Dewayne Cartwright v. State of Arkansas

2024 Ark. App. 334, 690 S.W.3d 449
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedMay 22, 2024
StatusPublished

This text of 2024 Ark. App. 334 (Dewayne Cartwright 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
Dewayne Cartwright v. State of Arkansas, 2024 Ark. App. 334, 690 S.W.3d 449 (Ark. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Cite as 2024 Ark. App. 334 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION II No. CR-23-527

DEWAYNE CARTWRIGHT Opinion Delivered May 22, 2024

APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE PHILLIPS COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NO. 54CR-21-152] V. HONORABLE CHALK MITCHELL, STATE OF ARKANSAS JUDGE APPELLEE AFFIRMED

CINDY GRACE THYER, Judge

Appellant DeWayne Cartwright was convicted of rape by a Phillips County jury and

sentenced to forty years in the Arkansas Division of Correction. On appeal, he argues that

the circuit court erred in granting the State’s motion to unseal a prior conviction; in

addition, he challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his conviction. We find

no error and affirm.

I. Trial Testimony and Evidence

In March 2021, the seventy-eight-year-old victim in this case was helping her husband

and sister-in-law take care of her mother-in-law at Heritage Hill Manor in Helena. As the

victim was sleeping in her sister-in-law’s apartment, she awoke to see the silhouette of a man

standing beside her bed. At first, she thought it was her husband, so she called out his name.

The man turned around, and she saw that he was naked and holding a pillow in his hand. The man put the pillow over her face and pressed down, saying, “I’m going to kill you.” The

man then let go of the pillow and began choking the victim, so she started trying to push

him away and dug her fingernails into his skin. After a few minutes of her scratching at him,

he told her that if she would quit fighting, he would stop. When she stopped, the man pulled

her nightgown up and penetrated her vagina and anus with his fingers. The man was unable

to obtain an erection but nevertheless put his penis in her mouth and pushed it down her

throat.

Eventually the man pulled the victim off the bed and told her to go take a shower.

After she had been standing in the shower for a few minutes with the water running, the

man came back in, pulled the shower curtain back, put his finger between her legs, and said

he would like to see her again. He then left the room. The victim waited to make sure the

man was gone and then ran across the hall to her mother-in-law’s apartment and called the

police.

When the police arrived, Officer Roosevelt Eaton obtained a statement from the

victim. She was unable to give a description of her attacker or otherwise identify him because

it had been dark in the room. Eaton went to the bedroom where the attack had happened

and saw a woman’s nightgown as well as some pillows with bloodstains on them. Eaton

photographed the evidence and collected the nightgown, the pillows, and a bedsheet, placing

them in an evidence bag. Evidence Officer Juanita Mills received the bag from Eaton and

transported it, along with a rape kit, to the Arkansas State Crime Laboratory.

2 A forensic serologist at the crime lab identified bloodstains on the nightgown, pillows,

and sheet. Cuttings from those materials were sent to the crime lab’s DNA section. Emma

Fort, a forensic DNA analyst, determined that female DNA from the pillow and bedsheet

was consistent with that of the victim. The analyst also found male DNA on the materials

and ran it through a database; a “hit” in the database came back as belonging to Cartwright.

The crime lab forwarded this information to the Helena-West Helena Police Department,

after which Lieutenant Wesley Smith obtained cheek swabs from Cartwright. Smith sent the

swabs from Cartwright back to the crime lab, where Fort compared them to the DNA results

from her previous testing. She determined that the DNA from the sheet matched

Cartwright’s DNA, and the chances of the DNA belonging to someone other than

Cartwright were 1 in 120 trillion. The chances of the DNA on the pillow belonging to

someone other than Cartwright were 1 in 10.5 billion. She therefore concluded that the

odds that the blood on the pillow was Cartwright’s were “very high,” and the blood from the

sheet “originated from Dewayne Cartwright with all scientific certainty.” She added that she

“would not expect to see that profile in anyone else in the population.”

At the conclusion of the State’s case, Cartwright moved for directed verdict, arguing

that the victim had been unable to identify him and that the DNA evidence was insufficient

to identify him as the rapist. The court denied Cartwright’s motion, and the jury

subsequently convicted him of rape.

II. Sufficiency of the Evidence

3 Although Cartwright challenges the sufficiency of the evidence in his second point

on appeal, double-jeopardy considerations require us to consider it first. Chambers v. State,

2024 Ark. App. 257, ___ S.W.3d ___. In reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence, the court

determines whether the verdict is supported by substantial evidence, either direct or

circumstantial. Driver v. State, 2023 Ark. 181, 678 S.W.3d 753. Substantial evidence is

evidence forceful enough to compel a conclusion beyond suspicion or conjecture. Id. The

evidence is viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict, and only evidence that supports

the verdict will be considered. Id.

A person commits rape if he or she engages in sexual intercourse or deviate sexual

activity with another person by forcible compulsion. Ark. Code Ann. § 5-14-103(a)(1) (Repl.

2013). On appeal, Cartwright argues that the State failed to prove that he was the “person”

who committed the alleged act. He notes that the victim was unable to identify him, and

none of the police-officer witnesses testified that he was the perpetrator. Cartwright posits

that there was no evidence presented in the case that corroborated his identity, noting that

he was not seen at or near the crime scene, no items belonging to him were found at or near

the crime scene, and there was no testimony that he was ever seen in the vicinity. He

concludes, with no citation to convincing authority, that “the only evidence that could

support a verdict in this case is the DNA testimony and that should be insufficient.”

We disagree. Our appellate courts have “consistently accepted DNA evidence as proof

of guilt.” Lewis v. State, 2010 Ark. 209, at 4; Ellis v. State, 364 Ark. 538, 543, 222 S.W.3d

192, 196 (2006). In Engram v. State, 341 Ark. 196, 202, 15 S.W.3d 678, 681 (2000), the

4 supreme court held that DNA evidence would have been “substantial standing alone,”

although it considered that other corroborating evidence had been adduced at trial. Here,

the scientific evidence demonstrated that the odds of the DNA evidence taken from the

bedsheet belonging to someone other than Cartwright were 1 in 120 trillion. See Terry v. State,

366 Ark. 441, 444, 236 S.W.3d 495, 498 (2006) (when the probability of selecting another

person with the same DNA profile as appellant’s was more than one in one trillion,

substantial evidence supported appellant’s conviction for rape). 1 We therefore hold that

substantial evidence supports Cartwright’s rape conviction.

III. Unsealed Conviction

In what is actually his first point on appeal, Cartwright argues that the court erred in

granting the State’s pretrial motion to unseal a previous conviction. The day before

Cartwright’s jury trial began, the State asked the court to unseal “a 2001 previous sex

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Related

Luce v. United States
469 U.S. 38 (Supreme Court, 1984)
Ellis v. State
222 S.W.3d 192 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 2006)
Engram v. State
15 S.W.3d 678 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 2000)
Terry v. State
236 S.W.3d 495 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 2006)
Smith v. State
778 S.W.2d 947 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1989)
Campbell v. State
2017 Ark. App. 59 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2017)
Michael Eugene Driver v. State of Arkansas
2023 Ark. 181 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 2023)

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2024 Ark. App. 334, 690 S.W.3d 449, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dewayne-cartwright-v-state-of-arkansas-arkctapp-2024.