Jeffery D. Parnell v. State of Arkansas

2025 Ark. App. 417
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedSeptember 10, 2025
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2025 Ark. App. 417 (Jeffery D. Parnell 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
Jeffery D. Parnell v. State of Arkansas, 2025 Ark. App. 417 (Ark. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Cite as 2025 Ark. App. 417 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION III No. CR-24-551

JEFFERY D. PARNELL APPELLANT Opinion Delivered September 10, 2025

APPEAL FROM THE POLK COUNTY V. CIRCUIT COURT STATE OF ARKANSAS [NO. 57CR-19-189] APPELLEE HONORABLE ANDY RINER, JUDGE

AFFIRMED

CASEY R. TUCKER, Judge

At the conclusion of a one-day jury trial, a Polk County jury found Jeffrey Parnell

guilty of kidnapping, second-degree domestic battery, and aggravated assault on a family or

household member. Following the jury’s recommendation, the circuit court sentenced

Parnell as a habitual offender to forty years’ imprisonment for Class Y felony kidnapping,

twenty years’ imprisonment for second-degree domestic battery, and twelve years’

imprisonment for aggravated assault on a family or household member, with the sentences

to run consecutively. Parnell appeals, raising three points: (1) that the evidence was

insufficient to support a conviction of Class Y felony kidnapping; (2) that there was

insufficient evidence of second-degree domestic battery; and (3) that the circuit court erred

in allowing the State to amend the information by extending the date range of the crime on

the eve of trial. We affirm. The State initially charged Parnell with second-degree domestic battery by criminal

information filed on September 19, 2019. In that information, the State alleged that the

crime took place “on or about August 23, 2019.” A series of amended criminal-information

filings followed, with the State adding the charges of kidnapping and aggravated assault on

a family or household member on December 4, 2019. The State consistently alleged that

the crimes took place “on or about August 23, 2019.” The State filed its final amended

criminal information at 8:37 a.m. on the day of trial, February 22, 2024, changing the

allegations to reflect that the crimes occurred “on or about August 20, 2019, to August 23,

2019.”

Parnell’s trial counsel objected to the amendment, arguing that changing a single date

to a date range was a material change and that discovery had been conducted with regard to

only one night. The circuit court overruled Parnell’s objection. Parnell’s attorney then

stated, “If it becomes an issue, judge, I’ll renew my objection.” The jury was seated and trial

began.

After admitting volumes of her medical records through the Baptist Health records

custodian, the State called the victim, Rhonda Allen, to testify. Allen testified that Parnell

was her fiancé, and they were living together in a camper trailer in August 2019 when he

inflicted the injuries documented in the medical records. Allen graphically described how

Parnell (1) hit her in the head with a Coleman lantern; (2) stomped and kicked her with his

steel-toed boots all over her body; (3) slammed her into things; (4) hit her with the back of

his hand and with “whatever he could get ahold of”; and (5) prevented her from escaping by

2 grabbing her and yanking her back, pulling her by her hair and pulling out wads of it in the

process. Allen testified that she begged and screamed for help. When Allen tried a second

time to escape, Parnell grabbed her by her neck and lifted her off the floor. Allen testified

she felt like she was going to die: “I wasn’t even touching the floor and he slammed me down

and then he -- it’s like he was trying to pull my goozle plum out, and then he just shoved it

in and I couldn’t breathe.” Parnell chained the door after Allen’s failed escape attempts.

Based on Allen’s testimony, Parnell’s attack lasted, intermittently, the entire night. The next

morning, when Allen’s friend, Annette Turner, walked by the camper on her way to work,

Allen yelled for help. Seeing Annette approach the camper, Parnell removed the chain from

the door. When Annette came to the door, Allen was able to leave.

Allen did not immediately seek medical attention nor did she contact law

enforcement. She testified, however, that someone, perhaps a neighbor, reported the

incident. When EMTs and law enforcement first went to the camper, Allen refused

treatment. An investigator with the prosecutor’s office then contacted her on August 23,

2019, to come in for an interview, and she did so that evening.

On August 24, 2019, Allen went by ambulance to the emergency room in Fort Smith.

She never returned to the residence she shared with Parnell; instead, she went to the

Women’s Crisis Center, where she lived for three months. Allen testified that she had severe

depression and anxiety following the attack and took classes for abused women, depression,

and posttraumatic stress syndrome (PTSD). She saw three different doctors for months. As

3 of the date of the trial, Allen continued to have “bad sickening headaches,” short-term

memory problems, and pain in one of her hips.

On August 23, Elena Cannon, an investigator with the Polk County Prosecutor’s

Office, received the report of Parnell’s beating Allen and began investigating. She

interviewed Allen, photographed her extensively, and took photos of the camper where

Parnell and Allen lived. Cannon testified that Allen had bruising all over her face, on her

neck, and on her chest. Allen’s eyes were swollen to the point that her vision was affected,

and she struggled to see. Cannon testified that Allen had bruising to both of her upper

arms, on the back of her shoulders, and the front and back of her legs. In addition to the

bruising on the back of her shoulders, Allen had bruising to her lower back. She had a cut

on her head, was missing parts of her hair, and her ponytail or bun was hanging on by just

a few attached strands. Cannon testified that Allen had an unusually extensive amount of

bruising. The State admitted the photographs depicting Allen’s injuries and missing hair

into evidence through Cannon’s testimony.

Cannon also testified regarding her interview of Parnell, and the recorded interview

was played for the jury. In the recorded interview, Parnell admitted keeping Allen in the

camper against her will from about midnight until almost daylight. He stated that Allen was

mad and acting crazy, which he assumed had to do with some recent interaction with a

nearby acquaintance of hers with whom she constantly argued and fought. He also stated

that Allen was mad because she wanted a cigarette and did not have any. Parnell told the

investigator he physically kept Allen against her will because he was afraid she would go to

4 her nearby acquaintance’s mobile home where they were doing drugs and drinking and that

she would get into trouble. Parnell admitted repeatedly grabbing Allen and holding her on

the couch against her will. He noticed some swelling around Allen’s eye but told Cannon

he did not notice much in the way of other injuries or a cut on her head until daylight due

to the lack of electricity in the camper. Parnell denied hitting Allen in the head with the

lantern but stated that her head was “all over that camper,” so she might have hit her head

on the lantern. Parnell admitted to Cannon that Allen complained of her head hurting and

that she screamed in pain that he thought was legitimate.

Dr. James Russell, the emergency room doctor who treated Allen at Baptist Health

Fort Smith, was called as a State’s witness. He testified that Allen had multiple facial

fractures: a fracture of her left orbital floor, a fracture of the nearby left lamina papyracea,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2025 Ark. App. 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jeffery-d-parnell-v-state-of-arkansas-arkctapp-2025.