Leashebia Davis v. State of Arkansas

2024 Ark. 49, 685 S.W.3d 909
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 11, 2024
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2024 Ark. 49 (Leashebia Davis v. State of Arkansas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leashebia Davis v. State of Arkansas, 2024 Ark. 49, 685 S.W.3d 909 (Ark. 2024).

Opinion

Cite as 2024 Ark. 49 SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS No. CR-23-602

Opinion Delivered: April 11, 2024

LEASHEBIA DAVIS APPEAL FROM THE JEFFERSON APPELLANT COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NO. 35CR-20-351]

HONORABLE ROBERT H. WYATT, V. JR., JUDGE

STATE OF ARKANSAS APPELLEE AFFIRMED.

KAREN R. BAKER, Associate Justice

On May 17, 2023, a Jefferson County Circuit Court jury convicted appellant,

Leashebia Davis, of capital murder, for which she was sentenced by the circuit court to a

term of life imprisonment without the possibility of parole.1 On appeal, Davis presents two

points: (1) there was insufficient evidence to support Davis’s capital-murder conviction; and

(2) the circuit court erred in denying Davis’s motion for new trial based on juror

misconduct. We affirm.

1 The jury also found that Davis had employed a firearm as a means of committing the charged offense in accordance with Arkansas Code Annotated section 16-90-120. However, on June 5, 2023, the circuit court entered an order explaining that “as a result of the [mandatory] Life Without Parole sentence on the underlying charge, no additional sentence was imposed on the Enhancement.” This appeal stems from the shooting death of Elvis Kendal on May 4, 2020. On July

1, 2020, Davis was charged with capital murder. On May 16–17, 2023, Davis’s jury trial

was held. The record before us establishes the following facts.

I. Facts and Procedural History

On Monday, May 4, 2020, law enforcement officers with the Pine Bluff Police

Department (“PBPD”) were dispatched to the scene of a shooting near 33rd Avenue and

Hazel Street where they observed Kendal lying on the ground near his white Cadillac CTS.

Kendal was transported to a nearby hospital where he ultimately succumbed to his injuries

during surgery. Jimmiesha Palmer, a crime scene technician with the PBPD, testified that

four shell casings were recovered at the scene near Kendal’s vehicle and there was what

appeared to be a bullet hole in the back passenger door on the driver’s side of the vehicle.

Natasha Gill, Kendal’s cousin, testified that she lived near the scene of the shooting,

and on May 4, she was keeping an eye on her nieces and cousins who were riding their

bicycles outside when she observed Kendal turn the corner onto 33rd Avenue in his white

Cadillac. Gill testified that she went back inside and, shortly thereafter, she heard four or

five gunshots and saw that a black Jeep that had pulled up beside Kendal’s vehicle was driving

away. Gill testified that Kendal had been sitting in his vehicle, and after she heard the

gunshots, she observed him get out, walk toward the back of his vehicle, and collapse to the

ground. Gill testified further that she ran to the scene and attempted to render aid to Kendal,

but upon seeing a vehicle resembling the black Jeep returning, she fled and called 911.

By Wednesday, May 6, Davis had been identified as a suspect in the investigation.

Law enforcement sought to locate Davis, and Detective Corey Wilfong with the PBPD,

2 lead investigator in the case, testified that he learned that Davis was believed to be with an

individual named Erica Heard. Detective Steven Rucker with the PBPD testified that, on

May 6, he and Lieutenant Marcus Smith located Heard’s vehicle and conducted a traffic

stop. Detective Rucker testified that he approached the passenger side of the vehicle, the

passenger identified herself to be Davis, and he ordered her to step out of the vehicle. Before

Davis exited the vehicle, Detective Rucker testified that she reached across the center

console and picked up a bag, handed it to Heard, and said something to the effect of “hold

on to this.” Detective Rucker testified that he was given authorization to search the bag, at

which point he discovered a Ruger LCP LaserMax .380-caliber handgun inside. Heard

testified that both the bag and the handgun belonged to her and that she had lent the gun

to Davis over the weekend at Davis’s request. Later that day, Davis was Mirandized before

giving a brief statement to Detective Wilfong. Davis told Detective Wilfong that she had

been arguing with Kendal on May 4 because Kendal had allegedly struck her fourteen-year-

old son earlier that day. After Davis provided her statement, she was taken into custody.

Detective Wilfong testified that, after Davis was taken into custody, a search warrant

was executed on her apartment, during which a green shirt was collected as evidence.

Detective Wilfong testified further that he subsequently obtained surveillance-video footage

of the events leading up to the shooting on May 4 from the Superstop gas station located

near the scene of the shooting. The footage, which was played for the jury, showed Kendal’s

vehicle turning out of the gas station parking lot onto Hazel Street and heading toward 33rd

Avenue. Shortly thereafter, the footage captured a black Jeep quickly approaching Kendal’s

vehicle from behind. Then, as the vehicles were driving out of frame of the surveillance

3 camera headed toward 33rd Avenue, a person wearing what appeared to Detective Wilfong

to be the same green shirt recovered from Davis’s apartment was seen hanging out of the

front passenger window of the Jeep waving in the direction of Kendal’s vehicle. Detective

Wilfong testified that it appeared to him that the footage depicted a shooting.

In the course of the investigation, law enforcement learned that the black Jeep shown

in the May 4 gas station surveillance-video footage, a Jeep Patriot, belonged to Davis’s

cousin, Robin Cones, and that Davis, Roderick Breedlove, and Michael Brazell had been

the occupants of the vehicle. According to trial testimony, neither Breedlove nor Brazell

had ever met Davis prior to that day. Cones had been living with Davis, and on May 4,

Breedlove and Brazell dropped Cones off at Davis’s apartment after Cones got off work so

that she could take a shower. When they arrived, Davis asked for a ride to the store, and

Breedlove, who was in a romantic relationship with Cones at the time, borrowed Cones’s

Jeep Patriot to give her a ride. Brazell joined Breedlove and Davis, and he sat in the back

seat on the driver’s side of the vehicle. What happened next was disputed at trial.

According to Breedlove, Davis’s demeanor had been calm, but he noticed that Davis

was holding a gun in her hand during the car ride. Breedlove testified that Davis was the

individual seen hanging out of the front passenger window of the Jeep, but he could not

see what was in her hand at that time because she had her back to him. Breedlove testified

that, by coincidence, they drove up behind Kendal’s vehicle on Hazel Street as he turned

out of the gas station and that Kendal stopped his vehicle on 33rd Avenue and flagged the

Jeep down. Breedlove testified further that Davis exited the vehicle and approached Kendal’s

vehicle where he had pulled over, and the two began arguing about the alleged encounter

4 he had with her teenage son earlier that day. Breedlove testified that, at some point during

the argument, Brazell also exited the vehicle, took the gun away from Davis, and fired four

shots at Kendal. At that time, Breedlove testified, both Davis and Brazell got back into the

Jeep, and Breedlove drove away. Breedlove testified that he did not provide a statement

about the shooting until he was approached by law enforcement on May 11. When

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2024 Ark. 49, 685 S.W.3d 909, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leashebia-davis-v-state-of-arkansas-ark-2024.