Keith Lamont Bing v. State of Arkansas

2025 Ark. App. 319
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedMay 21, 2025
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Ark. App. 319 (Keith Lamont Bing 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
Keith Lamont Bing v. State of Arkansas, 2025 Ark. App. 319 (Ark. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Cite as 2025 Ark. App. 319 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION IV No. CR-24-479

Opinion Delivered May 21, 2025

APPEAL FROM THE PULASKI KEITH LAMONT BING COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT, APPELLANT SEVENTH DIVISION [NO. 60CR-21-3809] V. HONORABLE KAREN D. WHATLEY, STATE OF ARKANSAS JUDGE APPELLEE AFFIRMED

CINDY GRACE THYER, Judge

Keith Bing was convicted by a Pulaski County jury of one count of aggravated robbery

and was sentenced to ten years in the Arkansas Division of Correction. He appeals that

conviction, alleging there was insufficient evidence to support his conviction; that is, there

was insufficient evidence that he committed a theft or acted with the purpose of committing

theft as is required for an aggravated-robbery conviction. We affirm.

In October 2021, Bing was charged with one count of aggravated robbery, a Class Y

felony; one count of theft of property, a Class B felony; and one count of possession of a

controlled substance (marijuana) with purpose to deliver, a Class A misdemeanor. These

charges arose out of his arrest for an altercation he had with Roy Thomas Dobbins on August

9, 2021. The State also sought a sentencing enhancement for the employment of a firearm during the commission of the crime. The State later nolle prossed the drug charge, and Bing

was tried on the remaining counts.

A jury trial was held on December 13, 2023. The State presented three witnesses:

Angela Bauman and investigating officers Sam Cooper and Peyton Looper with the North

Little Rock Police Department. Dobbins did not testify.

The altercation between Bing and Dobbins occurred at the Superstop gas station in

North Little Rock. Bauman, an attendant there, testified that she was working when Bing

and Dobbins began to argue. After her requests for peace were ignored, she ushered the

customers out of the store, went outside, and flagged down a police officer who was nearby.

When asked on cross-examination, she testified that Bing was a regular in the store and had

never caused any problems. She denied seeing a handgun and did not see anything to

indicate that Bing was robbing Dobbins.

A surveillance video of the altercation was then played for the jury. The video shows

the interaction between Bing and Dobbins. Bing can be seen pulling a pistol out of his

crossbody bag, racking the slide, and putting it behind his back. The argument between the

two appears to get even more heated, with Bing getting in Dobbins’s face. Dobbins turns his

back, and Bing pistol-whips Dobbins and puts the gun in his face. Bing becomes more

agitated, and he points his finger in Dobbins’s face; Dobbins does not react. A short time

later, Bing acts as though he is going to hit Dobbins in the face with the gun. Dobbins

flinches and takes a couple of steps back. Dobbins is then seen taking money out of his

pocket. Bing grabs it from Dobbins’s hand, throws it onto the floor, and once again points

2 the gun at Dobbins’s face. Dobbins is seen talking to Bing calmly and swatting the gun away.

Bing then picks up something from the floor. After that, he rifles through Dobbins’s pockets

and throws what he finds on the ground. Before he leaves the store, Bing can be seen picking

something else up off the ground. He then places his pistol near the front register and exits

the store.

Officer Cooper testified that he was on patrol when Bauman flagged him down.

When he stopped, Bauman told him that two men were fighting in the convenience store

and that a handgun was involved.

He testified that he encountered Bing and Dobbins when they exited the front of the

convenience store. The two men were still arguing, and Dobbins was holding his hand to

the back of his head. Officer Cooper remarked that he was told that a threat had been made

before the altercation ensued.

Officer Cooper later retrieved a handgun from behind the clerk’s counter. He

searched Bing and found an extended magazine along with ammunition matching the caliber

of weapon found in the convenience store. He handed the firearm and ammunition to

Officer Looper to place into evidence. He then arrested Bing for aggravated robbery. He

stated that Bing never tried to leave and that he cooperated with the police, although he was

argumentative at times and originally denied, then admitted, having a handgun.

Officer Looper testified that she responded to the incident at the Superstop and took

possession of the evidence—the handgun, magazine, and ammunition. Those items,

including thirty-five 9mm bullets, were admitted into evidence.

3 At the close of the State’s case, Bing moved for a directed verdict. As to the aggravated-

robbery charge, Bing argued that the State failed to admit any evidence that he had

committed a theft. More specifically, he argued:

Without calling the victim in this case, no one has testified that it was Mr. Bing’s purpose to commit a theft. The element of aggravated robbery includes that, if a person deploys a weapon or other serious form – or uses other forms of serious force to commit, with the purpose of committing a theft. There has been no evidence introduced that there was a purpose of committing the theft, as to [aggravated robbery].

In addition, the theft element requires that someone either took or intended to take an item from a victim or exercise control or attempt to exercise control, to deprive that person of some sort of property, that they have either some sort of interest in a property, and there’s been no testimony of that.

As a matter of fact, there’s just been no evidence for this jury to consider that would move this jury beyond speculation and conjecture as to what occurred in this video, other than this is a video of an altercation that occurred inside a convenience store and a weapon was involved.

So for that – for those purposes, as to [aggravated robbery], I would ask this Court to direct the verdict and enter a judgment of acquittal.

In response, the State argued that it was required to show only an intent to commit a

theft; it did not have to show that a theft was actually completed. The State claimed that

intent could be inferred by watching the video and by seeing the conduct, and the jury, by

watching Bing’s actions and conduct, could infer “with some clarity” what his intent was.

The court denied the motion, and the defense presented its case.1

1 Bing also presented surveillance video of his interactions with Dobbins before the altercation.

4 Bing testified that he was at the convenience store almost every day and knows the

people in the store. He also knows Dobbins from the neighborhood. He testified that

Dobbins has a reputation for being a dangerous person and that Dobbins had once shot his

own brother. Bing, on the other hand, has no criminal history and no prior felony

convictions.

Bing testified that, on the day of the altercation, he entered the convenience store

and greeted the people there—shaking hands, fist-bumping, and talking to them. As he was

walking to the rear of the store to get something to drink, he noticed Dobbins by the drinking

fountain. He approached Dobbins, and they spoke. Neither had an issue with the other at

this point.

Bing then asked Dobbins about some money that Bing had given him approximately

six months earlier. He stated that Dobbins had been gambling and needed some money for

his family, so Bing had given him eighty dollars. Dobbins had offered to give him some

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2025 Ark. App. 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keith-lamont-bing-v-state-of-arkansas-arkctapp-2025.