Rollf v. State

2015 Ark. App. 520, 472 S.W.3d 490, 2015 Ark. App. LEXIS 604
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedSeptember 30, 2015
DocketCR-15-46
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2015 Ark. App. 520 (Rollf v. State) 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
Rollf v. State, 2015 Ark. App. 520, 472 S.W.3d 490, 2015 Ark. App. LEXIS 604 (Ark. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

BRANDON J. HARRISON, Judge

| ¶ Joyce Rene Rollf-was convicted during a 2014 bench trial of first-degree murder, abuse of a corpse, and tampering with physical evidence. The circuit court sentenced Rollf to thirty years’ imprisonment for murder, ten years for abusing a corpse, and six years for tampering with physical evidence related to the death of James Heath — and ordered the sentences to run consecutively. Here, Rollf argues only that the State produced insufficient evidence to support the first-degree-murder conviction. We disagree and affirm the conviction.

I. Trial Testimony

Because Rollf challenges the sufficiency of the evidence, and differing accounts of James Heath’s death were' presented during trial, a detailed account of the trial testimony is |2necessary. Taylor Arnold testified that he lived with Rollf on Centennial Road in September 2012. According to Arnold, on September 15, he, Rollf (the defendant), Heath (the victim), and William Null (Rollf s boyfriend) were getting ■ high on methamphetamine inside R’ollf s trailer. ‘ Rollf left the room, and Arnold heard “No, Rene, no,” “a metal baseball bat hitting something,” and a “ting noise.” A “scuffle” and “fighting” occurred, and Arnold saw Rollf hitting Heath with a bat. At one point, two more people — John and Jody Posey — arrived at the residence. Arnold said that when he came out of the bedroom, Heath was dead in the hallway; and Rollf and Jody Posey had blood on them. Arnold told the court that “Rene killed James Heath,” and that Rollf was mad at Heath because Heath had told Rollf s parents about her methamphetamine use. Arnold said that he helped Rollf bum bloody clothes, clean the trailer, and dispose of Heath’s body because he was “scared she was gonna beat me with the bat and put me in a hole, too ... because that’s how she was.” Arnold denied that he saw anyone else in the trailer with the bat. He said that Rollf later hid the bat in a cabinet. Arnold agreed to testify during Rollf s trial in exchange for a probation recommendation.

Another account of events came from John Posey. Posey testified that he came to Rollfs house on September 15 because Rollf had texted his wife Jody asking for help beating up a guy “who had snitched on her.” Posey first encountered Heath for a brief moment before Heath ran back into the house. Posey then heard “the aluminum cling of a baseball bat” and, when he entered the home, saw Heath holding an aluminum bat in his right hand and a wooden cane in his left. Rollf, in a rage, picked up a large knife. Heath eventually dropped the bat, and Posey used the bat to knock Heath down. Then, disaccording to Posey, Rollf started hitting Heath “all over” with the bat like “she’s splitting wood.” Posey explained that this went on for five or ten minutes with Heath getting up several times and trying to defend himself. When Heath tried to run out the front door Posey shoved him into the hallway. Heath then locked himself in the bathroom. Rollf kicked the bathroom door off its hinges, and Jody and Rollf started beating Heath. Posey said he prevented Rollf from using a knife, telling her “if you want to beat his ass, beat his ass, but you’re not going in there with the knife.” Rollf, without the bat, straddled Heath “trying to choke him and gouging his eyes and stuff like that” and Heath' bit her. This, according to Posey, made Rollf more enraged, and Heath started screaming “Stop it, Rene, you’re killing, me.” Rollf reportedly replied that she didn’t care. A minute or two later Rene reported to John Posey that Heath was dead and “it was over.”

When Rollf stepped into the master bedroom Posey said he looked down the hallway and saw his wife Jody standing on Heath’s throat. Jody told John that she “thought she seen him [Heath] breathing.” Heath was dead and had blood on his head and shoulder area, according to John Po-sey. At that point, Rollfs-friend Justine Gainey and her boyfriend Mike arrived at the house, and, according to Posey, Rollf started to “bark” orders that “everybody is gonna help and nobody’s gonna say nothing, or else they was next.” The group eventually tied Heath’s body to a dóor and carried him to a hole that Rollf had readied in- an area directly behind her back fence.

On cross-examination, John Posey explained that Jody, who weighed 180 pounds, stood on Heath’s neck for thirty seconds to a minute. Posey also said that he had “stepped on [Heath] myself’ and that he heard Heath breathe. Posey stared at Heath for another Rminute then stepped on his body again and' felt Heath “take a deeper breath” inhaling and exhaling one time. It was also revealed that John Posey’s testimony was also part of a plea arrangement.

Justiné Gainey, Rollfs friend, testified that there was blood on the ‘floors', walls, and hallway of Rollf s' residence when she and her boyfriend arrived. Rollf was in her bedroom in boxer shorts and a bra with blood on her holding a bag of ice on. her injured hand. According to Gainey, Heath was on the hallway floor, not moving, and his clothes were partially ripped off. Rollf sent Gainey to the store to buy bleach; but there was only enough money to buy cigarettes and gas, according to Gainey.

• Pulaski County Sheriff Department Investigator Jeff Allison testified during trial that, on 26 October 2012,-he went to Rollfs trailer to investigate Heath’s disappearance, because it was. then a missing-person case. Law enforcement had recovered Heath’s van in Jacksonville in October and through a series of events and interviews had talked to Taylor Arnold. Arnold told the police that a body was buried behind Rollfs house. Investigator Allison testified that he was specifically watching Rollfs residence as law enforcement discovered Heath’s body below a pile of debris. 'Officer Allison noticed that a woman opened the back door and quickly darted back inside; Rollf and two men then fled the residence. Rollf was arrested the next day in Pope County and cut her -wrists while being pulled over by the police.

Rollf made a recorded statement to the police the day after her arrest.. It was played during the State’s case in chief. During her statement, Rollf told the police that John Posey had hit Heath on the head. Rollf also admitted hitting Heath, but she did not Rremember what she had hit him with or why Heath ended up dead. She told the investigator, “I know I got a couple of blows in, but I didn’t kill him.”

Dr. Charles Kokes, a forensic medical examiner, testified that the official cause' of Heath’s death was blunt-force trauma to the head from an “oval shaped depressed skull fracture” measuring “about three quarters of an inch in length and five eights inch in width” and depressed inwards “by as much as an eighth of an inch.” He ruled the death a homicide. In Dr. Kokes’s expert opinion, “[a] injury of this type, if left untreated, would inevitably lead to death.” The skull fracture was caused by a “hard object with a cylindrical shape ... very consistent with something like an aluminum baseball bat.” Dr. Kokes also testified that a person who strikes another person with a metal baseball bat could cause the type of injury Heath sustained. The location of the injury — the frontal part of the head — requires “the full force swing of a normal strength adult” swinging an object “roughly about as hard as they can” to make an indent. Dr. Kokes also said, “I believe the fracture is at least part of the cause of death.

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Related

Claggett v. State
2019 Ark. App. 208 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2019)
Wilson v. State
2016 Ark. App. 164 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2016)

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Bluebook (online)
2015 Ark. App. 520, 472 S.W.3d 490, 2015 Ark. App. LEXIS 604, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rollf-v-state-arkctapp-2015.