Maxwell v. State

285 S.W.3d 195, 373 Ark. 553, 2008 Ark. LEXIS 382
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 29, 2008
DocketCR 07-1318
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 285 S.W.3d 195 (Maxwell v. State) 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
Maxwell v. State, 285 S.W.3d 195, 373 Ark. 553, 2008 Ark. LEXIS 382 (Ark. 2008).

Opinion

Robert L. Brown, Justice.

Appellant Robert Thomas Maxwell appeals his judgment of conviction for unlawful discharge of a firearm from a vehicle in the first degree, for which he was sentenced to fife imprisonment. We affirm the judgment.

On the evening of May 8, 2006, Maxwell, whose brother, Dale Daniels, had been a resident at the Economy Inn on West Markham Street in Little Rock for several months, got into an argument with the desk clerk, David Kelso. Maxwell called the front desk and requested clean sheets for Daniels’s room, but Kelso refused, citing the motel’s policy of not handing out clean sheets after eleven a.m. Maxwell became irate, repeatedly shouting “you’re fucking dead.”

Maxwell and Daniels then came to the front desk. Kelso informed the other desk clerk, Imtiaz Khan, of the problem he was having with Maxwell, and Khan joined Kelso in the office. Khan attempted to calm Maxwell down, but Maxwell continued to threaten Kelso, stating that he was going to “go get an AK-47 and blow [Kelso’s] ass away.” In the end, Khan agreed to give Daniels a ten dollar refund of the money he had paid for that week’s rent of his room in exchange for Daniels checking out a day early. Daniels and Maxwell retrieved Daniels’s belongings and left the motel in a white four-door Lincoln, the car that Maxwell had been driving for several months.

After leaving the motel, Maxwell picked up Princess Smith, who was referred to at trial at different times as Maxwell’s girlfriend, his wife, and his “common-law” wife. 1 The two went to the house of Wesley Grant, a friend of Maxwell’s, and borrowed Grant’s black Ford Explorer, saying that there was something wrong with Maxwell’s car and that they needed to run an errand. Cedric Barnes was also at Grant’s house. Barnes testified that he had brought a .380 caliber handgun with him. He testified that he left the gun on a table at Grant’s house when he went to the bathroom, and when he came back, the gun, Maxwell, and Smith were gone.

Sometime after midnight, Maxwell and Smith returned to the Economy Inn in Grant’s Ford Explorer. At least five shots were fired from the vehicle through the office window and into the office, one of which struck Kelso in the left shoulder and lodged in his arm. Kelso woke Khan, who called the police. Kelso was taken to the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences Medical Center, where he was treated and released within a few hours. The bullet was not removed from his arm because of the danger of causing nerve damage.

The shooting was witnessed by a University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences police officer, Roger Blaine, who was sitting in his patrol car at a red light near the motel when he saw a black SUV stopped outside the office of the Economy Inn. He next saw muzzle flashes coming from the front passenger’s side window of the SUV and heard several gun shots. Blaine and a second officer pulled the SUV over and arrested Maxwell, who was in the driver’s seat, and Smith, who was in the passenger seat.

Little Rock Police officers responded shortly thereafter and found a gun in the grass in a place where it could have been thrown from the SUV. Barnes identified the gun as his gun that was taken from Grant’s house on the night of the shooting. Barnes also testified that, after Maxwell was arrested, he told Barnes that he had taken Barnes’s gun and that Smith had used it in the shooting. One spent shell casing was found inside the SUV, and an additional five shell casings were found outside the Economy Inn office. Bullet fragments were recovered from the motel’s office and were found to have been fired from Barnes’s gun.

Maxwell was charged with one count of discharging a firearm from a vehicle in the first degree in connection with the shot that hit Kelso. Maxwell was also charged with four counts of discharging a firearm from a vehicle in the second degree for the other shots that were fired into the Economy Inn office.

A two-day jury trial was held beginning on August 8, 2007. The State did not dispute that Smith might have been the shooter but argued that Maxwell was either the shooter or was an accomplice to the shooting. The State’s witnesses included Kelso, Khan, the arresting UAMS police officers, a crime scene specialist, and a tool mark examiner. Grant and Barnes, Maxwell’s friends from whom he obtained the car and gun, also testified for the State.

In his testimony regarding the events of the night of the shooting, Kelso described being shot as feeling like a “sting.” He showed the jury the scar on his shoulder where the bullet entered and an additional grazing scar on his back. He testified that the scar itched and that one time he had pain when he tried to lift his arm. He also testified that he had discomfort at the site of the wound for a couple of days after he was shot. The State did not present any medical testimony regarding Kelso’s wound.

After the State rested, Maxwell’s counsel moved for a directed verdict on the basis of insufficient evidence:

Your Honor, I would move for a directed verdict in this matter. We feel the State’s not met their burden of proof in showing that on or about May the 9th, 2006, Mr. Robert Maxwell, as to Count IV, did unlawfully, feloniously and knowingly discharge a firearm, a .380 caliber weapon from a vehicle, causing death or serious physical injury to David Kelso.
Nor has there been any showing that Mr. Maxwell on the same date in Count V, VI, VII and VIII recklessly, unlawfully, feloniously, and recklessly discharged a firearm, a .380 caliber handgun, from a vehicle that created a substantial risk of physical injury to another person, against the peace and dignity of the State of Arkansas.
I believe the testimony from Mr. David Kelso was that he initially, after an argument between the alleged party, was watching TV at the Economy Inn, started hearing reports from a gun, noticed glass (sic) firing, indicated that the last shot was, in fact, the shot that allegedly hit him.
Now, again, I think it’s convoluted for the State to say that these initial gunshots were reckless shots, were reckless behavior and yet the last shot was supposedly knowingly firing to cause these injuries to Mr. Kelso.
In addition, Your Honor, the testimony presented before (sic) the State today clearly established that Mr. Maxwell was, in fact, in the driver’s position of the vehicle allegedly used in this matter.
The shell casing that was found inside this particular vehicle was found in the passenger’s side vehicle.
Furthermore, Your Honor, I think that the shell casings found at the crime scene introduced into the photographs by the State indicates a similar pattern that fired from the passenger’s side of a particular vehicle.
In any event, there’s no indication of Mr. Maxwell having fired such a weapon or that he participated in the actions that apparently Miss Princess Smith committed.
I don’t think that there’s a sufficient proof before the Court to show that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
285 S.W.3d 195, 373 Ark. 553, 2008 Ark. LEXIS 382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maxwell-v-state-ark-2008.