-murder charge to murder in the first

degree. The jury acquitted Payne of murder but convicted him of abuse of a corpse and

sentenced him to thirty years’ imprisonment. On appeal, Payne argues that the circuit court

erred in denying his directed-verdict motion because the State failed to introduce substantial

evidence that he knowingly mistreated or concealed a corpse in a manner offensive to a

person of reasonable sensibilities. We affirm.

At trial, Captain Fred Tisdale, Jr., with the Pine Bluff Fire Department fire-marshal

division, testified that on June 14, 2019, he responded to a fatal house fire; during his investigation, he determined the fire originated in the back bedroom where Jones’s body was

located. Tisdale testified that the bedroom sustained “heavy damage” in the fire and that

Jones’s body was located to the left of the bedroom door. There were remnants of a mattress

set in the middle of the back wall of the bedroom, and a generator was on the right side of

the bed between the bed and the wall. Tisdale testified that the gas unit on top of the

generator was missing its cap, and there were additional pieces of the generator housing—

including a plastic shroud, a fuel cell, the coil system, and wiring—photographed with the gas

unit. He was unable to determine the fire’s ignition source due to the amount of damage;

therefore, he ruled the cause of the fire undetermined. Tisdale also testified that a Rally’s

take-out bag was located on top of a three-drawer chest in the living room.

On cross-examination, Tisdale reiterated that he could not rule the fire accidental or

intentional, so he had ruled it undetermined; and he agreed he could not say the fire was

started by an individual, including Payne. He also testified that what looked to be an Ultra

beer can and what appeared to be a hamburger, among other items and debris from the fire,

were on the couch in the living room. Tisdale agreed that using generators inside is not a

good idea because they produce carbon monoxide and are not safe to use indoors; he

admitted that pieces of a generator were found close together, but not attached, in the

bedroom where the fire originated. Tisdale could not determine whether the house was

powered by the generator; a stolen commercial power meter was also on the house at the

time of the fire. Tisdale explained that such a meter is not designed for basic house wiring

because it allows excess power to come through the lines, which could cause the wiring to

2 melt down; he agreed that a commercial meter on a residential structure could be a possible

fire hazard. Along with the generator, Tisdale found a microwave and what he believed were

the remnants of a hotplate in the burned bedroom.

Nelson Kimble testified that Jones was a “very good friend” as well as his employee.

He explained that after Jones’s mother died, Jones encountered financial problems and

could not keep his electricity turned on. Jones had asked Kimble if he could use Kimble’s

generator to run fans in the house; Kimble agreed to let Jones use it and explained the

mixture of gasoline and two-cycle oil needed to operate it. Kimble said that the generator,

which had a one- or two-gallon tank, was running properly when he loaned it to Jones—it did

not leak, it started with two or three pulls, and he was not aware of any problems with the

generator’s functioning.

When Kimble learned there was a reward for information about the fire, he asked

Payne what had happened; Payne told him that Jones had pulled the generator, and it had

blown up in his face. Kimble asked Payne why he had not pulled Jones out of the fire, and

Payne told him to “go ask Sarah.” Kimble contacted the police after Payne placed himself

inside the house at the time of the fire.

On cross-examination, Kimble said Jones had the generator for about two weeks; he

had been with Jones on a couple of occasions when Jones had “cranked” the generator up;

and Jones had never used the generator inside because Kimble had explained the danger of

carbon-monoxide poisoning. However, Kimble admitted Jones did not have electricity and

that he had never been inside Jones’s house. He said that the day before Jones’s death, he

3 had shown Jones how to mix the oil and gas for the generator and that Jones had been

confused about how much “green oil” to mix with the gas.

Perry Burris testified that he, Jones, and Payne were drinking beer behind

McDonald’s and the gas station the day before the house fire. Burris left around dark; Jones,

Payne, and Sarah Bray left at the same time, and they were headed toward Jones’s house.

Lt. Steven Rucker of the Pine Bluff Police Department testified that during his

investigation of the fire, he collected two knives and a pair of shoes as evidence. He said that

he interviewed Payne on June 22 after Payne had been developed as a suspect, and Payne

gave a statement. In that statement, Payne said that he and Jones were best friends, and he

would never do anything to hurt him. He said that he and Jones had been drinking behind

McDonald’s, like they did almost every day, and they walked back to Jones’s house. Payne

said they had both been drinking, that Jones was complaining about the generator, and he

asked Payne if he wanted to see the generator. Payne said that the next thing he knew, Jones

had “fired that mother****er up” in the back bedroom, and before he knew it, there was a

“boom,” and fire was shooting out. Payne said that when the fire started, he was in the front

room eating a Rally’s hamburger; when he tried to pull Jones out, the flames hit him in the

face. Payne said he did not know what to do, so he ran out the door; he said that Sarah was

at Jones’s house when the fire started, and she was the one who called for an ambulance

from a neighbor’s house. Payne said that he did not want to be at the house because he had

an outstanding warrant, and he was trying not to get “locked up.” Payne told Lieutenant

Rucker that he tried to save Jones, but flames were shooting from the generator exhaust;

4 there was fire “everywhere”; and although he tried to save Jones, the fire was so hot that he

could not. When Lieutenant Rucker told Payne that Jones had been stabbed in his chest

and his throat had been cut and that Jones did not die from the fire but rather from the stab

wounds, Payne told Lieutenant Rucker that he did not stab Jones. Payne asserted that he

and Jones were “cool” and did not have any problems; Payne said that they could not charge

him because he did not have anything to do with it. When told that Jones’s throat had been

cut before the fire, Payne continued to deny that he had anything to do with Jones’s death.

The officers told Pyane that he would be found guilty; Payne continued to deny involvement

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

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2025 Ark. App. 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/derek-payne-v-state-of-arkansas-arkctapp-2025.