Jeffery Allen Workman v. State of Arkansas

2023 Ark. 183
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 7, 2023
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2023 Ark. 183 (Jeffery Allen Workman 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
Jeffery Allen Workman v. State of Arkansas, 2023 Ark. 183 (Ark. 2023).

Opinion

Cite as 2023 Ark. 183 SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS No. CR-23-102

Opinion Delivered: December 7, 2023

JEFFERY ALLEN WORKMAN APPEAL FROM THE SEBASTIAN COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NO. APPELLANT 66GCR-21-26]

V. HONORABLE STEPHEN TABOR, JUDGE STATE OF ARKANSAS AFFIRMED. APPELLEE

BARBARA W. WEBB, Justice

A Sebastian County jury convicted Jeffery Allen Workman of first-degree murder,

aggravated residential burglary, and second-degree battery. As a habitual offender, Workman

received consecutive sentences of life in prison, life in prison, and 180 months, respectively.

On appeal, Workman argues that the State failed to provide substantial evidence that he

committed first-degree murder. We hold that Workman failed to properly preserve this issue,

and we affirm his convictions.

I. Facts

The charges stemmed from a February 14, 2021 incident in which Workman broke

into David Crone’s residence, purportedly to retrieve from David Basham, who lived with

Crone, a computer belonging to Jennifer Martin. In the course of this intrusion, Workman

shot and killed Basham.

At trial, the State presented testimony from all of the people who survived Workman’s intrusion. Eleven-year-old Alexis Crone testified that on the date in question,

she, along with her father, David Crone, were sleeping on couches in the living room of

the townhouse that they shared with her brothers, Logan and James, and Basham. Alexis

stated that a “medium-tall” man wearing a gray hoodie and boots and holding a bat, kicked

in the door and shouted “get down on the ground.” She saw the man run upstairs, followed

by Crone. Subsequently, she heard gunshots and people screaming. Alexis saw the intruder

run down the stairs and leave the apartment. She denied hearing anything said about a

computer. Alexis also noted that Crone had suffered a bloody head wound.

Alexis’s thirteen-year-old brother Logan testified next. He recalled that in the

predawn hours of February 14, he was playing a video game in the room he shared with

James, who was asleep. Basham was sleeping in another bedroom with his girlfriend, Debbie

Torres. Logan testified that he heard someone run up the stairs, so he peeked through a hole

in the door and saw the face of a man whom he did not recognize. The individual was

wearing a gray hoodie, but his face was clearly visible. Subsequently, he heard Basham yell,

“Get out.” Six loud “bangs” followed. James woke, and Logan stated that he told him to

call the police. He then heard Debbie screaming. He remained in his room until he saw

from his window the intruder running behind the townhouses. Subsequently, he saw Crone

go into the bathroom. Blood was running down his face from a deep gash in his head.

The third Crone child, seventeen-year-old James, confirmed the sleeping

arrangements in the apartment, adding that Basham’s dog, a pit bull named Milo, was also

staying in the room that was occupied by Basham and Torres. James stated that he was

awakened by two loud gunshots. He saw a person dressed in a gray hoodie in the hallway

2 outside Basham’s bedroom. According to James, he saw the assailant run down the stairs

with Basham in pursuit. James subsequently unlocked his door and went downstairs in

search of his father. He saw Basham lying on the floor. Eventually he found his father in the

bathroom. A couple of days after the incident, James took a picture of his father’s injuries,

and the picture was introduced into evidence and published to the jury. It showed a wound

that ran diagonally from the middle of Crone’s nose to his hair line.

The State addressed the issue of the ownership of the computer that Workman was

purportedly seeking when he entered the Crone residence. After Jeff Wilkinson, the assistant

security officer and executive vice-president of Farmers Bank sponsored into evidence the

Hackett branch’s surveillance video from February 3, 2021, David Crone was called to

testify. He stated that he had purchased a computer from Jennifer Martin with cash he got

from Farmers Bank ATM. The surveillance video from Farmers Bank was played, and

Crone confirmed that it showed him at the ATM as a passenger in Jennifer Martin’s car,

along with Basham.

Crone then described the events of February 14. According to Crone, he is hard of

hearing and did not hear the door being kicked open. He awoke when he heard what he

believed was a gunshot. He climbed the stairs and encountered a man whom he did not

know. He described him as wearing a light-colored hoodie and sporting a goatee. According

to Crone, he saw a gun in the man’s hand, and the man pointed the gun at him. Crone

further testified that when he reached the top of the stairs, the man struck him in the head

with a bat. At first he thought he had been shot, but that fear was allayed when he looked

in the bathroom mirror. After making sure his boys were safe, he went downstairs and saw

3 Basham lying on the living room floor. He briefly spoke to the 911 operator and attempted

to help Basham but acknowledged that he “couldn’t do nothing.” Soon, EMS personnel

arrived and quickly began to attend to Crone. Crone went to Mercy Hospital where his

head wound was treated. While there, he learned that Basham had passed away.

Crone testified about the lingering effects of being hit by the bat. He stated that it

makes it hard for him to walk, makes his deafness complete in his left ear, causes him to

suffer from headaches, requires an increase in his antiseizure medication, and left a

permanent scar. He also claimed to have some memory loss.

Debbie Torres testified next. She stated that on the day in question, she was spending

the night with her boyfriend, David Basham. Her pit bull, Milo, was in the room with her.

Basham had a room in Crone’s apartment where he stayed for more than a year. In the early

morning hours of February 14, she heard someone yelling for Basham. Basham got up and

left the room, closing the door behind him. Torres stated she stayed in bed. She then heard

someone asking Basham for a computer. She heard Basham reply, “Man I got you. I got

you.” His response was followed by two gunshots. Torres testified that she got out of bed

and opened the bedroom door. Milo tried to attack the intruder, who was standing

approximately two feet away from Basham. According to Torres, she witnessed the intruder

shoot Basham. She then saw the intruder strike Crone in the head with a baseball bat, which

caused extensive bleeding. The intruder also hit Milo with the bat, causing the dog to run

downstairs. Basham followed. At some point, the intruder left. Basham told Torres to call

911, and she did as requested. Torres stated that she went downstairs and saw Basham on

the couch “flopping like a fish out of water.” Basham had a burn mark on his chest. Basham

4 slipped to the floor, and she held him and urged him to hang on as the ambulance was on

the way.

On cross-examination, Torres stated that Basham told her that Jennifer Martin had

rented the computer and that he had sold it to Crone. She stated that Basham told her to

give him a few weeks. However, she speculated that Martin must have made Basham angry

because he told Martin that he was not going to get her computer back.

Sebastian County first responders testified next. Deputy Lloyd Bates of the Sebastian

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