Joe Bethune v. State of Arkansas

2025 Ark. App. 107
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 19, 2025
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2025 Ark. App. 107 (Joe Bethune 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
Joe Bethune v. State of Arkansas, 2025 Ark. App. 107 (Ark. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Cite as 2025 Ark. App. 107 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION IV No. CR-24-67

JOE BETHUNE APPELLANT Opinion Delivered February 19, 2025

V. APPEAL FROM THE FAULKNER COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NO. 23CR-22-1170]

STATE OF ARKANSAS HONORABLE TROY B. BRASWELL, APPELLEE JR., JUDGE

AFFIRMED

MIKE MURPHY, Judge

A Faulkner County jury convicted appellant Joe Bethune of second-degree battery

and sentenced him to twelve years’ incarceration. Bethune was also charged with having

acted in concert with two or more persons and being a habitual offender with four or more

prior felony convictions. His convictions stemmed from a riot at the Faulkner County

Detention Center on December 16, 2021. On appeal, Bethune challenges the sufficiency of

the evidence; argues that the court erred in admitting evidence of him passing a weapon to

another inmate; and argues that the court erred in refusing to admit testimony regarding

motive of the State’s witnesses to lie. We affirm.

A jury trial was conducted on September 7, 2023, and established the following.

While gathering trustees to serve dinner to other inmates, Sergeant William Lipsmeyer noticed that a blanket had been placed over a door window to one of the jail pods. This

prevented detention officers from monitoring what went on inside the pod from “the tower,”

a centrally located office within the jail. Lipsmeyer went to investigate. When he arrived at

the pod, he noticed that the door lock was faulty, so he kept his foot in the doorway to keep

it from closing and locking behind him. Once inside the pod, Lipsmeyer discovered that

two inmates—Thomas Jaquez and Michael Champaign—were fighting. When he drew his

taser and ordered them to stop, Bethune, along with another inmate, Shelby Stivers, “rushed

him,” and Bethune demanded that he “get out of there,” declaring that the inmates “handled

their own business in their pods[.]” In trying to create distance between them, he moved his

foot and got locked inside the pod.

At some point, Bethune jumped on Lipsmeyer’s back and hit him and tried to choke

him. Lipsmeyer testified he was able to get Bethune off his back and put him on the ground.

When he put his weight on Bethune, Bethune told him he gave up. As Lipsmeyer was getting

off of Bethune to get his handcuffs, Bethune kicked him. Lipsmeyer then tased him.

Sergeant Volkman testified that he and others were radioed to help Lipsmeyer.

Volkman said when they arrived at the pod, “there was an energy” and “[e]verything kind of

seemed off.” Upon entering, the inmates were told to “catch the wall,” meaning they should

move away from the officers and stand or sit by the wall. However, no one did. According to

Volkman, there were two inmates, Bethune and Isaac Keathley, instigating the conflict.

When Volkman attempted to handcuff Bethune, he was attacked by another inmate, Jason

Heath. Volkman attempted to fire his taser at Heath, but it malfunctioned, so he was forced

2 to go “hands-on.” During the struggle, Volkman used pepper spray on Heath. As a result of

his encounter with Heath, Volkman’s shoulder bone separated from his rotator cuff. At the

time of trial, Volkman had regained only 80 percent function in his shoulder.

Volkman further testified that he saw Lieutenant Roper engaged with an unidentified

inmate when Keathley came up behind Roper and kicked the back of his knee. Roper fell to

the floor, turned pale, and attempted to crawl out of the pod.

As Volkman was escorting Heath out, Bethune was putting spoons and other items

in the door to prevent officers from getting back into the cell. He heard Bethune screaming

profanities, including “Fuck you pigs” and “You are not coming into the cell.” Volkman

retrieved the “less-lethal” shotgun, which ejected foam rounds. Everyone then complied with

the command to go back to their pods or to the wall. The officers were then able to handcuff

Bethune and Keathley.

Deputy Sheldon White testified that upon making entry into the cell, he saw Bethune

attacking Lipsmeyer while he was dealing with inmate Stivers. White testified that Lipsmeyer

was able to use his taser and hit Bethune, but in the middle of doing so, Lipsmeyer was

punched by Keathley, causing him to lose control of the taser. White was able to regain

control of the taser, and that is when Roper, Lipsmeyer, and Volkman arrived to help control

the situation. White said multiple people were involved but that Keathley and Bethune were

causing the most harm.

Lieutenant Terry Roper testified he was almost immediately taken down by a kick to

his knee. He recalled that while on the ground, there was fighting and scrambling going on

3 behind him until he was eventually pulled out of the pod by inmate Stivers and another

officer. He testified there was no recording of the incident because the cameras had stopped

working, and the new ones had not yet arrived.

At the close of the State’s evidence, Bethune moved for a directed verdict. Specifically,

Bethune argued that, while there was testimony that he hit Sergeant Lipsmeyer, the State

had failed to show that his assault caused Lipsmeyer’s injuries. Bethune also challenged the

proof that he was the instigator of the chaos.

The court denied the motion, and defense counsel announced that Bethune would

testify. Defense counsel informed the circuit court that Bethune intended to testify regarding

a civil lawsuit that he had filed immediately after the incident at the jail. He contended the

lawsuit was motivation for the officers to testify against him. The circuit court ruled that a

civil lawsuit was not relevant and excluded it.

Bethune testified that the incident started with a fight between two other inmates in

the pod. He said Stivers and Heath were holding a blanket over the front window so the

officers could not see inside. Bethune testified that because he is an older inmate, he tries

to guide and calm the others. Bethune testified he was trying to break up the fight and

explain to Sergeant Lipsmeyer that he and Stivers had it handled because they did not want

anyone to get into trouble. He explained that once the other officers arrived, it “blew up

from there.” Bethune further testified that during the “tussling,” he “may have hit [Sergeant

Lipsmeyer] inadvertently.” However, he claimed he never “swung and hit the man” or

jumped on his back. Bethune explained he was not resisting arrest; rather, he was avoiding

4 getting injured by Sergeant Lipsmeyer’s roughness. Bethune said, “I wouldn’t plan nothing

like that against law enforcement. I never have.”

Prior to the State’s cross-examination, the circuit court, out of the hearing of the jury,

considered the State’s request to cross-examine Bethune regarding an incident in which he

passed a shank to another inmate. The State sought to use this evidence to rebut Bethune’s

testimony of his good character and that he had never done anything to hurt a law

enforcement officer. Bethune argued that the evidence was not relevant because he was

testifying about his conduct only in this specific incident and that his passing the shank to

another inmate was not directed at law enforcement. The circuit court, after taking a short

recess to review the tape of Bethune’s testimony, reconvened the trial and ruled that the

State was allowed to rebut his claims.

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