JOHN WOMACK v. STATE OF ARKANSAS

CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 8, 2025
DocketCR-24-700
StatusPublished

This text of JOHN WOMACK v. STATE OF ARKANSAS (JOHN WOMACK 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
JOHN WOMACK v. STATE OF ARKANSAS, (Ark. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Cite as 2025 Ark. App. 473 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION II No. CR-24-700

JOHN WOMACK Opinion Delivered October 8, 2025

APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE MARION COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT V. [NO. 45CR-22-136]

STATE OF ARKANSAS HONORABLE JOHN R. PUTMAN, APPELLEE JUDGE

AFFIRMED

CINDY GRACE THYER, Judge

The State charged appellant John Womack as a habitual offender with multiple felony

offenses. During the course of Womack’s jury trial in the Marion County Circuit Court,

Womack sought a mistrial, which the court granted. When the case was reset for trial,

Womack moved to dismiss, asserting that the Double Jeopardy Clause barred his retrial. The

circuit court denied his motion, and Womack has now brought this interlocutory appeal

assigning error to the court’s decision. We find no error and affirm.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

Womack was charged on October 13, 2022, with one count of aggravated robbery,

possession of a firearm by certain persons, five counts of aggravated assault, resisting arrest,

disorderly conduct, and public intoxication. On October 27, Womack filed a motion for

discovery, requesting that the prosecuting attorney furnish him with, among other things, the names and addresses of persons the State intended to call as witnesses. The State emailed

Womack thirteen pages of discovery on November 7.

Before Womack’s trial almost a year later, the State issued subpoenas to Charlene Ply,

John Spence, Heith Hogan, Jake Kelley, and Jerry Atwell on October 30, 2023. The

subpoenas for Spence, Hogan, and Kelley were served on November 2. Atwell’s subpoena

was not served. Also on November 2, Womack filed a motion in limine to exclude

undisclosed evidence. In this motion, he acknowledged that the State had provided some

discovery, but it remained “unknown to the defense at this time whether the State possesses

further evidence or documents in this case which it: (a) has failed to disclose to the defense

in a timely fashion; and (b) intends to use at trial.” Womack asked the court to enter an

order barring the State from using or referring to any such evidence at trial.

Womack’s jury trial then began on November 6.1 Ply, the State’s first witness, testified

that she called 911 on October 2, 2022, because Womack was at her home “acting crazy,

waving around a gun” and threatening her and her boyfriend, Atwell, over a chainsaw that

Womack had loaned Atwell.

Officers Heith Hogan and John Spence were dispatched in response to Ply’s call.

When they arrived, followed closely by Deputy Jake Kelley, they found Womack and Rebecca

McCutcheon standing next to a white car. Both officers pointed their firearms at Womack

and McCutcheon and told them to put their hands in the air. McCutcheon complied, but

1 An August 31, 2023 order continued the case to January 16, 2024. The record does not reveal when the case was moved up to November 6, 2023.

2 Womack became very agitated and started yelling. Womack began advancing on the officers,

ignoring multiple instructions to stop. Womack had his hands behind his back, and Spence

was afraid he was going to pull a weapon at any time. Spence deployed his taser, which had

no effect. Womack continued to advance and pulled out a sharp object. In a state of being

“very excited, to the extreme,” he told the officers that he was not going to comply with their

orders. The officers were eventually able to get Womack on the ground and in handcuffs. A

search of Womack’s car revealed a pistol in a backpack, and a 9mm shell casing was recovered

from Ply’s yard.

After Ply and the three officers testified, the court asked the State if it had any other

witnesses. The State informed the court that it had some “housekeeping matters to take up,”

at which time the jury was excused from the courtroom. The State then explained that it had

been trying to locate Atwell for a week. Because Atwell, who was anticipated to be the last

witness, had still not been located, the State asked the court if the trial could pick up again

the next morning. Womack objected, arguing that if the State did not have Atwell under

subpoena, it should have asked for a continuance to obtain the his presence. The State

responded that a subpoena had been issued for Atwell, but he had not been served. It

believed he was in “one of two places.” The State added that an employee of the prosecutor’s

office had spoken with both Atwell and his mother, so it did not believe there would be an

issue with getting him served. The State speculated that Atwell was reluctant to come to court

because he had a misdemeanor warrant. Womack again argued that the State should have

sought a continuance, but the court replied that it did not “see it in the nature of a

3 continuance. I just see it as whether we go forward into the evening or come back in the

morning.” The court added that if the issue had arisen “in the middle of the afternoon it

would be different, but this is the end of the day.” The court then recessed the trial for the

evening at 4:35 p.m.

The next morning, Atwell appeared and was served with a subpoena. Both the State

and the defense were afforded some time to speak with him before the trial recommenced.

Atwell then testified for the State. He said that on the day of the incident, Womack and

McCutcheon had come over to get a bar and chain for a chainsaw. When they arrived, Atwell

told them that he did not have the right parts. Atwell then said, “But then they were asking

me if I could get them some crystal meth. And when I told them, no, that I couldn’t do that,

he––I guess it kind of made him mad, pissed him off. And he had been drinking . . . and

he just started, you know, saying, ‘Eliminate the ones who owe you.’” Atwell tried to calm

Womack down, but Womack went to his car, got a gun, and began waving it around. Atwell

asked Womack to leave them in peace, but “he didn’t want to have that ’cause I couldn’t get

any drugs for him.”

Soon thereafter, defense counsel approached the bench and objected to Atwell’s

testimony, arguing that he was attributing statements to Womack that had not been

disclosed by the State in discovery. Although the State claimed some of Atwell’s statements

were on a body-cam video that had been turned over, counsel said there was nothing on the

video about Womack asking for drugs. The court asked the State if all of Atwell’s statements

had been turned over, and the prosecutor replied that “[t]he only thing that they don’t have

4 that I wasn’t aware of until it just came out of his mouth is about him going over to buy

drugs.”

The court asked Atwell if he had ever told the investigating officers about what he

had just testified to. Atwell replied that he had not because he did not want to incriminate

himself. Womack then inquired if he had spoken to the prosecutor before that morning.

Atwell said that he had not and that he had only met the prosecutor that day.

Womack then asked to exclude Atwell as a witness. The court said it was not inclined

to exclude him, but would “probably grant a motion for mistrial.” Although Womack

initially declined to move for a mistrial, he eventually moved for one, which the court

granted, explaining to the jury that there had been “a lot of evidentiary problems in this case

and problems regarding discovery.” Womack then asked the court to make a finding that he

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