Joshua Adam Devault v. State of Arkansas

2021 Ark. App. 269
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedMay 26, 2021
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2021 Ark. App. 269 (Joshua Adam Devault 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
Joshua Adam Devault v. State of Arkansas, 2021 Ark. App. 269 (Ark. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Cite as 2021 Ark. App. 269 Elizabeth Perry ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS I attest to the accuracy and integrity of this document DIVISION III 2023.06.27 15:46:58 -05'00' No. CR-20-391 2023.001.20174 Opinion Delivered May 26, 2021 JOSHUA ADAM DEVAULT APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE VAN BUREN COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT V. [NO. 71CR-18-45]

HONORABLE H.G. FOSTER, JUDGE STATE OF ARKANSAS APPELLEE AFFIRMED

KENNETH S. HIXSON, Judge

Appellant Joshua DeVault appeals after he was convicted by a Van Buren County

Circuit Court jury of rape. He was sentenced to serve three hundred months’ imprisonment

in the Arkansas Department of Correction. On appeal, appellant does not challenge the

sufficiency of the evidence for his conviction. Instead, he argues that his conviction should

be reversed and remanded for a new trial because the circuit court erred in limiting his cross-

examination of the victim’s mother, Sasha Hughes. We affirm.

I. Relevant Facts

Appellant and Sasha Hughes 1 were married in 2011. Ms. Hughes has two daughters,

M.W. and G.S.; appellant has another daughter; and appellant and Ms. Hughes have a son

together. At the time of the rape, appellant, Ms. Hughes, and the four children lived

1 We note that, at times, Sasha Hughes is referred to in our record and at trial by the name Sasha Shivers, which was her maiden name. together in a two-bedroom home. On the night of July 5, 2017, appellant raped his

stepdaughter, M.W. The next day, M.W. broke down and told her mother that appellant

had come into her room during the night and raped her as he had done many times before.

Ms. Hughes took M.W. to the police department and then to Arkansas Children’s Hospital

for a sexual-assault examination. Appellant was subsequently arrested and charged by

amended felony information with rape in violation of Arkansas Code Annotated section 5-

14-103(a)(4)(A)(i) (Repl. 2013), a Class Y felony. A jury trial was held on November 15–

16, 2019.

Shortly after the arrest and before the results of the rape kit that confirmed the

presence of appellant’s DNA were released, Ms. Hughes sought an order of protection

against the appellant. During a hearing for the order of protection, Ms. Hughes testified

regarding the rape and whether she believed M.W.’s account. Ms. Hughes stated, “I’m on

her side. And I want to show I am there for her. Whenever I look at things from an

unbiased standpoint, I don’t see any evidence and some of the things she says don’t line up.”

In a hearing before trial below, appellant argued that he intended to use the transcript from

the order-of-protection hearing to impeach Ms. Hughes as a prior inconsistent statement.

The circuit court took the matter under advisement.

At trial, Robert Leal, a former investigator for the Van Buren County Sheriff’s

Office, testified that he had been assigned in July 2017 to investigate appellant’s case. When

he learned that M.W. alleged that appellant had sexual contact with her within the last

twenty-four hours, Mr. Leal immediately sent her to Arkansas Children’s Hospital for a

sexual-assault examination and to have a rape kit conducted.

2 Emily Davis, a nurse practitioner for University of Arkansas for Medical Services at

the campus of Arkansas Children’s Hospital, testified that she has specialized training as a

sexual-assault-nurse-examination (SANE) nurse and that she examined M.W. She described

M.W.’s demeanor as tearful before and during the examination. Nurse Davis testified that

she did not notice any physical signs of trauma during her examination; however, she stated

that she would not expect to see any physical signs of tearing or trauma to a fourteen-year-

old girl who had already started her period if she had “typical” sexual intercourse with a

man. She explained that typical intercourse meant not forceful. Therefore, Nurse Davis

explained that the lack of physical findings neither confirmed nor negated a history of sexual

abuse. During the examination, Nurse Davis collected several swabs and included them in

the sealed rape kit for analysis.

Dr. Charlotte Renee Willis testified that M.W. was her patient at Arkansas Children’s

Hospital. She and her team made the decision to order the rape kit based on the history

that was presented to them. Dr. Willis testified that she was in the room when Nurse Davis

examined M.W. Dr. Willis agreed with Nurse Davis’s findings and stated that there were

no physical findings present. She further testified that under 5 percent of abused children

will have abnormal findings on just a physical examination.

Grant Hupp testified that he had previously worked as a forensic DNA analyst at the

Arkansas State Crime Laboratory. While employed there, he examined vaginal, rectal, and

oral swabs along with a known DNA sample taken from M.W. Mr. Hupp testified that he

found two individual’s DNA on the vaginal swab. The first was M.W.’s, and the other

DNA profile was retained for comparison purposes at a later date. Lieutenant Frank Bricklin

3 Lewis testified that he obtained a DNA sample from appellant by swabbing the inside of

each of his cheeks. Alexa Harrod, a DNA analyst at the Arkansas State Crime Laboratory,

testified that appellant’s DNA matched the DNA found on the vaginal swab within scientific

certainty. Ms. Harrod explained that “within all scientific certainty” means a 1 in 19.4

nonillion chance in the Caucasian population. On cross-examination, Ms. Harrod admitted

that a serology test was not conducted to determine if the DNA found was skin, saliva, or

semen. However, she explained that a serology test was not standard procedure at that time

if DNA was found. She further explained that the samples were retained and that someone

else could have requested a serology test to be performed if desired.

Before Ms. Hughes testified, the State again raised the issue of whether appellant was

permitted to introduce the copy of the transcript from the separate order-of-protection case.

The State argued that it should be suppressed under Arkansas Rules of Evidence 401 and

403. Although appellant argued that it should be allowed to prove a prior inconsistent

statement, the State explained that it must still be excluded under the other rules of evidence

and that whether M.W. was telling the truth was ultimately for the jury to decide. After

both parties had orally argued their positions, the circuit court ruled as follows:

We started all this when Mr. Brown [on behalf of the State] moved to suppress reference to the order of protection hearing and what happened in the order of protection hearing. Ms. Byrd [defense counsel] responded that she wanted to go into prior inconsistent statements that were made within the context of the order of protection hearing. I said that prior inconsistent statements can absolutely be used, consistent with the rules of evidence but there would be no reference to the order of protection. We have continued to talk about it some more and the issue was put forward, well, wait a minute, let me question, is it your opinion that she is going to want to impeach her with, that is not an admissible question. I agree that is not an admissible question. I understand Ms. Byrd disagrees with that and you have expressed why on the record. My thought was yesterday morning that I kind of made it clear that we weren’t going to go into mom’s changing opinion of different things

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