Marlon Smith v. State of Arkansas

2024 Ark. 1, 680 S.W.3d 711
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 18, 2024
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2024 Ark. 1 (Marlon Smith 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
Marlon Smith v. State of Arkansas, 2024 Ark. 1, 680 S.W.3d 711 (Ark. 2024).

Opinion

Cite as 2024 Ark. 1 SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS No. CR-22-615

Opinion Delivered: January 18, 2024

MARLON SMITH APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE WASHINGTON V. COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NO. 72CR-19-1446] STATE OF ARKANSAS APPELLEE HONORABLE MARK LINDSAY, JUDGE

AFFIRMED.

COURTNEY RAE HUDSON, Associate Justice

Appellant Marlon Smith appeals his conviction in the Washington County Circuit

Court for first-degree murder, for which he received a sentence of life imprisonment. For

reversal, appellant argues that the circuit court erred by (1) failing to grant his motion for

mistrial after a witness testified that he had been in prison and (2) failing to grant his motion

for directed verdict on the basis of insufficient evidence. We affirm.

On May 29, 2019, the State filed a criminal information charging appellant with

capital murder in connection with the death of Scott Kendricks, who was shot and killed

on April 28, 2019. The jury trial was held on June 6–8, 2022, and the State presented the

following evidence in support of the murder charge. Nakita Blackburn, who was engaged to Kendricks at the time of the murder, testified

that in the fall of 2018, Kendricks and appellant got into an altercation. 1 She stated that

appellant had refused to leave her home and that the two men began fighting. Nakita

indicated that at one point, Kendricks pinned appellant to the ground and began choking

and punching him. After a brief separation, Kendricks then struck appellant with a bat.

According to Nakita, appellant eventually left, but he returned to the house on several

occasions over the next few weeks wanting to talk to Kendricks. On one of those occasions,

appellant had a pistol in his hand, and Nakita told him that if he did not leave, she would

call the police. She stated that she did not see appellant again until the night of April 28,

when she gathered with Kendricks and other friends and family for a barbeque at the home

of her grandmother, Loretta Blackburn. After Nakita arrived at the party and saw that

appellant was there, she told him that he needed to leave. Later that evening, shortly after

Nakita had left the party and gone home, she received a phone call and was told that

Kendricks had been shot.

Katherine Smith testified that she also attended the April 28 barbeque. Appellant,

Kendricks, Katherine, and her boyfriend, Chris Blackburn, were all outside the house

talking, drinking, and smoking. Katherine stated that appellant left and then returned to the

party a couple of times. Katherine testified that when appellant returned the last time, he

drank a shot of brandy with her. He also attempted to buy some marijuana but decided that

he did not like the way it looked. Katherine stated that appellant then shot Kendricks,

1 Because several of the witnesses have the same last name, we refer to them by their first names and to Marlon Smith as appellant to avoid confusion.

2 walked to his car, and drove away. She testified that everyone had been getting along before

the incident and that she did not know why appellant shot the victim. Afterward, Katherine

stated that Kendricks was running down the street screaming and holding his neck. She

attempted to calm him down and stop the bleeding while they waited for an ambulance.

When the police arrived at the scene, Katherine admitted that she initially told them she did

not know who had shot Kendricks. However, in her interview with the police the next

day, she stated that she had told the truth about appellant committing the murder.

Chris Blackburn also testified to what he had witnessed on April 28. He stated that

he was familiar with appellant, that he had known him a long time, and that he was aware

of the previous altercation between appellant and Kendricks. Chris testified that on the day

of the barbeque, he, Kendricks, and Katherine were “chilling, smoking, and drinking”

outside when appellant returned to the party later that evening. Chris stated that after

appellant engaged in a brief conversation with Kendricks, appellant “just up and shot him.”

Chris testified that he was pretty sure appellant was talking to Kendricks about some

marijuana, but he did not see an argument between the two prior to the shooting. Chris

could not remember what he told the police that night, but he informed them in his

interview the next day that it was appellant who had shot Kendricks.

Casey Simon, one of Loretta’s grandsons, testified that appellant was his best friend.

Simon indicated that appellant and Kendricks had gotten into an altercation prior to the

murder and that he got tired of appellant talking about it. Simon also attended the April 28

barbeque, although he left prior to the shooting. He stated that when he saw appellant and

Kendricks at the party, they were not arguing and instead seemed to be getting along. After

3 appellant shot Kendricks, he came to Simon’s home, smoked some marijuana, and ate some

dinner. Simon testified that although appellant acted as if everything was normal at first,

appellant later went to the back of the house and started yelling for him. When Simon went

to talk to him, appellant told him, “I just put a bullet in Hot’s brain.”2 Simon then received

a phone call about the shooting, and he told appellant to leave. Simon testified that when

appellant walked to the door, it looked like “all of his emotions drained out of his body like

he recognized what it is that he just did. He looked at me, he walked back to me[,] and he

gave me a hug because he knew right then that this was it.”

Fayetteville Police Officer Dalton Frazier testified that he and another officer were

the first to arrive on the scene after the shooting. Frazier stated that Kendricks was having

trouble breathing and that at one point, he spit what appeared to be bone fragments out of

his mouth. Frazier rode in the ambulance with Kendricks, and he testified that Kendricks

lost consciousness on the way to the hospital. He was pronounced dead upon arrival.

Appellant was arrested for Kendrick’s murder, and his shirt and jeans tested positive

for gunshot residue. In his interviews with police, appellant denied shooting Kendricks or

even owning a gun. Washington County Detention Center Deputy Dean Hejl testified that

after appellant’s arrest, another detainee was moved to appellant’s jail cell due to

overcrowding. Shortly afterward, Hejl heard banging on the cell door. He stated that he

went to investigate and heard appellant yell, “I just blew a mother fucker’s brains out and

y’all are gonna put somebody in my cell?”

2 Multiple witnesses testified that Kendricks was also known as “Hot” or “Too Hot.”

4 Dr. Stephen Erickson, the medical examiner who performed an autopsy on

Kendrick’s body, testified that Kendricks died from a gunshot wound to his head. Dr.

Erickson stated that the bullet entered near Kendrick’s right ear lobe, exited under his left

jaw, and reentered his left shoulder. He testified that, based on the powder stippling present

around the entry wound, the shot was fired from a “can’t miss” range of less than one foot.

Although the bullet did not cause the neurological injury that is typically associated with a

gunshot wound to the head, Dr. Erickson stated that it created a tremendous amount of

hemorrhaging in the soft tissue of Kendrick’s mouth and resulted in his suffocation due to

the blockage of air to his lungs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2024 Ark. 1, 680 S.W.3d 711, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marlon-smith-v-state-of-arkansas-ark-2024.