Rogrick Adway v. State of Arkansas

2019 Ark. App. 495
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 30, 2019
StatusPublished

This text of 2019 Ark. App. 495 (Rogrick Adway 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
Rogrick Adway v. State of Arkansas, 2019 Ark. App. 495 (Ark. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Cite as 2019 Ark. App. 495 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS Digitally signed by Elizabeth Perry DIVISION IV Date: 2022.08.05 10:33:57 No. CR-19-309 -05'00' Adobe Acrobat version: Opinion Delivered October 30, 2019 2022.001.20169

ROGRICK ADWAY, JR. APPEAL FROM THE JEFFERSON APPELLANT COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NO. 35CR-17-353] V. HONORABLE JODI RAINES STATE OF ARKANSAS DENNIS, JUDGE APPELLEE AFFIRMED

BRANDON J. HARRISON, Judge

In July 2017, Rogrick Adway, Jr., was charged with simultaneous possession of drugs

and firearms, possession of a Schedule VI controlled substance with purpose to deliver,

fleeing, and use or possession of drug paraphernalia. After a jury trial, Adway was found

guilty of all counts and sentenced to an aggregate term of fifteen years’ imprisonment. On

appeal, he argues that the circuit court erred in (1) denying his motion for directed verdict

and (2) denying his request for a mistrial. We affirm the circuit court. Specific facts

pertinent to each point on appeal will be discussed below.

I. Directed Verdict

At a jury trial on 17 September 2018, Detective Richard McCorvy with the Pine

Bluff Police Department testified that on 2 June 2017, he and Detective Matthew Pate were

surveilling the Piney Wood Apartments based on suspicion of drug activity. McCorvy saw

Adway exit an apartment carrying a backpack on his shoulder and “looking from side to

1 side suspiciously . . . to make sure nobody was looking while he was messing with the

backpack.” A second man, Jose Cirino, also left the apartment, locked the door, and got

into a green Toyota Camry. Adway walked to the Camry, put the backpack inside the car

through the window, then walked to a different apartment carrying some tissue paper.

Adway returned a few minutes later, got into the passenger side of the car, and the two men

left the apartment complex. McCorvy and Pate followed the car and made a traffic stop a

short time later. Cirino did not stop the car immediately but instead drove slowly for

another one hundred feet before stopping near a back gate in the apartment complex. As

the car was still moving, McCorvy observed both men “reaching down,” and it appeared

that the men were “trying to hide something.” When the car stopped, Adway exited the

passenger side with the backpack and ran back into the apartment complex. McCorvy

chased him, and as he went around the corner of a building, he saw Adway emerging from

behind an AC unit—minus one backpack. McCorvy saw the backpack next to the AC unit

but continued to chase Adway and took him into custody a short time later. As they walked

back toward the cars, Detective Pate approached and continued to escort Adway while

McCorvy went back and retrieved the backpack. Detective Pate also testified and

corroborated McCorvy’s account of what happened before, during, and after the traffic stop.

Meghan Wells, a former employee of the Pine Bluff Police Department, testified that

on 2 June 2017, she was dispatched to the Piney Wood Apartments and met Detective

McCorvy, who gave her the backpack to process. Wells prepared an evidence log of all the

items in the backpack, including Adway’s identification, phone chargers, and plastic

sandwich bags. The backpack contents also included two small mason jars containing

2 marijuana, a half-full box of Blazer 9mm cartridges, a black digital scale, a Crown Royal

bag containing two types of 9mm cartridges, a .38 Smith & Wesson revolver, and a 9mm

handgun. Wells also identified another small bag of marijuana that had been found in the

car’s cup holder.

After the State rested, Adway moved for a directed verdict as follows:

We believe that the State has failed to show sufficient evidence to go forward in this matter, that they have not sufficiently proven their cases on these various four charges. . . . The first one that I have is the simultaneous possession of drugs and firearms. The second one is 5-64-436, the purpose to deliver. And then the third charge is the possession of drug paraphernalia with purpose to use or manufacture. I’m not going to make the motion on the fleeing charge—it’s a misdemeanor—but I would on the—the three felonies.

Adway’s motion was denied. 1

The defense presented the testimony of Ivy Alston, who rented the apartment that

Adway and Cirino had been in and who owned the Toyota Camry driven by them on June

2. She said that she had known Adway approximately two months at the time of this

incident, and she denied having ever seen Adway with guns, drugs, or the backpack.

Adway testified that he was eighteen years old when this incident occurred and had

just graduated from high school two weeks prior. He said that his girlfriend lived at Piney

Woods Apartments and that he also visited Cirino at the apartments. He admitted that the

1 Adway also objected to the State’s criminal information, which charged him with use or possession of drug paraphernalia under section 5-64-443(c), a statute specific to methamphetamine or cocaine, instead of subsection (d), which applies to other drugs like marijuana. The State moved to amend the information to reflect the correct subsection, and Adway objected to the amendment. This argument has been abandoned on appeal.

3 backpack belonged to him but denied ever having firearms or illegal drugs in his possession.

He explained that when he and Cirino left the apartment that day, the only things in his

backpack were his identification, phone chargers, his keys, and some tissue. According to

Adway, he put the backpack inside the car, took some tissue to his girlfriend’s cousin’s

apartment, and returned approximately ten minutes later. He testified that after the car was

pulled over by the officers, he got out of the car, “saw a gun,” and became scared, so he

“took off running.” He said he was wearing the backpack but threw it off while running

because it was slowing him down. He said the backpack felt heavier, but he did not know

what was in it.

After the defense rested, Adway renewed his motion for directed verdict, again

arguing that the State had failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt any of the offenses

charged. “The testimony, even taken in the light of the—to the State, which is what the

statutory—the requirements are—is that there was a brief period of time in which my client

had a backpack and then it was gone.” The renewed motion was denied. Adway was

found guilty, was sentenced as indicated above, and has now appealed.

A motion for directed verdict is considered a challenge to the sufficiency of the

evidence. Cora v. State, 2009 Ark. App. 431, 319 S.W.3d 281. We will affirm a circuit

court’s denial of the motion if there is substantial evidence, either direct or circumstantial,

to support the verdict. Id. Substantial evidence is evidence forceful enough to compel a

conclusion one way or the other beyond suspicion and conjecture. Id. The evidence is

viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict, and only evidence supporting the verdict

is considered. Id.

4 To preserve a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence, a defendant must move

for a directed verdict at the close of the State’s case and at the close of all the evidence and

must state the specific grounds for the motion. Ark. R. Crim. P. 33.1(a) (2019). Rule 33.1

is strictly construed. A defendant’s failure to adhere to the rule waives any question

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2019 Ark. App. 495, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogrick-adway-v-state-of-arkansas-arkctapp-2019.