Jason Baxter v. State of Arkansas

2024 Ark. App. 9, 682 S.W.3d 722
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 10, 2024
StatusPublished

This text of 2024 Ark. App. 9 (Jason Baxter 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
Jason Baxter v. State of Arkansas, 2024 Ark. App. 9, 682 S.W.3d 722 (Ark. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Cite as 2024 Ark. App. 9 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION IV No. CR-22-701

Opinion Delivered January 10, 2024 JASON BAXTER APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE WHITE COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NO. 73CR-20-357] V. HONORABLE MARK PATE, JUDGE STATE OF ARKANSAS APPELLEE AFFIRMED

WENDY SCHOLTENS WOOD, Judge

Jason Baxter entered a conditional plea of guilty to first-degree murder in the White

County Circuit Court and was sentenced to forty years’ imprisonment. On appeal, he argues

that the circuit court erred in denying his five motions to suppress his interrogation. We

affirm.

On May 14, 2020, while conducting a welfare check on the seventy-seven-year-old

victim, Julius Williams, Officer Dillon Chandler of the Kensett Police Department

discovered Williams’s front door cracked open and Williams lying dead on the floor just

inside the door with a gunshot wound to his face. Williams’s next-door neighbor, Brandon

Swain, told police that he heard a gunshot around 1:00 p.m. the day before police discovered

Williams’s body and that he saw a heavy-set white male with dark hair running through

Williams’s yard immediately after the gunshot in the direction of the neighboring trailer park. Swain said that the man returned later with his shirt off and that he had a large scar

on his back.

During the investigation, Officer Robert Parsons, chief of police of the Judsonia

Police Department, went to the trailer park and took pictures of four white males who

matched Swain’s description: Baxter; Baxter’s father, who was also at Baxter’s trailer when

Officer Parsons arrived; and two other individuals. While taking these photos, Officer

Parsons told Baxter that they were investigating “a shooting” at Williams’s home and asked

if he knew anything about it. Baxter denied knowing Williams or knowing anything about a

shooting. He also said he did not have a gun but admitted that he heard three shots “the

other day” while he was in his home and mentioned that “if there’s a murder . . . you need

to know something about it.” When Officer Parsons returned to Swain’s home with the four

photos he had taken, Swain identified Baxter as the man he saw running through Williams’s

yard. Officer Parsons then returned to Baxter’s trailer, told him the neighbor had identified

him, and said that the police wanted to speak to him if he was willing to go to the Kensett

Police Department. Baxter agreed, and his father drove him to the police station.

When Baxter arrived, Officer Chandler read to him an Arkansas Rule of Criminal

Procedure 2.3 rights form, which Baxter signed, acknowledging that the police asked him

there to furnish information or cooperate in an investigation but that he was not legally

obligated to do either. Officer Chandler also read to him a Miranda statement-of-rights form,

which Baxter executed, waiving his Miranda rights. Both Officers Chandler and Parsons, who

questioned Baxter at the police department, testified that Baxter did not appear intoxicated

2 or impaired. They recorded the entire interview on a video that was played for the circuit

court at the suppression hearing.

Officer Chandler initiated the questioning by asking if Baxter knew why he was there,

to which Baxter replied, “I heard three shots, looked outside. Wouldn’t know what to do if

I was around a murder. Freaked the hell out.” When asked what Baxter knew about

Williams, Baxter said that he “caught him outside the other day” at Williams’s house and

spoke to him about mowing his yard. Baxter said that they had not discussed a price and that

he had never mowed Williams’s yard. He also said that he had walked past Williams’s house

on the day of the murder on his way to get a soda, then claimed he said he had simply been

“on a jog” that day. When Officer Parsons asked Baxter if he could explain “why people

[had] seen you run from this guy’s house after hearing a gunshot,” Baxter replied, “I was on

a jog, and I cut through[.]”

Officer Parsons eventually told Baxter that someone had shot and killed Williams,

and Baxter replied, “For real?” and “I heard shots.” Officer Parsons informed Baxter that a

neighbor had seen him running through Williams’s yard after hearing a gunshot, to which

Baxter responded, “I wasn’t there.” When Parsons asked Baxter whether it was self-defense,

Baxter continued to deny having anything to do with the shooting. He explained that he had

simply been running through Williams’s yard because he was on a jog and “cut through”

Williams’s yard. He had his shirt off because he “was sweaty,” but when the officers asked to

see his scar, he refused to show them. He said, “You hear a shot, you’re going to run.” Baxter

3 denied actually witnessing the shooting, however, explaining that “[h]earing shots and seeing

them is total[ly] different.”

When Officer Parsons began asking Baxter if he was trying to protect anyone—

explaining to Baxter that he wanted Baxter to “give” him something so he could “help” him—

and asking Baxter the difference if a crime is committed in self-defense, Baxter replied,

“Texas.” Officer Parsons said he needed to know if it was self-defense because if it was not,

he would have to arrest the offender and “work it like a capital murder case.” Baxter said he

hoped Officer Parsons “find[s] them.”

Officer Parsons and Baxter then began discussing Baxter’s conversation with

Williams about mowing his yard. Baxter said Williams wanted him to mow it and that they

had agreed he would mow it “[w]hen it’s dried out.” He then revised his account and said he

had not actually been to Williams’s home to discuss the job but had spoken to him on the

phone. When pressed again, Baxter said he had not actually called Williams, and he refused

to consent to a search of his cell phone. When Officer Chandler asked Baxter why he had

lied about calling Williams, Baxter said, “I’ve got so much anxiety from being questioned.”

Chad Everetts, Baxter’s probation officer, arrived during the interview and stood in

the open doorway while Baxter was being questioned. Officers Parsons and Chandler left

the room midway through the interview, and the following colloquy occurred between Baxter

and Everetts:

BAXTER: Shut the door.

EVERETTS: Do what?

4 BAXTER: Close the door.

EVERETTS: No. We’re running this. You sit there and shut up and don’t move.

BAXTER: Be nice if I could leave.

EVERETTS: I’m sure it would be, buddy, but you’re not. I told you to sit there and be quiet.

(Detective Chandler returned to the interview room.)

CHANDLER: Right now is the best time to talk to us, man, ‘cause later on down the road, it’s not going to be good talk. Everything’s been good right now.

BAXTER: I’ve said what I had to say. Answered what you’ve asked.

CHANDLER: But you also lied to us.

BAXTER: I’ve got so much anxiety.

CHANDLER: Why?

BAXTER: Anxiety, flipping out, being questioned.

CHANDLER: If you didn’t do anything, you shouldn’t have anything to flip out about.

BAXTER: I’ve never been questioned like this before.

CHANDLER: I understand that.

BAXTER: Silence kills me.

CHANDLER: Well, what do you want to talk about?

BAXTER: Say what I got to say and get out of here.

The questioning continued, and Baxter admitted that he had knocked on Williams’s door

and then shot Williams in the face when he answered the door. He said he had thrown the

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